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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Assembly of God
+ Miscellaneous Writings of C. H. Mackintosh, volume III
+
+Author: C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+Release Date: August 30, 2011 [EBook #37274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark Young, Júlio Reis, Moisés S. Gomes and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Assembly of God
+
+_Miscellaneous Writings of_ C. H. MACKINTOSH
+
+_Volume III_
+
+LOIZEAUX BROTHERS _New York_
+
+FIRST EDITION 1898 TENTH PRINTING 1960
+
+LOIZEAUX BROTHERS, INC., PUBLISHERS
+
+_A Nonprofit Organization, Devoted to the Lord's Work and to the Spread
+of His Truth_
+
+19 WEST 21ST STREET, NEW YORK 10, N. Y.
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ Pages
+
+ THE MAN OF GOD 3-39
+
+ DECISION FOR CHRIST 1-28
+
+ PRAYER IN ITS PROPER PLACE 1-8
+
+ "GILGAL" 1-48
+
+ THOUGHTS ON CONFIRMATION VOWS 1-16
+
+ THOUGHTS ON THE LORD'S SUPPER 1-46
+
+ THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1-47
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN: HIS POSITION AND HIS WORK 1-32
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN PRIESTHOOD 1-13
+
+ FATHER! THY SOVEREIGN LOVE--_Poem_
+
+ PAPERS ON EVANGELIZATION 1-86
+
+ THE LIVING GOD AND A LIVING FAITH 1-28
+
+ A SCRIPTURAL INQUIRY AS TO THE SABBATH,
+ THE LAW, AND CHRISTIAN MINISTRY 2-28
+
+ THE MINISTRY OF CHRIST; PAST, PRESENT,
+ AND FUTURE 3-30
+
+ PRAYER AND THE PRAYER MEETING 3-23
+
+_The original numbering of these writings has been retained, Many of the
+above may be had separately in pamphlet form._
+
+
+
+"THE MAN OF GOD"
+
+
+The sentence which we have just penned occurs in Paul's second Epistle
+to his beloved son Timothy--an epistle marked, as we know, by intense
+individuality. All thoughtful students of Scripture have noticed the
+striking contrast between the two Epistles of Paul to Timothy. In the
+first, the Church is presented in its order, and Timothy is instructed
+as to how he is to behave himself therein. In the second, on the
+contrary, the Church is presented in its ruin. The house of God has
+become the great house, in the which there are vessels to dishonor as
+well as vessels to honor; and where, moreover, errors and evils
+abound--heretical teachers and false professors, on every hand.
+
+It is in this epistle of individuality, then, that the expression, "The
+man of God" is used with such obvious force and meaning. It is in times
+of general declension, of ruin and confusion that the faithfulness,
+devotedness, and decision of the individual man of God are specially
+called for. And it is a signal mercy for such an one to know that, spite
+of the hopeless failure of the Church as a responsible witness for
+Christ, it is the privilege of the individual to tread as holy a path,
+to taste as deep communion, and to enjoy as rich blessings, as could be
+known in the Church's brightest days.
+
+This is a most encouraging and consolatory fact--a fact established by
+many infallible proofs, and set forth in the very passage from which our
+heading is taken. We shall here quote at length this passage of
+singular weight and power:
+
+"But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been
+assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them; and that from a
+child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee
+wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All
+Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
+doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,
+that the man of God may be _perfect_, throughly _furnished unto all good
+works_"[I.] (2 Tim. iii. 14-17).
+
+Here we have "the man of God," in the midst of all the ruin and
+confusion, the heresies and moral pravities of the last days, standing
+forth in his own distinct individuality, "perfect, thoroughly furnished
+unto all good works." And, may we not ask, what more could be said in
+the Church's brightest days? If we go back to the day of Pentecost
+itself, with all its display of power and glory, have we anything
+higher, or better, or more solid than that which is set forth in the
+words "perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works?"
+
+And is it not a signal mercy for anyone who desires to stand for God, in
+a dark and evil day, to be told that, spite of all the darkness, the
+evil, the error and confusion, he possesses that which can make a child
+_wise_ unto salvation, and make a man _perfect_ and thoroughly furnished
+unto all good works? Assuredly it is; and we have to praise our God for
+it, with full and overflowing hearts. To have access, in days like
+these, to the eternal fountain of inspiration, where the child and the
+man can meet and drink and be satisfied--that fountain so clear that the
+honest, simple soul can understand; and so deep that you cannot reach
+the bottom--that peerless, priceless volume which meets the child at his
+mother's knee, and makes him wise unto salvation; and meets the man in
+the most advanced stage of his practical career and makes him perfect
+and fully furnished for the exigence of every hour.
+
+However, we shall have occasion, ere we close this paper, to look more
+particularly at "the man of God," and to consider what is the special
+force and meaning of this term. That there is very much more involved in
+it than is ordinarily understood, we are most fully persuaded.
+
+There are three aspects in which man is presented in Scripture: in the
+first place, we have _man in nature_; secondly, _a man in Christ_; and,
+thirdly, we have, _the man of God_. It might perhaps be thought that the
+second and third are synonymous; but we shall find a very material
+difference between them. True, I must be a man in Christ before I can be
+a man of God; but they are by no means interchangeable terms.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, consider
+
+
+MAN IN NATURE.
+
+This is a very comprehensive term indeed. Under this title, we shall
+find every possible shade of character, temperament, and disposition.
+Man, on the platform of nature, graduates between two extremes. You may
+view him at the very highest point of cultivation, or at the very lowest
+point of degradation. You may see him surrounded with all the
+advantages, the refinements and the so-called dignities of civilized
+life; or you may find him sunk in all the shameless and barbarous
+customs of savage existence. You may view him in the almost numberless
+grades, ranks, classes, and _castes_ into which the human family has
+distributed itself.
+
+Then again, in the self-same class, or caste, you will find the most
+vivid contrasts, in the way of character, temper, and disposition.
+There, for example, is a man of such an atrocious temper that he is the
+very horror of every one who knows him. He is the plague of his family
+circle, and a perfect nuisance to society. He can be compared to a
+porcupine with all his quills perpetually up; and if you meet him once
+you will not wish to meet him again. There, on the other hand, is a man
+of the sweetest disposition and most amiable temper. He is just as
+attractive as the other is repulsive. He is a tender, loving, faithful
+husband; a kind, affectionate, considerate father; a thoughtful,
+liberal master; a kindly, genial neighbor; a generous friend, beloved by
+all, and justly so: the more you know him the more you must like him,
+and if you meet him once you are sure to wish to meet him again.
+
+Further, you may meet on the platform of nature, a man who is false and
+deceitful to the very heart's core. He delights in lying, cheating, and
+deception. He is mean and contemptible in his thoughts, words and ways;
+a man to whom all who know him would like to give as wide a berth as
+possible. And, on the other hand, you may meet a man of high principle,
+frank, honorable, generous, upright; one who would scorn to tell a lie,
+or do a mean act; whose reputation is unblemished, his character
+unexceptionable. His word would be taken for any amount; he is one with
+whom all who know him would be glad to have dealings; an almost perfect
+natural character; a man of whom it might be said, he lacks but one
+thing.
+
+Finally, as you pass to and fro on nature's platform, you may meet the
+atheist who affects to deny the existence of God; the infidel who denies
+God's revelation; the skeptic and the rationalist who disbelieves
+everything. And, on the other hand, you will meet the superstitious
+devotee who spends his time in prayers and fastings, ordinances, and
+ceremonies; and who feels sure he is earning a place in heaven by a
+wearisome round of religious observances that actually _un_fit him for
+the proper functions and responsibilities of domestic and social life.
+You may meet men of every imaginable shade of religious opinion, high
+church, low church, broad church, and no church; men who, without a
+spark of divine life in their souls, are contending for the powerless
+forms of a traditionary religion.
+
+Now, there is one grand and awfully solemn fact common to all these
+various classes, castes, grades, shades, and conditions of men who
+occupy the platform of nature, and that is there is not so much as a
+single link between them and heaven--there is no link with the Man who
+sits at the right hand of God--no link with the new creation. They are
+unconverted, and without Christ. As regards God, and Christ, and eternal
+life, and heaven, they all--however they may differ morally, socially,
+and religiously--stand on one common ground; they are far from God--they
+are out of Christ--they are in their sins--they are in the flesh--they
+are of the world--they are on their way to hell.
+
+There is really no getting over this, if we are to listen to the voice
+of Holy Scripture. False teachers may deny it. Infidels may pretend to
+smile contemptuously at the idea; but Scripture is plain as can be. It
+speaks in manifold places of a fire that NEVER shall be quenched, and of
+a worm that shall never die.
+
+It is the very height of folly for anyone to seek to set aside the plain
+testimony of the word of God on this most solemn and weighty subject.
+Better far to let that testimony fall, with all its weight and
+authority, upon the heart and conscience--infinitely better to flee
+from the wrath to come than to attempt to deny that it is coming, and
+that, when it does come, it will abide forever--yes, forever, and
+forever, and forever! Tremendous thought!--over-whelming consideration!
+May it speak with living power to the soul of the unconverted reader,
+leading him to cry out in all sincerity, "What is to be done?"
+
+Yes, here is the question, "What must I do to be saved?" The divine
+answer is wrapped up in the following words which dropped from the lips
+of two of Christ's very highest and most gifted ambassadors. "Repent and
+be converted," said Peter to the Jew. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
+and thou shalt be saved and thy house," said Paul to the Gentile. And
+again, the latter of these two blessed messengers, in summing up his own
+ministry, thus defines the whole matter, "Testifying both to the Jews,
+and also to the Greeks, repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord
+Jesus Christ."
+
+How simple! But how real! How deep! How thoroughly practical! It is not
+a nominal, national head belief. It is not saying, in mere flippant
+profession, "I believe." Ah! no; it is something far deeper and more
+serious than this. It is much to be feared that a large amount of the
+professed faith of this our day is deplorably superficial, and that many
+who throng our preaching rooms and lecture halls are, after all, but
+wayside and stony ground hearers. The plough of conviction and
+repentance has not passed over them. The fallow ground has never been
+broken up. The arrow of conviction has never pierced them through and
+through. They have never been broken down, turned inside out--thoroughly
+revolutionized. The preaching of the gospel to all such is just like
+scattering precious seed on the hard pavement or the beaten highway. It
+does not penetrate. It does not enter into the depths of the soul; the
+conscience is not reached; the heart is not affected. The seed lies on
+the surface, it has not taken root, and is soon carried away.
+
+Nor is this all. It is also much to be feared that many of the preachers
+of the present day, in their efforts to make the gospel simple, lose
+sight of the abiding necessity of repentance, and the essential
+necessity of the action of the Holy Ghost, without which so-called faith
+is a mere human exercise and passes away like the vapors of the morning,
+leaving the soul still in the region of nature, satisfied with itself,
+daubed with the untempered mortar of a merely human gospel that cries
+peace, peace, where there is no peace, but the most imminent danger.
+
+All this is very serious, and should lead the soul into profound
+exercise. We want the reader to give it his grave and immediate
+consideration. We would put this pointed question to him, which we
+entreat him to answer, now, "_Have you got eternal life_?" Say, dear
+friend, _have you_? "He that believeth on the Son of God hath eternal
+life." Grand reality! If you have not got this, you have nothing.
+
+You are still on that platform of nature of which we have spoken so
+much. Yes, you are still there; no matter though you were the very
+fairest specimen to be found there--amiable, polished, affable, frank,
+generous, truthful, upright, honorable, attractive, beloved, learned,
+cultivated, and even pious after a merely human fashion. You may be all
+this, and yet not have a single pulsation of eternal life in your soul.
+
+This may sound harsh and severe. But it is true; and you will find out
+its truth sooner or later. We want you to find it out _now_. We want you
+to see that you are a thorough bankrupt, in the fullest sense of that
+word. A deed of bankruptcy has been filed against you in the high court
+of heaven. Here are its terms, "_They that are in the flesh cannot
+please God_." Have you ever pondered these words? Have you ever seen
+their application to yourself? So long as you are unrepentant,
+unconverted, unbelieving, you cannot do a single thing to please
+God--not one. "In the flesh" and "on the platform of nature" mean one
+and the same thing; and so long as you are there, you cannot please God.
+"You must be born again"--must be renewed in the very deepest springs of
+your being: unrenewed nature is wholly unable to see, and unfit to
+enter, the kingdom of God. You must be born of water and of the
+Spirit--that is by the living word of God, and of the Holy Ghost. There
+is no other way by which to enter the kingdom. It is not by
+self-improvement, but by new birth we reach the blessed kingdom of God.
+"That which is born of the flesh is flesh;" and "the flesh profiteth
+nothing," for "they that are in the flesh cannot please God."
+
+How distinct is all this! How pointed! How personal! How earnestly we
+desire that the unawakened or undecided reader should, just now, take it
+home to himself, as though he were the only individual upon the face of
+the earth. It will not do to generalize--to rest satisfied with saying,
+"We are all sinners." No; it is an intensely individual matter. "You
+_must_ be born again." If you again ask, "How?" hear the divine response
+from the lips of the Master Himself, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in
+the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up; that whosoever
+believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."
+
+Here is the sovereign remedy, for every poor broken-hearted,
+conscience-smitten, hell-deserving sinner--for every one who owns
+himself lost--who confesses his sins, and judges himself--for every
+weary, heavy-laden, sin-burdened soul--here is God's own blessed
+promise: Jesus died, that you might live. He was condemned, that you
+might be justified. He drank the cup of wrath, that you might drink the
+cup of salvation. Behold Him hanging on yonder cross for thee. See what
+He did for thee. Believe that He satisfied, on your behalf, _all_ the
+claims of justice before the throne of God. See all your sins laid on
+Him--your guilt imputed to Him--your entire condition represented and
+disposed of by Him. See His atoning death answering perfectly for all
+that was or ever could be brought against you. See Him rising from the
+dead, having accomplished all. See Him ascending into the heavens,
+bearing in His divine Person the marks of His finished atonement. See
+Him seated on the throne of God, in the very highest place of power. See
+Him crowned with glory and honor. Believe in Him, and you will receive
+remission of sins, the gift of eternal life, the seal of the Holy Ghost.
+You will pass off the platform of nature--you will be "_A man in
+Christ_."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[I.] The reader should be informed that the word which is rendered
+"perfect," in the above passage, occurs but this once in the entire New
+Testament. It is [Greek: artios] (artios) and signifies, ready,
+complete, well fitted; as an instrument with all its strings, a machine
+with all its parts, a body with all its limbs, joints, muscles, and
+sinews. The usual word for "perfect" is [Greek: teleios] (teleios) which
+signifies the reaching of the moral _end_, in any particular thing.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+To all whose eyes have been opened to see their true condition by
+nature, who have been brought under the convicting power of the Holy
+Ghost, who know something of the real meaning of a broken heart and a
+contrite spirit--to all such it must be of the deepest possible interest
+to know the divine secret of rest and peace. If it be true--and it is
+true, because God says it--that "they that are _in the flesh_ cannot
+please God," then how is any one to get _out of the flesh_? How can he
+pass off the platform of nature? How can he reach the blessed position
+of those to whom the Holy Ghost declares, "Ye are not in the flesh but
+in the Spirit"?
+
+These are momentous questions, surely. For, be it thoroughly known and
+ever remembered, that no improvement of our old nature is of any value
+whatsoever as to our standing before God. It may be all very well, so
+far as this life is concerned, for a man to improve himself by every
+means within his reach, to cultivate his mind, furnish his memory,
+elevate his moral tone, advance his social position. All this is quite
+true, so true as not to need a moment's argument.
+
+But, admitting in the fullest manner the truth of all this, it leaves
+wholly untouched the solemn and sweeping statement of the inspired
+apostle that, "they that are in the flesh cannot please God." There
+_must_ be a new standing altogether, and this new standing cannot be
+reached by any change in the old nature--by any doings or formalities,
+feelings, ordinances of religion, prayers, alms or sacraments. Do what
+you will with nature and it is nature still. "That which is born of the
+flesh is flesh;" and do what you will with flesh you cannot make it
+spirit. There must be a new life--a life flowing from the new man, the
+last Adam, who has become, in resurrection, the Head of a new race.
+
+How is this most precious life to be had? Hear the memorable
+answer--hear it, anxious reader, hear it and live. "Verily, verily, I
+say unto you, he that heareth My word, and believeth on Him that sent
+Me, _hath_ everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment; but _is
+passed_ from death unto life" (John v. 24).
+
+Here we have a total change of standing; a passing from death to life;
+from a position in which there is not so much as a single link with
+heaven, with the new creation, with the risen Man in glory, into a
+position in which there is not a single link with the first man, with
+the old creation, and this present evil world. And all this is through
+believing on the Son of God--not _saying_ we believe, but really, truly,
+heartily, believing on the Son of God; not by a mere intellectual faith,
+but believing with the heart.
+
+Thus only does any one become
+
+
+A MAN IN CHRIST.
+
+Every true believer is a man in Christ. Whether it be the convert of
+yesterday or the hoary headed saint of fifty or sixty years' standing as
+a Christian, each stands in precisely the same blessed position--he is
+in Christ. There can be no difference here. The practical _state_ may
+differ immensely; but the positive standing is one and the same. As on
+the platform of nature, you may meet with every imaginable shade, class,
+grade, and condition (though all having one common standing) so on the
+new, the divine, the heavenly platform, you may meet with every possible
+variety of practical condition: the greatest possible difference in
+intelligence, experience, and spiritual power, while all possessing the
+same standing before God, all being in Christ. There can be no degrees
+as to standing, whatever there may be as to state. The convert of
+yesterday, and the hoary headed father in Christ are both alike as to
+standing. Each is a man in Christ, and there can be no advance upon
+this. We sometimes hear of, "The higher Christian life:" but, strictly
+speaking, there is no such thing as a higher or a lower Christian life,
+inasmuch as Christ is the life of every believer. It may be that those
+who use the term mean a right thing. They probably refer to the higher
+stages of the Christian life--greater nearness to God, greater likeness
+to Christ, greater power in the Spirit, more devotedness, more
+separation from the world, more entire consecration of heart to Christ.
+But all these things belong to the question of our _state_, not to our
+standing. This latter is absolute, settled, unchangeable. It is in
+Christ--nothing less, nothing more, nothing different. If we are not in
+Christ, we are in our sins; but if we are in Christ, we cannot possibly
+be higher, as to standing.
+
+If the reader will turn with us, for a few moments, to I Cor. xv. 45-48,
+he will find some powerful teaching on this great foundation truth. The
+apostle speaks here of two men, "The first and the second." And let it
+be carefully noted that the Second Man is by no means federally
+connected with the first, but stands in contrast with him--a new,
+independent, divine, heavenly source of life in Himself. The first man
+has been entirely set aside, as a ruined, guilty, outcast creature. We
+speak of Adam federally, as the head of a race. Personally, Adam was
+saved by grace; but if we look at him from a federal standpoint, we see
+him a hopeless wreck.
+
+The first man is an irremediable ruin. This is proved by the fact of a
+_second_ Man; for truly we may say of the men as of the covenants, "If
+the first had been found faultless, then should no place have been
+sought for the Second." But the very fact of a second Man being
+introduced demonstrates the hopeless ruin of the first. Why a second, if
+aught could be made of the first? If our old Adam nature was, in any
+wise, capable of being improved, there was no need of something new. But
+"they that are in the flesh cannot please God." "For in Christ Jesus
+neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
+creation" (Rom. viii.: Gal. vi.).
+
+There is immense moral power in all this line of teaching. It sets forth
+Christianity in vivid and striking contrast with every form of
+religiousness under the sun. Take Judaism or any other _ism_ that ever
+was known or that now exists in this world, and what do you find it to
+be? Is it not invariably something designed for the testing, or
+experimenting for the improvement, or advancement of the first man?
+Unquestionably.
+
+But what is Christianity? It is something entirely new--heavenly,
+spiritual, divine. It is based upon the cross of Christ, in the which
+the first man came to his end, where sin was put away, judgment borne,
+the old man crucified and put out of God's sight forever, so far as all
+believers are concerned. The cross closes, for faith, the history of the
+first man. "I am crucified with Christ," says the apostle. And again,
+"They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with its affections and
+lusts."
+
+Are these mere figures of speech, or do they set forth, in the mighty
+words of the Holy Ghost, the grand fact of the entire setting aside of
+the first man, as utterly worthless and condemned? The latter, most
+assuredly. Christianity starts, as it were, from the open grave of the
+Second Man, to pursue its bright career onward to eternal glory. It is,
+emphatically, a new creation in which there is not so much as a single
+shred of the old thing--for in this "all things are of God." And if
+"_all things_" are of God, there can be nothing of man.
+
+What rest! What comfort! What strength! What moral elevation! What sweet
+relief for the poor burdened soul that has been vainly seeking, for
+years perhaps, to find peace in self-improvement! What deliverance from
+the wretched thralldom of legality, in all its phases, to find out the
+precious secret that my guilty, ruined, bankrupt self--the very thing
+that I have been trying by every means in my power to improve, has been
+completely and forever set aside--that God is not looking for any
+amendment in it--that He has condemned it and put it to death in the
+cross of His Son! What an answer is here to the monk, the ascetic, and
+the ritualist! Oh, that it were understood in all its emancipating
+power! This heavenly, this divine, this spiritual Christianity. Surely
+were it only known in its living power and reality, it would deliver the
+soul from the thousand and one forms of corrupt religion whereby the
+arch-enemy and deceiver is ruining the souls of untold millions. We may
+truly say that Satan's most successful effort against the truth of the
+gospel, against the Christianity of the New Testament, is seen in the
+fact of his leading unconverted people to take and apply to themselves
+ordinances of the Christian religion, and to profess many of its
+doctrines. In this way he blinds their eyes to their own true condition,
+as utterly ruined, guilty, and undone; and strikes a deadly blow at the
+pure gospel of Christ. The best piece that was ever put upon the "old
+garment" of man's ruined nature is the profession of Christianity; and,
+the better the piece, the worse the rent. See Mark ii. 21.
+
+Let us bend an attentive ear to the following weighty words of the
+greatest teacher and best exponent of true Christianity the world ever
+saw. "For _I_ through the law _am dead_ to the law, that I might live to
+God. _I am crucified_ with Christ; nevertheless I live; yet _not I_, but
+Christ liveth in me." Mark this, "I--not I--but Christ." The old
+"I"--"crucified." The new "I"--Christ. "And the life which I now live in
+the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave
+Himself for me" (Gal. ii. 19, 20).[II.]
+
+This, and nothing else, is Christianity. It is not "the old man," the
+first man, becoming religious, even though the religion be the
+profession of the doctrines, and the adopting of the ordinances of
+Christianity. No; it is the death and burial of the old man--the old
+I--and becoming a new man in Christ. Every true believer is a new man in
+Christ. He has passed clean out of the old creation-standing--the old
+estate of sin and death, guilt and condemnation; and he has passed into
+a new creation-standing--a new estate of life and righteousness in a
+risen and glorified Christ, the Head of the new creation, the last Adam.
+
+Such is the position and unalterable standing of the feeblest believer
+in Christ. There is absolutely no other standing for any Christian. I
+must either be in the first man or in the Second. There is no _third_
+man, for the Second Man is the last Adam. There is no middle ground. I
+am either _in Christ_, or I am _in my sins_. But if I am in Christ, I am
+as He is before God. "As _He is so are we_, in this world." He does not
+say, "As He _was_" but "as He _is_." That is, the Christian is viewed by
+God as one with Christ--the Second Man, in whom He delights. We do not
+speak of His Deity, of course, which is incommunicable. That blessed One
+stood in the believer's stead--bore his sins, died his death, paid his
+penalty, represented him in every respect; took all his guilt, all his
+liabilities, all that pertained to him as a man in nature, stood as his
+substitute, in all the verity and reality of that word, and having
+divinely met his case, and borne his judgment, He rose from the dead,
+and is now the Head, the Representative, and the only true definition
+of the believer before God.
+
+To this most glorious and enfranchising truth, Scripture bears the
+amplest testimony. The passage which we have just quoted from Galatians
+is a most vivid, powerful, and condensed statement of it. And if the
+reader will turn to Rom. vi. he will find further evidence. We shall
+quote some of the weighty sentences.
+
+"What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may
+abound? Far be the thought. How shall _we that are dead_ to sin, live
+any longer therein? Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized to
+Jesus Christ were baptized to His death? Therefore we are buried with
+Him by baptism unto death; that _like as Christ_ was raised up from the
+dead by the glory of the Father, _even so we also_ should walk in
+newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of
+His death, we shall be also of resurrection. Knowing this that _our old
+man is crucified with Him_, that the body of sin might be destroyed,
+that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed
+from sin. Now if we _be dead with Christ_, we believe that we shall also
+live with Him. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, dieth no
+more; death hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died
+unto sin once; but in that He liveth He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon
+ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. vi. I-11).
+
+Reader, mark especially these words in the foregoing quotation--"We that
+_are dead_"--"We are buried with Him"--"_Like as Christ_ was raised ...
+_even so_ we also"--"Our old man is crucified with Him"--"Dead with
+Christ"--"Dead indeed unto sin." Do we really understand such
+utterances? Have we entered into their real force and meaning? Do we, in
+very deed, perceive their application to ourselves? These are searching
+questions for the heart, and needful. The real doctrine of Rom. vi. is
+but little apprehended. There are thousands who profess to believe in
+the atoning virtue of the death of Christ, but who do not see aught
+therein beyond the forgiveness of their _sins_. They do not see the
+crucifixion, death, and burial of the old man--the destruction of the
+body of sin--the condemnation of sin--the entire setting aside of the
+old system of things belonging to their first Adam condition--in a word
+their perfect identification with a dead and risen Christ. Hence it is
+that we press this grand and all-important line of truth upon the
+attention of the reader. It lies at the very base of all true
+Christianity, and forms an integral part of the truth of the gospel.
+
+Let us hearken to further evidence on the point. Hear what the apostle
+said to the Colossians: "Wherefore, if ye be _dead with Christ_ from the
+rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
+subject to ordinances, after the commandments and doctrines of men,
+[such as] touch not, taste not, handle not"?--thus it is that human
+ordinances speak to us, telling us not to touch this, not to taste that,
+not to handle the other, as if there could possibly be any divine
+principle involved in such things--"which all are to perish with the
+using;" and "which, have indeed a show of wisdom in will worship, and
+humility, and neglecting of the body--not in any honor--to the
+satisfying of the flesh. If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those
+things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God.
+Set your mind on things that are above, not on things on the earth. For
+_ye have died_ and your life is hid with Christ in God" (Col. ii., iii.
+2).
+
+Here, again, let us inquire how far we enter into the true force,
+meaning, and application of such words as these--"Why as though _living
+in the world_," etc.? Are we living in the world or living in
+heaven--which? The true Christian is one who has died out of this
+present evil world. He has no more to do with it than Christ. "Like as
+Christ ... even so we." He is dead to the law--dead to sin: alive in
+Christ--alive to God--alive in the new creation. He belongs to heaven.
+He is enrolled as a citizen of heaven. His religion, his politics, his
+morals are all heavenly. He is a heavenly man walking on the earth, and
+fulfilling all the duties which belong to the varied relationships in
+which the hand of God has placed him, and in which the word of God most
+fully recognizes him, and amply guides him, such as husband, father,
+master, child, servant, and such like. The Christian is not a monk, an
+ascetic, or a hermit. He is, we repeat, a heavenly, spiritual man, _in_
+the world, but not _of_ it. He is like a foreigner, so far as his
+residence here is concerned. He is in the body, as to the fact of his
+condition; but not in the flesh as to the principle of his standing. He
+is _a man in Christ_.
+
+Ere closing this article, we should like to call the reader's attention
+to 2 Cor. xii. In it he will find, at once, the _positive standing_ and
+the _possible state_ of the believer. The standing is fixed and
+unalterable, as set forth in that one comprehensive sentence--"A man in
+Christ." The state may graduate between the two extremes presented in
+the opening and closing verses of this chapter. A Christian may be in
+the third heaven, amid the seraphic visions of that blessed and holy
+place; or he may, if not watchful, sink down into all the gross and evil
+things named in vers. 20, 21.
+
+It may be asked, "Is it possible that a true child of God could ever be
+found in such a low moral condition?" Alas! alas! reader, it is indeed
+possible. There is no depth of sin and folly into which a Christian is
+not capable of plunging, if not kept by the grace of God. Even the
+blessed apostle himself, when he came down from the third heaven, needed
+"a thorn in the flesh" to keep him from being "exalted above measure."
+We might suppose that a man who had been up in that bright and blessed
+region could never again feel the stirrings of pride. But the plain fact
+is that even the third heavens cannot cure the flesh. It is utterly
+incorrigible and must be judged and kept under, day by day, hour by
+hour, moment by moment, else it will cut out plenty of sorrowful work
+for us.
+
+Still, the believer's standing is in Christ, forever justified,
+accepted, perfect in Him. And, moreover, he must ever judge his state by
+his standing, never his standing by his state. To attempt to reach the
+standing by my state is _legalism_; to refuse to judge my state by the
+standing is _antinomianism_. Both--though so diverse one from the
+other--are alike false, alike opposed to the truth of God, alike
+offensive to the Holy Ghost, alike removed from the divine idea of "A
+man in Christ."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[II.] The reader will distinguish between the expression "in the flesh"
+as used in Gal. ii. 20, and in Rom. viii. 8, 9. In the former, it simply
+refers to our condition as in the body. In the latter, it sets forth the
+principle or ground of our standing. The believer is in the body, as to
+the fact of his condition; but he is not in the flesh as to the
+principle of his standing.
+
+
+PART III.
+
+Having considered the deeply interesting questions of "a man in nature"
+and "a man in Christ," it remains for us now to consider, in this third
+and last Part, the deeply practical subject of the title of this paper,
+namely,
+
+
+THE MAN OF GOD.
+
+It would be a great mistake to suppose that every Christian is a man of
+God. Even in Paul's day--in the days of Timothy, there were many who
+bore the Christian name who were very far indeed from acquitting
+themselves as men of God, that is, as those who were really God's men,
+in the midst of the failure and error which, even then, had begun to
+creep in.
+
+It is the perception of this fact that renders the second Epistle to
+Timothy so profoundly interesting. In it we have what we may call ample
+provision for the man of God, in the day in which he is called to
+live--a dark, evil, and perilous day, most surely, in which all who will
+live godly must keep the eye steadily fixed on Christ Himself--His
+name--His person--His Word, if they would make any headway against the
+tide.
+
+It is hardly possible to read second Timothy without being struck with
+its intensely individual character. The very opening address is
+strikingly characteristic. "I thank God, whom I serve from my
+forefathers with pure conscience, that without ceasing I have
+remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day."
+
+What glowing words are these! How affecting to harken thus to one man of
+God pouring the deep and tender feelings of his great, large, loving
+heart into the heart of another man of God! The dear apostle was
+beginning to feel the chilling influence that was fast creeping over the
+professing Church. He was tasting the bitterness of disappointed hopes.
+He found himself deserted by many who had once professed to be his
+friends and associates in that glorious work to which he had consecrated
+all the energies of his great soul. Many were becoming "ashamed of the
+testimony of our Lord, and of His prisoner." It was not that they
+altogether ceased to be Christians, or abandoned the Christian
+profession; but they turned their backs upon Paul, and left him alone in
+the day of trial.
+
+Now, it is under such circumstances that the heart turns, with peculiar
+tenderness, to individual faithfulness and affection. If one is
+surrounded, on all hands, by true-hearted confessors--by a great cloud
+of witnesses--a large army of good soldiers of Jesus Christ--if the tide
+of devotedness is flowing around one and bearing him on its bosom, he is
+not so dependent upon individual sympathy and fellowship.
+
+But, on the other hand, when the general condition of things is low,
+when the majority prove faithless, when old associates are dropping off,
+it is then that personal grace and true affection are specially valued.
+The dark background of general declension throws individual devotedness
+into beauteous relief.
+
+Thus it is in this exquisite Epistle which now lies open before us. It
+does the heart good to harken to the breathings of the aged prisoner of
+Jesus Christ, who can speak of serving God from his forefathers with
+pure conscience, and of unceasing remembrance of his beloved son and
+true yoke-fellow.
+
+It is specially interesting to notice that, both in reference to his own
+history and that of his beloved friend, Paul goes back to facts of very
+early date--facts in their own individual paths, facts prior to their
+meeting one another, and prior to what we may call their church
+associations--important and interesting as these things surely are in
+their place. Paul had served God, from his forefathers, with pure
+conscience, before he had known a fellow-Christian. This he could
+continue to do though deserted by all his Christian companions. So also,
+in the case of his faithful friend, he says, "I call to remembrance the
+unfeigned faith that is in thee, which dwelt in thy grandmother Lois,
+and thy mother Eunice: and I am persuaded that is in thee also."
+
+This is very touching and very beautiful. We cannot but be struck with
+such references to the previous history of those beloved men of God. The
+"pure conscience" of the one, and "the unfeigned faith" of the other,
+indicate two grand moral qualities which all must possess if they would
+prove true men of God in a dark and evil day. The former has its
+immediate reference, in all things, to the one living and true God; the
+latter draws all its springs from Him. That, leads us to walk _before_
+God; this, enables us to walk _with_ Him. Both together are
+indispensable in forming the character of the true man of God.
+
+It is utterly impossible to over-estimate the importance of keeping a
+pure conscience before God, in all our ways. It is positively
+invaluable. It leads us to refer everything to God. It keeps us from
+being tossed hither and thither by every wave and current of human
+opinion. It imparts stability and consistency to the entire course and
+character.
+
+We are all in imminent danger of falling under human influence--of
+shaping our way according to the thoughts of our fellow-man, adopting
+his cue, or mounting his hobby.
+
+All this is destructive of the character of the man of God. If you take
+your tone from your fellow, if you suffer yourself to be formed in a
+merely human mould, if your faith stands in the wisdom of man, if your
+object is to please men, then instead of being a man of God, you will
+become a member of a party or clique. You will lose that lovely
+freshness and originality so essential to the individual servant of
+Christ, and become marked by the peculiar and dominant features of a
+sect.
+
+Let us carefully guard against this. It has ruined many a valuable
+servant. Many who might have proved really useful workmen in the
+vineyard, have failed completely through not maintaining the integrity
+of their individual character and path. They began with God. They
+started on their course in the exercise of a pure conscience, and in the
+pursuit of that path which a divine hand had marked out for them. There
+was a bloom, a freshness, and a verdure about them, most refreshing to
+all who came in contact with them. They were taught of God. They drew
+near to the eternal fountain of Holy Scripture and drank for themselves.
+Perhaps they did not know much; but what they did know was real because
+they received it from God, and it turned to good account for "there is
+much food in the tillage of the poor."
+
+But, instead of going on with God, they allowed themselves to get under
+human influence; they got truth secondhand, and became the vendors of
+other men's thoughts; instead of drinking at the fountain head, they
+drank at the streams of human opinion; they lost originality,
+simplicity, freshness, and power, and became mere copyists, if not
+miserable caricatures. Instead of giving forth those "rivers of living
+water" which flow from the true believer in Jesus, they dropped into the
+barren technicalities and cut and dry common-places of mere systematized
+religion.
+
+Beloved Christian reader, all this must be sedulously guarded against.
+We must watch against it, pray against it, believe against it, and live
+against it. Let us seek to serve God, with a pure conscience. Let us
+live in His own immediate presence, in the light of His blessed
+countenance, in the holy intimacy of personal communion with Him,
+through the power of the Holy Ghost. This, we may rest assured, is the
+true secret of power for the man of God, at all times, and under all
+circumstances. We must walk with God, in the deep and cherished sense of
+our own personal responsibility to Him. This is what we understand by "a
+pure conscience."
+
+But will this tend, in the smallest degree, to lessen our sense of the
+value of true fellowship, of holy communion with all those who are true
+to Christ? By no means; indeed it is the very thing which will impart
+power, energy, and depth of tone to the fellowship. If every "man in
+Christ" were only acquitting himself thoroughly as "a man of God," what
+blessed fellowship there would be! what heart work! what glow and
+unmistakable power! How different from the dull formalism of a merely
+nominal assent to certain accredited dogmas of a party, on the one hand,
+and from the mere _esprit de corps_ of cliquism, on the other.
+
+There are few terms in such common use and so little understood as
+"fellowship." In numberless cases, it merely indicates the fact of a
+nominal membership in some religious denomination--a fact which
+furnishes no guarantee whatsoever of living communion with Christ, or
+personal devotedness to His cause. If all who are nominally "in fellow
+ship" were acquitting themselves thoroughly as men of God, what a very
+different condition of things we should be privileged to witness!
+
+But what is fellowship? It is, in its very highest expression, having
+one common object with God, and taking part in the same portion; and
+that object, that portion, is Christ--Christ known and enjoyed through
+the Holy Ghost. This is fellowship with God. What a privilege! What a
+dignity! What unspeakable blessedness! To be allowed to have a common
+object and a common portion with God Himself! To delight in the One in
+whom He delights! There can be nothing higher, nothing better, nothing
+more precious than this. Not even in heaven itself shall we know aught
+beyond this. Our own condition will, thank God, be vastly different.
+
+We shall be done with a body of sin and death, and be clothed with a
+body of glory. We shall be done with a sinful, sorrowful, distracting
+world, where all is directly opposed to God and to us, and we shall
+breathe the pure, invigorating atmosphere of that bright and blessed
+world above.
+
+For, in so far as our fellowship is real, it is now as it shall be then,
+"with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ"--"in the light," and by
+the power of the Holy Ghost.
+
+Thus much as to our fellowship with God. And, as regards our fellowship
+one with another, it is simply as we walk in the light; as we read, "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" (I John i. 7). We can only have fellowship one with another as we
+walk in the immediate presence of God. There may be a vast amount of
+mere intercourse without one particle of divine fellowship. Alas! alas!
+a great deal of what passes for Christian fellowship is nothing more
+than the merest religious gossip--the vapid, worthless, soul-withering
+chit-chat of the religious world, than which nothing can be more
+miserably unprofitable. True Christian fellowship can only be enjoyed in
+the light. It is when we are individually walking with God, in the power
+of personal communion, that we really have fellowship one with another,
+and this fellowship consists in real heart enjoyment of Christ as our
+one object, our common portion. It is not heartless traffic in certain
+favorite doctrines which we receive to hold in common. It is not morbid
+sympathy with those who think, and see, and feel with us in some
+favorite theory or dogma. It is something quite different from all this.
+It is delighting in Christ, in common with all those who are walking in
+the light. It is attachment to Him, to His person, His name, His Word,
+His cause, His people. It is joint consecration of heart and soul to
+that blessed One who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own
+blood, and brought us into the light of God's presence, there to walk
+with Him and with one another. This, and nothing less, is Christian
+fellowship; and where this is really understood it will lead us to pause
+and consider what we say when we declare, in any given case, "such an
+one is in fellowship."
+
+But we must proceed with our Epistle, and there see what full provision
+there is for the man of God, however dark the day may be in which his
+lot is cast.
+
+We have seen something of the importance--yea, rather, we should say the
+indispensable necessity of "a pure conscience," and "unfeigned faith,"
+in the moral equipment of God's man. These qualities lie at the very
+base of the entire edifice of practical godliness which must ever
+characterize the genuine man of God.
+
+But there is more than this. The edifice must be erected as well as the
+foundation laid. The man of God has to work on amid all sorts of
+difficulties, trials, sorrows, disappointments, obstacles, questions
+and controversies. He has his niche to fill, his path to tread, his work
+to do. Come what may, he must serve. The enemy may oppose; the world may
+frown; the Church may be in ruins around him; false brethren may thwart,
+hinder, and desert; strife, controversy, and division may arise and
+darken the atmosphere; still the man of God must move on, regardless of
+all these things, working, serving, testifying, according to the sphere
+in which the hand of God has placed him, and according to the gift
+bestowed upon him. How is this to be done? Not only by keeping a pure
+conscience and the exercise of an unfeigned faith--priceless,
+indispensable qualities! but, further, he has to harken to the following
+weighty word of exhortation--"Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that
+thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the putting on of my
+hands."
+
+The gift must be stirred up, else it may become useless if allowed to
+lie dormant. There is great danger of letting the gift drop into disuse
+through the discouraging influence of surrounding circumstances. A gift
+unused will soon become useless; whereas, a gift stirred up and
+diligently used grows and expands. It is not enough to possess a gift,
+we must wait upon the gift, cultivate it, and exercise it. This is the
+way to improve it.
+
+And observe the special force of the expression, "the gift of God." In
+Eph. iv. we read of "the gift of Christ," and there, too, we find all
+the gifts, from the highest to the lowest range, flowing down from
+Christ the risen and glorified Head of His body, the Church. But in
+second Timothy, we have it defined as "the gift of God." True it
+is--blessed be His holy name!--our Lord Christ is God over all, blessed
+forever, so that the gift of Christ is the gift of God. But we may rest
+assured there is never any distinction in Scripture without a
+difference; and hence there is some good reason for the expression "gift
+of God." We doubt not it is in full harmony with the nature and object
+of the Epistle in which it occurs. It is "the gift of God" communicated
+to "the man of God" to be used by him notwithstanding the hopeless ruin
+of the professing Church, and spite of all the difficulty, darkness, and
+discouragement of the day in which his lot is cast.
+
+The man of God must not allow himself to be hindered in the diligent
+cultivation and exercise of his gift, though everything seems to look
+dark and forbidding, for "God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but
+of power and of love, and of a sound mind." Here we have "God" again
+introduced to our thoughts, and that, too, in a most gracious manner, as
+furnishing His man with the very thing he needs to meet the special
+exigence of his day--"The spirit of power, and of love, and of a sound
+mind."
+
+Marvelous combination! Truly, an exquisite compound after the art of the
+apothecary! Power, love, and wisdom! How perfect! Not a single
+ingredient too much. Not one too little. If it were merely a spirit of
+power, it might lead one to carry things with a high hand. Were it
+merely a spirit of love, it might lead one to sacrifice truth for peace'
+sake; or indolently to tolerate error and evil rather than give offence.
+But the power is softened by the love; and the love is strengthened by
+the power; and, moreover, the spirit of wisdom comes in to adjust both
+the power and the love. In a word, it is a divinely perfect and
+beautiful provision for the man of God--the very thing he needs for "the
+last days" so perilous, so difficult, so full of all sorts of perplexing
+questions and apparent contradictions. If one were to be asked what he
+would consider most necessary for such days as these? surely he should,
+at once, say, "power, love, and soundness of mind." Well, blessed be
+God, these are the very things which He has graciously given to form the
+character, shape the way, and govern the conduct of the man of God,
+right on to the end.
+
+But there is further provision and further exhortation for the man of
+God. "Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of
+me His prisoner; but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel
+according to the power of God." In pentecostal days, when the rich and
+mighty tide of divine grace was flowing in, and bearing thousands of
+ransomed souls upon its bosom; when all were of one heart and one mind;
+when those outside were overawed by the extraordinary manifestations of
+divine power, it was rather a question of partaking of the _triumphs_ of
+the gospel, than its afflictions. But in the days contemplated in second
+Timothy, all is changed. The beloved apostle is a lonely prisoner at
+Rome; all in Asia had forsaken him; Hymeneus and Philetus are denying
+the resurrection; all sorts of heresies, errors, and evils are creeping
+in; the landmarks are in danger of being swept away by the tide of
+apostasy and corruption.
+
+In the face of all this, the man of God has to brace himself up for the
+occasion. He has to endure hardness; to hold fast the form of sound
+words; he has to keep the good thing committed to him; to be strong in
+the grace that is in Christ Jesus; to keep himself _disentangled_
+--however he may be _engaged_; he must keep himself free as a soldier;
+he must cling to God's sure foundation; he must purge himself from the
+dishonorable vessels in the great house; he must _flee_ youthful lusts,
+and _follow_ righteousness, faith, love, peace, with them that call on
+the Lord out of a pure heart. He must avoid foolish and unlearned
+questions. He must turn away from formal and heartless professors. He
+must be thoroughly furnished for all good works, perfectly equipped
+through a knowledge of the Holy Scriptures. He must preach the Word; be
+instant in season and out of season. He must watch in all things; endure
+afflictions; and do the work of an evangelist.
+
+What a category for the man of God! Who is sufficient for these things?
+Where is the spiritual power to be had for such works? It is to be had
+at the mercy-seat. It is to be found in earnest, patient, believing,
+waiting upon the living God, and in no other way. All our springs are
+in Him. We have only to draw upon Him. He is sufficient for the darkest
+day. Difficulties are nothing to Him, and they are bread for faith. Yes,
+beloved reader, difficulties of the most formidable nature are simply
+bread for faith, and the man of faith will develop and grow strong
+thereby. Unbelief says, "There is a lion in the way;" but faith slays
+the lion that roars along the path of the nazarite of God. It is the
+privilege of the true believer to rise above all the hostile influences
+which surround him, no matter what they are, or from whence they spring;
+and, in the calmness and brightness of the divine presence, enjoy as
+high communion, and taste as rich and rare privileges as ever were known
+in the Church's brightest days.
+
+Let us remember this--every man of God needs to remember it: there is no
+comfort, no peace, no strength, no moral power, no true elevation to be
+derived from looking at the ruins. We must look up out of the ruins to
+the place where our Lord Christ has taken His seat, at the right hand of
+the Majesty in the heavens. Or rather, to speak more according to our
+true position, we should look down from our place in the heavens upon
+all the ruins of earth. To realize our place in Christ, and to be
+occupied in heart and soul with Him, is the true secret of power to
+carry ourselves as men of God. To have Christ ever before us--His work
+for the conscience, His person for the heart, His Word for the path, is
+the one grand, sovereign, divine remedy for a ruined self, a ruined
+world, a ruined Church.
+
+But we close. Very gladly would we linger, in company with the reader,
+over the contents of this most precious second Timothy. Truly refreshing
+would it be to dwell upon all its touching allusions, its earnest
+appeals, its weighty exhortations. But this would demand a volume, and
+hence we must leave the Christian reader to study the Epistle for
+himself, praying that the eternal Spirit who indited it may unfold and
+apply it in living power to his soul, so that he may be enabled to
+acquit himself as an earnest, faithful, whole-hearted man of God and
+servant of Christ, in the midst of a scene of hollow profession, and
+heartless worldly religiousness.
+
+May the good Lord stir us all up to a more thorough consecration of
+ourselves, in spirit, soul, and body--all we are and all we have--to His
+service! We think we can really say we long for this--long for it, in
+the deep sense of our lack of it--long for it, more intensely, as we
+grow increasingly sick of the unreal condition of things within and
+around us.
+
+O beloved Christian, let us earnestly, believingly, and perseveringly
+cry to our own ever gracious God to make us more real, more
+whole-hearted, more thoroughly devoted to our Lord Jesus Christ in all
+things.
+
+ IN THE FATHER'S HOUSE
+
+ "The wanderer no more will roam,
+ The lost one to the fold hath come,
+ The prodigal is welcomed home,
+ O Lamb of God, through Thee!
+
+ "Though clothed in rags, by sin defiled,
+ The Father did embrace His child;
+ And I am pardoned, reconciled,
+ O Lamb of God, through Thee!
+
+ "It is the Father's joy to bless;
+ His love has found for me a dress,
+ A robe of spotless righteousness,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "And now my famished soul is fed,
+ A feast of love for me is spread,
+ I feed upon the children's bread,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Yea, in the fulness of His grace,
+ God put me in the children's place,
+ Where I may gaze upon His face,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Not half His Love can I express,
+ Yet, Lord, with joy my lips confess,
+ This blessed portion I possess,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Thy precious name it is I bear,
+ In Thee I am to God brought near,
+ And all the Father's love I share,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!"
+
+
+
+
+DECISION FOR CHRIST
+
+
+In approaching the subject of "Decision for Christ," there are two or
+three obstacles which lie in our way--two or three difficulties which
+hang around the question, which we would fain remove, if possible, in
+order that the reader may be able to view the matter on its own proper
+ground, and in its own proper bearings.
+
+In the first place, we encounter a serious difficulty in the fact that
+very few of us, comparatively, are in a condition of soul to appreciate
+the subject, or to suffer a word of exhortation thereon. We are, for the
+most part, so occupied with the question of our soul's salvation,--so
+taken up with matters affecting ourselves, our peace, our liberty, our
+comfort, our deliverance from the wrath to come, our interest in
+Christ,--that we have but little heart for aught that purely concerns
+Christ Himself--His name, His person, His cause, His glory.
+
+There are, we may say, two things which lie at the foundation of all
+true decision for Christ, namely, a conscience purged by the blood of
+Jesus, and a heart that bows with reverent submission to the authority
+of His Word in all things. Now we do not mean to dwell upon these things
+in this paper; first, because we are anxious to get at once to our
+immediate theme; and secondly, because we have so often dwelt on the
+subject of establishing the conscience in the peace of the gospel, and
+on setting before the heart the paramount claims of the word of God. We
+merely refer to them here for the purpose of reminding the reader that
+they are absolutely essential materials in forming the basis of decision
+for Christ. If my conscience is ill at ease, if I am in doubt as to my
+salvation, if I am filled with "anxious thought" as to whether I am a
+child of God or not, decision for Christ is out of the question. I must
+know that Christ died for me before I can intelligently and happily live
+for Him.
+
+So, also, if there be any reserve in the heart as to my entire
+subjection to the authority of Christ as my Lord and Master; if I am
+keeping some chamber of my heart, be it ever so remote, ever so small,
+closed against the light of His Word, it must of necessity hinder my
+whole-hearted decision for Him in this world. In a word, I must know
+that _Christ is mine_ and _I am His_ ere my course down here can be one
+of unswerving, uncompromising decision for Him. If the reader hesitates
+as to this, if he is still in doubt and darkness, let him pause and turn
+directly to the cross of the Son of God and hearken to what the Holy
+Spirit declares as to all those who simply put their trust therein. Let
+him drink into his inmost soul these words: "Be it known unto you,
+therefore, that through this Man is preached unto you the forgiveness of
+sins; and by Him _all_ that _believe are_ justified from _all_ things
+from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses." Yes, reader,
+these are the glad tidings for you. "_All_, from _all_," by faith in a
+crucified and risen Lord.
+
+But we see another difficulty in the way of our subject. We greatly fear
+that while we speak of decision for Christ, some of our readers may
+suppose that we are contending for some notion or set of notions of our
+own; that we are pressing some peculiar views or principles to which we
+vainly and foolishly venture to apply the imposing title of "Decision
+for Christ." All this we do most solemnly disclaim. The words which
+stand at the head of this paper are the simple expression of our thesis.
+We do not contend for attachment to sect, party, or denomination; for
+adherence to the doctrines or commandments of men. We write in the
+immediate presence of Him who searcheth the hearts and trieth the reins
+of the children of men, and we distinctly avow that our one object is to
+urge upon the Christian reader the necessity of decision for Christ. We
+would not, if we know ourselves, pen a single line to swell the ranks of
+a party, or draw over adherents to any particular doctrinal creed or any
+special form of church polity. We are impressed with the conviction that
+where Christ has His right place in the heart, all will be right; and
+that where He has not, there will be nothing right. And further, we
+believe that nothing but plain decision for Christ can effectually
+preserve the soul from the fatal influences that are at work around us
+in the professing Church. Mere orthodoxy cannot preserve us. Attachment
+to religious forms will not avail in the present fearful struggle. It
+is, we feel persuaded, a simple question of Christ as our _life_, and
+Christ as our _object_. May the Spirit of God now enable us to ponder
+aright the subject of "Decision for Christ"!
+
+It is well to bear in mind that there are certain great truths--certain
+immutable principles--which underlie all the dispensations of God from
+age to age and which remain untouched by all the failure, the folly and
+the sin of man. It is on these great moral truths, these foundation
+principles, that faith lays hold, and in them finds its strength and
+sustenance. Dispensations change and pass away, men prove unfaithful in
+their varied positions of stewardship and responsibility, but the word
+of the Lord endureth forever. It never fails. "Forever, O Lord, Thy word
+is settled in heaven." And again, "Thou hast magnified Thy word above
+all Thy name."[III.] Nothing can touch the eternal truth of God, and
+therefore what we want at all times is to give that truth its proper
+place in our hearts; to let it act on our conscience, form our
+character, and shape our way. "Thy word have I hid in my heart, that I
+might not sin against Thee." "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by
+every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord." This is true
+security. Here lies the real secret of decision for Christ. What God
+has spoken must govern us in the most absolute manner ere our path can
+be said to be one of plain decision. There may be tenacious adherence to
+our own notions, obstinate attachment to the prejudices of the age, a
+blind devotion to certain doctrines and practices resting on a
+traditionary foundation, certain opinions which we have received to hold
+without ever inquiring as to whether or not there be any authority
+whatever for such opinions in Holy Scripture. There may be all this and
+much more, and yet not one atom of genuine decision for Christ.
+
+Now we feel we cannot do better than furnish our readers with an example
+or two drawn from the page of inspired history, which will do more to
+illustrate and enforce our theme than aught that we could possibly
+advance. And first, then, let us turn to the book of Esther, and there
+contemplate for a few moments the instructive history of
+
+
+"MORDECAI THE JEW."
+
+This very remarkable man lived at a time in which the Jewish economy had
+failed through the unfaithfulness and disobedience of the Jewish people.
+The Gentile was in power. The relationship between Jehovah and Israel
+could no longer be publicly acknowledged. The faithful Jew had but to
+hang his harp on the willows and sigh over the faded light of other
+days. The chosen seed was in exile; the city and temple where their
+fathers worshiped were in ruins, and the vessels of the Lord's house
+were in a strange land. Such was the outward condition of things in the
+day in which Mordecai's lot was cast. But in addition to this there was
+a man very near the throne occupying only the second place in the
+empire, sitting beside the very fountain-head of authority, possessing
+princely wealth, and wielding almost boundless influence. To this great
+man, strange to say, the poor exiled Jew sternly refuses to bow. Nothing
+will induce him to yield a single mark of respect to the second man in
+the kingdom. He will save the life of Ahasuerus, but he will not bow to
+Haman.
+
+Reader, why was this? Was this blind obstinacy, or bold decision--which?
+In order to determine this we must inquire as to the real root or
+principle of Mordecai's acting. If, indeed, there was no authority for
+his conduct in the law of God, then must we at once pronounce it to have
+been blind obstinacy, foolish pride, or, it may have been, envy of a man
+in power. But if, on the other hand, there be within the covers of the
+five inspired books of Moses a plain authority for Mordecai's deportment
+in this matter, then must we, without hesitation, pronounce his conduct
+to have been the rare and exquisite fruit of attachment to the law of
+his God, and uncompromising decision for Him and His holy authority.
+
+This makes all the difference. If it be merely a matter of private
+opinion,--a question concerning which each one may lawfully adopt his
+own view,--then, verily, might such a line of conduct be justly termed
+the most narrow-minded bigotry. We hear a great deal now-a-days about
+narrow-mindedness on the one hand, and large-heartedness on the other.
+But as a Roman orator, over two thousand years ago, exclaimed in the
+senate-house of Rome, "Conscript fathers: long since, indeed, we have
+lost the true names of things," so may we, in the bosom of the
+professing Church, at the close of the nineteenth century, repeat, with
+far greater force, "Long since we have lost the true names of things."
+For what do men now call bigotry and narrow-mindedness? A faithful
+clinging to and carrying out of "Thus saith the Lord." And what do they
+designate large-heartedness? A readiness to sacrifice truth on the altar
+of politeness and civility.
+
+Reader, be thou fully assured that thus it is at this solemn moment. We
+do not want to be sour or cynical, morose or gloomy; but we must speak
+the truth if we are to speak at all. We desire that the tongue may be
+hushed in silence, and the pen may drop from the hand, if we could
+basely cushion the plain, bold, unvarnished truth through fear of
+scattering our readers, or to avoid the sneer of the infidel. We cannot
+shut our eyes to the solemn fact that God's truth is being trampled in
+the dust--that the name of Jesus is despised and rejected. We have only
+to pass from city to city, and from town to town, of highly-favored
+England, and read upon the walls the melancholy proofs of the truth of
+our assertions. Truth is flung aside, in cold contempt. The name of
+Jesus is little set by. On the other hand, man is exalted, his reason
+deified, his will indulged. Where must all this end? "In the blackness
+of darkness forever."
+
+How refreshing, in the face of all this, to ponder the history of
+Mordecai the Jew! It is very plain that he knew little and cared less
+about the thoughts of men on the question of narrow-mindedness. He
+obeyed the word of the Lord; and this we must be allowed to call real
+breadth of mind, true largeness of heart. For what, after all, is a
+narrow mind? A narrow mind we hold to be a mind which refuses to open
+itself to admit the truth of God. And what, on the contrary, is a large
+and liberal heart? A heart expanded by the truth and grace of God. Let
+us not be scared away from decision in the path of obedience by the
+scornful epithets which men have bestowed upon that path. It is a path
+of peace and purity, a path where the light of an approving conscience
+is enjoyed, and upon which the beams of divine favor ever pour
+themselves in undimmed lustre.
+
+But why did Mordecai refuse to bow to Haman? Was there any great
+principle at stake? Was it merely a whim of his own? Had he a "Thus
+saith the Lord" for his warrant in refusing a single nod of the head to
+the proud Amalekite? Yes. Let us turn to the seventeenth chapter of the
+book of Exodus, and there we read, "And the Lord said unto Moses, Write
+this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua:
+for I will utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.
+And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it Jehovah-nissi; for
+he said, Because the Lord hath sworn that the Lord will have war with
+Amalek from generation to generation."[IV.]
+
+Here, then, was Mordecai's authority for not bowing to Haman the
+Agagite. A faithful Jew could not do reverence to one with whom Jehovah
+was at war. The heart might plead a thousand excuses and urge a thousand
+reasons. It might seek an easy path for itself on the plea that the
+Jewish system was in ruins and the Amalekite in power, and that
+therefore it was worse than useless, yea, it was positively absurd, to
+maintain such lofty ground when the glory of Israel was gone and the
+Amalekite was in the place of authority. "Of what use," it might be
+argued, "can it be to uphold the standard when all is gone to pieces?
+You are only making your degradation more remarkable by the pertinacious
+refusal to bow your head. Would it not be better to give just one nod?
+That will settle the matter. Haman will be satisfied, and you and your
+people will be safe. Do not be obstinate. Show a tendency to be
+courteous. Do not stand up in that dogged way for a thing so manifestly
+non-essential. Besides, you should remember that the command in Exodus
+xvii. was only to be rehearsed in the ears of Joshua, and only had its
+true application in his bright and palmy days. It was never meant for
+the ears of an exile, never intended to apply in the days of Israel's
+desolation."
+
+All this, and much beside, might have been urged on Mordecai; but ah,
+the answer was simple: "God hath spoken. This is enough for me. True, we
+are a scattered people; but the word of the Lord is not scattered. He
+has not reversed His word about Amalek, nor entered into a treaty of
+peace with him. Jehovah and Amalek are still at war, and Amalek stands
+before me in the person of this haughty Agagite. How can I bow to one
+with whom Jehovah is at war? How can I do homage to a man whom the
+faithful Samuel would hew in pieces before the Lord?" "Well, then," it
+might be further urged upon this devoted Jew, "you will all be
+destroyed. You must either bow or perish." The answer is still most
+simple: "I have nothing to do with consequences. They are in the hand of
+God. Obedience is my path, the results are with Him. It is better to die
+with a good conscience than live with a bad one. It is better to go to
+heaven with an uncondemning heart than remain upon earth with a heart
+that would make me a coward. God has spoken. I can do no otherwise. May
+the Lord help me! Amen."
+
+Oh, how well we can understand the mode in which this faithful Jew would
+be assaulted by the enemy. Nothing but the grace of God can ever enable
+any one to maintain a deportment of unflinching decision at a moment in
+which everything within and around is against us. True it is, we know
+that it is better to suffer anything than deny our Lord or fly in the
+face of His commandments; but yet how little are some of us prepared to
+endure a single sneer, a single scornful look, a single contemptuous
+expression, for Christ's sake. And perhaps there are few things harder,
+for some of us at least, to bear than to be reproached on the ground of
+narrow-mindedness and bigotry. We naturally like to be thought
+large-hearted and liberal. We like to be accounted men of enlightened
+mind, sound judgment, and comprehensive grasp. But we must remember that
+we have no right to be liberal at our Master's expense. We have simply
+to obey.
+
+Thus it was with Mordecai. He stood like a rock, and allowed the whole
+tide of difficulty and opposition to roll over him. He would not bow to
+the Amalekite, let the consequence be what it might. Obedience was his
+path. The results were with God. And look at the result! In one moment
+the tide was turned. The proud Amalekite fell from his lofty eminence,
+and the exiled Jew was lifted from his sackcloth and ashes and placed
+next the throne. Haman exchanged his wealth and dignities for a gallows;
+Mordecai exchanged his sackcloth for a royal robe.
+
+Now it may not always happen that the reward of simple obedience will be
+as speedy and as signal as in Mordecai's case. And moreover, we may say
+that we are not Mordecais, nor are we placed in his position. But the
+principle holds good, whoever and wherever we are. There is not one of
+us, however obscure or insignificant, that has not a sphere within which
+our influence is felt for good or for evil. And besides, independent
+altogether of our circumstances and the apparent results of our conduct,
+we are called upon to obey implicitly the word of the Lord--to have His
+word hidden in our hearts--to refuse with unswerving decision, to do or
+say aught that the word of the living God condemns. "How can I do this
+great wickedness, and sin against God?" This should be the language,
+whether it be the question of a child tempted to steal a lump of sugar,
+or the most momentous step in evil that one can be tempted to take. The
+strength and moral security of Mordecai's position lay in this fact,
+that he had the word of God for his authority. Had it not been so, his
+conduct would have been senseless in the extreme. To have refused the
+usual expression of respect to one in high authority, without some
+weighty reason, could only be regarded as the most unmeaning obstinacy.
+But the moment you introduce a "Thus saith the Lord," the matter is
+entirely changed. The word of the Lord endureth forever. The divine
+testimonies do not fade away or change with the times and seasons.
+Heaven and earth shall pass away, but one jot or tittle of what our God
+hath spoken shall never pass away. Hence, what had been rehearsed in the
+ears of Joshua, as he rested in triumph under the banner of Jehovah, was
+designed to govern the conduct of Mordecai, though clothed in sackcloth
+as an exile, in the city of Shushan. Ages and generations had passed
+away; the days of the Judges and the days of the Kings had run their
+course; but the commandment of the Lord with respect to Amalek had
+lost--could lose--none of its force. "The Lord _hath sworn_ that the
+Lord will have war with Amalek," not merely in the days of Joshua, nor
+in the days of the Judges, nor in the days of the Kings, but "from
+generation to generation." Such was the record--the imperishable and
+immutable record of God; and such was the plain, solid and
+unquestionable foundation of Mordecai's conduct.
+
+And here let us say a few words as to the immense importance of entire
+submission to the word of God. We live in a day which is plainly marked
+by strong self-will. Man's reason, man's will and man's interest are
+working together, with appalling success, to ignore the authority of
+Holy Scripture. So long as the statements of the word of God chime in
+with man's reason, so long as they do not run counter to his will, and
+are not subversive of his interests, so long will he tolerate them; or,
+it may be, he will quote them with a measure of respect, or at least
+with self-complacency; but the moment it becomes a question of Scripture
+_versus_ reason, will or interest, the former is either silently ignored
+or contemptuously rejected. This is a very marked and solemn feature of
+the days that are now passing over our heads. It behooves Christians to
+be aware of it, and to be on their watch-tower. We fear that very few,
+comparatively, are truly alive to the real state of the moral atmosphere
+which enwraps the religious world. We do not refer here so much to the
+bold attacks of infidel writers. To these we have alluded elsewhere.
+What we have now before us is rather the cool indifference on the part
+of professing Christians as to Scripture; the little power which pure
+truth wields over the conscience; the way in which the edge of Scripture
+is blunted or turned aside. You quote passage after passage from the
+inspired volume, but it seems like the pattering of rain upon the
+window: the _reason_ is at work, the _will_ is dominant, _interest_ is
+at stake, human opinions bear sway, God's truth is practically, if not
+in so many words, set aside.
+
+All this is deeply solemn. We know of few things more dangerous than
+intellectual familiarity with the letter of Scripture where the spirit
+of it does not govern the conscience, form the character, and shape the
+way. We want to tremble at the word of God, to bow down in reverential
+submission to its holy authority in all things. A single line of
+Scripture ought to be sufficient for our souls on any point, even
+though, in carrying it out, we should have to move athwart the opinions
+of the highest and best of men. May the Lord raise up many faithful and
+true-hearted witnesses in these last days,--men like the faithful
+Mordecai,--who would rather ascend a gallows than bow to an Amalekite!
+
+For the further illustration of our theme, we shall ask the reader to
+turn to the sixth chapter of the book of Daniel. There is a special
+charm and interest in the history of these living examples presented to
+us in the Holy Scriptures. They tell us how the truth of God was acted
+upon, in other days, by men of like passions with ourselves; they prove
+to us that in every age there have been men who so prized the truth, so
+reverenced the word of the living God, that they would rather face
+death, in its most appalling forms, than to depart one hair's breadth
+from the narrow line laid down by the authoritative voice of their Lord
+and Master. It is healthful to be brought into contact with such
+men--healthful at all times, but peculiarly so in days like the present,
+when there is so much laxity and easy-going profession--so much of mere
+theory--when every one is allowed to go his own way, and hold his own
+opinion, provided always that he does not interfere with the opinions of
+his neighbor--when the commandments of God seem to have so little
+weight, so little power over the heart and conscience. Tradition will
+get a hearing; public opinion will be respected; anything and
+everything, in short, but the plain and positive statements of the word
+of God, will get a place in the thoughts and opinions of men. At such a
+time, it is, we repeat, at once healthful and edifying to muse over the
+history of men like Mordecai the Jew, and Daniel the prophet, and scores
+of others, in whose estimation a single line of Holy Scripture rose far
+above all the thoughts of men, the decrees of governors, and the
+statutes of kings, and who declared plainly that they had nothing
+whatever to do with consequences where the word of the Lord was
+concerned. Absolute submission to the divine command is that which alone
+becomes the creature.
+
+It is not, be it observed and well remembered, that any man or any
+number of men have any right to demand subjection to their decisions or
+decrees. No man has any right to enforce his opinions upon his fellow.
+This is plain enough, and we have to bless God for the inestimable
+privilege of civil and religious liberty, as enjoyed under this
+government. But what we urge upon our readers, just now, is plain
+decision for Christ, and implicit subjection to His authority,
+irrespective of everything, and regardless of consequences. This is what
+we do most earnestly desire for ourselves and for all the people of God
+in these last days. We long for that condition of soul, that attitude of
+heart, that quality of conscience, which shall lead us to bow down in
+implicit subjection to the commandments of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
+Christ. No doubt there are difficulties, stumbling blocks, and hostile
+influences to be encountered. It may be said, for instance, that "It is
+very difficult for one, now-a-days, to know what is really true and
+right. There are so many opinions and so many ways, and good men differ
+so in judgment about the simplest and plainest matters, and yet they all
+profess to own the Bible as the only standard of appeal; and, moreover,
+they all declare that their one desire is to do what is right, and to
+serve the Lord, in their day and generation. How, then, is one to know
+what is true or what is false, seeing that you will find the very best
+of men ranged on opposite sides of the same question?"
+
+The answer to all this is very simple. "If thine eye be single thy whole
+body shall be full of light." But, most assuredly, my eye is not single
+if I am looking at men, and reasoning on what I see in them. A single
+eye rests simply on the Lord and His Word. Men differ, no doubt--they
+have differed, and they ever will differ, but I am to harken to the
+voice of my Lord and do His will. His Word is to be my light and my
+authority, the girdle of my loins in action, the strength of my heart in
+service, my only warrant for moving hither and thither, the stable
+foundation of all my ways. If I were to attempt to shape my way
+according to the thoughts of men, where should I be? How uncertain and
+unsatisfactory would my course be! If I really want to be guided aright,
+my God will surely guide me; but if I am looking to men, if I am
+governed by mixed motives, if I am seeking my own ends and interests, if
+I am seeking to please my fellows, then, undoubtedly, my body shall be
+full of darkness, heavy clouds shall settle down upon my pathway, and
+uncertainty mark all my goings.
+
+Christian reader, think of these things. Think deeply of them. Depend
+upon it they have a just claim upon your attention. Do you earnestly
+desire to follow your Lord? Do you really aim at something beyond mere
+empty profession, cold orthodoxy, or mechanical religiousness? Do you
+sigh for reality, depth, energy, fervor, and whole-heartedness? Then
+make Christ your one object, His Word your rule, His glory your aim. May
+the blessed Spirit be pleased to use for the furtherance of these ends
+our meditation on the interesting narrative of
+
+
+"DANIEL THE PROPHET."
+
+"It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom a hundred and twenty princes,
+which should be over the whole kingdom; and over these, three
+presidents, of whom Daniel was first; that the princes might give
+accounts unto them, and the king should have no damage. Then this Daniel
+was preferred above the presidents and princes, because an excellent
+spirit was in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.
+Then the presidents and princes sought to find occasion against Daniel
+concerning the kingdom; but they could find none occasion or fault;
+forasmuch as he was faithful, neither was there any error or fault found
+in him" (Dan. vi. I-4).
+
+What a testimony! How truly refreshing to the heart! "No error or
+fault!" Even his most bitter enemies could not put their finger upon a
+single blemish in his character, or a flaw in his practical career.
+Truly this was a rare and admirable character--a bright witness for the
+God of Israel, even in the dark days of the Babylonish captivity--an
+unanswerable proof of the fact that no matter where we are situated, or
+how we are circumstanced, no matter how unfavorable our position, or how
+dark the day in which our lot is cast, it is our happy privilege so to
+carry ourselves, in all the details of daily life, as to give no
+occasion to the enemy to speak reproachfully.
+
+How sad when it is otherwise! How humiliating when those who make a high
+profession are found constantly breaking down in the most commonplace
+affairs of domestic and commercial life! There are few things which more
+tend to discourage the heart than that.
+
+No doubt worldly people are only too ready to find occasion against
+those who profess the name of Jesus; and, further, we have to remember
+that there are two sides to every question, and that, very frequently, a
+broad margin must be left for exaggeration, high coloring, and false
+impressions. But still, it is the Christian's plain duty so to walk in
+every position and relationship of life, as that "no error or fault" may
+be found in him. We should not make any excuses for ourselves. The
+duties of our situation, whatever it may happen to be, should be
+scrupulously performed. A careless manner, a slovenly habit, an
+unprincipled mode of acting, on the part of the Christian, is a serious
+damage to the cause of Christ, and a dishonor to His holy name. And, on
+the other hand, diligence, earnestness, punctuality, and fidelity, bring
+glory to that name. And this should ever be the Christian's object. He
+should not aim at his own interest, his own reputation, or his own
+advancement, in seeking to carry himself aright in his family and in his
+calling in life. True, it will promote his interest, establish his
+reputation, and further his progress, to be upright and diligent in all
+his ways; but none of these things should ever be his motive. He is to
+be ever and only governed by the one thing, namely, to please and honor
+his Lord and Master. The standard which the Holy Ghost has set before
+us, as to all these things, is furnished in the words of the apostle to
+the Philippians, "That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God
+without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom
+ye shine as lights in the world." We should not be satisfied with
+anything less than this. "They could find none occasion nor fault,
+forasmuch as he was faithful, neither was there any error or fault found
+in him." Noble testimony! Would that it were more called forth, in this
+our day, by the deportment, the habits, the temper, and ways of all
+those who call themselves Christians.
+
+But there was one point in which Daniel's enemies felt they could lay
+hold of him. "Then said these men, We shall not find any occasion
+against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning _the law
+of his God_." Here was a something in the which occasion might be found
+to ruin this beloved and honored servant of God. It appears that Daniel
+had been in the habit of praying three times a day with his windows open
+toward Jerusalem.
+
+This fact was well known, and was speedily laid hold of, and turned to
+account. "Then these presidents and princes assembled together to the
+king, and said thus unto him, King Darius, live for ever. All the
+presidents of the kingdom, the governors, and the princes, the
+counsellors, and the captains, have consulted together to establish a
+royal statute, and to make a firm decree, that whosoever shall ask a
+petition of any god or man for thirty days, save of thee, O king, he
+shall be cast into the den of lions. Now, O king, establish the decree,
+and sign the writing, that it be not changed, according to the law of
+the Medes and Persians, which altereth not. Wherefore king Darius signed
+the writing and the decree."
+
+Here, then, was a deep plot, a subtle snare, laid for the blameless and
+harmless Daniel. How would he act in the face of all this? Would he not
+feel it right to lower the standard? Well, if the standard was something
+of his own, he might surely lower it, and perhaps he ought. But if it
+were something divine--if his conduct was based upon the truth of God,
+then clearly it was his place to hold it up as high as ever, regardless
+of statutes, decrees, and writings established, signed, and
+countersigned. The whole question hinged upon this. Just as in the case
+of Mordecai the Jew, the question hinged upon the one point of whether
+he had any divine warrant for refusing to bow to Haman; so, in the case
+of Daniel the prophet, the question was, had he any divine authority for
+praying toward Jerusalem. It certainly seemed strange and odd. Many
+might have felt disposed to say to him, "Why persist in this practice?
+What need is there for opening your windows and praying toward
+Jerusalem, in such a public manner? Can you not wait until night has
+drawn her sable curtain around you, and your closet door has shut you
+in, and then pour out your heart to your God? This would be prudent,
+judicious, and expedient. And, surely, your God does not exact this of
+you. He does not regard time, place, or attitude. All times and places
+are alike to Him. Are you wise--are you right, in persisting in such a
+line of action under such circumstances? It was all well enough before
+this decree was signed, when you could pray when and as you thought
+right; but now it does seem like the most culpable fatuity and blind
+obstinacy to persevere; it is as though you really courted martyrdom."
+
+All this, and much more, we may easily conceive, might be suggested to
+the mind of the faithful Jew; but still the grand question remained,
+"What saith the Scripture?" Was there any divine reason for Daniel's
+praying toward Jerusalem? Assuredly there was! In the first place,
+Jehovah had said to Solomon, in reference to the temple at Jerusalem,
+"Mine eyes and My heart shall be there perpetually." Jerusalem was God's
+earthly centre. It was, it is, and ever shall be. True, it was in
+ruins--the temple was in ruins; but God's word was not in ruins; and
+here is faith's simple but solid warrant. King Solomon had said, at the
+dedication of the temple, hundreds of years before Daniel's time, "If
+Thy people sin against Thee, (for there is no man that sinneth not,) and
+Thou be angry with them, and deliver them over before their enemies, and
+they carry them away captive unto a land far off or near. Yet if they
+bethink themselves in the land whither they are carried captive, and
+turn and pray unto Thee, in the land of their captivity, saying, We have
+sinned, we have done amiss, and have dealt wickedly; if they return to
+Thee with all their heart and with all their soul in the land of their
+captivity, whither they have carried them captive, and pray toward their
+land, which Thou gavest unto their fathers, and toward the city which
+Thou hast chosen, and toward the house which I have built for Thy name:
+then hear Thou from the heavens, even from Thy dwelling-place, their
+prayer and their supplications, and maintain their cause, and forgive
+Thy people which have sinned against Thee" (2 Chron. vi. 36-39).
+
+Now this was precisely what Daniel was doing--this was the ground he
+took. He was a captive exile, but his heart was at Jerusalem, and his
+eyes followed his heart. If he could not sing the songs of Zion, he
+could at least breathe his prayers toward Zion's hill. If his harp was
+on the willows at Babylon, his fond affections turned toward the city of
+God, now a heap of ruins, but ere long to be an eternal excellency, "the
+joy of the whole earth." It mattered not to him that a decree had been
+signed by earth's greatest monarch, forbidding him to pray toward the
+city of his fathers and to his father's God. It mattered not to him
+that the lion's den was yawning to receive him, and the lion's jaws
+ready to devour him. Like his brother Mordecai, he had nothing to do
+with consequences. Mordecai would rather mount the gallows than bow to
+Haman, and Daniel would rather descend to the lion's den than cease to
+pray to Jehovah. These, surely, were the worthies. They were men whose
+hearts and consciences were governed absolutely by the word of God. The
+world may dub them bigots and fools; but, oh! how the heart does long
+for such bigots and fools, in these days of false liberality and wisdom!
+
+It might have been said to Mordecai and Daniel that they were contending
+for mere trifles--for things wholly indifferent and non-essential. This
+is an argument often used; but, oh! it has no weight with an honest and
+devoted heart. Indeed, there is nothing more contemptible, in the
+judgment of every true lover of Jesus, than the principle that regulates
+the standard as to essentials and non-essentials. For, what is it?
+Simply this, "All that concerns my salvation is essential; all that
+merely affects the glory of Christ is non-essential." How terrible is
+this! Reader, dost thou not utterly abhor it? What! shall we accept
+salvation as the fruit of our Lord's death, and deem aught that concerns
+Him non-essential? God forbid. Yea; rather let us entirely reverse the
+matter, and regard all that concerns the honor and glory of the name of
+Jesus, the truth of His Word, and the integrity of His cause, as vital,
+essential, and fundamental; and all that merely concerns ourselves as
+non-essential and indifferent. May God grant us this mind! May nothing
+be deemed trivial by us which has for its foundation the word of the
+living God!
+
+Thus it was with those devoted men whose history we have been glancing
+at. Mordecai would not bow his head, and Daniel would not close his
+window. Blessed men! The Lord be praised for such, and for the inspired
+record of their actings. Mordecai would rather surrender life than
+diverge from the truth of God, and Daniel would rather do the same than
+turn away from God's centre. Jehovah had said that He would have war
+with Amalek from generation to generation, and therefore Mordecai would
+not bow. Jehovah had said of Jerusalem, "Mine eyes and My heart shall be
+there perpetually;" therefore Daniel would not cease to pray toward that
+blessed centre. The word of the Lord endureth forever, and faith takes
+its stand on that imperishable foundation. There is an eternal freshness
+about every word that has come forth from the Lord. His truth holds good
+throughout all generations; its bloom can never be brushed away, its
+light can never fade, its edge can never be blunted. All praise be to
+His holy name!
+
+But let us look for a moment at the result of Daniel's faithfulness. The
+king was plunged into the deepest grief when he discovered his mistake.
+"He was sore displeased with himself." So well he might. He had fallen
+into a snare; but Daniel was in good keeping. It was all right with
+him. "The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous runneth into
+it, and is safe." It matters not whether it be a lion's den at Babylon
+or a prison at Philippi; faith and a good conscience can make a man
+happy in either. We question if Daniel ever spent a happier night on
+this earth, than the night he spent in the lion's den. He was there for
+God, and God was there with him. He was there with an approving
+conscience and an uncondemning heart. He could look up from the very
+bottom of that den straight into heaven: yea, that den was heaven upon
+earth to his happy spirit. Who would not rather be Daniel in the den
+than Darius in the palace? The one happy in God; the other "sore
+displeased with himself." Darius would have every one pray to him;
+Daniel would pray to none but God. Darius was bound by his own rash
+decree; Daniel was bound only by the word of the living God. What a
+contrast!
+
+And then see in the end what signal honor was put upon Daniel. He stood
+publicly identified with the one living and true God. "O Daniel," cried
+the king, "servant of the living God." Truly he had earned this title
+for himself. He was, unquestionably, a faithful servant of God. He had
+seen his three brethren cast into a furnace because they would worship
+_only_ the true God, and he had been cast into the lion's den because he
+would pray _only_ to Him; but the Lord had appeared for them and him,
+and given them a glorious triumph. He had allowed them to realize that
+precious promise made of old to their fathers, that they should be the
+head and their enemies the tail; that they should be above and their
+enemies below. Nothing could be more marked--nothing could more forcibly
+illustrate the value which God puts upon plain decision and true-hearted
+devotedness, no matter where, when, or by whom exhibited.
+
+Oh! for an earnest heart in this day of lukewarmness! O Lord, revive Thy
+work!
+
+ How gentle God's commands!
+ How kind His precepts are!
+ We'll cast our burdens on the Lord,
+ And trust His constant care.
+
+ Beneath His watchful eye
+ His saints securely dwell:
+ The hand that bears all nature up,
+ Will guard His children well.
+
+ Why should an anxious load
+ Press down our weary mind?
+ We haste, O Father, to Thy throne,
+ And sweet refreshment find.
+
+ Thy goodness stands approved--
+ Unchanged from day to day:
+ We drop our burdens at Thy feet,
+ To bear a song away!
+
+ ---_Philip Doddrige._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[III.] ["Thou hast magnified Thy word (or saying) according to all Thy
+Name," seems more exactly to give the meaning of the passage. ED.]
+
+[IV.] It is deeply interesting to note that neither the Jews' best
+Friend nor their worst enemy is once formally named in the book of
+Esther; but faith could recognize both the one and the other.
+
+
+
+
+PRAYER,
+
+IN ITS PROPER PLACE
+
+
+There is a strong tendency in the human mind to take a one-sided view of
+things. This should be carefully guarded against. It would ever be our
+wisdom to view things as God presents them to us, in His holy Word. We
+should put things where He puts them, and leave them there. Were this
+more faithfully attended to, the truth would be much more clearly
+understood, and souls much better instructed. There is a divinely
+appointed place for everything, and we should avoid putting right things
+in wrong places, just as carefully as we would avoid setting them aside
+altogether. The one may do as much damage as the other. Let any divine
+institution be taken out of its divinely-appointed place, and it must
+necessarily fail of its divinely-appointed end. This, I imagine, will
+hardly be questioned by any enlightened or well-regulated mind. It will
+be admitted, on all hands, to be wrong to put things in any place but
+just where God intended them to be.
+
+And in proportion to the importance of a right thing is the importance
+of having it in its right place. This remark holds good, in a special
+manner, with respect to the hallowed and most precious exercise of
+prayer. It is hard to imagine how any one, with the word of God in his
+hand, could presume to detract from the value of prayer. It is one of
+the very highest functions, and most important privileges of the
+Christian life. No sooner has the new nature been communicated by the
+Holy Ghost, through faith in Christ, than it expresses itself in the
+sweet accents of prayer. Prayer is the earnest breathing of the new man,
+drawn forth by the operation of the Holy Ghost, who dwells in all true
+believers. Hence, to find any one praying is to find him manifesting
+divine life in one of its most touching and beauteous characteristics,
+namely, dependence. There may be a vast amount of ignorance displayed in
+the prayer, both in its character and object; but the _spirit_ of prayer
+is, unquestionably, divine. A child may ask for a great many foolish
+things; but, clearly, he could not ask for any thing if he had not life.
+The ability and desire to ask are the infallible proofs of life. No
+sooner had Saul of Tarsus passed from death unto life, than the Lord
+says of him, "_Behold he prayeth_!" (Acts ix.) Doubtless he had, as "a
+Pharisee of the Pharisees," said many "long prayers;" but not until he
+"saw that Just One, and heard the voice of His mouth," could it be said
+of him, "behold, _he prayeth_."
+
+Saying prayers and praying, are two totally different things. A
+self-righteous Pharisee may excel in the former; none but a converted
+soul can enjoy the latter. The spirit of prayer is the spirit of the new
+man; the language of prayer is the distinct utterance of the new life.
+The moment a spiritual babe is born into the new creation, it sends up
+its cry of dependence and of trust toward the Source of its birth. Who
+would dare to hush or hinder that cry? Let the babe be gently satisfied
+and encouraged, not ignorantly hindered or rudely silenced. The very cry
+which ignorance would seek to stifle, falls like sweetest music on the
+parent's ear. It is the proof of life. It evidences the existence of a
+new object around which the affections of a parent's heart may entwine
+themselves.
+
+All this is plain enough. It commends itself to every renewed mind. The
+man who could think of hushing the accents of prayer must be wholly
+ignorant of the precious and beautiful mysteries of the new creation.
+The understanding of the praying one may need to be instructed; but oh!
+let not the spirit of prayer be quenched. Let the beams of divine
+revelation, in all their emancipating power, shine in upon the
+struggling conscience, but let not the breathings of the new life be
+interrupted. The newly-converted soul may be in great darkness. The
+chilling mists of legalism may enwrap his spirit. He may not, as yet, be
+able to rest fully in Christ and His accomplished work. His awakened
+conscience may not, as yet, have found its peace-giving answer in the
+precious blood of Jesus. Doubts and fears may sorely beset him. He may
+not know about the important doctrine of the two natures, and the
+continual conflict between them. He is bowed down beneath the
+humiliating sense of indwelling sin, and sees not, as yet, the ample
+provision which redeeming love has made for that very thing, in the
+sacrifice and priesthood--the blood and advocacy of the Lord Jesus
+Christ. The joyous emotions which attended upon the first moments of his
+conversion may have passed away. The beams of the Sun of Righteousness
+may be hidden by the heavy clouds which arise from within and around
+him. It is not with him as in days past. He marvels at the sad change
+which has come over him, and well nigh doubts if he were ever converted
+at all.
+
+Need we wonder that such an one should cry mightily to God? Yea, the
+wonder would be if he could do aught else. How, then, should we treat
+him? Should we teach him not to pray? God forbid. This would be to do
+the work of Satan, who, assuredly, hates prayer most cordially. To drop
+a syllable which could even be understood as making little of an
+exercise so entirely divine, would be to fly in the face of the entire
+book of God, to deny the very example of Christ, and hinder the
+utterance of the Holy Ghost in the new-born soul. The Old and New
+Testament Scriptures literally teem with exhortations and encouragements
+to pray. To quote the passages would fill a volume. The blessed Master
+Himself has left His people an example as to the unceasing exercise of a
+spirit of prayer. He both prayed Himself and taught His disciples to
+pray. The same is true of the Holy Ghost in the apostles. (See the
+following passages; Luke iii. 21; vi. 12; ix. 28, 29; xi. I-13; xviii.
+I-8; Acts i. 14; iv. 31; Rom. xii. 12; xv. 30; Eph. vi. 18; Phil. iv. 6;
+Col. iv. 2-4; I Thess. v. 17; 2 Thess. iii. I, 2; I Tim. ii. I-3; Heb.
+xiii. 18; James v. 14, 15.)
+
+If my reader will look out and ponder the foregoing passages, he will
+have a just view of the place which prayer occupies in the Christian
+economy. He will see that disciples are exhorted to pray; and that it is
+only disciples who are so exhorted. He will see that prayer is a grand
+prominent exercise of the household of God, and that he must be of that
+household to engage in it. He will see that prayer is the undoubted
+utterance of the new life; and that the life therefore must be there to
+utter itself. He will see that prayer is an important part of the
+Christian's privilege; and that it enters in no wise in the foundation
+of the Christian's peace.
+
+Thus, he will be able to put prayer in its proper place; and how
+important it is that it should be so put! How important it is that the
+anxious inquirer should see that the deep and solid foundations of his
+present and everlasting peace were laid in the work of the Cross,
+nineteen centuries ago! How important that the blood of Jesus should
+stand out before the soul in clear and bold relief, in its solitary
+grandeur, as the alone foundation of the sinner's rest! A soul may be
+earnestly seeking and crying for salvation, and all the while be
+ignorant of the great fact that it is ready to his hand--that he is
+actually commanded to accept a free, full, present, personal, and
+eternal salvation--that Christ has done all--that a brimming cup of
+salvation is set before him, which faith has only to take and drink for
+its everlasting satisfaction. The gospel of God's free grace points to
+the rent vail--the empty tomb--the occupied throne above. (Matt. xxviii;
+Heb. i. and x.) What do these things declare? What do they utter in the
+anxious sinner's ear? Salvation! salvation! The rent vail, the empty
+tomb, the occupied throne, all cry out, salvation!
+
+Reader, do you really want salvation? Then why not take it, as God's
+free gift? Are you looking to your own heart or to Christ's finished
+work for salvation? Is it needful, think you, to wait that God should do
+something more for your salvation? If so, then Christ's work were not
+finished; the ransom were not paid. But Christ said "_It is finished_,"
+and God says, "I have found a ransom" (Job xxxiii. John xix.). And if
+_you_ have to do, say, or think aught, to complete the work of
+salvation, then Christ would not be a whole, a perfect Saviour. And,
+further, it would be a plain denial of Rom. iv. 5, which says, "To him
+that _worketh not_, but believeth on Him that _justifieth the ungodly_,
+his faith is counted for righteousness." Take heed that you are not
+mixing up your poor prayers with the glorious work of redemption,
+completed by the Lamb of God on the cross. Prayer is most precious; but,
+remember, "without faith it is impossible to please God" (Heb. xi. 6);
+and if you have faith, you have Christ; and having Christ, you have ALL.
+If you say you are crying for mercy, the word of God points you to
+mercy's copious stream flowing from the finished sacrifice. You have all
+your anxious heart can want in Jesus, and He is God's free gift to you
+just as you are, where you are, _now_. If you had _to be_ aught else but
+what you are, or _to go_ anywhere else from where you are, then
+salvation would not be "by grace, through faith" (Eph. ii. 8). If you
+are anxious to get salvation, and God desires you should have it, why
+need you be another moment without it? It is all ready. Christ died and
+rose again. The Holy Ghost testifies. The word is plain. "_Only
+believe._"
+
+Oh, may the Spirit of God lead any anxious soul to find settled repose
+in Jesus. May He lead you to look away from all besides, straight to an
+all-sufficient atonement. May He give clearness of apprehension, and
+simplicity of faith to all; and may He especially endow all who stand up
+to teach and preach with the ability "rightly to divide the word of
+truth," so that they may not apply to the unregenerate sinner, or the
+anxious inquirer, such passages of Scripture as refer only to the
+established believer. Very serious damage is done both to the truth of
+God, and to the souls of men, by an unskilful division and application
+of the Word. There must be spiritual life, before there can be spiritual
+action; and the _only_ way to get spiritual life is by _believing_ on
+the name of the Son of God[V.] (John i. 12, 13; iii. 14-16, 36; v. 24; xx.
+31). If, therefore, the precepts of God's word be applied to persons who
+have not the spiritual life to act in them, confusion must be the result.
+The precious privileges of the Christian are turned into a heavy yoke for
+the unconverted. A strange system of half-law half-gospel is propounded,
+whereby true Christianity is robbed of its characteristic glory, and the
+souls of men are plunged in mist and perplexity. There is urgent need
+for clearness in setting forth the true ground of a sinner's peace. When
+souls are convicted of sin, and have life, but not liberty, they want a
+full, clear, unclouded gospel. The claims of a divinely-awakened
+conscience can only be answered by the blood of the Cross. If anything,
+no matter what, be added to the finished work of Christ, the soul must
+be filled with doubt and darkness.
+
+May God grant us to know more fully the true place and value of simple
+faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and of earnest prayer in the Holy Ghost.
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[V.] When the jailer at Philippi inquired of Paul and Silas, "What must
+I do to be saved?" they simply replied, "_Believe_ on the Lord Jesus
+Christ and thou shalt be saved, and thy house" (Acts xvi. 30, 31). It
+would, surely, be well if this method of dealing with an anxious
+inquirer were more faithfully adopted.
+
+
+
+
+"GILGAL"
+
+JOSHUA V.
+
+
+"Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning,
+that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope"
+(Rom. xv. 4). These few words furnish a title, distinct and
+unquestionable, for the Christian to range through the wide and
+magnificent field of Old Testament Scripture, and gather therein
+instruction and comfort, according to the measure of his capacity and
+the character or depth of his spiritual need. And were any further
+warrant needed, we have it with equal clearness in the words of another
+inspired epistle: "Now all these things happened unto them (Israel) for
+ensamples; and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends
+of the world are come" (I Cor. x. 11).
+
+No doubt, in reading the Old Testament, as in reading the New, there is
+constant need of watchfulness--need of self-emptiness, of dependence
+upon the direct teaching of the Holy Spirit, by whom all Scripture has
+been indited. The imagination must be checked, lest it lead us into
+crude notions and fanciful interpretations, which tend to no profit,
+but rather to the weakening of the power of Scripture over the soul,
+and hindering our growth in the divine life.
+
+Still, we must never lose sight of the divine charter made out for us in
+Rom. xv. 4--never forget for a single moment that "whatsoever things
+were written aforetime were written for our learning." It is in the
+strength of these words that we invite the reader to accompany us back
+to the opening of the book of Joshua, that we may together contemplate
+the striking and instructive scenes presented there, and seek to gather
+up some of the precious "learning" there unfolded. If we mistake not, we
+shall learn some fine lessons on the banks of the Jordan, and find the
+air of Gilgal most healthful and bracing for the spiritual constitution.
+
+We have all been accustomed to look at Jordan as the figure of
+death--the death of the believer--his leaving this world and going to
+heaven. Doubtless the believer has often read and heard these lines:
+
+ "Could we but stand where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Jordan's stream nor death's cold flood
+ Could fright us from the shore."
+
+But all this line of thought, feeling and experience is very far below
+the mark of true Christianity. A moment's reflection in the true light
+which Scripture pours upon our souls would be sufficient to show how
+utterly deficient is the popular religious thought as to Jordan. For
+instance, when a believer dies and goes to heaven, is he called to
+fight? Surely not. All is rest and peace up yonder--ineffable, eternal
+peace. Not a ripple on that ocean. No sound of alarm throughout that
+pure and holy region. No conflict there. No need of armor. We shall want
+no girdle, because our garments may flow loosely around us. We shall not
+need a breast-plate of righteousness, for divine righteousness has there
+its eternal abode. We shall have no need of sandals, for there will be
+no rough or thorny places in that fair and blissful region. No shield
+called for there, inasmuch as there will be no fiery darts flying. No
+helmet of salvation, for the divine and eternal results of God's
+salvation shall then be reached. No sword, inasmuch as there will be
+neither enemy nor evil occurrent throughout all that blissful, sunny
+region.
+
+Hence, therefore, Jordan cannot mean the death of the believer and his
+going to heaven, for the simplest of all reasons, that it was when
+Israel crossed the Jordan that their fighting, properly speaking, began.
+True they had fought with Amalek in the wilderness; but it was in Canaan
+that their real war commenced. The careful reader of the Scriptures will
+readily see this.
+
+But does not Jordan represent death? Most surely it does. And must not
+the believer cross it? Yes; but he finds it dry, because the Prince of
+Life has gone down into its deepest depths, and opened up a pathway for
+His people, by the which they pass over into their heavenly
+inheritance.
+
+Moses, from Pisgah's top, gazed upon the promised land. _Personally_,
+under the governmental dealings of God, he was prevented from going over
+Jordan. But looking at him _officially_, we know that the law could not
+possibly bring the people into Canaan; so Moses' course must end there,
+for he represents the law.
+
+But Christ, the true Joshua, has crossed the Jordan, and not only
+crossed it, but turned it into a pathway by which the ransomed host can
+pass over dry-shod into the heavenly Canaan. The Christian is not called
+to stand shivering on the brink of the river of death, as one in doubt
+as to how it may go with him. That river is dried up for faith. Its
+power is gone. Our adorable Lord "has abolished death, and brought life
+and incorruptibility to light by the gospel." Faith can now, therefore,
+sing triumphantly, "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy
+victory? The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law;
+but thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus
+Christ" (I Cor. xv. 55-57).
+
+Glorious, enfranchising fact! Let us praise Him for it. Let all our
+ransomed powers adore Him. Let our whole moral being be stirred up to
+chant the praises of Him who has taken the sting from death, and
+destroyed him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and
+conducted us into a sphere which is pervaded throughout with life,
+light, incorruptibility, and glory. May our entire practical career be
+to His glory!
+
+We shall now proceed to examine more particularly the teaching of
+Scripture on this great subject, and may the Holy Spirit Himself be our
+immediate instructor!
+
+"And Joshua rose early in the morning; and they removed from Shittim,
+and came to Jordan, he and all the children of Israel, and lodged there
+before they passed over. And it came to pass after three days, that the
+officers went through the host; and they commanded the people, saying,
+When ye see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the
+priests, the Levites, bearing it, then ye shall remove from your place,
+and go after it. _Yet there shall be a space between you and it_, about
+two thousand cubits by measure: come not near unto it, _that ye may know
+the way by which ye must go: for ye have not passed this way
+heretofore_" (Josh. iii. I-4).
+
+There are three deeply important points in Israel's history which the
+reader would do well to ponder. There is, first, the blood-stained
+lintel, in the land of Egypt; secondly, the Red Sea; thirdly, the river
+Jordan.
+
+Now in each of these we have a type of the death of Christ, in some one
+or other of its grand aspects--for, as we know, that precious death has
+many and various aspects, and nothing can be more profitable for the
+Christian, and nothing, surely, ought to be more attractive, than the
+study of the profound mystery of the death of Christ. There are depths
+and heights in that mystery which eternity alone will unfold; and it
+should be our delight now, under the powerful ministry of the Holy
+Ghost, through the perfect light of Holy Scripture, to search into these
+things for the strength, comfort and refreshment of the inward man.
+
+Looking, then, at the death of Christ, as typified by the blood of the
+paschal lamb, we see in it that which screens us from the judgment of
+God. "I will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and will smite
+all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against
+all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment; I am the Lord. And the
+blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses where ye are; and when
+I see the blood, I will pass over you, and the plague shall not be upon
+you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt" (Ex. xii.).
+
+Now, we need hardly say, it is of the deepest moment for the exercised,
+consciously guilty soul, to know that God has provided a shelter from
+wrath and judgment to come. No right-minded person would think for a
+moment of undervaluing this aspect of the death of Christ. "When I see
+the blood, I will pass over you." Israel's safety rested upon God's
+estimate of the blood. He does not say, "When _you_ see the blood." The
+Judge saw the blood, knew its value, and passed over the house. Israel
+was screened by the blood of the lamb--by God's estimate of that blood,
+not by their own. Precious fact!
+
+How prone we are to be occupied with our thoughts about the blood of
+Christ, instead of with God's thoughts! We feel we do not value that
+precious blood as we ought--who ever did, or ever could? and then we
+begin to question if we are safe, seeing we so sadly fail in our
+estimate of Christ's work and in our love to His person.
+
+Now if our _safety_ depends in the smallest degree upon our estimate of
+Christ's work, or our love to His person, we are in more imminent danger
+than if it depended upon our keeping the law. True it is,--most
+true--who could think of denying it?--we ought to value Christ's work,
+and we ought to love Himself. But if all this be put upon the footing of
+a righteous claim, and if our safety rests upon our answering to that
+claim, then are we in greater danger and more justly condemned than if
+we stood on the ground of a broken law. For just in proportion as the
+claims of Christ are higher than the claims of Moses, and in proportion
+as Christianity is higher than the legal system, so are we worse off, in
+greater danger, farther from peace, if our safety depends upon our
+response to those higher claims.
+
+Mark, it is not that we ought not to answer to such claims; we most
+certainly ought. But who among us does? and hence, so far as we are
+concerned, our ruin and guilt are only made more manifest, and our
+condemnation more righteous, if we stand upon the claims of Christ,
+because we have not answered to them. If we are to be saved by our
+estimate of Christ, by our response to His claims, by our appreciation
+of His love, we are worse off by far than if we were placed under the
+claims of the law of Moses.
+
+But, blessed be God, it is not so. We are saved by grace,--free,
+sovereign, divine and eternal grace,--not by our sense of grace. We are
+sheltered by the blood, not by our estimate of the blood. Jehovah did
+not say, on that awful night, "When _you_ see the blood, and estimate it
+as you ought, I will pass over you." Nothing of the kind. This is not
+the way of our God. He wanted to shelter His people, and to let them
+know that they were sheltered,--perfectly, because divinely
+sheltered,--and therefore He places the matter wholly upon a divine
+basis; He takes it entirely out of their hands, by assuring them that
+their safety rested simply and entirely upon the blood, and upon His
+estimate thereof. He gives them to understand that they had nothing
+whatever to do with providing the shelter. It was His to _provide_. It
+was theirs to _enjoy_.
+
+Thus it stood between Jehovah and His Israel in that memorable night;
+and thus it stands between Him and the soul that simply trusts in Jesus
+now. We are not saved by _our_ love, or _our_ estimate, or _our_
+anything. We are saved by the blood behind which faith has fled for
+refuge, and by God's estimate of it, which faith apprehends. And just as
+Israel, within that blood-stained lintel screened from judgment,--safe
+from the sword of the destroyer,--could feed upon the roasted lamb, so
+may the believer, perfectly sheltered from the wrath to come,--sweetly
+secure from all danger, screened from judgment,--feed upon Christ in all
+the preciousness of what He is.
+
+But more of this by and by.
+
+We are specially anxious that the reader should weigh the point on which
+we have been dwelling, if he be one who has not yet found peace, even as
+to the question of safety from judgment to come, which, as we shall see
+(if God permit) ere we close this paper, is but a part, though an
+ineffably precious part, of what the death of Christ has procured for
+us.
+
+We have very little idea indeed of how much of the leaven of
+self-righteousness cleaves to us, even after our conversion, and how
+immensely it interferes with our peace, our enjoyment of grace, and our
+consequent progress in the divine life. It may be we fancy we have done
+with self-righteousness when we have given up all thought of being saved
+by our works; but alas, it is not so, for the evil takes new forms; and
+of all these, none is more subtle than the feeling that we do not value
+the blood as we ought, and the doubting our safety on that ground. All
+this is the fruit of self-righteousness. We have not done with _self_.
+True, we are not, it may be, making a saviour of our _doings_, but we
+are of our _feelings_. We are seeking, unknown to ourselves perhaps, to
+find some sort of title in our love to God or our appreciation of
+Christ.
+
+Now all this must be given up. We must rest simply on the blood of
+Christ, and upon God's testimony to that blood. He sees the blood. He
+values it as it deserves. He is satisfied. This ought to satisfy us. He
+did not say to Israel, When I see how you behave yourselves; when I see
+the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs, the girded loins, the shod feet,
+I will pass over you.
+
+No doubt all these things had their proper place; but that proper place
+was not as the ground of safety, but as the secret of communion. They
+were called to behave themselves--called to keep the feast; but it was
+as _being_, not _in order to be_, a sheltered people. This made all the
+difference. It was because they were divinely screened from judgment
+that they could keep the feast. They had the authority of the word of
+God to assure them that there was no judgment for them; and if they
+believed that word, they could celebrate the feast in peace and safety.
+"Through faith he kept the passover, and the sprinkling of blood, lest
+He that destroyed the firstborn should touch them" (Heb. xi. 28).
+
+Here lies the deep and precious secret of the whole matter. It was by
+faith he kept the passover. God had said, "When I see the blood, I will
+pass over you," and He could not deny Himself. It would have been a
+denial of His very nature and character, and an ignoring of His own
+blessed remedy, had a single hair of an Israelite's head been touched on
+that deeply solemn night. It was not, we repeat, in anywise a question
+of Israel's state or Israel's deservings. It was simply and entirely a
+question of the value of the blood _in God's sight_, and of the truth
+and authority of His own word.
+
+What stability is here!--what peace and rest! What a solid ground of
+confidence! The blood of Christ! the word of God! True, divinely
+true--let it never be forgotten or lost sight of--it is only by the
+grace of the Holy Spirit that the word of God can be received, or the
+blood of Christ relied upon. Still, it is the word of God and the blood
+of Christ, and nothing else, which give peace to the heart as regards
+all question of coming judgment. There can be no judgment for the
+believer. And why? Because the blood is on the mercy-seat, as the
+perfect proof that judgment has been already executed.
+
+ "He bore on the tree the sentence for me,
+ And now both the Surety and sinner are free."
+
+Yet, all praise to His name, thus it stands as to every soul that simply
+takes God at His word, and rests in the precious blood of Christ. It is
+as impossible that such an one can come into judgment, as that Christ
+Himself can. All who are sheltered by the blood are as safe as the word
+of God is sure--as safe as Christ Himself. It seems perfectly wonderful
+for any poor sinful mortal to be able to pen such words; but the blessed
+fact is, it is either this or nothing. If there is any question as to
+the believer's safety, then the blood of Christ is not on the
+mercy-seat, or it is of no account in the judgment of God. If it be a
+question of the believer's state, of his worthiness, of his feelings,
+of his experience, of his walk, of his love, of his devotedness, of his
+appreciation of Christ, then would there be no force, no value, no truth
+in that glorious sentence, "When I see the blood, I will pass over;" for
+in that case the form of speech should be entirely changed, and a dark
+and chilling shade be cast over its heavenly lustre. It should then be,
+"When I see the blood, and----"
+
+But no, beloved, anxious reader, it is not, and it never can be, thus.
+Nothing must ever be added--not the weight of a feather, to that
+precious blood which has perfectly satisfied God as a Judge, and which
+perfectly shelters every soul that has fled for safety behind it. If the
+righteous Judge has declared Himself satisfied, surely the guilty
+culprit may well be satisfied also. God is satisfied with the blood of
+Jesus; and when the soul is satisfied likewise, all is settled, and
+there is peace as regards the question of judgment. "There is no
+condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus." How can there be, seeing
+He has borne the condemnation in their stead? To doubt the believer's
+exemption from judgment is to make God a liar, and to make the blood of
+Christ of none effect.
+
+The reader will note that thus far we have been occupied only with the
+question of deliverance from judgment--a most weighty question surely.
+But, as we shall see in the course of this series of papers, there is
+far more secured for us by the death of Christ than freedom from
+judgment and wrath, blessed as that is. That peerless sacrifice does a
+great deal more for us than keep God out as a Judge.
+
+But for the present we pause, and shall close this paper with a solemn
+and earnest question to the reader, _Art thou sheltered by the blood of
+Jesus_? Do not rest, beloved, until you can answer with a clear and
+unhesitating "Yes." Remember, you are either sheltered by the blood, or
+exposed to the horrors of eternal judgment.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+In our last paper we had before us Israel under the shelter of the
+blood. A grand reality, most surely: who could duly estimate it? What
+human language could suitably unfold the deep blessedness of being
+screened from the judgment of God by the blood of the Lamb--of being
+within that hallowed circle where wrath and judgment can never come? Who
+can speak aright of the privilege of feeding in perfect safety on the
+Lamb whose precious blood has forever averted from us the wrath of a
+sin-hating God?
+
+But blessed as all this is, there is much more than this. There is far
+more comprehended in the salvation of God than deliverance from judgment
+and wrath. We may have the fullest assurance that our sins are forgiven,
+that God will never enter into judgment with us on account of our sins,
+and yet be very far indeed from the enjoyment of the true Christian
+position. We may be filled with all manner of fears about
+ourselves--fears occasioned by the consciousness of indwelling sin, the
+power of Satan, the influence of the world. All these things may crop up
+before us, and fill us with the gravest apprehensions.
+
+Thus, for example, when we turn to Ex. xiv., we find Israel in the
+deepest distress, and almost overwhelmed with fear. It would seem as if
+they had for the moment lost sight of the fact that they had been under
+the cover of the blood.
+
+Let us look at the passage.
+
+"And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of
+Israel, that they turn and encamp before Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and
+the sea, over against Baal-zephon: before it shall ye encamp by the sea.
+For Pharaoh will say of the children of Israel, They are entangled in
+the land, the wilderness hath shut them in. And I will harden Pharaoh's
+heart, that he shall follow after them: and I will be honored upon
+Pharaoh, and upon all his host; that the Egyptians may know that I am
+the Lord. And they did so. And it was told the king of Egypt that the
+people fled: and the heart of Pharaoh and of his servants was turned
+against the people, and they said, Why have we done this, _that we have
+let Israel go from serving us_?"--mark these words:--"And he made ready
+his chariot, and took his people with him. And he took six hundred
+chosen chariots, and all the chariots of Egypt, and captains over every
+one of them. And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt,
+and he pursued after the children of Israel: and the children of Israel
+went out with a high hand. But the Egyptians pursued after them, all the
+horses and chariots of Pharaoh, and his horsemen, and his army, and
+overtook them, encamping by the sea, beside Pi-hahiroth, before
+Baal-zephon. And when Pharaoh drew nigh, the children of Israel lifted
+up their eyes, and, behold, the Egyptians marched after them; and they
+were _sore afraid_: and the children of Israel _cried out_ unto the
+Lord."
+
+Now, we may feel disposed to ask, Are these the people whom we have seen
+so recently feeding, in perfect safety, under the cover of the blood?
+The very same. Whence, then, these fears, this intense alarm, this
+agonizing cry? Did they really think that Jehovah was going to judge and
+destroy them, after all? Not exactly. Of what, then, were they afraid?
+Of perishing in the wilderness after all. "And they said unto Moses,
+Because there were no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in
+the wilderness? Wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us, to carry us
+forth out of Egypt? Is not this the word that we did tell thee in Egypt,
+saying, Let us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians! For it had been
+better for us to serve the Egyptians, than that we should die in the
+wilderness."
+
+All this was most gloomy and depressing. Their poor hearts seem to
+fluctuate between "graves in Egypt" and death in the wilderness. There
+is no sense of deliverance; no adequate knowledge either of God's
+purposes or of God's salvation. All seems utter darkness, almost
+bordering upon hopeless despair. They are thoroughly hemmed in and "shut
+up." They seem in a worse plight than ever. They heartily wish
+themselves back again amid the brick-kilns and stubble fields of Egypt.
+Deserts sands on either side of them; the sea in front; Pharaoh and all
+his terrific hosts behind!
+
+The case seemed perfectly hopeless; and hopeless it was, so far as they
+were concerned. They were utterly powerless, and they were being made to
+realize it, and this is a very painful process to go through; but very
+wholesome and valuable, yea, most necessary for all. We must all, in one
+way or another, learn the force, meaning, and depth of that phrase,
+"without strength." It is exactly in proportion as we find out what it
+is to be without strength, that we are prepared to appreciate God's "due
+time."
+
+But, we may here inquire, "Is there aught in the history of God's people
+now answering to Israel's experience at the Red Sea?" Doubtless there
+is; for we are told that the things which happened unto Israel are our
+ensamples, or types. And, most surely, the scene at the Red Sea is full
+of instruction for us. How often do we find the children of God plunged
+in the very depths of distress and darkness as to their state and
+prospects! It is not that they question the love of God, or the efficacy
+of the blood of Jesus, nor yet that God will reckon their sins to them,
+or enter into judgment with them. But still, they have no sense of full
+deliverance. They do not see the application of the death of Christ to
+their _evil nature_. They do not realize the glorious truth that by that
+death they are completely delivered from this present evil world, from
+the dominion of sin, and from the power of Satan. They see that the
+blood of Jesus screens them from the judgment of God; but they do not
+see that _they_ are "dead to sin;" that their "old man is crucified
+with Christ;" that not only have their sins been put upon Christ at the
+cross, but _they themselves_, as sinful children of Adam, have been, by
+the act of God, identified with Christ in His death; that God pronounces
+them _dead and risen with Christ_. (See Col. iii. I-4 and the sixth
+chapter of Romans.) But if this precious truth is not apprehended, by
+faith, there is no bright, happy, emancipating sense of full and
+everlasting salvation. They are, to speak according to our type, at
+Egypt's side of the Red Sea, and in danger of falling into the hands of
+the prince of this world. They do not see "_all_ their enemies dead on
+the sea-shore." They cannot sing the song of redemption. No one can sing
+it, until he stands by faith on the wilderness side of the Red Sea, or,
+in other words, until he sees his complete deliverance from sin, the
+world, and Satan--the great foes of every child of God.
+
+Thus, in contemplating the facts of Israel's history, as recorded in the
+first fifteen chapters of Exodus, we observe that they did not raise a
+single note of praise until they had passed through the Red Sea. We hear
+the cry of sore distress under the cruel lash of Pharaoh's task-masters,
+and amid the grievous toil of Egypt's brick-kilns. And we hear the cry
+of terror when they stood "between Migdol and the sea." All this we
+hear; but not one note of praise, not a single accent of triumph, until
+the waters of the Red Sea rolled between them and the land of bondage
+and of death, and they saw all the power of the enemy broken and gone.
+"Thus the Lord saved Israel that day out of the hand of the Egyptians;
+and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea-shore. And _Israel saw
+that great work which the Lord did_ upon the Egyptians: and the people
+feared the Lord and His servant Moses. _Then sang_ Moses and the
+children of Israel."
+
+Now, what is the simple application of all this to us as Christians?
+What grand lesson are we to learn from the scenes on the shores of the
+Red Sea? In a word, of what is the Red Sea a type? And what is the
+difference between the blood-stained lintel and the divided sea?
+
+The Red Sea is the type of the death of Christ, in its application to
+all our spiritual enemies, sin, the world, and Satan. By the death of
+Christ the believer is completely and forever delivered from the _power_
+of sin. He is, alas! conscious of the _presence_ of sin; but its power
+is gone. He has died to sin, in the death of Christ; and what power has
+sin over a dead man? It is the privilege of the Christian to reckon
+himself as much delivered from the dominion of sin as a man lying dead
+on the floor. What power has sin over such an one? None whatever. No
+more has it over the Christian. Sin _dwells_ in the believer, and will
+do so to the end of the chapter; but its _rule_ is gone. Christ has
+wrested the sceptre from the grasp of our old master, and shivered it to
+atoms. It is not merely that His blood has purged our _sins_; but His
+death has broken the power of _sin_.
+
+It is one thing to know that our sins are forgiven, and another thing
+altogether to know that "the body of sin is destroyed"--its rule
+ended--its dominion gone. Many will tell you that they do not question
+the forgiveness of their past sins, but they do not know what to say as
+to indwelling sin. They fear lest, after all, that may come against
+them, and bring them into judgment. Such persons are, to use the figure,
+"between Migdol and the sea." They have not learnt the doctrine of Rom.
+vi. They have not as yet, in their spiritual intelligence and
+apprehension, reached the resurrection side of the Red Sea. They do not
+know what it is to be dead unto sin, and alive unto God through Jesus
+Christ our Lord.
+
+And let the reader particularly note the force of the apostle's word,
+"_reckon_." How very different it is, in every way, from our word,
+"_realize_!" This latter word may do very well where natural or human
+things are concerned. We can realize physical or material facts; but
+where a spiritual truth is involved, it is not a question of realizing,
+but of reckoning. How can I realize that I am dead to sin? All my own
+experience, my own feelings, my inward self-consciousness seems to offer
+a flat contradiction to the truth. I cannot realize that I am dead; but
+God tells me I am. He assures me that He counts me to have died to sin
+when Christ died. I believe it; not because I feel it, but because God
+says it. I reckon myself to be what God tells me I am. If I were
+sinless, if I had no sin in me, I should never be told to reckon myself
+dead to sin; neither should I ever be called to listen to such words as,
+"Let not sin, therefore, _reign_ in your mortal body." But it is just
+because I have sin dwelling in me, and in order to give me full
+practical deliverance from its reigning power, that I am taught the
+grand enfranchising truth, that the dominion of sin is broken by the
+death of Christ in which I also died.
+
+How do I know this? Is it because I feel it? Certainly not. How could I
+feel it? How could I realize it? How could I ever have the
+self-consciousness of it, while in the body? Impossible. But God tells
+me I have died in the death of Christ. I believe it. I do not reason
+about it. I do not stagger at it because I cannot find any evidence of
+its truth in myself. I take God at His word. I reckon myself to be what
+He tells me I am. I do not endeavor to struggle, and strive, and work
+myself into a sinless state which is impossible. Neither do I imagine
+myself to be in it, which were a deceit and a delusion; but by a simple,
+childlike faith, I take the blessed ground which faith assigns me, in
+association with a dead Christ. I look at Christ there, and see in Him,
+according to God's word, the true expression of where I am, in the
+Divine Presence. I do not reason from myself upwards, but I reason from
+God downwards. This makes all the difference. It is just the difference
+between unbelief and faith,--between law and grace--between human
+religion and divine Christianity. If I reason from self, how can I have
+any right thought of what is in the heart of God?--all my conclusions
+must be utterly false. But if, on the other hand, I listen to God and
+believe His Word, my conclusions are divinely sound. Abraham did not
+look at himself and the improbability, nay, the impossibility of having
+a son in his old age; but he believed God and gave glory to Him. And it
+was counted to Him for righteousness.
+
+It is an unspeakable mercy to get done with self, in all its phases and
+in all its workings, and to be brought to rest, in all simplicity, on
+the written Word, and on the Christ which that written Word presents to
+our souls. Self-occupation is a deathblow to fellowship, and a great
+barrier to the soul's rest and progress. It is impossible for any one to
+enjoy settled peace so long as he is occupied with himself. He must
+cease from self, and harken to God's Word, and rest, without a single
+question, on its pure, precious, and everlasting record. God's Word
+never changes. I change; my frames, my feelings, my experience, my
+circumstances, change continually; but God's Word is the same yesterday,
+and to-day, and forever.
+
+Furthermore, it is a grand and essential point for the soul to apprehend
+that Christ is the only definition of the believer's place before God.
+This gives immense power, liberty, and blessing. "As He is, so are we,
+in this world" (I John iv. 17). This is something perfectly wonderful!
+Let us ponder it: let us think of a poor, wretched, guilty slave of
+sin, a bondslave of Satan, a votary of the world, exposed to an eternal
+hell--such an one taken up by sovereign grace, delivered completely from
+the grasp of Satan, the dominion of sin, the power of this present evil
+world--pardoned, washed, justified, brought nigh to God, accepted in
+Christ, and perfectly and forever identified with Him, so that the Holy
+Ghost can say, as Christ is, so is he in this world!
+
+All this seems too good to be true; and, most assuredly, it is too good
+for us to get; but, blessed be the God of all grace, and blessed be the
+Christ of God! it is not too good for Him to give. God gives like
+Himself. He will be God, spite of our unworthiness and Satan's
+opposition. He will act in a way worthy of Himself, and worthy of the
+Son of His love. Were it a question of our deservings, we could only
+think of the deepest and darkest pit of hell. But seeing it is a
+question of what is worthy of God to give, and that He gives according
+to His estimate of the worthiness of Christ, then, verily, we can think
+of the very highest place in heaven. The glory of God, and the
+worthiness of His Son, are involved in His dealings with us; and hence
+everything that could possibly stand in the way of our eternal
+blessedness, has been disposed of in such a manner as to secure the
+divine glory, and furnish a triumphant answer to every plea of the
+enemy. Is it a question of trespass? "He has forgiven us all
+trespasses." Is it a question of sin? He has condemned sin at the cross,
+and thus put it away. Is it a question of guilt? It is canceled by the
+blood of the cross. Is it a question of death? He has taken away its
+sting, and actually made it part of our property. Is it a question of
+Satan? He has destroyed him, by annulling all his power. Is it a
+question of the world? He has delivered us from it, and snapped every
+link which connected us with it.
+
+Thus, beloved Christian reader, it stands with us if we are to be taught
+by Scripture, if we are to take God at His word, if we are to believe
+what He says. And we may add, if it be not thus, we are in our sins;
+under the power of sin; in the grasp of Satan; obnoxious to death; part
+and parcel of an evil, Christless, Godless world, and exposed to the
+unmitigated wrath of God--the vengeance of eternal fire.
+
+Oh that the blessed Spirit may open the eyes of God's people, and give
+them to see their proper place, their full and eternal deliverance in
+association with Christ who died for them, and _in whom they have died_,
+and _thus_ passed out of the power of all their enemies!
+
+
+PART III.
+
+Having glanced at two of the leading points in our subject, namely,
+Israel freed from guilt under the shelter of the blood, and Israel freed
+from all their enemies in the passage of the Red Sea, we have now to
+contemplate for a few moments Israel crossing the Jordan, and
+celebrating the paschal feast at Gilgal, in which they represent the
+risen position of Christians now.
+
+The Christian is one who is not only sheltered from judgment by the
+blood of the Lamb, not only delivered from the power of all his enemies
+by the death of Christ, but is also associated with Him where He now is,
+at the right hand of God; he is, with Christ, passed out of death, in
+resurrection, and is blessed with all spiritual blessings, in the
+heavenlies, in Christ. He is thus a heavenly man, and, as such, is
+called to walk in this world in all the varied relationships and
+responsibilities in which the good hand of God has placed him. He is not
+a monk, or an ascetic, or a man living in the clouds, fit neither for
+earth or heaven. He is not one who lives in a dreamy, misty, unpractical
+region; but, on the contrary, one whose happy privilege it is, from day
+to day, to reflect, amid the scenes and circumstances of earth, the
+graces and virtues of Christ, with whom, through infinite grace, and on
+the solid ground of accomplished redemption, he is linked in the power
+of the Holy Ghost.
+
+Such is the Christian, according to the teaching of the New Testament.
+Let the reader see that he understands it. It is very real, very
+definite, very positive, very practical. A child may know it, and
+realize it, and exhibit it. A Christian is one whose sins are forgiven,
+who possesses eternal life, and knows it; in whom the Holy Ghost dwells;
+he is accepted in and associated with a risen and glorified Christ; he
+has broken with the world, is dead to sin and the law, and finds his
+object and his delight, and his spiritual sustenance, in the Christ who
+loved him and gave Himself for him, and for whose coming he waits every
+day of his life.
+
+This, we repeat, is the New Testament description of a Christian. How
+immensely it differs from the ordinary type of Christian profession
+around us we need not say. But let the reader measure himself by the
+divine standard, and see wherein he comes short; for of this he may rest
+assured, that there is no reason whatsoever, so far as the love of God,
+or the work of Christ, or the testimony of the Holy Ghost, is concerned,
+why he should not be in the full enjoyment of all the rich and rare
+spiritual blessings which appertain to the true Christian position. Dark
+unbelief, fed by legality, bad teaching, and spurious religiousness, rob
+many of God's dear children of their proper place and portion. And not
+only so, but, from want of a thorough break with the world, many are
+sadly hindered from the clear perception and full realization of their
+position and privileges as heavenly men.
+
+But we are rather anticipating the instruction unfolded to us in the
+typical history of Israel, in Josh. iii.-v., to which we shall now turn.
+"And Joshua rose early in the morning; and they removed from Shittim,
+and came to Jordan, he and all the children of Israel, and lodged there
+before they passed over. And it came to pass, after three days, that the
+officers went through the host. And they commanded the people, saying,
+When ye see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the
+priests the Levites bearing it, then ye shall remove from your place,
+and go after it. _Yet there shall be a space between you and it_, about
+two thousand cubits by measure: _come not near unto it, that ye may know
+the way by which ye must go; for ye have not passed this way
+heretofore_" (Josh. iii. I-4).
+
+It is most desirable that the reader should, with all simplicity and
+clearness, seize the true spiritual import of the river Jordan. It
+typifies the death of Christ in one of its grand aspects, just as the
+Red Sea typifies it in another. When the children of Israel stood on the
+wilderness side of the Red Sea, they sang the song of redemption. They
+were a delivered people--delivered from Egypt and the power of Pharaoh.
+They saw all their enemies dead on the sea-shore. They could even
+anticipate, in glowing accents, their triumphal entrance into the
+promised land. "Thou in Thy mercy hast led forth the people which Thou
+hast redeemed; Thou hast guided them in Thy strength unto Thy holy
+habitation. The people shall hear, and be afraid: sorrow shall take hold
+on the inhabitants of Palestina. Then the dukes of Edom shall be amazed;
+the mighty men of Moab, trembling shall take hold upon them: all the
+inhabitants of Canaan shall melt away. Fear and dread shall fall upon
+them: by the greatness of Thine arm they shall be still as a stone; till
+Thy people pass over, O Lord, till the people pass over which Thou hast
+purchased. Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of
+Thine inheritance, in the place, O Lord, which Thou hast made for Thee
+to dwell in; in the sanctuary, O Lord, which Thy hands have established.
+The Lord shall reign for ever and ever."
+
+All this was perfectly magnificent, and divinely true. But they were not
+yet in Canaan. Jordan--of which, most surely, there is no mention in
+their glorious song of victory--lay between them and the promised land.
+True, in the purpose of God and in the judgment of faith, the land was
+theirs; but they had to traverse the wilderness, cross the Jordan, and
+take possession.
+
+How constantly we see all this exemplified in the history of souls! When
+first converted, there is nothing but joy and victory and praise. They
+know their sins forgiven; they are filled with wonder, love, and praise.
+Being justified by faith, they have peace with God, and they can rejoice
+in hope of His glory, yea, and joy in Himself through Jesus Christ our
+Lord. They are in Rom. v. I-11; and, in one sense, there can be nothing
+higher. Even in heaven itself we shall have nothing higher or better
+than "joy in God." Persons sometimes speak of Rom. viii. being higher
+than Rom. v.: but what can be higher than "joy in God"? If we are
+brought to God, we have reached the most exalted point to which any soul
+can come. To know Him as our portion, our rest, our stay, our object,
+our all; to have all our springs in Him, and know Him as a perfect
+covering for our eyes, at all times, and in all places, and under all
+circumstances--this is heaven itself to the believer.
+
+But there is this difference between Rom. v. and viii., that vi. and
+vii. lie between; and when the soul has traveled practically through
+these latter, and learns how to apply their profound and precious
+teaching to the great questions of indwelling sin and the law, then it
+is in a better state, though, most assuredly, not in a higher standing.
+
+We repeat, and with emphasis, the words "_traveled practically_." For it
+must be even so, if we would really enter into these holy mysteries
+according to God. It is easy to talk about being "dead to sin" and "dead
+to the law"--easy to see these things written in Rom. vi. and vii.--easy
+to grasp, in the intellect, the mere theory of these things. But the
+question is, have we made them our own--have they been applied
+practically to our souls by the power of the Holy Ghost? Are they
+livingly exhibited in our ways to the glory of Him who, at such a cost
+to Himself, has brought us into such a marvelous place of blessing and
+privilege?
+
+It is much to be feared that there is a vast amount of merely
+intellectual traffic in these deep and precious mysteries of our most
+holy faith, which, if only laid hold of in spiritual power, would
+produce wonderful results in practice.
+
+But we must return to our theme; and in doing so, we would ask the
+reader if he really understands the true spiritual import of the river
+Jordan? What does it really mean? We have said that it typifies the
+death of Christ. But in what aspect? for that precious death, as we are
+now considering, has many and various aspects. We believe the Jordan
+sets forth the death of our Lord Jesus Christ as that by which we are
+introduced into the inheritance He has obtained for us. The Red Sea
+_delivered Israel from_ Egypt and the power of Pharaoh. Jordan _brought
+them into_ the land of Canaan.
+
+We find both in the death of Christ. He, blessed be His name, has, by
+His death on the cross--His death for us--delivered us from our sins,
+from their guilt and condemnation, from Satan's power, and from this
+present evil world.
+
+But more than this: He has, by the same infinitely precious work,
+brought us _now_ into an entirely new position, in resurrection and in
+living union and association with Himself, where He is at God's right
+hand. Such is the distinct teaching of Eph. ii. "But God, who is rich in
+mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead
+in sins, _hath quickened us together with Christ_, (by grace ye are
+saved;) and _hath raised us up together_, and made us _sit together in
+the heavenlies_ in Christ Jesus" (vers. 4-6).
+
+Note the little word "_hath_." He is not speaking of what God _will_ do,
+but of what He _hath_ done--done for us, and with us, in Christ Jesus.
+The believer has not to wait till he passes out of this life to enjoy
+his inheritance in heaven. In the person of his living and glorified
+Head, through faith, by the Spirit, he belongs there now, and is free to
+all that God has given to all His own.[VI.]
+
+Is all this real and true? Yes! As real and true as that Christ hung on
+the cross and lay in the grave; as real and true as that we were dead in
+trespasses and sins; as real and true as the truth of God can make it;
+as real and true as the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the body of
+every true believer.
+
+Mark, reader, we are not now speaking of the practical working-out of
+all this glorious truth in the life of Christians from day to day. This
+is another thing altogether. Alas, alas! if our only idea of true
+Christian position were to be drawn from the practical career of
+professing Christians, we might give up Christianity as a myth or a
+sham.
+
+But, thank God, it is not so. We must learn what true Christianity is
+from the pages of the New Testament, and, having learnt it there, judge
+ourselves, our ways, our surroundings, by its heavenly light. In this
+way, while we shall ever have to confess and mourn our shortcomings, our
+hearts shall ever, more and more, be filled with praise to Him whose
+infinite grace has brought us into such a glorious position, in union
+and fellowship with His own Son--a position, blessed be God, in nowise
+dependent upon our personal state, but which, if really apprehended,
+must exert a powerful influence upon our entire course, conduct, and
+character.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[VI.] [There are three very distinct aspects of the death of Christ
+which, to apprehend clearly, is of unspeakable value to the soul.
+
+1st. That which is typified in the blood of the paschal lamb on Israel's
+doors in Egypt. This is the judgment of God against the sinner in the
+person of the Substitute provided for him. Rom. iii. 23-27 applies to
+this.
+
+It brings peace to the soul who believes, for his judgment is passed.
+Christ has borne it in our stead.
+
+2nd. As revealed at the passage of the Red Sea. There it is fully
+manifested that God is _for_ His people; He has completely overcome
+their enemy and freed them from his power forever. The prince and his
+hosts, who ruled over them unto death, are drowned in the sea. God's
+people have passed out of his dominions, and can now go on with God in
+perfect freedom. No condemnation remains. Henceforth, to faith, Satan is
+a vanquished foe. God's people are delivered; they can now, in settled
+peace, worship, praise, and serve their God. Blessed, holy deliverance
+and service! Rom. vi.-vii. gives the full teaching of this aspect of the
+death of Christ.
+
+3rd. As seen in the passage of Jordan. There is no judgment to escape
+there; no foe pressing behind. It is a question of entering the good
+land which is just across. It is the death of Christ here as _the ending
+of His people's history_ _as children of Adam_; that, by resurrection,
+He may now introduce them, as having died and risen with Him, into the
+place of glory where He has gone. By this it can be said, "As He is, so
+are we in this world" (I John iv. 17)
+
+Col. ii. 10-iii. 4, is the New Testament doctrine of this precious
+truth. ED.]
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+The more deeply we ponder the typical instruction presented in the river
+Jordan, the more clearly we must see that the whole Christian position
+is involved in the standpoint from which we view it. Jordan means death,
+but, for the believer, a death that is _past_--the death we have gone
+through as identified with Christ, and which, through resurrection, has
+brought us on the other side--the Canaan side--where He is now. He,
+typified by the ark, has passed over before us into Jordan, to stem its
+torrent for us, and make it a dry path for our feet, so that we might
+pass clean over into our heavenly inheritance. The Prince of life has
+destroyed, on our behalf, him that had the power of death. He has taken
+the sting from death; yea, He has made death itself the very means by
+which we reach, even now, in spirit and by faith, the true heavenly
+Canaan.
+
+Let us see how all this is unfolded in our type. Mark particularly the
+commandment given by the officers of the host. "When ye see the ark of
+the covenant of the Lord your God, and the priests the Levites bearing
+it, then ye shall remove from your place, and go after it." The ark must
+go first. They dared not to move one inch along that mysterious way,
+until the symbol of the divine Presence had gone before.
+
+"Yet there shall be a space between you and it, about two thousand
+cubits by measure: _come not near unto it that ye may know the way by
+which ye must go_; for ye have _not passed this way heretofore_." It was
+an awful flood ahead of them. No mortal could tread it with impunity.
+Death and destruction are linked together. "It is appointed unto men
+once to die; but after this the judgment" (Heb. ix.) Who can stand
+before the king of terrors? Who can face that grim and terrible foe? Who
+can encounter the swellings of Jordan? Who, except the Ark go first, can
+face death and judgment? Poor Peter thought he could; but he was sadly
+mistaken. He said unto Jesus, "Lord, whither goest thou? Jesus answered
+him, Whither I go, _thou canst not follow Me now_; but thou shalt follow
+Me afterwards."
+
+How fully these words explain the import of that mystic "space" between
+Israel and the ark. Peter did not understand that space. He had not
+studied aright Josh. iii. 4. He knew nothing of that terrible pathway
+which his blessed Master was about to enter upon. "Peter said unto Him,
+Lord, why cannot I follow Thee now? I will lay down my life for Thy
+sake."
+
+Poor dear Peter! How little he knew of himself, or of that which he
+was--sincerely, no doubt, though ignorantly--undertaking to do! How
+little did he imagine that the very sound of death's dark river, heard
+even in the distance, would be sufficient so to terrify him, as to make
+him curse and swear that he did not know his Master! "Jesus answered
+him, Wilt thou lay down thy life for My sake? Verily, verily, I say unto
+thee, the cock shall not crow till thou hast denied Me thrice."
+
+"Yet there shall be a space between you and it." How needful! How
+absolutely essential! Truly there was a space between Peter and his
+Lord. Jesus had to go before. He had to meet death in its most terrific
+form. He had to tread that rough path in profound solitude--for who
+could accompany Him? "There shall be a space between you and it: come
+not near to it, that ye may know the way by which ye must go; for ye
+have not passed this way heretofore."
+
+"Thou canst not follow Me _now_: but thou shalt follow me _afterwards_."
+Blessed Master! He would not suffer His poor feeble servant to enter
+upon that terrible path, until He Himself had gone before, and so
+entirely changed its character, that the pathway of death should be
+lighted up with the beams of life and the light of God's face. Our Jesus
+has "abolished death, and brought life and incorruptibility to light by
+the gospel."
+
+Thus death is no longer death to the believer. It was death to Jesus, in
+all its intensity, in all its horrors, in all its reality. He met it as
+the power which Satan wields over the soul of man. He met it as the
+penalty due to sin. He met it as the just judgment of God against
+sin--against us. There was not a single feature, not a single
+ingredient, not a single circumstance, which could possibly render
+death formidable which did not enter into the death of Christ. He met
+all; and, blessed be God, _we are accounted as having gone through all
+in and by Him_. We died in Him, so that death has no further claim upon
+us, or power over us. Its claims are disposed of, its power broken and
+gone for all believers. The whole scene is cleared completely of death,
+and filled with life and incorruptibility.
+
+And hence, in Peter's case, we find our Lord, in the last chapter of
+John, most graciously meeting the desire of His servant's heart--a
+desire in which he was perfectly sincere--the desire to follow his
+beloved Lord. "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young,
+thou girdest thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest; but when thou
+shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird
+thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not. This spake He signifying
+by what death he should glorify God." Thus death, instead of being the
+judgment of God to overwhelm Peter, was turned into a means by which
+Peter could glorify God.
+
+What a glorious change! What a stupendous mystery! How it magnifies the
+cross, or rather the One who hung thereon! What a mighty revolution,
+when a poor sinful man can, by death, glorify God! So completely has
+death been robbed of its sting, so thoroughly has its character been
+changed that, instead of shrinking from it with terror, we can meet it,
+if it does come, and go through it with song of victory; and instead of
+its being to us the wages of sin, it is a means by which we can glorify
+God. All praise to Him who has so wrought for us! to Him who has gone
+down into Jordan's deepest depths for us, and made there a highway by
+which His ransomed people can pass over into their heavenly inheritance!
+May our hearts adore Him! May all our powers be stirred up to magnify
+His holy name! May our whole life be devoted to His praise! May we
+appreciate the grace and lay hold of the inheritance.
+
+But we must proceed with our type.
+
+"And Joshua spake unto the priests, saying, Take up the ark of the
+covenant, and pass over before the people. And they took up the ark of
+the covenant, and went before the people. And the Lord said unto Joshua,
+This day will I begin to magnify thee in the sight of all Israel, that
+they may know that as I was with Moses, so I will be with thee." Joshua
+stands before us as a type of the risen Christ, leading His people, in
+the power of the Holy Ghost, into their heavenly inheritance. The
+priests bearing the ark into the midst of Jordan typify Christ going
+down into death for us, and destroying completely its power. "He passed
+through death's dark raging flood, to make our rest secure;" and not
+only to make it secure, but to lead us into it, in association with
+Himself, now, in spirit and by faith; by-and-by, in actual fact.
+
+"And Joshua said unto the children of Israel, Come hither, and hear the
+words of the Lord your God. And Joshua said, Hereby ye shall know that
+the _living_ God is among you, and that He will without fail drive out
+from before you the Canaanites.... Behold, the ark of the covenant of
+the Lord of all the earth passeth over before you into Jordan."
+
+The passage of the ark into Jordan proved two things, namely, the
+presence of the living God in the midst of His people; and that He would
+most surely drive out all their enemies from before them. The death of
+Christ is the basis and the guarantee of everything to faith. Grant us
+but this, that Christ has gone down into death for us, and we argue,
+with all possible confidence, that, in this one great fact, all is
+secured. God is with us, and God is for us. "He that spared not His own
+Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also
+freely give us all things?" The difficulty of unbelief is, "How shall
+He?" The difficulty of faith is, "How shall He _not_?"
+
+Israel might wonder how all the hosts of Canaan could ever be expelled
+from before them: let them gaze on the ark in the midst of Jordan, and
+cease to wonder, cease to doubt. The less is included in the greater.
+And hence we can say, What may we not expect, seeing that Christ has
+died for us? There is nothing too good, nothing too great, nothing too
+glorious, for God to do for us, and in us, and with us, seeing He has
+not spared His only-begotten Son, but delivered Him up for us all.
+Everything is secured for us by the precious death of Christ. It has
+opened up the everlasting flood-gates of the love of God, so that the
+rich streams thereof might flow down into the very depths of our souls.
+It fills us with the sweetest assurance that the One who could bruise
+His only-begotten Son, on the cursed tree, for us, will meet our every
+need, carry us through all our difficulties, and lead us into the full
+possession and enjoyment of all that His eternal purpose of grace has in
+store for us. Having given us such a proof of His love, even when we
+were yet sinners, what may we not expect at His hands now that He views
+us in association with that blessed One who glorified Him in death--the
+death that He died for us? When Israel saw the ark in the midst of
+Jordan, they were entitled to consider that all was secured. As our Lord
+also said to His disciples before leaving them, "Be of good cheer, I
+have overcome the world;" and, in view of His cross, He could say, "Now
+is the prince of this world cast out." True, Israel had, as we know, to
+take possession: they had to plant their feet upon the inheritance; but
+the power that could stem death's dark waters, could also drive out
+every foe from before them, and put them in peaceful possession of all
+that God had promised.
+
+
+PART V.
+
+In closing this series of brief papers on Gilgal, we must turn our
+thoughts to the practical application of that which has been engaging
+our attention. If it be true--and it is true--that Jesus died for us, it
+is equally true that we have died in Him; as one of our own poets has
+sweetly put it:
+
+ "For me, Lord Jesus, Thou hast died
+ And I have died in Thee:
+ Thou'rt risen--my bands are all untied,
+ And now Thou livest in me.
+ The Father's face of radiant grace
+ Shines now in light on me."
+
+Now this is a great practical truth--none more so. It lies at the very
+foundation of all true Christianity. If Christ has died for us, then, in
+very deed, He has taken us completely out of our old condition, with all
+that appertained to it, and placed us upon an entirely new footing. We
+can look back from resurrection-ground on which we now stand, into the
+dark river of death, and see there, in its deepest depths, the memorial
+of the victory gained for us by the Prince of Life. We do not look
+forward to death; we look back at it. We can truly say, "The bitterness
+of death is past."
+
+Jesus met death for us in its most terrible form. Just as the river of
+Jordan was divided when it presented its most formidable
+appearance--"for Jordan overfloweth all its banks all the time of
+harvest"--so our Jesus encountered our last great enemy, vanquished him
+in his most fearful form, and left behind, in the very centre of death's
+dark domain, the imperishable record of His glorious victory. All
+praise, homage, and adoration to His peerless name! It is our privilege,
+by faith and in spirit, to stand on Canaan's side of Jordan, and erect
+our memorial of what the Saviour, the true Joshua, has done for us.
+
+"And it came to pass, when all the people were clean passed over Jordan,
+that the Lord spake unto Joshua, saying, Take you twelve men out of the
+people, _out of every tribe a man_. And command ye them, saying, Take
+you hence out of the midst of Jordan, _out of the place where the
+priests' feet stood firm_, twelve stones; and ye shall carry them over
+with you, and leave them in the lodging-place where ye shall lodge this
+night. Then Joshua called the twelve men whom he had prepared of the
+children of Israel, _out of every tribe a man_. And Joshua said unto
+them, Pass over before the ark of the Lord your God, into the midst of
+Jordan, and take you up _every man of you_ a stone upon his shoulder,
+according unto the number of the tribes of the children of Israel: that
+this may be a sign among you, that when your children ask their fathers
+in time to come, saying, What mean ye by these stones? then ye shall
+answer them, That the waters of Jordan were cut off before the ark of
+the covenant of the Lord; when it passed over Jordan, the waters of
+Jordan were cut off: and these stones shall be _for a memorial_ unto the
+children of Israel for ever" (Josh. iv: I-7).
+
+The great fact was to be seized, and practically carried out by the
+whole assembly, "of every tribe a man"--"every man of you a stone upon
+his shoulder," a stone taken from the very spot where the priests' feet
+stood firm. All were to be brought into living personal contact with the
+great mysterious fact that the waters of Jordan were cut off. All were
+to engage in erecting such a memorial of this fact as should elicit
+inquiry from their children as to what it meant. It was never to be
+forgotten.
+
+What a lesson is here for us! Are we erecting our memorial? Are we
+giving evidence--such evidence as may strike even the mind of a
+child--of the fact that our Jesus has vanquished the power of death for
+us? Are we affording any practical proof in daily life that Christ has
+died for us, and that we have died in Him? Is there aught in our actual
+history, from day to day, answering to the figure set forth in the
+passage just quoted--"every man of you a stone upon his shoulder"? Are
+we declaring plainly that we have passed clean over Jordan--that we
+belong to heaven--that we are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit? Do
+our children see aught in our habits and ways, in our spirit and
+deportment, in our whole character and manner of life, leading them to
+inquire, "What mean ye by these things?" Are we living as those who are
+dead with Christ--dead to sin--dead to the world?
+
+Are we practically freed from the world--letting go our hold of present
+things, in the power of communion with a risen Christ?
+
+These are searching questions for the soul, beloved Christian reader.
+Let us seek to meet them honestly, as in the divine presence. We profess
+these things, we hold them in theory. We say we believe that Jesus died
+for us, and that we died in Him. Where is the proof--where the abiding
+memorial--where the stone on the shoulder? Let us judge ourselves
+honestly before God. Let us no longer rest satisfied with anything short
+of the thorough, practical, habitual carrying out of the great truth
+that "we are dead, and our life is hid with Christ in God." Mere
+profession is worthless. We want the living power--the true result--the
+proper fruit.
+
+"And the people came up out of Jordan on the tenth day of the first
+month, and encamped in Gilgal, in the east border of Jericho. And _those
+twelve stones which they took out of Jordan_"--stones of peculiar
+import--no other stones could tell such a tale, teach such a lesson, or
+symbolize such a stupendous fact--no other stones like them--"those
+twelve stones did Joshua pitch in Gilgal. And he spake unto the children
+of Israel, saying, When your children shall ask their fathers in time to
+come, saying, What mean these stones? then ye shall let your children
+know, saying, _Israel came over this Jordan on dry land_. For the Lord
+your God dried up the waters of Jordan from before you, until ye were
+passed over, as the Lord your God did to the Red Sea, which He dried up
+from before us, until we were gone over: that all the people of the
+earth might know the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty: that ye might
+fear the Lord your God forever."
+
+Here, then, we see Israel at Gilgal. "Everything was finished that the
+Lord commanded Joshua to speak unto the people, according to all that
+Moses commanded Joshua." Every member of the host had passed clean over
+Jordan--not one had been suffered to feel the slightest touch of the
+river of death. Grace had brought them all safely over into the
+inheritance promised to their fathers. They were not only separated from
+Egypt by the Red Sea, but actually brought into Canaan across the dry
+bed of the Jordan, and encamped in Gilgal, in the plains of Jericho.
+
+And now mark what follows. "And it came to pass, when all the kings of
+the Amorites which were on the side of Jordan westward, and all the
+kings of the Canaanites which were by the sea, heard that the Lord had
+dried up the waters of Jordan from before the children of Israel, until
+we were passed over, that their heart melted, neither was there spirit
+in them any more, because of the children of Israel. _At that
+time_"--note the words!--when all the nations were paralyzed with terror
+at the very thought of this people--"at that time the Lord said unto
+Joshua, Make thee _sharp knives_, and circumcise again the children of
+Israel the second time."
+
+How deeply significant is this: How suggestive are these "sharp knives"!
+How needful! If Israel are about to bring the sword upon the Canaanites,
+Israel must have the sharp knife applied to themselves. They had never
+been circumcised in the wilderness. The reproach of Egypt had never been
+rolled away from them. And ere they could celebrate the passover, and
+eat of the old corn of the land of Canaan, they must have the sentence
+of death written upon them. No doubt this was aught but agreeable to
+nature; but it must be done. How could they take possession of Canaan
+with the reproach of Egypt resting upon them? How could uncircumcised
+people dispossess the Canaanites? Impossible! The sharp knives had to do
+their work throughout the camp of Israel ere they could eat of Canaan's
+food or prosecute the warfare which of necessity belongs to it.
+
+"And Joshua made him sharp knives, and circumcised the children of
+Israel at the hill of the foreskins. And this is the cause why Joshua
+did circumcise. All the people that came out of Egypt that were males,
+even all the men of war, died in the wilderness by the way, after they
+came out of Egypt.... And their children, whom he raised up in their
+stead, them Joshua circumcised: for they were uncircumcised, because
+they had not circumcised them by the way.... And the Lord said unto
+Joshua, This day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from off you.
+Wherefore the name of the place is called Gilgal ("rolling") unto this
+day. And the children of Israel encamped in Gilgal, and kept the
+passover on the fourteenth day of the month, at even, in the plains of
+Jericho. And they did eat of the old corn of the land on the morrow
+after the passover, unleavened cakes and parched corn, in the self-same
+day. And the manna ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the old
+corn of the land; neither had the children of Israel manna any more; but
+they did eat of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year."
+
+Here, then, we have a type of the full Christian position. The Christian
+is a heavenly man, dead to the world, crucified with Christ, associated
+with Him where He now is, and, while waiting for His appearing, occupied
+in heart with Him, feeding by faith upon Him as the proper nourishment
+of the new man.
+
+Such is the Christian's position--such his portion. But in order to
+enter fully into the enjoyment thereof, there must be the application of
+the "sharp knife" to all that belongs to mere nature. There must be the
+sentence of death written upon that which Scripture designates as "the
+old man."
+
+All this must be really and practically entered into if we would
+maintain our position or enjoy our proper portion as heavenly men. If we
+are indulging nature; if we are living in a low, worldly atmosphere; if
+we are going in for this world's pursuits, its pleasures, its politics,
+its riches, its honors, its fashions, and its distinctions--then,
+verily, it is impossible that we can be enjoying fellowship with our
+risen Head and Lord.[VII.] Christ is in heaven, and to enjoy Him we must
+be living, in spirit and by faith, where He is. He is not of this world;
+and if we are of it, we cannot be enjoying fellowship with Him. "If we
+say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and
+do not the truth" (I John i. 6).
+
+This is most solemn. If I am living in and of the world, I am walking in
+darkness, and I can have no fellowship with a heavenly Christ.
+"Wherefore," says the blessed apostle, "if ye be dead with Christ from
+the rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
+subject to ordinances?" Do we really understand these words? Have we
+weighed the full force of the expression, "living in the world"? Is the
+Christian not to be as one living in the world? Clearly not. He is to
+live, in spirit, where Christ is. As to fact, he is obviously on this
+earth, moving up and down, and in and out, in the varied relations of
+life, and in the varied spheres of action in which the hand of God has
+set him. But his home is in heaven. His life is there. His object, his
+rest, his proper _all_, is in heaven. He does not belong to earth. His
+citizenship is in heaven; and in order to make this good in practice
+from day to day, there must be the denial of self, the mortification of
+our members.
+
+All this comes vividly out in Col. iii. Indeed, it would be impossible
+to give a more striking exposition of the entire subject of "Gilgal"
+than that presented in the following lines: "If ye then be risen with
+Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the
+right hand of God. Set your affections on things above, not on things on
+the earth. For ye have died, and your life is hid with Christ in God.
+When Christ our life shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
+glory." And now comes the true spiritual import and application of
+"Gilgal" and its "sharp knives"--"Mortify, therefore, your members which
+are upon the earth."
+
+May the Holy Spirit lead us into a deeper and fuller understanding of
+our place, portion and practice as Christians. Would to God that we
+better knew what it is to feed upon the old corn of the land, at the
+true spiritual Gilgal, that thus we might be better fitted for the
+conflict and service to which we are called!
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[VII.] The reader may here remark that "the old corn of the land of
+Canaan" is a type of Christ risen and glorified. The manna is a type of
+Christ in His humiliation. The remembrance of Him in the latter is
+ineffably precious to the soul. It is sweet to look back and trace His
+way as the lowly, humble, self-emptied man. This is to feed upon the
+hidden manna--"Christ, once humbled here." Nevertheless, a risen,
+ascended and glorified Christ is the true object for the heart of the
+Christian; but to enjoy Him there, the reproach of this present evil
+world--all conformity to it--must be rolled away from us by the
+spiritual application of the circumcision of Christ. He was not
+conformed to this world, and we must be prepared to identify ourselves
+with Him in this.
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE CONFIRMATION VOWS
+
+
+"All that the Lord hath spoken we will do." Such were the memorable
+words with which the people of Israel virtually abandoned the ground on
+which the blessed God had just been setting them, and on which, too, He
+had dealt with them in bringing them up out of the land of Egypt. "Ye
+have seen," said He, "what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you
+on eagles' wings, and brought you unto Myself." All this was
+grace--pure, perfect, divine grace. He heard the groans and beheld the
+sorrows of the people amid the darkness and degradation of Egyptian
+bondage, and in His unmingled mercy He came down to deliver them. He
+sought not their aid, He looked not for aught from them. "His own arm
+brought salvation." He acted _for_ them, _with_ them, and _in_ them; and
+that, too, in the solitariness and sovereignty of His own unfailing
+grace. He said to Moses at the opening of the book of Exodus, "_I am
+come down to deliver them_." This was absolute and unqualified grace.
+There was no "if," no "but," no condition, no vow, no resolve. It was
+FREE GRACE, founded upon God's eternal counsels, and righteously
+displayed in immediate connection with "the blood of the Lamb." Hence,
+from first to last, the word to Israel was, "_stand still, and see the
+salvation of Jehovah_." They were not called to "resolve," or to "vow,"
+or to "do." God was acting for them--He was doing ALL: He placed Himself
+between them and every enemy, and every evil. He spread forth the shield
+of His salvation that they might hide themselves behind its impenetrable
+defences, and abide there in peace.
+
+But, alas, Israel made a vow--a strange, a singular vow indeed. Not
+satisfied with God's doings, they would fain talk of their own. They
+would be doing, as if God's salvation were incomplete; and in lamentable
+ignorance of their own weakness and nothingness, they said, "All that
+the Lord hath spoken we will do." This was taking a bold stand, a high
+ground. For a poor worm to make such a vow proved how little grace was
+really understood, or nature's true condition apprehended.
+
+However, Israel having undertaken to "_do_," they were put to the test,
+and the most cursory view of Ex. xix. will be sufficient to show what a
+marked change took place the moment they had uttered the words "we will
+do." The Lord had just reminded them of how He "bare them on eagles'
+wings, and brought them unto Himself;" but now He says, "Set bounds unto
+the people round about, saying, Take heed to yourselves, that ye go not
+up into the mount, or touch the border of it: whosoever toucheth the
+mount shall be surely put to death." This was a very different aspect of
+things. And let my reader remember, it was the simple result of man's
+having said, "I will do." There is far more involved in those words than
+many might imagine. If we take our eyes off from God's actings, and fix
+them on our own, the consequences must be disastrous in the extreme. But
+we shall see this more fully ere we close this paper. Let us now inquire
+how the house of Israel fulfilled their singular vow. We shall see that
+it ended like human vows in every age.[VIII.]
+
+Did they do "_all_" that the Lord commanded? Did they "continue in all
+things which are written in the book of the law, to do them?" Alas, no.
+On the contrary, we find that ere the tables of testimony were given,
+they had broken the very first commandment in the Decalogue, by making a
+golden calf, and bowing down thereto. This was the earliest fruit of
+their broken vow; and then, onward they went, from stage to stage,
+dishonoring the name of the Lord--breaking His laws, despising His
+judgments, trampling under foot His sacred institutions. Then followed
+the stoning of His messengers whom, in patient grace and long-suffering,
+He sent unto them. Finally, when the only-begotten Son came forth from
+the bosom of the Father, they with wicked hearts rejected and with
+wicked hands crucified Him. Thus we pass from Sinai to Calvary: at the
+former we hear man undertaking to do all the Lord's commandments, and at
+the latter see him crucifying the Lord Himself. So much for man's vows,
+so much for man's "_I will do_." The fragments of the tables of
+testimony scattered beneath the fiery mount told the first melancholy
+tale of the failure of man's audacious resolution: nor was there any
+real break in the narrative, which has its closing scene around the
+cross of Calvary. All was failure--gross, unmitigated failure. Thus it
+must ever be when man presumes to vow or resolve in the presence of God.
+
+Now there is a very striking resemblance between Israel's vow at the
+foot of mount Sinai and the Confirmation Vow of the Establishment. We
+have rapidly glanced at the former; let us now refer to the latter.
+
+In "the ministration of public baptism of infants," after various
+prayers and the reading of the Gospel, the minister addresses the
+godfathers and godmothers on this wise: "Dearly beloved, ye have brought
+this child here to be baptized; ye have prayed that our Lord Jesus
+Christ would vouchsafe to receive him, to release him of his sins, to
+sanctify him with the Holy Ghost, to give him the kingdom of heaven and
+everlasting life. Ye have heard also that our Lord Jesus Christ hath
+promised in His gospel to grant all these things that ye have prayed
+for: which promise He, for His part, will most surely keep and perform.
+Wherefore, after this promise made by Christ, this infant must also
+faithfully, for his part, promise by you that are his sureties (until he
+come of age to take it upon himself), that _he will renounce_ the devil
+and all his works, and constantly believe God's holy word and
+_obediently keep His commandments_. I demand, therefore, Dost thou, in
+the name of this child, renounce the devil and all his works, the vain
+pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and
+the carnal desires of the flesh, so that thou wilt not follow nor be led
+by them? _Answer_: I RENOUNCE THEM ALL." Again: "Wilt thou obediently
+keep God's holy will and commandments, and walk in the same all the days
+of thy life? _Answer_: I WILL."
+
+Both the above vows the children, when come to years of discretion,
+deliberately and solemnly take upon themselves, as may be seen by
+reference to "The Order of Confirmation." Thus we have, in the first
+place, people vowing and resolving, on behalf of unconscious infants, to
+"renounce the world, the flesh, and the devil," and to keep all God's
+commandments, all the days of their life; and, in the second place, we
+find those children, in due time, placing themselves under the weight of
+those awful vows; and all this, moreover, as a necessary condition to
+the fulfilment of Christ's promise. That is to say, if they allow aught
+of the world, the flesh or the devil to adhere to them; or if they fail
+in the faithful keeping of _all_ God's commandments, then they cannot be
+saved, but must, so far as they are concerned, inevitably be condemned.
+In short, salvation is here made to depend on a covenant to which man
+makes himself a party. Christ is represented as willing to do His part,
+provided always that man accomplishes his; but not otherwise. In other
+words, there is an "_if_" in the matter, and, as a consequence, there
+never is, and never can be, the certainty of salvation; yea, there can
+only be the constant terror of eternal condemnation hanging over the
+soul; that is, if there is any thought about the matter at all.
+
+If the heart is not perfectly assured of the fact that Christ has in
+very deed done all; that He has put away our sin; that He has forever
+canceled our debt; that He has settled, by His perfect sacrifice, every
+question that could possibly arise, whether it be the charges of
+conscience, the accusings of Satan, or the claims of divine justice;
+that He has not left a cloud on the prospect; that all is perfectly
+done--in a word, that we stand before God in the power of divine
+righteousness, and in the same favor with His own Son; if, I say, there
+be any doubt in the soul as to the eternal truth of all these
+things--then there cannot be settled peace. And that there is not this
+settled peace in the case of those who have taken on themselves the
+above tremendous vows is but too evident from the clouds and darkness
+which hang around their spirits as they tread the next stage of their
+ecclesiastical journey.
+
+We could hardly expect that persons who boldly vow to renounce all evil,
+and perfectly to fulfil all good, could approach the Lord's table with
+any other acknowledgment than the following, namely: "The burden of our
+sins is intolerable." It would need an obtuse conscience to be able to
+shake off the conviction that those vows have been unfulfilled; and
+then, assuredly, the burden must be intolerable. If I have taken vows
+upon me, they will, without doubt, prove in the sequel to be dishonored
+vows; and thus the whole matter of my salvation comes to the ground, and
+I find myself, according to the terms of my own self-chosen covenant,
+righteously exposed to the curses of a broken law. I have undertaken to
+do everything; and yet I have in reality done nothing. Hence I am
+"cursed;" for the word is, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in
+all things which are written in the book of the law, to do them."
+
+Nor will it at all alter the matter to say that those extraordinary vows
+are entered into in dependence upon divine grace; for there cannot be
+such a thing as dependence upon _grace_ when people are placing
+themselves directly under the _law_. No two things can be more opposite
+than law and grace. They are put in direct contrast in Paul's epistles
+to the Romans and Galatians. "Whosoever of you are justified by the law
+([Greek: en nomô]),[IX.] ye are fallen from grace" (Gal. v. 4). Hence, to
+think of depending upon grace when putting myself under law is precisely
+the same as if I were to look to God for grace to enable me to subvert
+the entire gospel of His Son Jesus Christ. "As many as are of works of
+law ([Greek: ergôn nomou])[IX.] are under the curse." Could I depend
+upon God's grace to enable me to abide under the curse? The thought is
+preposterous in the extreme. And be it observed that the apostle, in the
+last-quoted passage, does not merely say, "As many as fail to keep the
+law are under the curse." This he distinctly teaches, no doubt; but the
+special point is, that as many as attempt to stand before God on the
+ground of "works of law," are of necessity under the curse, for the
+simplest of all reasons, that they are not able to satisfy His claims.
+In order for man to satisfy God's claims, he must bewhat in himself he
+cannot be; that is, without sin. The law demands, as its right, perfect
+obedience; and those who take upon them the Confirmation Vows promise
+perfect obedience. They promise to renounce all evil, and to fulfil all
+good, in the most absolute manner; and moreover, they make their
+salvation to depend upon their fulfilment of those vows; else why make
+them at all?
+
+This, when looked at in the light of the apostolic teaching in Romans
+and Galatians, is the most complete denial of all the fundamental truths
+of the gospel. In the first place, it is a denial of man's total ruin,
+of his condition as one "dead in trespasses and sins," "alienated from
+the life of God," "without strength," "ungodly," "enmity against God."
+If I can undertake to renounce all evil, and to do all God's
+commandments, then, assuredly, I do not know myself to be a lost,
+ruined, helpless creature; and, as a consequence, I do not need a
+Saviour. If I can boldly undertake to "_renounce_" and to "_do_," to
+"keep" and to "walk," I am manifestly not lost, and hence I do not want
+salvation; I am not dead, and hence I do not want life; I am not
+"without strength," and hence I do not want the energy of that new, that
+divine life which is imparted by the Holy Ghost to all who, by His
+grace, believe in the Son of God. If I am capable of doing for myself, I
+do not want another, even the Lord Jesus Christ, to do all for me.
+
+Again, as flowing out of what has already been stated, those vows do
+entirely set aside the essential glories, divine dignities and sacred
+virtues of the cross of Christ. If I can get a godfather and godmother
+to take vows on them on my behalf until I am capable of taking them on
+myself, then it is evident I cannot possibly know the deep blessedness
+of having all my vows, all my responsibilities and liabilities as a lost
+sinner, all my sins and shortcomings,--everything, in short,--fully and
+eternally answered in the Cross. If there is anything in my case which
+has not been perfectly settled in the Cross, then I must inevitably
+perish. I may make vows and resolutions, but they are as the morning
+cloud that passeth away. I may get a sponsor to renounce the devil on my
+behalf, and I may in due time talk of renouncing him for myself; but
+what if the devil all the while has fast hold of both my sponsor and
+myself? He will not renounce me, unless the chain by which he binds me
+has been snapped asunder by the Cross.
+
+Again, I may get a sponsor to undertake to keep all God's commandments
+for me, and, in due time, I may undertake to keep them for myself; but
+what if neither my sponsor nor I really understand the true nature or
+spirituality, the majesty or stringency, of that law? Yea, more. What if
+both he and I are, by our very vows, made debtors to do the whole law,
+and thus shut up under its terrible curse? What then becomes of all our
+vows and resolutions? Is it not plain that I am throwing overboard the
+cross? Truly so. That cross must either be everything or nothing to me.
+If it is anything it must be everything; and if it is not everything it
+is nothing. Thus it stands, my beloved reader. The gospel of the grace
+of God sets forth Christ as the great Sponsor and Surety of His people.
+The Confirmation Service sets one sinner to stand sponsor for another,
+or for himself. The gospel sets forth One, who is possessed of
+"unsearchable riches," as the security for His people; the Confirmation
+Service sets one bankrupt to stand security for another or for himself.
+What avails such security? Who would accept of it? It is perfectly
+valueless to God and man. If I am a bankrupt, I cannot promise to pay
+anything, and if I could promise, no one would accept of it--yea, it
+would be justly regarded in the light of an empty formality. The
+promissory note of a bankrupt is little worth; and truly the vows and
+resolutions of a poor ruined sinner are not merely an empty formality,
+but a solemn mockery, in the presence of Almighty God. No one who knows
+himself would presume to vow, or resolve, to keep all God's
+commandments--such an one would have the full conviction that he could
+never do anything of the kind.
+
+But, as a further reply to the statement that those Confirmation Vows
+are made in entire dependence upon the grace of God, I would observe
+that grace can only be known or trusted by those who are His. "They that
+know Thy name will put their trust in Thee," and none else. Now, the
+word of God connects eternal life with the knowledge of Him. "This is
+life eternal, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus
+Christ, whom Thou hast sent" (John xvii. 3). If, therefore, I have
+eternal life, I need not make vows to get it. If I am eternally saved, I
+need not make vows to get salvation. If my sins are all canceled by the
+precious blood of the Lamb, I need not make vows to get them canceled.
+Neither baptismal vows, confirmation vows, sacramental vows, nor any
+other vows are necessary for one who has found life, righteousness,
+wisdom, sanctification, redemption--yea, all things in Christ.
+
+The comfort and peace of the feeblest believer are based upon the fact
+that Christ took all his vows, all his liabilities, all his sins, all
+his iniquities entirely upon Himself, and, by His death upon the cross,
+gloriously discharged them all. This sets him entirely free. Hence, it
+follows that if I am not a child of God, I cannot keep vows; and if I
+am, I need not make them. In either case, I deny man's fallen condition,
+and set aside the true glories of the Cross. It may be in ignorance--it
+may be with the most sincere intention--no doubt; but the most profound
+ignorance and the purest sincerity cannot alter the real principle which
+lies at the root of all manner of vows, promises, and resolutions. There
+is, beyond all question, involved therein a plain denial of the great
+foundation-truths of the Christian religion. A vow assumes the
+competency to fulfil. Well, then, if I vow to keep all God's
+commandments perfectly, all the days of my life, I am not lost or
+without strength. I must have strength, else I could not undertake such
+a ponderous responsibility.
+
+And, my reader, remark further the strange anomaly involved in this
+system of vows; that while it denies my lost estate, it robs me of
+everything approaching to a certainty of ever being saved. If I resolve
+to keep God's commandments as a necessary condition of my salvation, I
+never can be sure of being saved until I have fulfilled the condition;
+but inasmuch as I never can fulfil it, I, therefore, never can be sure
+of my salvation; and thus I travel on, from stage to stage, from baptism
+to confirmation, from confirmation to communion, and from communion to
+the death-bed, in a state of miserable doubt and torturing uncertainty.
+This is not the gospel. It is "a different gospel which is not another."
+The immediate effect of the work of Christ, when laid hold of by faith,
+is to give settled peace to the conscience; the effect of the system of
+vows, is to keep the heart in constant doubt and heaviness. How many
+have approached the ordinance of confirmation with trembling hearts, at
+the thought of having to take upon their own shoulders the solemn vows
+which, from the period of their baptism, had rested on their godfathers
+and godmothers. How could it be otherwise with an honest mind? If I am
+really sincere, the thought of having to take on myself those solemn
+baptismal vows, must fill me with horror. Some, alas! go through these
+things with thoughtless hearts and frivolous minds; but it is evident
+the confirmation service was never framed for such. It was designed for
+thoughtful, serious, earnest spirits; and all such must, assuredly,
+retire from the ceremony, with troubled hearts and burdened consciences.
+
+With what different feelings we gaze upon the cross of the Son of God!
+There, in good truth, Satan was renounced, and his works destroyed.
+There the law of God was magnified and made honorable, vindicated, and
+established. There the justice of God was fully answered. There Satan
+was vanquished; there conscience gets its full answer; there the cup of
+God's unmingled wrath against sin was drained to the dregs by His
+blessed Son. Where is the proof of all this? Not in the unaccomplished,
+dishonored vows of poor frail mortals; but in a risen, ascended,
+glorified Christ, seated at the right hand of the Majesty in the
+heavens.
+
+Who that knows aught of the pure and most excellent grace of God, or
+that has tasted aught of the true blessedness of divinely-accomplished
+redemption, could tolerate such language as, "CHRIST FOR HIS PART" and
+"THIS INFANT FOR HIS PART?" Who that has listened, by faith, to those
+words, "It is finished," issuing, as they do, from amid the solemn
+scenes of Calvary, could endure a sinful mortal's "_I do_," or "_I
+will_?" What a total setting aside of grace! What a tarnishing of the
+brightness of God's salvation! What an insult to the righteousness of
+God, which is by faith, and without works! What a manifest return to a
+religion of ordinances and the poor works of man! Christ and an infant,
+or the infant's sureties, are placed on the same platform to work out
+salvation. Is it not so? If not, what mean the words, "Christ for His
+part, and this infant for his part?" Is it not plain that salvation is
+made to depend upon something or some one besides Christ?
+Unquestionably. The vows must be fulfilled, or there is no salvation!
+Miserable condition! Christ's accomplished work abandoned for a sinner's
+unaccomplishable vows and resolutions! Man's "I do" substituted for
+Christ's "I have finished!"
+
+My reader, can you own such a fearful surrender of the truth of God? Are
+you content with such a sandy foundation? Whither, think you, will such
+a system lead you? To heaven, or to Rome? Which? Be honest. Take the New
+Testament, search it from cover to cover, and see if you can find such a
+thing as infants making vows by proxy, to renounce the world, the flesh,
+and the devil, and to keep all God's commandments, in order to
+salvation. There is not so much as a shadow of a foundation for such an
+idea. "By works of law shall no flesh living be justified." "But now the
+righteousness of God, without law, is manifested, being witnessed by the
+law and the prophets." "To him that worketh not, but believeth on Him
+that justified the ungodly, his faith is counted to him for
+righteousness." "For by grace are ye saved, through faith; and that not
+of yourselves it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should
+boast." "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
+according to His mercy He saved us." (See Rom. iii. 20-28; iv. 4, 5;
+Eph. ii. 8, 9; Titus iii. 5-7.)
+
+These are but a very few of the numerous passages which might be adduced
+in proof of the fact that the Confirmation Vows are diametrically
+opposed to the truth of God--totally subversive of the grace of God. If
+my vows mean anything I must be miserable, because I am in imminent
+danger of being lost forever, inasmuch as I have _not_ kept them, and
+never could keep them.
+
+Oh! what sweet relief for the wearied heart and sin-burdened conscience
+in the atoning blood of Jesus! What full deliverance from my worthless
+and worse than worthless vows! _Christ has done all._ He has put away
+sin--made peace--brought in everlasting righteousness--brought life and
+immortality to light. In Him may you, my beloved reader, find abiding
+peace, unfading joy, and everlasting glory. To Him and His perfect work
+I now most affectionately commend you, body, soul, and spirit, fully
+assuring you my object in this paper is not to attack the prejudices, or
+wound the feelings of any, but simply to take occasion to show how the
+perfect work of the Lord Jesus Christ is thrown into full and blessed
+relief by being looked at in contrast with the "Confirmation Vows."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[VIII.] There is a passage in the book of Deuteronomy which, as it may
+present a difficulty to some minds, should be noticed here. "And the
+Lord heard the voice of your words, when ye spake unto me; and the Lord
+said unto me, I have heard the voice of the words of this people which
+they have spoken unto thee: _they have well said all that they have
+spoken_" (Deut. v. 28). From this passage, it might seem as though the
+Lord approved of their making a vow; but if my reader will take the
+trouble of reading the entire context, from verse 24 to 27, he will see
+that it has nothing whatever to say to the vow, but that it contains the
+expression of their terror at the consequences of their vow. They were
+not able to endure that which was commanded. "If," said they "we hear
+the voice of the Lord our God any more, then we shall die. For who is
+there of all flesh that hath heard the voice of the living God speaking
+out of the midst of the fire, as we have, and lived? Go thou near, and
+hear all that the Lord our God shall say; and speak thou unto us all
+that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee; and we will hear it and do
+it." It was the confession of their own inability to encounter Jehovah
+in that awful aspect which their proud legality had led Him to assume.
+It is impossible that the Lord could ever commend an abandonment of free
+and changeless grace for a sandy foundation of works of law. (See "Notes
+on the book of Exodus," page 253. Same publishers.)
+
+[IX.] [That is, as many as are on that principle--of "law," "works of
+law." ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE LORD'S SUPPER;
+
+DESIGNED FOR THE HELP OF CHRISTIANS IN THIS DAY OF DIFFICULTY.
+
+_NEW EDITION, REVISED._
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The institution of the Lord's Supper must be regarded, by every
+spiritual mind, as a peculiarly touching proof of the Lord's gracious
+care and considerate love for His Church. From the time of its
+appointment until the present hour, it has been a steady, though silent,
+witness to a truth which the enemy, by every means in his power, has
+sought to corrupt and set aside, namely, that redemption is an
+accomplished fact to be enjoyed by the weakest believer in Jesus.
+Eighteen centuries have rolled away since the Lord Jesus appointed "the
+bread and the cup" in the Eucharist as the significant symbols of His
+broken body and His blood shed for us; and notwithstanding all the
+heresy, all the schism, all the controversy and strife, the war of
+principles and prejudices which the blotted page of ecclesiastical
+history records, this most expressive institution has been observed by
+the saints of God in every age. True, the enemy has succeeded,
+throughout a vast section of the professing Church, in wrapping it up in
+a shroud of dark superstition; in presenting it in such a way as
+actually to hide from the view of the communicant the grand and eternal
+reality of which it is the memorial; in displacing Christ and His
+accomplished sacrifice by a powerless ordinance--an ordinance, moreover,
+which by the very mode of its administration proves its utter
+worthlessness and opposition to the truth. (See note to page 29.) Yet,
+notwithstanding Rome's deadly error in reference to the ordinance of the
+Lord's Supper, it still speaks to every circumcised ear and every
+spiritual mind the same deep and precious truth--it "shows the Lord's
+death till He come." The body has been broken, the blood has been shed
+ONCE, no more to be repeated; and the breaking of bread is but the
+memorial of this emancipating truth.
+
+With what profound interest and thankfulness, therefore, should the
+believer contemplate "the bread and the cup"! Without a word spoken,
+there is the setting forth of truths at once the most precious and
+glorious: grace reigning--redemption finished--sin put away--everlasting
+righteousness brought in--the sting of death gone--eternal glory
+secured--"grace and glory" revealed as the free gift of God and the
+Lamb--the unity of the "one body," as baptized by "one Spirit." What a
+feast! It carries the soul back, in the twinkling of an eye, over a
+lapse of eighteen hundred years, and shows us the Master Himself, "in
+the same night in which He was betrayed," sitting at the supper table,
+and there instituting a feast which, from that solemn moment, that
+memorable night, until the dawn of the morning, should lead every
+believing heart at once backward to the cross and forward to the glory.
+
+This feast has ever since, by the very simplicity of its character, and
+yet the deep significance of its elements, rebuked the superstition that
+would deify and worship it, the profanity that would desecrate it, and
+the infidelity that would set it aside altogether: and furthermore,
+while it has rebuked all these, it has strengthened, comforted and
+refreshed the hearts of millions of God's beloved saints. It is sweet to
+think of this--sweet to bear in mind, as we assemble on the first day of
+the week round the supper of the Lord, that apostles, martyrs and saints
+have gathered round that feast, and found therein, according to their
+measure, refreshment and blessing. Schools of theology have arisen,
+flourished, and disappeared; doctors and fathers have accumulated
+ponderous tomes of divinity; deadly heresies have darkened the
+atmosphere, and rent the professing Church from one end to the other;
+superstition and fanaticism have put forth their baseless theories and
+extravagant notions; professing Christians have split into sects
+innumerable--all these things have taken place; but the Lord's Supper
+has continued, amid the darkness and confusion, to tell out its simple
+yet comprehensive tale. "As oft as ye eat this bread, and drink this
+cup, ye do show[X.] the Lord's death till He come" (I Cor. xi. 26).
+Precious feast! Thank God for the great privilege of celebrating it! And
+yet is it but a sign, the elements of which must, in nature's view, be
+mean and contemptible. Bread broken, wine poured out--how simple! Faith
+alone can read, in the sign, the thing signified; and therefore it
+needs not the adventitious circumstances which false religion has
+introduced in order to add dignity, solemnity and awe to that which
+derives all its value, its power and its impressiveness from its being a
+memorial of an eternal fact which false religion denies.
+
+May you and I, beloved reader, enter with more freshness and
+intelligence into the meaning of the Lord's Supper, and with deeper
+experience into the blessedness of breaking that bread which is "the
+communion of the body of Christ," and drinking of that cup which is "the
+communion of the blood of Christ."
+
+In closing these few prefatory lines, I commend this treatise to the
+Lord's gracious care, praying Him to make it useful to the souls of His
+people.
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[X.] [The Greek word translated "show" is more exactly rendered
+"announce" or "proclaim"--same word as in I Cor. ix. 14. ED.]
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE LORD'S SUPPER
+
+ "For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered
+ unto you, That the Lord Jesus, the same night in which He was
+ betrayed, took bread: and when He had given thanks, He brake
+ it, and said, Take, eat; this is My body, which is broken for
+ you: this do in remembrance of Me. After the same manner also
+ He took the cup, when He had supped, saying, This cup is the
+ new testament in My blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it,
+ in remembrance of Me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and
+ drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come."--I
+ Cor. xi. 23-26.
+
+I desire to offer a few brief remarks on the subject of the Lord's
+Supper, for the purpose of stirring up the minds of all who love the
+name and institutions of Christ to a more fervent and affectionate
+interest in this most important and refreshing ordinance.
+
+We should bless the Lord for His gracious consideration of our need in
+having established such a memorial of His dying love, and also in having
+spread a table at which _all_ His members might present themselves
+without any other condition than the indispensable one of personal
+connection with and obedience to Him. The blessed Master knew well the
+tendency of our hearts to slip away from Him, and from each other, and
+to meet this tendency was _one_, at least, of His objects in the
+institution of the Supper. He would gather His people around His own
+blessed person; He would spread a table for them where, in view of His
+broken body and shed blood, they might remember Him, and the intensity
+of His love for them, and from whence, also, they might look forward
+into the future, and contemplate the glory of which the Cross is the
+everlasting foundation. There, if anywhere, they would learn to forget
+their differences, and to love one another; there they might see around
+them those whom THE LOVE OF GOD had invited to the feast, and whom THE
+BLOOD OF CHRIST had made fit to be there.
+
+However, in order that I may the more easily and briefly convey to the
+mind of my reader what I have to say on this subject, I shall confine
+myself to the four following points, viz.:
+
+1st. The nature of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper.
+
+2d. The circumstances under which it was instituted.
+
+3d. The persons for whom it was designed.
+
+4th. The time and manner of its observance.
+
+
+I. And first, as to the nature of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper.
+This is a cardinal point. If we understand not the nature of the
+ordinance, we shall be astray in all our thoughts about it. The Supper,
+then, is purely and distinctly a feast of thanksgiving--thanksgiving for
+grace already received.
+
+The Lord Himself, at the institution of it, marks its character by
+giving thanks. "He took bread: ... when He had given thanks," etc.
+Praise, and not prayer, is the suited utterance of those who sit at the
+table of the Lord.
+
+True, we have much to pray for, much to confess, much to mourn over; but
+the table is not the place for mourners: its language is, "Give strong
+drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of
+heavy hearts. Let him drink and forget his poverty, and remember his
+misery no more." Ours is "a cup of blessing," a cup of thanksgiving, the
+divinely appointed symbol of that precious blood which has procured our
+ransom. "The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body
+of Christ?" How, then, could we break it with sad hearts or sorrowful
+countenances? Could a family circle, after the toils of the day, sit
+down to supper with sighs and gloomy looks? Surely not. The supper was
+the great family meal, the only one that was sure to bring _all the
+family together_. Faces that might not have been seen during the day
+were sure to be seen at the supper table, and no doubt they would be
+happy there. Just so it should be at the Lord's Supper: the family
+should assemble there; and when assembled, they should be happy,
+unfeignedly happy, in the love that brings them together. True, each
+heart may have its own peculiar history--its secret sorrows, trials,
+failures, and temptations, unknown to all around; but these are not the
+objects to be contemplated at the supper: to bring them into view is to
+dishonor the Lord of the feast, and make the cup of blessing a cup of
+sorrow. The Lord has invited us to the feast, and commanded us,
+notwithstanding all our shortcomings, to place the fulness of His love
+and the cleansing efficacy of His blood between our souls and
+everything; and when the eye of faith is filled with Christ, there is no
+room for aught beside. If my sin be the object which fills my eye and
+engages my thoughts, of course I must be miserable, because I am looking
+right away from what God commands me to contemplate; I am remembering my
+misery and poverty, the very things which God commands me to forget.
+Hence the true character of the ordinance is lost, and, instead of being
+a feast of joy and gladness, it becomes a season of gloom and spiritual
+depression; and the preparation for it, and the thoughts which are
+entertained about it are more what might be expected in reference to
+mount Sinai than to a happy family feast.
+
+If ever a feeling of sadness could have prevailed at the celebration of
+this ordinance, surely it would have been on the occasion of its first
+institution, when, as we shall see when we come to consider the second
+point in our subject, there was everything that could possibly produce
+deep sadness and desolation of spirit; yet the Lord Jesus could "give
+thanks;" the tide of joy that flowed through His soul was far too deep
+to be ruffled by surrounding circumstances; He had a joy even in the
+breaking and bruising of His body and in the pouring forth of His blood
+which lay far beyond the reach of human thought and feeling. And if He
+could rejoice in spirit, and give thanks in breaking that bread which
+was to be to all future generations of the faithful the memorial of His
+broken body, should not we rejoice therein, we who stand in the blessed
+results of all His toil and passion? Yes; it becomes us to rejoice.
+
+But it may be asked, Is there no preparation necessary? are we to sit
+down at the table of the Lord with as much indifference as if we were
+sitting down to an ordinary supper table? Surely not--we need to be
+right in our souls, and the first step toward this is peace with
+God--that sweet assurance of our eternal salvation which most certainly
+is not the result of human sighs or penitential tears, but the simple
+result of the finished work of the Lamb of God, attested by the Spirit
+of God. Apprehending this by faith, we apprehend that which makes us
+perfectly fit for God. Many imagine that they are putting honor upon the
+Lord's table when they approach it with their souls bowed down into the
+very dust, under a sense of the intolerable burden of their sins. This
+thought can only flow from the legalism of the human heart, that
+ever-fruitful source of thoughts at once dishonoring to God, dishonoring
+to the Cross of Christ, grievous to the Holy Ghost, and completely
+subversive of our own peace. We may feel quite satisfied that the honor
+and purity of the Lord's table are more fully maintained when THE BLOOD
+OF CHRIST is made the only title than if human sorrow and human
+penitence were superadded.[XI.]
+
+However, the question of preparedness will come more fully before us as
+we proceed with our subject; I shall therefore state another principle
+connected with the nature of the Lord's Supper, viz., that there is
+involved in it an intelligent recognition of the oneness of the body of
+Christ. "The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body
+of Christ? For we, being many, are one bread, and one body; for we are
+all partakers of that one bread." Now there was sad failure and sad
+confusion in reference to this point at Corinth: indeed, the great
+principle of the Church's oneness would seem to have been totally lost
+sight of there. Hence the apostle observes that "when ye come together
+into one place, this is not to eat the Lord's Supper, for every one
+taketh before other _his own_ supper" (I Cor. xi. 20, 21). Here, it was
+isolation, and not unity; an individual, and not a corporate question:
+"_his own supper_" is strikingly contrasted with "_the Lord's Supper_."
+The _Lord's_ Supper demands that the body be fully recognized: if the
+one body be not recognized, it is but sectarianism: the Lord Himself has
+lost His place. If the table be spread upon any narrower principle than
+that which would embrace the whole body of Christ, it is become a
+sectarian table, and has lost its claim upon the hearts of the faithful.
+On the contrary, where a table is spread upon this divine principle,
+which embraces _all_ the members of the body _simply as such_, every one
+who refuses to present himself at it is chargeable with schism, and
+that, too, upon the plain principles of I Cor. xi. "There must," says
+the apostle, "be heresies among you, that they which are approved may be
+made manifest among you."
+
+When the great Church principle is lost sight of by any portion of the
+body, there must be heresies, in order that the approved ones may be
+made manifest! and under such circumstances it becomes the business of
+each one to approve himself, and so to eat. The "approved" ones stand in
+contrast with the heretics, or those who were doing their own
+will.[XII.]
+
+But it may be asked, Do not the numerous denominations at present
+existing in the professing Church altogether preclude the idea of ever
+being able to gather the whole body together? and, under such
+circumstances, is it not better for each denomination to have their own
+table? If there be any force in this question, it merely goes to prove
+that the people of God are no longer able to act upon God's principles,
+but that they are left to the miserable alternative of acting on human
+expediency. Thank God, such is not the case. The truth of the Lord
+endureth forever, and what the Holy Ghost teaches in I Cor. xi. is
+binding upon every member of the Church of God. There were divisions,
+and heresies, and unholiness, existing in the assembly at Corinth, just
+as there are divisions, and heresies, and unholiness, existing in the
+professing Church now; but the apostle did not tell them to set up
+separate tables on the one hand, nor yet to cease from breaking bread on
+the other. No; he presses upon them the principles and the holiness
+connected with "the Church of God," and tells those who could approve
+themselves accordingly to eat. The expression is, "_So let him eat_." We
+are to eat, therefore: our care must be to eat "_so_," as the Holy Ghost
+teaches us; and that is in the true recognition of the holiness and
+oneness of the Church of God.[XIII.] When the Church is despised, the
+Spirit Be-must be grieved and dishonored, and the certain end will be
+spiritual barrenness and freezing formalism: and although men may
+substitute intellectual for spiritual power, and human talents and
+attainments for the gifts of the Holy Ghost, yet will the end be "like
+the heath in the desert." The true way to make progress in the divine
+life is to live for the Church, and not for ourselves. The man who lives
+for the Church is in full harmony with the mind of the Spirit, and must
+necessarily grow. On the contrary, the man who is living for himself,
+having his thoughts revolving round, and his energies concentrated upon,
+himself, must soon become cramped and formal, and, in all probability,
+openly worldly. Yes; he will become worldly, in some sense of that
+extensive term; for the world and the Church stand in direct opposition,
+the one to the other; nor is there any aspect of the world in which this
+opposition is more fully seen than in its religious aspect. What is
+commonly called the _religious world_ will be found, when examined in
+the light of the presence of God, to be more thoroughly hostile to the
+true interests of the Church of God than almost anything.
+
+But I must hasten on to other branches of our subject, only stating
+another simple principle connected with the Lord's Supper, to which I
+desire to call the special attention of the Christian reader; it is
+this: the celebration of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper should be
+the distinct expression of the unity of ALL believers, and not merely of
+the unity of a certain number gathered on certain principles, which
+distinguish them from others. If there be any term of communion
+proposed, save the all-important one of faith in the atonement of
+Christ, and a walk consistent with that faith, the table becomes the
+table of a sect, and possesses no claims upon the hearts of the
+faithful.
+
+Furthermore, if by sitting at the table I must identify myself with any
+one thing, whether it be principle or practice, not enjoined in
+Scripture, as a term of communion, there also the table becomes the
+table of a sect. It is not a question of whether there may be Christians
+there or not; it would be hard indeed to find a table amongst the
+reformed communities of which some Christians are not partakers. The
+apostle did not say, "there must be heresies among you, that they which
+are _Christians_ may be made manifest among you." No; but "that they
+which are _approved_." Nor did he say, "Let a man prove himself a
+Christian, and so let him eat." No; but "let a man approve himself," i.
+e., let him shew himself to be one of those who are not only upright in
+their consciences as to their individual act in the matter, but who are
+also confessing the oneness of the body of Christ. When men set up terms
+of communion of their own, there you find the principle of heresy;
+there, too, there must be schism. On the contrary, where a table is
+spread in such a manner and upon such principles as that a Christian,
+subject to God, can take his place at it, then it becomes schism not to
+be there; for, by being there, and by walking consistently with our
+position and profession there, we, so far as in us lies, confess the
+oneness of the Church of God--that grand object for which the Holy Ghost
+was sent from heaven to earth. The Lord Jesus, having been raised from
+the dead, and having taken His seat at the right hand of God, sent down
+the Holy Ghost to earth for the purpose of forming one body. Mark, to
+form _one body_--not many bodies. He has no sympathy with the many
+bodies, as such; though He has blessed sympathy with many members in
+those bodies, because they, though being members of sects or schisms,
+are nevertheless, members of the one body; but He does not form the many
+bodies, but the one body, for "by one Spirit are we all baptized into
+one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free;
+and have all been made to drink into one Spirit" (I Cor. xii. 13).
+
+I desire that there may be no misunderstanding on this point. I say the
+Holy Ghost cannot approve the schisms in the professing Church, for He
+Himself has said of such, "I praise you not." He is grieved by them--He
+would counteract them; He baptizes all believers into the unity of the
+one body, so that it cannot be thought, by any intelligent mind, that
+the Holy Ghost could sustain schisms, which are a grief and a dishonor
+to Him.
+
+We must however, distinguish between the Spirit's dwelling in the
+Church, and His dwelling in individuals. He dwells in the body of
+Christ, which is the Church (see I Cor. iii. 17; Eph. ii. 22); He dwells
+also in the body of the believer, as we read, "your body is the temple
+of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of God" (I Cor. vi.
+19). The only body or community, therefore, in which the Spirit can
+dwell, is _the whole Church of God_; and the only person in which He can
+dwell is the believer. But, as has already been observed, the table of
+the Lord, in any given locality, should be the exhibition of the unity
+of the whole Church. This leads us to another principle connected with
+the nature of the Lord's Supper, viz., this, It is an act whereby we not
+only shew the death of the Lord until He come, but whereby we also give
+expression to a fundamental truth, which cannot be too strongly or too
+frequently pressed upon the minds of Christians, at the present day,
+viz., that_ all believers are_ "_one loaf--one body_." It is a very
+common error to view this ordinance merely as a channel through which
+grace flows to the soul of the individual, and not as an act bearing
+upon the whole body, and bearing also upon the glory of the Head of the
+Church. That it is a channel through which grace flows to the soul of
+the individual communicant there can be no doubt, for there is blessing
+in every act of obedience. But that individual blessing is but a very
+small part of it, can be seen by the attentive reader of I Cor. xi. It
+is the Lord's death and the Lord's coming, that are brought prominently
+before our souls in the Lord's Supper; and where any one of these
+elements is excluded there must be something wrong. If there be anything
+to hinder the complete showing forth of the Lord's death, or the
+exhibition of the unity of the body, or the clear perception of the
+Lord's coming, then there must be something radically wrong in the
+principle on which the table is spread, and we only need a single eye,
+and a mind entirely subject to the Word and Spirit of Christ, in order
+to detect the wrong.
+
+Let the Christian reader, now, prayerfully examine the table at which
+he periodically takes his place and see if it will bear the threefold
+test of I Cor. xi., and if not, let him, in the name of the Lord, and
+for the sake of the Church, abandon it. There are heresies, and schisms
+flowing from heresies, in the professing Church, but "let a man approve
+himself, and so let him eat" the Lord's Supper; and if, once for all, it
+be asked, What means the term "approved?" it may be answered, It is in
+the first place, to be personally true to the Lord in the act of
+breaking bread; and in the next place, to shake off all schism, and take
+our stand, firmly and decidedly, upon the broad principle which will
+embrace all the members of the flock of Christ. We are not only to be
+careful that we ourselves are walking in purity of heart and life before
+the Lord; but also, that the table of which we partake has nothing
+connected with it that could at all act as a barrier to the unity of the
+Church. It is not merely a personal question. Nothing more fully proves
+the low ebb of Christianity at the present day, or the fearful extent to
+which the Holy Ghost is grieved, than the miserable selfishness which
+tinges, yea, pollutes, the thoughts of professing Christians. Everything
+is made to hinge upon the mere question of self. It is _my_
+forgiveness--_my_ safety--_my_ peace--_my_ happy frames and feelings, and
+not the glory of Christ, or the welfare of His beloved Church. Well,
+therefore, may the words of the prophet be applied to us, "Thus saith
+the Lord, Consider your ways. Go up to the mountain and bring wood, and
+BUILD THE HOUSE; and I will take pleasure in _it_ and I WILL BE
+GLORIFIED. Ye looked for much, and lo, it came to little; and when ye
+brought it home, I did blow upon it. Why? saith the Lord of hosts.
+Because of _My house_ that is waste, and ye run every man to _his own_
+house" (Hag. i. 7-9). Here is the root of the matter. Self stands in
+contrast with the house of God; and, if self be made the object, no
+marvel that there should be a sad lack of spiritual joy, energy, and
+power. To have these, we must be in fellowship with the Spirit's
+thoughts. He thinks of the body of Christ; and, if we are thinking of
+self, we must be at issue with Him; and the consequences are but too
+apparent.
+
+
+II. Having now treated of what I conceive to be by far the most
+important point in our subject, I shall proceed to consider, in the
+second place, the circumstances under which the Lord's Supper was
+instituted. These were particularly solemn and touching. The Lord was
+about to enter into dreadful conflict with all the powers of
+darkness--to meet all the deadly enmity of man; and to drain to the
+dregs the cup of Jehovah's righteous wrath against sin. He had a
+terrible morrow before Him--the most terrible that had ever been
+encountered by man or angel; yet, notwithstanding all this, we read that
+"on _the same night_ in which He was betrayed, He took bread." What
+unselfish love is here! "The same night"--the night of profound
+sorrow--the night of His agony and bloody sweat---the night of His
+betrayal by one, and His denial by another, and His desertion by all of
+His disciples--on that very night, the loving heart of Jesus was full of
+thoughts about His Church--on that very night He instituted the
+ordinance of the Lord's Supper. He appointed the bread to be the emblem
+of His body broken, and the wine to be the emblem of His blood shed; and
+such they are to us now, as often as we partake of them, for the Word
+assures us that "as often as ye eat _this bread_ and drink _this cup_,
+ye do show _the Lord's death_, till He come."
+
+Now, all this, we may say, attaches peculiar importance and sacred
+solemnity to the Supper of the Lord; and, moreover, gives us some idea
+of the consequences of eating and drinking unworthily.[XIV.]
+
+The voice which the ordinance utters in the circumcised ear is ever the
+same. The bread and the wine are deeply significant symbols; the bruised
+corn and the pressed grape being both combined to minister strength and
+gladness to the heart: and not only are they significant in themselves,
+but they are also to be used in the Lord's Supper, as being the very
+emblems which the blessed Master Himself ordained on the night previous
+to His crucifixion; so that faith can behold the Lord Jesus presiding at
+_His own table_--can see Him take the bread and the wine, and hear Him
+say, "Take, eat; this is My body;" and again, of the cup, "Drink ye
+_all_ of it. For this is My blood of the New Testament which is shed for
+many for the remission of sins." In a word, the ordinance leads the soul
+back to the eventful night already referred to--brings before us all the
+reality of the cross and passion of the Lamb of God, in which our whole
+souls can rest and rejoice; it reminds us, in the most impressive
+manner, of the unselfish love and pure devotedness of Him, who, when
+Calvary was casting its dark shadow across His path, and the cup of
+Jehovah's righteous wrath against sin, of which He was about to be the
+bearer, was being filled for Him, could, nevertheless, busy Himself
+about us, and institute a feast which was to be both the expression of
+our connection with Him, and with all the members of His body.
+
+And may we not infer, that the Holy Ghost made use of the expression
+"_the same night_," for the purpose of remedying the disorders that had
+arisen in the church at Corinth? Was there not a severe rebuke
+administered to the selfishness of those who were taking "_their own
+supper_," in the Spirit's reference to the same night in which the Lord
+of the feast was betrayed? Doubtless there was. Can selfishness live in
+the view of the cross? Can thoughts about our own interests, or our own
+gratification, be indulged in the presence of Him who sacrificed Himself
+for us? Surely not. Could we heartlessly and wilfully despise the Church
+of God--could we offend or exclude beloved members of the flock of
+Christ, while gazing on that cross on which the Shepherd of the flock,
+and the Head of the body, was crucified?[XV.] Ah, no; let believers
+only keep near the cross--let them remember "the same night"--let them
+keep in mind the broken body and shed blood of the Lord Jesus Christ,
+and there will soon be an end to heresy, schism, and selfishness. If we
+could only bear in mind that the Lord Himself presides at the table, to
+dispense the bread and wine; if we could hear Him say, "Take this, and
+divide it among yourselves," we should be better able to meet _all_ our
+brethren on the _only_ Christian ground of fellowship which God can own.
+In a word, the person of Christ is God's centre of union. "I," said
+Christ, "if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto _Me_."
+Each believer can hear his blessed Master speaking from the cross, and
+saying of his fellow believers, "_Behold thy brethren_;" and, truly, if
+we could distinctly hear this, we should act, in a measure, as the
+beloved disciple acted towards the mother of Jesus; our hearts and our
+homes would be open to all who have been thus commended to our care. The
+word is, "_Receive ye one another, as Christ also received us to the
+glory of God_."
+
+There is another point worthy of notice, in connection with the
+circumstances under which the Lord's Supper was instituted, namely, its
+connection with the Jewish Passover. "Then came the day of unleavened
+bread, when the Passover must be killed. And He sent Peter and John,
+saying, Go and prepare us the Passover, that we may eat.... And _when
+the hour was come_, He sat down, and the twelve apostles with Him. And
+He said unto them, With desire I have desired to eat this Passover with
+you before I suffer; for I say unto you, I will not any more eat
+thereof, until it be fulfilled in the Kingdom of God. And He took the
+cup [i. e., the cup of the Passover], and gave thanks, and said, Take
+this and divide it among yourselves; for I say unto you, I will not
+drink of the fruit of the vine until the Kingdom of God shall come"
+(Luke xxii. 7-18). The Passover was, as we know, the great feast of
+Israel, first observed on the memorable night of their happy deliverance
+from the thralldom of Egypt. As to its connection with the Lord's
+Supper, it consists in its being the marked _type_ of that of which the
+Supper is the _memorial_. The Passover pointed _forward_ to the cross;
+the Supper points _back_ to it. But Israel was no longer in a fit moral
+condition to keep the Passover, according to the divine thoughts about
+it; and the Lord Jesus, on the occasion above referred to, was leading
+His apostles away altogether from the Jewish element to a new order of
+things. It was no longer to be a lamb sacrificed, but bread broken and
+wine drunk in commemoration of a sacrifice ONCE offered, the efficacy of
+which was to be eternal. Those whose minds are bowed down to Jewish
+ordinances, may still look, in some way or another, for the periodical
+repetition, either of a sacrifice, or of something which is to bring
+them into a place of greater nearness to God.[XVI.]
+
+Some there are who think that in the Lord's Supper the soul makes, or
+renews, a covenant with God, not knowing that if we were to enter into
+covenant with God, we should inevitably be ruined; as the only possible
+issue of a covenant between God and man is the failure of one of the
+parties (i. e., man), and consequent judgment. Thank God, there is no
+such thing as a covenant with us. The bread and wine, in the Supper,
+speak a deep and wondrous truth; they tell of the broken body and shed
+blood of the Lamb of God--the Lamb of God's own providing. Here the soul
+can rest with perfect complacency; it is THE NEW TESTAMENT IN THE BLOOD
+OF CHRIST, and not a covenant between God and man. Man's covenant had
+signally failed, and the Lord Jesus had to allow the cup of the fruit of
+the vine (the emblem of joy in the earth) to pass Him by. Earth had no
+joy for Him--Israel had become "the degenerate plant of a strange
+vine;" wherefore, He had only to say, "I will not drink of the fruit of
+the vine, until the Kingdom of God shall come." A long and dreary season
+was to pass over Israel, ere her King could take any joy in her moral
+condition: but, during that time, "the Church of God" was to "keep the
+feast" of unleavened bread, in all its moral power and significance, by
+putting away the "old leaven of malice and wickedness," as the fruit of
+fellowship with Him whose blood cleanseth from all sin.
+
+However, the fact of the Lord's Supper having been instituted
+immediately after the Passover, teaches us a very valuable principle of
+truth, viz., this: the destinies of the Church and of Israel are
+inseparably linked with the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ. True, the
+Church has a higher place, even identification with her risen and
+glorified Head; yet all rests upon the Cross. Yes; it was on the cross
+that the pure sheaf of corn was bruised and the juices of the living
+vine pressed forth by the hand of Jehovah Himself, to yield strength and
+gladness to the hearts of His heavenly and earthly people forever. The
+Prince of Life took from Jehovah's righteous hand the cup of wrath, the
+cup of trembling, and drained it to the dregs in order that He might put
+into the hands of His people the cup of salvation, the cup of God's
+ineffable love, that they might drink and forget their poverty, and
+remember their misery no more. The Lord's Supper expresses all this.
+There the Lord presides; there the redeemed should meet in holy
+fellowship and brotherly love, to eat and drink before the Lord; and
+while they do so, they can look back at their Master's _night_ of deep
+sorrow, and forward to His day of glory--that "morning without clouds,"
+when "He shall come to be glorified in His saints, and to be admired in
+all them that believe."
+
+
+III. We shall now consider, in the third place, the persons for whom,
+and for whom _alone_, the Lord's Supper was instituted.
+
+The Lord's Supper, then, was instituted for the Church of God--the
+family of the redeemed. All the members of that family should be there;
+for none can be absent without incurring the guilt of disobedience to
+the plain command of Christ and His inspired apostle; and the
+consequence of this disobedience will be positive spiritual decline and
+a complete failure in testimony for Christ. Such consequences, however,
+are the result only of wilful absence from the Lord's table. There are
+circumstances which, in certain cases, may present an insurmountable
+barrier, though there might be the most earnest desire to be present at
+the celebration of the ordinance, as there ever will be where the mind
+is spiritual; but we may lay it down as a fixed principle of truth that
+no one can make progress in the divine life who wilfully absents himself
+from the Lord's table. "ALL the congregation of Israel" were commanded
+to keep the passover (Ex. xii.).
+
+No member of the congregation could with impunity be absent. "The man
+that is clean, and is not in a journey, and forbeareth to keep the
+passover, even the same soul shall be cut off from among his people:
+because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appointed season,
+that man shall bear his sin" (Num. ix. 13).
+
+I feel that it would be rendering really valuable service to the cause
+of truth, and a furtherance of the interests of the Church of God, if an
+interest could be awakened on this important subject. There is too much
+lightness and indifference in the minds of Christians as to the matter
+of their attendance at the table of the Lord; and where there is not
+this indifference, there is an unwillingness arising from imperfect
+views of justification. Now both these hindrances, though so different
+in their character, spring from one and the same source, viz.,
+selfishness. He who is indifferent about the matter will selfishly allow
+trifling circumstances to interfere with his attendance: he will be
+hindered by family arrangements, love of personal ease, unfavorable
+weather, trifling or, as it frequently happens, imaginary bodily
+ailments--things which are lost sight of or counted as nothing when some
+worldly object is to be gained. How often does it happen that men who
+have not spiritual energy to leave their houses on the Lord's day have
+abundant natural energy to carry them some miles to gain some worldly
+object on Monday. Alas that it should be so! How sad to think that
+worldly gain could exert a more powerful influence on the heart of the
+Christian than the glory of Christ and the furtherance of the Church's
+benefit! for this is the way in which we must view the question of the
+Lord's Supper. What would be our feelings, amid the glory of the coming
+kingdom, if we could remember that, while on earth, a fair or a market,
+or some such worldly object, had commanded our time and energies, while
+the assembly of the Lord's people around His table was neglected?
+
+Beloved Christian reader, if you are in the habit of absenting yourself
+from the assembly of Christians, I pray you to ponder the matter before
+the Lord ere you absent yourself again. Reflect upon the pernicious
+effect of your absence in every way. You are failing in your testimony
+for Christ; you are injuring the souls of your brethren, and you are
+hindering the progress of your own soul in grace and knowledge. Do not
+suppose that your actings are without their influence on the whole
+Church of God: you are at this moment either helping or hindering every
+member of that body on earth. "If _one_ member suffer, all the members
+suffer with it." This principle has not ceased to be true, though
+professing Christians have split into so many different divisions. Nay,
+it is so divinely true, that there is not a single believer on earth who
+is not acting either as a helper to, or a drain upon, the whole body of
+Christ; and if there be any truth in the principle already laid down
+(viz., that the assembly of Christians and the breaking of bread in any
+given locality is, or ought to be, the expression of the unity of the
+whole body), you cannot fail to see that if you absent yourself from
+that assembly, or refuse to join in giving expression to that unity, you
+are doing serious damage to all your brethren as well as to your own
+soul. I would lay these considerations on your heart and conscience, in
+the name of the Lord, looking to Him to make them influential.[XVII.]
+
+But not only does this culpable and pernicious indifference of spirit
+act as a hindrance to many, in presenting themselves at the Lord's
+table; imperfect views of justification produce the same unhappy result.
+If the conscience be not perfectly purged, if there be not perfect rest
+in God's testimony about the finished work of Christ, there will either
+be a shrinking from the Supper of the Lord, or an unintelligent
+celebration of it. Those only can show the Lord's death who know,
+through the teaching of the Holy Spirit, the value of the Lord's death.
+If I regard the ordinance as a means whereby I am to be brought into a
+place of greater nearness to God, or whereby I am to obtain a clearer
+sense of my acceptance, it is impossible that I can rightly observe it.
+I must believe, as the gospel commands me to believe, that ALL my sins
+are FOREVER put away ere I can take my place with any measure of
+spiritual intelligence at the Lord's table. If the matter be not viewed
+in this light, the Lord's Supper can only be regarded as a kind of step
+to the altar of God, and we are told in the law that we are not to go up
+by steps to God's altar, lest our nakedness be discovered (Ex. xx. 26).
+The meaning of which is, that all human efforts to approach God must
+issue in the discovery of human nakedness.
+
+Thus we see that if it be indifference that prevents the Christian from
+being at the breaking of bread, it is most culpable in the sight of God,
+and most injurious to his brethren and himself; and if it be an
+imperfect sense of justification that prevents, it is not only
+unwarrantable, but most dishonoring to the love of the Father, the work
+of the Son, and the clear and unequivocal testimony of the Holy Ghost.
+
+But it is not unfrequently said, and that, too, by those who profess
+spirituality and intelligence, "I derive no spiritual benefit by going
+to the assembly: I am as happy in my own room, reading my Bible." I
+would affectionately ask such, Are we to have no higher object before us
+in our actings than our own happiness? Is not obedience to the command
+of our blessed Master--a command delivered on "the same night in which
+He was betrayed"--a far higher and nobler object to set before us than
+anything connected with self? If He desires that His people should
+assemble in His name, for the express object of showing forth His death
+till He come, shall we refuse because we feel happier in our own rooms?
+He tells us to be there: we reply, "We feel happier at home." Our
+happiness, therefore, must be based on disobedience; and, as such, it is
+an unholy happiness. It is much better, if it should be so, to be
+unhappy in the path of obedience than happy in the path of disobedience.
+But I verily believe, the thought of being happier at home is a mere
+delusion, and the end of those deluded by it will prove it such. Thomas
+might have deemed it indifferent whether he was present with the other
+disciples, but he had to do without the Lord's presence, and to wait for
+eight days, until the disciples came together on the first day of the
+week; for there and then the Lord was pleased to reveal Himself to his
+soul. And just so will it be with those who say, "We feel happier at
+home than in the assembly of believers." They will surely be behindhand
+in knowledge and experience; yea, it will be well if they come not under
+the terrible woe denounced by the prophet: "Woe to the idol shepherd
+that _leaveth the flock_! the sword shall be upon his arm, and upon his
+right eye; his arm shall be clean dried up, and his right eye shall be
+utterly darkened" (Zech. xi. 17). And again, "Not forsaking the
+assembling of ourselves together, _as the manner of some is_; but
+exhorting one another, and so much the more as ye see the day
+approaching. For if we sin wilfully, after that we have received the
+knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but
+a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which
+shall devour the adversaries" (Heb. x. 25-27).
+
+As to the objection upon the grounds of the barrenness and
+unprofitableness of Christian assemblies, it will generally be remarked
+that the greatest spiritual barrenness will always be found in
+connection with a captious and complaining spirit; and I doubt not that
+if those who complain of the unprofitableness of meetings, and draw from
+thence an argument in favor of their remaining at home, were to spend
+more time in secret waiting on the Lord for His blessing on the
+meetings, they would have a very different experience.
+
+And now, having shown from Scripture who ought to be at the breaking of
+bread, we shall proceed to consider who ought _not_. On this point
+Scripture is equally explicit: in a word, then, none should be there who
+are not members of the true Church of God. The same law which commanded
+_all_ the congregation of Israel to eat the passover, commanded all
+uncircumcised strangers _not_ to eat; and now that Christ our Passover
+has been sacrificed for us, none can keep the feast, (which is to extend
+throughout this entire dispensation,) nor break the bread nor drink the
+wine in true remembrance of Him, save those who know the cleansing and
+healing virtues of His precious blood. To eat and drink without this
+knowledge, is to eat and drink unworthily--to eat and drink judgment;
+like the woman in Num. v. who drank the water of jealousy, to make the
+condemnation more manifest and awfully solemn.
+
+Now it is in this that Christendom's guilt is specially manifest. In
+taking the Lord's Supper, the professing Church has, like Judas, put her
+hand on the table with Christ and betrayed Him; she has eaten with Him,
+and at the same time lifted up her heel against Him. What will be her
+end? Just like the end of Judas. "He, then, having received the sop,
+_went immediately out_: and"--the Holy Ghost adds, in awful
+solemnity--"IT WAS NIGHT." Terrible night! The strongest expression of
+divine love only elicited the strongest expression of human hatred. So
+will it be with the false professing Church collectively, and each false
+professor individually; and all those who, though baptized in the name
+of Christ, and sitting down at the table of Christ, have nevertheless
+been His betrayers, will find themselves at last thrust out into outer
+darkness--involved in a night which shall never see the beams of the
+morning--plunged in a gulf of endless and ineffable woe; and though they
+may be able to say to the Lord, "We have eaten and drunk in Thy
+presence, and Thou hast taught in our streets," yet His solemn,
+heartrending reply will be, while He shuts the door against them,
+"Depart from Me! I never knew you." O reader, think of this, I pray you;
+and if you be yet in your sins, defile not the Lord's table by your
+presence; but instead of going thither as a hypocrite, repair to Calvary
+as a poor ruined and guilty sinner, and there receive pardon and
+cleansing from Him who died to save just such as you are.
+
+
+IV. Having now considered, through the Lord's mercy, the nature of the
+Lord's Supper; the circumstances under which it was instituted; and the
+persons for whom it was designed; I would only add a word as to what
+Scripture teaches us about the time and manner of its celebration.
+
+Although the Lord's Supper was not _first_ instituted on the first day
+of the week, yet the twenty-fourth of Luke and the twentieth of Acts are
+quite sufficient to prove, to a mind subject to the Word, that that is
+the day on which the ordinance should specially be observed. The Lord
+broke bread with His disciples on "the first day of the week" (Luke
+xxiv. 30); and "on the first day of the week the disciples came together
+to break bread" (Acts xx. 7). These scriptures are quite sufficient to
+prove that it is not once a month, nor once in three months, nor once in
+six months, that disciples should come together to break bread, but once
+a week at least, and that upon the first day of the week. Nor can we
+have any difficulty in seeing that there is a moral fitness in the first
+day of the week for the celebration of the Lord's Supper: it is the
+resurrection day--the Church's day, in contrast with the seventh, which
+was Israel's day; and as, in the institution of the ordinance, the Lord
+led His disciples away from Jewish things altogether, (by refusing to
+drink of the fruit of the vine--the passover cup,--and then instituting
+another ordinance) so, in the day on which that ordinance was to be
+celebrated, we observe the same contrast between heavenly and earthly
+things. It is in the power of resurrection that we can rightly show the
+Lord's death. When the conflict was over, Melchizedek brought forth
+bread and wine, and blessed Abram, in the name of the Lord. Thus, too,
+our Melchizedek, when all the conflict was over and the victory gained,
+came forth in resurrection with bread and wine, to strengthen and cheer
+the hearts of His people, and to breathe upon them that peace which He
+had so dearly purchased.
+
+If, then, the first day of the week be the day on which Scripture
+teaches the disciples to break bread, it is clear that man has no
+authority to alter the period to once a month, or once in six months.
+And I doubt not, when the affections are lively and fervent toward the
+person of the Lord Himself, the Christian will desire to show the Lord's
+death as frequently as possible: indeed, it would seem, from the opening
+of Acts, that the disciples broke bread daily. This we may infer from
+the expression "breaking bread from house to house" (or "at home").
+However, we are not left to depend upon mere inference as to the
+question of the first day of the week being the day on which the
+disciples came together to break bread: we are distinctly taught this,
+and we see its moral fitness and beauty.
+
+Thus much as to the _time_. And now one word about the _manner_. It
+should be the special aim of Christians to show that the breaking of
+bread is their grand and primary object in coming together on the first
+day of the week. They should show that it is not for preaching or
+teaching that they assemble, though teaching may be a happy adjunct, but
+that the breaking of bread is the leading object before their minds. It
+is the work of Christ which we show forth in the Supper, wherefore it
+should have the first place; and when it has been duly set forth, there
+should be a full and unqualified opening left for the work of the Holy
+Ghost in ministry. The office of the Spirit is to set forth and exalt
+the name, the person and the work of Christ; and if He be allowed to
+order and govern the assembly of Christians, as He undoubtedly should,
+He will ever give the work of Christ the primary place.
+
+I cannot close this paper without expressing my deep sense of the
+feebleness and shallowness of all that I have advanced, on a subject of
+really commanding interest. I do feel before the Lord, in whose presence
+I desire to write and speak, that I have so failed to bring out the full
+truth about this matter, that I almost shrink from letting these pages
+see the light. It is not that I have a shadow of doubt as to the truth
+of what I have endeavored to state; no: but I feel that, in writing upon
+such a subject as the breaking of bread, at the time when there is such
+sad confusion among professing Christians, there is a demand for
+pointed, clear, and lucid statements, to which I am little able to
+respond.
+
+We have but little conception of how entirely the question of the
+breaking of bread is connected with the Church's position and testimony
+on earth; and we have as little conception of how thoroughly the
+question has been misunderstood by the professing Church. The breaking
+of bread ought to be the distinct enunciation of the fact that all
+believers are _one body_; but the professing Church, by splitting into
+sects, and by setting up a table for each sect, has practically denied
+that fact.
+
+In truth, the breaking of bread has been cast into the background. The
+table, at which the Lord should preside, is almost lost sight of, by
+being placed in the shade of the pulpit, in which man presides: the
+pulpit, which, alas! is too often the instrument of creating and
+perpetuating disunion, is, to many minds, the commanding object; while
+the table, which if properly understood would perpetuate love and unity,
+is made quite a secondary thing. And even in the most laudable effort to
+recover from such a lamentable condition of things, what complete
+failure have we seen. What has the Evangelical Alliance effected? It has
+effected this, at least, it has developed a need existing among
+professing Christians, which they are confessedly unable to meet. They
+want union, and are unable to attain it. Why? Because they will not give
+up everything which has been _added_ to the truth to meet together
+according to the truth, to break bread as disciples. I say, _as
+disciples_, and not as Church-men, Independents, Baptists, etc. It is
+not that all such may not have much valuable truth, I mean those of them
+who love our Lord Jesus Christ: they certainly may; but they have no
+_truth_ that should prevent them from meeting _together_ to break bread.
+How could truth ever hinder Christians from giving expression to the
+unity of the Church? Impossible! A sectarian spirit in those who hold
+truth may do this, but truth never can. But how is it now in the
+professing Church? Christians, of various communities, can meet for the
+purpose of reading, praying, and singing together during the week, but
+when the first day of the week arrives, they have not the least idea of
+giving the only real and effectual expression of their unity, which the
+Holy Ghost can recognize, which is the breaking of bread. "We being many
+are one bread and one body; for we are _all_ partakers of that _one_
+bread."
+
+The sin at Corinth was their not tarrying one for another. This appears
+from the exhortation with which the apostle sums up the whole question
+(I Cor. xi.), "Wherefore, my brethren, when ye come together to eat,
+tarry one for another." Why were they to tarry one for another? Surely,
+in order that they might the more clearly express their unity. But what
+would the apostle have said, if, instead of coming together, into one
+place, they had gone to different places, according to their different
+views of truth? He might then say with, if possible, greater force, "Ye
+cannot eat the Lord's Supper." (See _margin_.)
+
+It may, however, be asked, "How could all the believers in London meet
+in one place?" I reply, if they could not meet in one place, they could,
+at least, meet on one principle. But how did the believers at Jerusalem
+meet together? The answer is, they were "_of one accord_." This being
+so, they had little difficulty about the question of a meeting-room.
+"Solomon's porch," or anywhere else, would suit their purpose. They gave
+expression to their unity, and that, too, in a way not to be mistaken.
+Neither various localities, nor various measures of knowledge and
+attainment, could, in the least, interfere with their unity. There was
+"one body and one Spirit."
+
+Finally, I would say, the Lord will assuredly honor those who have faith
+to believe and confess the unity of the Church on earth; and the greater
+the difficulty in the way of doing so, the greater will be the honor.
+The Lord grant to all His people a single eye, and a humble and honest
+spirit.
+
+ Thy broken body, gracious Lord,
+ Is shadowed by this broken bread;
+ The wine which in this cup is poured
+ Points to the blood which Thou hast shed.
+
+ And while we meet together thus,
+ We show that we are one in Thee;
+ Thy precious blood was shed for us--
+ Thy death, O Lord, has set us free.
+
+ Brethren in Thee, in union sweet--
+ Forever be Thy grace adored--
+ 'Tis in Thy name, that now we meet,
+ And know Thou'rt with us, gracious Lord.
+
+ We have one hope--that Thou wilt come;
+ Thee in the air we wait to see,
+ When Thou wilt take Thy people home,
+ And we shall ever reign with Thee.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XI.] It is needful to bear in mind that, while the blood of Christ is
+that alone which introduces the believer, in holy boldness, into the
+presence of God, yet it is nowhere set forth as our centre, or bond of
+union. Truly precious is it for every blood-washed soul to remember, in
+the secret of the divine presence, that the atoning blood of Jesus has
+rolled away for ever his heavy burden of sin. Yet the Holy Ghost can
+only gather us to the person of a risen and glorified Christ, who,
+having shed the blood of the everlasting covenant, is gone up into
+heaven in the power of an endless life, to which divine righteousness
+inseparably attaches. A living Christ, therefore, is our centre and bond
+of union. The blood having answered for us to God, we gather round our
+risen and exalted Head in the heavens. "I, if I be lifted up from the
+earth, will draw all men unto _Me_." We behold in the cup in the Lord's
+Supper the symbol of shed blood; but we are neither gathered round the
+cup nor the blood, but round Him who shed it. The blood of the Lamb has
+put away every obstacle to our fellowship with God; and in proof of this
+the Holy Ghost has come down to baptize believers into one body, and
+gather them round the risen and glorified Head. The wine is _the
+memorial_ of a life shed out for sin: the bread is _the memorial_ of a
+body broken for sin: but we are not gathered round a life poured out,
+nor round a body broken, but round a living Christ, who dieth no more,
+who cannot have His body broken any more, or His blood shed any more.
+This makes a serious difference; and when looked at in connection with
+the discipline of the house of God, the difference is immensely
+important. Very many are apt to imagine that when any one is put away
+from or refused communion, the question is raised as to there being a
+link between his soul and Christ. A moment's consideration of this point
+in the light of Scripture will be sufficient to prove that no such
+question is raised. If we look at the case of the "wicked person" in I
+Cor. v., we see one put away from the communion of the Church on earth
+who was nevertheless a Christian, as people say. He was not, therefore,
+put away because he was not a Christian: such a question was never
+raised; nor should it be in any case. How can we tell whether a man is
+eternally linked with Christ or not? Have we the custody of the Lamb's
+book of life? Is the discipline of the Church of God founded upon what
+we can know, or upon what we _cannot_? Was the man in I Cor. v. linked
+eternally with Christ, or not? Was the Church told to inquire? Even
+suppose we could see a man's name written in the book of life, that
+would not be the ground of receiving him into the assembly on earth, or
+retaining him there. That which the Church is held responsible for, is
+to keep herself pure in doctrine, pure in practice, and pure in
+association, and all this on the ground of being God's house. "Thy
+testimonies are very sure; holiness becometh Thy house, O Lord, for
+ever." When any one was separated, or "cut off," from the congregation
+of Israel, was it because of not being an Israelite? By no means; but
+because of some moral or ceremonial defilement which could not be
+tolerated in God's Assembly. In Achan's case (Josh. vii.), although
+there were six hundred thousand souls ignorant of his sin, yet God says,
+"_Israel hath sinned_." Why? Because they were looked at as God's
+Assembly, and there was defilement there which, if not judged, all would
+have been broken up.
+
+[XII.] Those who are competent to do so can look at the original of this
+important chapter, where they will see that the word translated
+"approved" (ver. 19) comes from the same root as that translated
+"examine himself" (ver. 28). Thus we see that the man who approves
+himself takes his place amongst the approved, and is the very opposite
+of those who were amongst the heretics. Now the meaning of a heretic is
+not merely one who holds false doctrine, though one may be a heretic in
+so doing, but one who persists in the exercise of _his own will_. The
+apostle knew that there must be heresies at Corinth, seeing that there
+were sects: those who were doing their own will were acting in
+opposition to God's will, and thus producing division; for God's will
+had reference to the whole body. Those who were acting heretically were
+despising the Church of God.
+
+[XIII.] It may be well to add a word here for the guidance of any
+simple-hearted Christian who may find himself placed in circumstances in
+which he is called upon to decide between the claims of different tables
+which might seem to be spread upon the same principle. To confirm and
+encourage such an one in a truthful course of action, I should regard as
+a most valuable service.
+
+Suppose, then, I find myself in a place where two or more tables have
+been spread; what am I to do? I believe I am to inquire into the
+_origin_ of these various tables, to see how it became needful to have
+more than one table. If, for example, a number of Christians meeting
+together have admitted and retained amongst them any unsound principles,
+affecting the person of the Son of God, or subversive of the unity of
+the Church of God on earth; if, I say, such principles be admitted and
+retained in the assembly, or if persons who hold and teach them be
+received and acknowledged by the assembly; under such painful and
+humiliating circumstances the faithful can no longer be there. Why?
+Because I cannot take my place at it without identifying myself with
+manifestly unchristian principles. The same remark, of course, applies
+if the case be that of corrupt conduct unjudged by the assembly.
+
+Now, if a number of Christians should find themselves placed in the
+circumstances above described, they would be called upon to maintain THE
+PURITY OF THE TRUTH OF GOD while acknowledging as ever the oneness of
+the body. We have not only to maintain the grace of the Lord's table,
+but the _holiness_ of it also. Truth is not to be sacrificed in order to
+maintain unity, nor will _true_ unity ever be interfered with by the
+strict maintenance of truth.
+
+It is not to be imagined that the unity of the body of Christ is
+interfered with when a community based upon unsound principles, or
+countenancing unsound doctrine or practice, is separated from. The
+Church of Rome charged the Reformers with schism because they separated
+from her; but we know that the Church of Rome lay, and still lies, under
+the charge of schism because she imposes false doctrine upon her
+members. Let it only be ascertained that the truth of God is called in
+question by any community, and that, to be a member of that community, I
+must identify myself with unsound doctrine or corrupt practice, and then
+it cannot be schism to separate from such a community; nay, I am bound
+to separate.
+
+[XIV.] It is usual to apply the term "unworthily," in this passage, to
+_persons_ doing the act, whereas it really refers to the _manner_ of
+doing it. The apostle never thought of calling in question the
+Christianity of the Corinthians; nay, in the opening address of his
+epistle, he looks at them as "the Church of God which is at Corinth,
+sanctified in Christ Jesus, called saints" (or saints by calling). How
+could he use this language in the first chapter, and in the eleventh
+call in question the worthiness of these saints to take their seat at
+the Lord's Supper? Impossible. He looked upon them as saints, and as
+such he exhorted them to celebrate the Lord's Supper in a worthy manner.
+The question of any but true Christians being there, is never raised; so
+that it is utterly impossible that the word "unworthily" could apply to
+_persons_. Its application is entirely to the _manner_. The persons were
+worthy, but their manner was not; and they were called, as saints, to
+judge themselves as to their _ways_, else the Lord might judge them in
+their _persons_ as was already the case. In a word, it was as true
+Christians they were called to judge themselves. If they were in doubt
+as to that, they were utterly unable to judge anything. I never think of
+setting my child to judge as to whether he is my child or not; but I
+expect him to judge himself as to his habits, else, if he do not, I may
+have to do, by chastening, what he ought to do by self-judgment. It is
+because I look upon him as my child, that I will not allow him to sit at
+my table with soiled garments and disorderly manners.
+
+[XV.] The reader will bear in mind that the text does not touch the
+question of Scriptural discipline. There may be many members of the
+flock of Christ who could not be received into the Assembly on earth,
+inasmuch as they may possibly be leavened by false doctrine, or wrong
+practice. But, though we might not be able to receive them, we do not,
+by any means, raise the question as to their being in the Lamb's book of
+life. This is not the province nor the prerogative of the Church of God.
+"_The Lord_ knoweth them that are His; and let every one that nameth the
+name of Christ depart from iniquity" (2 Tim. ii. 19).
+
+[XVI.] The church of Rome has so entirely departed from the truth set
+forth in the Lord's Supper, that she professes to offer, in the mass,
+"an unbloody sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead." Now, we
+are taught, in Heb. ix. 22, that "without shedding of blood is no
+remission;" consequently, the church of Rome has no remission of sins
+for her members. She robs them of this precious reality, and instead
+thereof, gives them an anomalous and utterly unscriptural thing, called
+"an unbloody sacrifice, or mass." This, which, according to her own
+practice and the testimony of Heb. ix. 22, can never take away sin, she
+offers day by day, week by week, and year by year. A sacrifice without
+blood must, if Scripture be true, be a sacrifice without remission.
+Hence, therefore, the sacrifice of the mass is a positive blind raised
+by the devil, through the agency of Rome, to hide from the sinner's view
+the glorious sacrifice of Christ, "_once offered_," and never to be
+repeated. "Christ, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death hath
+no more dominion over Him" (Rom. vi. 9). Every fresh sacrifice of the
+mass only declares the inefficiency of all the previous sacrifices, so
+that Rome is only mocking the sinner with an empty shadow. But she is
+consistent in her wickedness, for she withholds the cup from the laity,
+and teaches her members that they have body and blood and all in the
+wafer. But, if the blood be still in the body, it is manifestly not
+shed, and then we get back to the same gloomy point, namely, "no
+remission." "Without shedding of blood is no remission."
+
+How totally different is the precious and most refreshing institution of
+the Lord's Supper, as set before us in the New Testament. There we find
+the bread broken, and the wine poured out--the significant symbols of a
+body broken, and of blood shed. The wine is not in the bread, because
+the blood is not in the body, for, if it were, there would be "no
+remission." In a word, the Lord's Supper is the distinct memorial of an
+eternally accomplished sacrifice; and none can communicate thereat, with
+intelligence or blessing, save those who know the full remission of
+sins. It is not that we would, by any means, make knowledge a term of
+communion, for very many of the children of God, through bad teaching,
+and various other causes, do not know the perfect remission of sins, and
+were they to be excluded on that ground, it would be making _knowledge_
+a term of communion, instead of _life_ and _obedience_. Still, if I do
+not know, experimentally, that redemption is an accomplished fact, I
+shall see but little meaning in the symbols of bread and wine; and,
+moreover, I shall be in great danger of attaching a species of efficacy
+to the memorials, which belongs only to the great reality to which they
+point.
+
+[XVII.] I can only feel myself responsible to present myself in the
+assembly when it is gathered on proper Church ground, i. e., the ground
+laid down in the New Testament. People may assemble, and call themselves
+the Church of God, in any given locality, but if they do not exhibit the
+characteristic features and principles of the Church of God as set forth
+in Holy Scripture, I cannot own them. If they refuse, or lack spiritual
+power, to judge worldliness, carnality, or false doctrine, they are
+evidently not on proper Church ground: they are merely a religious
+fraternity, which, in its collective character, I am in no wise
+responsible before God to own. Hence the child of God needs much
+spiritual power, and subjection to the Word, to be able to carry himself
+through all the windings of the professing Church in this peculiarly
+evil and difficult day.
+
+
+
+
+THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD
+
+OR, THE
+
+ALL-SUFFICIENCY OF THE NAME OF JESUS
+
+
+In a day like the present, when almost every new idea becomes the centre
+or gathering-point of some new association, we cannot but feel the value
+of having divinely formed convictions as to what the assembly of God
+really is. We live in a time of unusual mental activity, and hence there
+is the more urgent need of calm and prayerful study of the word of God.
+That Word, blessed be its Author, is like a rock amid the ocean of human
+thought. There it stands unmoved, notwithstanding the raging of the
+storm and the ceaseless lashing of the waves. And not only does it thus
+stand unmoved itself, but it imparts its own stability to all who simply
+take their stand upon it. What a mercy to make one's escape from the
+heavings and tossings of the stormy ocean, and find a calm resting place
+on that everlasting Rock.
+
+This, truly, is a mercy. Were it not that we have "the law and the
+testimony," where should we be? Whither should we go? What should we do?
+What darkness! What confusion! What perplexity!
+
+A thousand jarring voices fall, at times, upon the ear, and each voice
+seems to speak with such authority, that if one is not well taught and
+grounded in the Word, there is great danger of being drawn away, or, at
+least, sadly unhinged. One man will tell you that _this_ is right;
+another will tell you _that_ is right; a third will tell you that
+_everything_ is right; and a fourth will tell you that _nothing_ is
+right. With reference to the question of church position, you will meet
+with some who go _here_; some who go _there_; some who go _everywhere_;
+and some who go _nowhere_.
+
+Now, under such circumstances, what is one to do? All cannot possibly be
+right. And yet, surely, there is something right. It cannot be that we
+are _compelled_ to live in error, in darkness, or uncertainty. "_There
+is a path_," blessed be God, though "no fowl knoweth it, and the
+vulture's eye hath not seen it. The lion's whelps have not trodden it,
+nor the fierce lion passed by it." Where is this safe and blessed path?
+Hear the divine reply: "Behold, _the fear of the Lord_, that is wisdom:
+and _to depart from evil_ is understanding" (Job xxviii.).
+
+Let us, therefore, in the fear of the Lord, in the light of His
+infallible truth, and in humble dependence upon the teaching of the Holy
+Spirit, proceed to the examination of the subject which stands at the
+head of this paper; and may we have grace to abandon all confidence in
+our own thoughts, and the thoughts of others, so that we may heartily
+and honestly yield ourselves up to be taught only of God.
+
+Now, in order to get fairly into the grand and all-important subject of
+the assembly of God, we have first to state _a fact_; and, secondly, to
+ask _a question_. The fact is this, _There is an assembly of God on the
+earth_. The question is, _What is that assembly_?
+
+I. And, first then, as to our _fact_. There is such a thing as the
+assembly of God on the earth. This is a most important fact, surely. God
+has an assembly on the earth. I do not refer to any merely human
+organization, such as the Greek Church; the Church of Rome; the Church
+of England; the Church of Scotland; or to any of the various systems
+which have sprung from these, framed and fashioned by man's hand, and
+carried on by man's resources. I refer simply to that assembly which is
+gathered by God the Holy Ghost, round the person of God the Son, to
+worship and hold fellowship with God the Father.
+
+If we set forth upon our search for the assembly of God, or for any
+expression thereof, with our minds full of prejudice, preconceived
+thoughts, and personal predilections; or if, in our searchings, we seek
+the aid of the flickering light of the dogmas, opinions, and traditions
+of men, nothing is more certain than that we shall fail to reach the
+truth. To recognize God's assembly, we must be exclusively taught by
+God's Word, and led by God's Spirit; for, of God's assembly, as well as
+of the sons of God, it may be said, "the world knoweth it not."
+
+Hence, then, if we are, in any wise, governed by the spirit of the
+world; if we desire to exalt man; if we seek to commend ourselves to the
+thoughts of men; if our object be to gain the attractive ends of a
+plausible and soul-ensnaring expediency, we may as well, forthwith,
+abandon our search for any true expression of the assembly of God, and
+take refuge in that form of human organization which most fully commends
+itself to our thinkings or our conscientious convictions.
+
+Further, if our object be to find a religious community in which the
+word of God is read, or in which the people of God are found, we may
+speedily satisfy ourselves, for it would be hard indeed to find a
+section of the professing Christian body in which one or both of these
+objects might not be realized.
+
+Finally, if we merely aim at doing all the good we can, without any
+question as to how we do it; if _Per fas aut nefas_, "right or wrong,"
+be our motto in whatever we undertake; if we are prepared to reverse
+those weighty words of Samuel, and say that, "To sacrifice is better
+than to obey, and the fat of rams better than to harken," then is it
+worse than vain for us to pursue our search for the assembly of God,
+inasmuch as that assembly can only be discovered and approved by one who
+has been taught to flee from the thousand flowery pathways of human
+expediency, and to submit his conscience, his heart, his understanding,
+his whole moral being to the supreme authority of "Thus saith the
+Lord."
+
+In one word, then, the obedient disciple knows that there is such a
+thing as God's assembly: and he it is, too, that will be enabled,
+through grace, to understand what is a true expression of it. The
+sincere student of Scripture knows, full well, the difference between
+that which is founded, formed, and governed by the wisdom and the will
+of man, and that which is gathered round, and governed by Christ the
+Lord. How vast is the difference! It is just the difference between God
+and man.
+
+But we may here be asked for the Scripture proofs of our fact that there
+is such a thing on the earth as _the_ assembly of God, and we shall, at
+once, proceed to furnish these; for we may be permitted to say that,
+without the authority of the Word, all statements are utterly valueless.
+What, therefore, saith the Scripture?
+
+Our first proof shall be that famous passage, in Matthew xvi., "When
+Jesus came into the coast of Cćsarea Philippi, He asked His disciples,
+saying Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am? And they said, Some
+say that Thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and others, Jeremias,
+or one of the prophets. He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am?
+And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
+living God. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou,
+Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but
+My Father which is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, that thou art
+Peter; and upon this rock I will build My assembly[XVIII.] ([Greek:
+ekklęsian]); and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it" (vers.
+13-18).
+
+Here our blessed Lord intimates His purpose to build an assembly, and
+sets forth the true foundation of that assembly, namely, "Christ, the
+Son of the living God." This is an all-important point in our subject.
+The building is founded on the Rock, and that Rock is not the poor
+failing, stumbling, erring Peter, but CHRIST, the eternal Son of the
+living God; and every stone in that building partakes of the Rock-life
+which, as being victorious over all the power of the enemy, is
+indestructible.[XIX.]
+
+Again, passing over a section of Matthew's Gospel, we come to an equally
+familiar passage: "Moreover, if thy brother shall trespass against thee,
+go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear
+thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he will not hear thee, then
+take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three
+witnesses every word may be established. And if he shall neglect to
+hear them, tell it unto the assembly, but if he neglect to hear the
+assembly, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican. Verily I
+say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in
+heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth, shall be loosed in
+heaven. Again, I say unto you, that if two of you shall agree on earth
+as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of
+My Father which is in heaven. For where two or three are _gathered_
+together _in My name_, there am I in the midst of them" (chap. xviii.
+15-20).
+
+We shall have occasion to refer to this passage again, under the second
+division of our subject. It is here introduced merely as a link in the
+chain of Scripture evidence of the fact that there is such a thing as
+the assembly of God on the earth. This assembly is not a name, a form, a
+pretence, an assumption. It is a divine reality--an institution of God,
+possessing His seal and sanction. It is a something to be appealed to in
+all cases of personal trespass and dispute which cannot be settled by
+the parties involved. This assembly may consist of only "two or three"
+in any particular place--the smallest plurality, if you please; but
+there it is, owned of God, and its decisions ratified in heaven.
+
+Now, we are not to be scared away from the truth on this subject, by the
+fact that the church of Rome has attempted to base her monstrous
+pretensions on the two passages which we have just quoted. That church
+is not God's assembly, built on the Rock Christ, and gathered in the
+name of Jesus; but a human apostasy, founded on a failing mortal, and
+governed by the traditions and doctrines of men. We must not, therefore,
+suffer ourselves to be deprived of God's reality by reason of Satan's
+counterfeit. God has His assembly on the earth, and we are responsible
+to confess the truth of it, and to be a practical expression of it. This
+may be difficult, in a day of confusion like the present. It will demand
+a single eye--a subject will--a mortified mind. But let the reader be
+assured of this, that it is his privilege to possess as divine certainty
+as to what is a true expression of the assembly of God, as surely as the
+truth concerning his own salvation through the blood of the Lamb; nor
+should he be satisfied without this. I should not be content to go on
+for an hour without the assurance that I am, in spirit and principle,
+associated with those whose ground of gathering is purely their common
+membership in the assembly of God--that assembly which includes all
+saints. I say, in spirit and principle, because I may happen to be in a
+place where there is no such local expression of the assembly; in which
+case I must be satisfied to hold fellowship, in spirit, with all those
+who are thus gathered.
+
+This simplifies the matter amazingly. If I cannot have a true expression
+of God's assembly, I shall have nothing. It will not do to point me to a
+religious community, with some Christians therein, the gospel preached,
+and the ordinances administered.
+
+I must be convinced that in very truth, they are gathered on that ground
+which, in my heart and conscience, frees them from the charge of
+sectarianism. I can own the children of God individually anywhere; but
+sectarianism I cannot own or sanction.
+
+No doubt this will give offence. It will be called bigotry,
+narrow-mindedness, intolerance, and the like. But this need not
+discourage us. All we have to do is to ascertain the truth as to God's
+assembly, and cleave to it, heartily and energetically, at all cost. If
+God has an assembly--and Scripture says He has--then let me be with
+those who maintain its principles, and nowhere else. It must be in this
+as in all other matters, truth or nothing. If there be a local
+expression of that assembly, well; be there in person. If not, be
+content to hold spiritual communion with all who humbly and faithfully
+own and occupy that holy ground. It may sound and seem like liberality
+to be ready to sanction and go with everything and everybody. It may
+appear very easy and very pleasant to be in a place "where everybody's
+will is indulged, and nobody's conscience is exercised"--where we may
+hold what we like, and say what we like, and do what we like, and go
+where we like. All this may seem very delightful--very plausible--very
+popular--very attractive; but oh! it will be barrenness and bitterness
+in the end; and, in the day of the Lord, it will assuredly be burnt up
+as so much wood, hay, and stubble, that cannot stand the action of His
+judgment.
+
+But let us proceed with our Scripture proofs. In the Acts of the
+Apostles, or rather, the Acts of the Holy Ghost, we find the assembly
+formally set up. A passage or two will suffice: "And they, continuing
+daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to
+house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart,
+praising God, and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added
+to the assembly, daily, such as should be saved" (Acts ii. 46, 47). Such
+was the original, simple apostolic order. When a person was converted,
+he thereby belonged to the assembly and took his place in it: there was
+no difficulty in the matter, there were no sects or parties, each
+claiming to be considered _a_ church, a cause, or an interest. There was
+just the one thing, and that was the assembly of God, where He dwelt,
+acted, and ruled. It was not a system formed according to the will, the
+judgment, or even the conscience of man. Man had not, as yet, entered
+upon the business of church-making. This was God's work. It was just as
+exclusively God's province and prerogative to baptize the saved into one
+body by one Spirit, as to save the scattered.[XX.]
+
+Why, we may justly inquire, should it be different now? Why should the
+regenerated seek to belong to something else than that to which they
+already belong--the assembly of God? Is not that sufficient? Assuredly.
+Should they seek aught else? Assuredly not. We repeat, with emphasis,
+"_Either that or nothing_."
+
+True it is, alas! that failure, and ruin, and apostasy have come in.
+Man's wisdom, and his will; or, if you please, his reason, his judgment,
+and his misguided conscience have wrought, in matters ecclesiastical,
+and the result appears before us in the almost numberless and nameless
+sects and parties of the present moment. Still, we are bold to say, that
+the ground of assembling as at the beginning, simply as being members of
+the assembly of God, remains the same, spite of all the failure, the
+error, and the confusion, which have come in. The difficulty in
+reaching it practically may be great, but its reality, when reached, is
+unaltered, and unalterable. In apostolic times the assembly stood out,
+in bold relief, from the dark background of Judaism on the one hand, and
+Paganism on the other. It was impossible to mistake it; there it stood,
+a grand reality! a company of living men, gathered, indwelt, ruled and
+regulated by God the Holy Ghost, so that the unlearned or unbelieving
+coming in, were convinced of all, and constrained to acknowledge that
+God was there. (See carefully, I Cor. xii., xiv. throughout.)
+
+Thus, in this Gospel, our blessed Lord intimates His purpose of building
+an assembly. This assembly is historically presented to us in the Acts
+of the Apostles. Then, when we turn to the Epistles of Paul, we find him
+addressing the assembly in seven distinct places, namely, Rome, Corinth,
+Galatia, Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, and Thessalonica; and finally, in
+the opening of the book of Revelation, we have addresses to seven
+distinct assemblies. Now, in all these places, the assembly of God was a
+plain, palpable, real thing, established and maintained by God Himself.
+It was not a human organization, but a divine institution--a
+testimony--a light bearer for God, in each place.
+
+Thus much as to our Scripture proofs of the fact that God has an
+assembly on the earth, gathered, indwelt, and governed by the Holy Ghost
+who is the true and only Vicar of Christ upon earth. The Gospel
+prophetically intimates the assembly; the Acts historically presents the
+assembly; and the Epistles formally address the assembly. All this is
+plain. And if it be broken into fragments now, it is for us to be
+gathered on the ground of the _one_ assembly of God, and to be a true
+expression of it.
+
+And let it be carefully noted that we will listen to nothing on this
+subject but the voice of Holy Scripture. Let not reason speak, for we
+own it not. Let not tradition lift her voice, for we wholly disregard
+her. Let not expediency thrust itself upon us, for we shall give it no
+place whatever. We believe in the all-sufficiency of Holy
+Scripture--that it is sufficient to furnish the man of God
+thoroughly--to equip him perfectly for all good works (2 Tim. iii. 16,
+17). The word of God is either sufficient or it is not. We believe it to
+be amply sufficient for every exigency of God's assembly. It could not
+be otherwise if God be its author. We must either deny the divinity or
+admit the sufficiency of the Bible. There is not a single hair's breadth
+of middle ground. It is impossible that God could have written an
+imperfect, an insufficient book.
+
+This is a very grave principle in connection with our subject. Many of
+our protestant writers have, in assailing popery, maintained the
+sufficiency and authority of the Bible; but it does seem very plain to
+us that they are always at fault when their opponents turn sharp round
+upon them and demand proof from Scripture for many things sanctioned and
+adopted by protestant communities.
+
+There are many things adopted and practised in the National
+Establishment and other protestant communities, which have no sanction
+in the Word; and when the shrewd and intelligent defenders of popery
+have called attention to these things, and demanded authority for them,
+the weakness of mere protestantism has been strikingly apparent. If we
+admit, for a moment, that, in some things, we must have recourse to
+tradition and expediency, then who will undertake to fix the boundary
+line? If it be allowable to depart from Scripture at all, how far are we
+to go? If the authority of tradition be admitted at all, who is to fix
+its domain? If we leave the narrow and well-defined pathway of divine
+revelation, and enter upon the wide and bewildering field of human
+tradition, has not one man as much right as another to make a choice?
+The gates of hell shall assuredly prevail against every human
+system--against all those corporations and associations which men have
+set on foot. And in no case has that triumph been, even already, made
+more awfully manifest than in that of the church of Rome itself,
+although it has arrogantly laid claim to this very declaration of our
+Lord as the bulwark of its strength. Nothing can withstand the power of
+the gates of hell but the assembly of the living God, for that is built
+upon "the living Stone." Now the local expression of that assembly may
+be but "two or three gathered in the name of Jesus," a poor, feeble,
+despised handful.
+
+It is well to be clear and decided as to this.
+
+Christ's promise can never fail. He has, blessed be His name, come down
+to the lowest possible point by which the assembly can be represented,
+even "_two_." How gracious! How tender! How considerate! How like
+Himself! He attaches all the dignity--all the value--all the efficacy of
+His own divine and deathless name to an obscure handful gathered round
+Himself. It must be very evident to the spiritual mind that the Lord
+Jesus, in speaking of the "two or three" thought not of those vast
+systems which have sprung up in ancient, medićval, and modern times,
+throughout the eastern and western world, numbering their adherents and
+votaries, not by "twos or threes," but by kingdoms, provinces, and
+parishes. It is very plain that a baptized kingdom, and "two or three"
+living souls gathered in the name of Jesus, do not and cannot mean the
+same thing. Baptized Christendom is one thing, and the assembly of God
+is another. What this latter is, we have yet to unfold; we are here
+asserting that they are not, and cannot be, the same thing. They are
+constantly confounded, though no two things can be more distinct.[XXI.]
+
+If we would know under what figure Christ presents the baptized world,
+we have only to look at the "leaven" and the "mustard tree" of Matt.
+xiii.
+
+The former gives us the internal, and the latter the external character
+of "the kingdom of heaven"--of that which was originally set up in truth
+and simplicity--a real thing, though small, but which, through Satan's
+crafty working, has become inwardly a corrupt mass, though outwardly a
+far-spreading, showy, popular thing in the earth, gathering all sorts
+beneath the shadow of its patronage. Such is the lesson--the simple but
+deeply solemn lesson to be learnt by the spiritual mind from the
+"leaven" and the "mustard-tree" of Matt. xiii. And we may add, one
+result of learning this lesson would be an ability to distinguish
+between "the kingdom of heaven" and "the assembly of God." The former
+may be compared to a wide morass, the latter to a running stream passing
+through it, and in constant danger of losing its distinctive character,
+as well as its proper direction, by intermingling with the surrounding
+waters. To confound the two things is to deal a deathblow to all godly
+discipline and consequent purity in the assembly of God. If the kingdom
+and the assembly mean one and the same thing, then how should we act in
+the case of "that wicked person" in I Cor. v.? The apostle tells us "to
+put him away." Where are we to put him? Our Lord Himself tells us
+distinctly that "the field is _the world_;" and again, in John xvii., He
+says that His people are not of the world. This makes all plain enough.
+But men tell us, in the very face of our Lord's statement, that the
+field is the assembly, and the tares and wheat, ungodly and godly, are
+to grow together, that they are on no account to be separated. Thus the
+plain and positive teaching of the Holy Ghost in I Cor. v. is set in
+open opposition to the equally plain and positive teaching of our Lord
+in Matt. xiii.; and all this flows from the effort to confound two
+distinct things, namely, "the kingdom of heaven" and "the assembly of
+God."
+
+It would not by any means comport with the object of this paper to enter
+further upon the interesting subject of "the kingdom." Enough has been
+said, if the reader has thereby been convinced of the immense importance
+of duly distinguishing that kingdom from the assembly. What this latter
+is we shall now proceed to inquire; and may God the Holy Ghost be our
+teacher!
+
+II. In handling our question as to the assembly of God, it will give
+clearness and precision to our thoughts to consider the four following
+points, namely:--
+
+First, what is the _material_ of which the assembly is composed?
+
+Secondly, what is the _centre_ round which the assembly is gathered?
+
+Thirdly, what is the _power_ by which the assembly is gathered?
+
+Fourthly, what is the _authority_ on which the assembly is gathered?
+
+I. And, first, then, as to the material of which God's assembly is
+composed; it is, in one word, those possessing salvation, or eternal
+life. We do not enter the assembly in order to be saved, but as those
+who are saved. The word is, "_On_ this rock I will build My Church." He
+does not say, "On My Church I will build the salvation of souls." One of
+Rome's boasted dogmas is this--"There is no salvation out of the true
+Church." Yes, but we can go deeper still, and say, "Off the true Rock
+there is no Church." Take away the Rock, and you have nothing but a
+baseless fabric of error and corruption. What a miserable delusion, to
+think of being saved by that! Thank God, it is not so. We do not get to
+Christ through the Church, but to the Church through Christ. To reverse
+this order is to displace Christ altogether, and thus have neither Rock,
+nor Church, nor salvation. We meet Christ as a life-giving Saviour,
+before we have anything to say to the assembly at all; and hence we
+could possess eternal life, and enjoy full salvation, though there were
+no such thing as the assembly of God on the earth.[XXII.]
+
+We cannot be too simple in grasping this truth, at a time like the
+present, when ecclesiastical pretention is rising to such a height. The
+church, falsely so called, is opening her bosom with delusive
+tenderness, and inviting poor sin-burdened, world-sick, and heavy-laden
+souls to take refuge therein. She, with crafty liberality, throws open
+her treasury door, and places her resources at the disposal of needy,
+craving, yearning souls. And truly those resources have powerful
+attractions for those who are not on "The Rock." There is an ordained
+priesthood, professing to stand in an unbroken line with the
+apostles.--Alas! how different the two ends of the line!--There is a
+continual sacrifice. Alas! a bloodless one, and therefore a worthless
+one. (Heb. ix. 22.)--There is a splendid ritual. Alas! it seeks its
+origin amid the shadows of a by-gone age--shadows which have been for
+ever displaced by the Person, the work, and the offices of the eternal
+Son of God. For ever be His peerless name adored!
+
+The believer has a very conclusive answer to all the pretensions and
+promises of the Romish system. He can say he has found his _all_ in a
+crucified and risen Saviour. What does he want with the sacrifice of the
+mass? He is washed in the blood of Christ. What does he want with a
+poor, sinful, dying priest, who cannot save himself? He has the Son of
+God as his priest. What does he want with a pompous ritual, with all its
+imposing adjuncts? He worships in spirit and in truth, within the
+holiest of all, whither he enters with boldness, through the blood of
+Jesus.
+
+Nor is it merely with Roman Catholicism we have to do in the
+establishment of our first point. We fear there are thousands besides
+Roman Catholics who, in heart, look to the church, if not for salvation,
+at least to be a stepping-stone thereto. Hence the importance of seeing
+clearly that the materials of which God's assembly is composed are those
+possessing salvation, in whom is eternal life; so that whatever be the
+object of that assembly, it most certainly is not to provide salvation
+for its members, seeing that all its members are saved ere they enter it
+at all. God's assembly is a houseful of saved ones from one end to the
+other. Blessed fact! It is not an institution set on foot for the
+purpose of providing salvation for sinners, nor yet for providing for
+their religious wants. It is a saved, living body, formed and gathered
+by the Holy Ghost, to make known to "Principalities and powers in the
+heavenlies, the manifold wisdom of God," and to declare to the whole
+universe the all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus.
+
+Now, the great enemy of Christ and the Church is well aware of what a
+powerful testimony the assembly of God is called and designed to yield
+on the earth; and therefore he has put forth all his hellish energy to
+quash that testimony in every possible way. He hates the name of Jesus,
+and everything tending to glorify that name. Hence his intense
+opposition to the assembly as a whole, and to each local expression
+thereof, wherever it may happen to exist. He has no objection to a mere
+religious establishment set on foot for the purpose of providing for
+man's religious wants, whether maintained by government or by voluntary
+effort. You may set up what you please. You may join what you please.
+You may be what you please; anything and everything for Satan but the
+assembly of God, and the practical expression of it in any given place.
+That he hates most cordially, and will seek to blacken and blast by
+every means in his power. But those consolatory accents of the Lord
+Christ fall with divine power on the ear of faith: "On this rock I will
+build My assembly, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
+
+2. This conducts us naturally to our second point, namely, What is the
+centre round which God's assembly is gathered? The centre is Christ--the
+living Stone, as we read in the Epistle of Peter, "To whom coming as
+unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and
+precious, ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house, a
+holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by
+Jesus Christ" (chap. ii. 4, 5).
+
+It is around the person of a living Christ then, that God's assembly is
+gathered. It is not round a doctrine, however true; nor round an
+ordinance, however important; but round a living, divine Person. This is
+a great cardinal and vital point which must be distinctly seized,
+tenaciously held, and faithfully and constantly avowed and carried out.
+"To whom coming." It is not said "_To which_ coming." We do not come to
+a thing, but to a Person. "Let us go forth therefore unto _Him_" (Heb.
+xiii.). The Holy Ghost leads us _only_ to Jesus. Nothing short of this
+will avail. We may speak of joining _a_ church, becoming a member of a
+congregation, attaching ourselves to a party, a cause, or an interest.
+All these expressions tend to darken and confuse the mind, and hide from
+our view the divine idea of the assembly of God. It is not our business
+to join anything. When God converted us, He joined us by His Spirit to
+Christ and to all the members of Christ, and that should be enough for
+us. Christ is the only centre of God's assembly.
+
+And, we may ask, is not He sufficient? Is it not quite enough for us to
+be "joined to the Lord?" Why add aught thereto? "Where two or three are
+gathered together _in My name_, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt.
+xviii. 20). What more can we need? If Jesus is in our midst, why should
+we think of setting up a human president? Why not unanimously and
+heartily allow Him to take the president's seat, and bow to Him in all
+things? Why set up human authority, in any shape or form, in the house
+of God? But this is done, and it is well to speak plainly about it. Man
+is set up in that which professes to be an assembly of God. We see human
+authority exercised in that sphere in which divine authority alone
+should be acknowledged. It matters not, so far as the foundation
+principle is concerned, whether it be pope, parson, priest, or
+president. It is man set up in Christ's place. It may be the pope
+appointing a cardinal, a legate, or a bishop to his sphere of work; or
+it may be a president appointing a man to exhort or to pray for ten
+minutes. The principle is one and the same. It is human authority acting
+in that sphere where only God's authority should be owned. If Christ be
+in our midst, we can count on Him for everything.
+
+Now, in saying this, we anticipate a very probable objection. It may be
+said by the advocates of human authority, "How could an assembly ever
+get on without some human presidency? Would it not lead to all sorts of
+confusion? Would it not open the door for everyone to intrude himself
+upon the assembly, quite irrespective of gift or qualification?"
+
+Our answer is a very simple one. Jesus is all-sufficient. We can trust
+Him to keep order in His house. We feel ourselves far safer in His
+gracious and powerful hand than in the hands of the most attractive
+human president. We have all spiritual gifts treasured up in Jesus. He
+is the fountain-head of all ministerial authority. "He hath the seven
+stars." Let us only confide in Him, and the order of our assembly will
+be as perfectly provided for as the salvation of our souls. This is just
+the reason of our connecting, in the title of this pamphlet, "The
+all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus" with the "Assembly of God." We
+believe that the name of Jesus is, in very truth, all-sufficient, not
+only for personal salvation, but for all the exigencies of the
+assembly--for worship, communion, ministry, discipline, government,
+everything. Having Him, we have all and abound.
+
+This is the real marrow and substance of our subject. Our one aim and
+object is to exalt the name of Jesus; and we believe He has been
+dishonored in that which calls itself His house. He has been dethroned,
+and man's authority has been set up. In vain does He bestow a
+ministerial gift; the possessor of that gift is not free to exercise it
+without the seal, the sanction, and the authority of man. And not only
+is this so, but if man thinks proper to give his seal, his sanction and
+authority, to one possessing not a particle of spiritual gift--yea, it
+may be, not a particle of spiritual life--he is nevertheless a
+recognized minister. In short, man's authority without Christ's gift
+makes a man a minister; whereas Christ's gift without man's authority
+does not. If this be not a dishonor done to the Lord Christ, what is?
+
+Christian reader, pause here, and deeply ponder this principle of human
+authority. We confess we are anxious you should get to the root of it,
+and judge it thoroughly, in the light of Holy Scripture, and the
+presence of God. It is, be assured of it, the grand point of distinction
+between the principles of the assembly of God and every human system of
+religion under the sun. If you look at all those systems, from Romanism
+down to the most refined form of religious association, you will find
+man's authority recognized and demanded. With that you may minister;
+without it you must not. On the contrary, in the assembly of God,
+Christ's gift _alone_ makes man a minister, apart from all human
+authority. "Not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the
+Father, who raised Him from the dead." (Gal. i. I). This is the grand
+principle of ministry in the assembly of God.
+
+Now, in classing Romanism with all the other religious systems of the
+day, let it, once for all, be distinctly understood that it is _only_ in
+reference to the principle of ministerial authority. God forbid that we
+should think of comparing a system which shuts out the word of God, and
+teaches idolatry, the worship of saints and angels, and a whole mass of
+gross, abominable error and superstition, with those systems where the
+word of God is held up, and more or less of scriptural truth
+promulgated. Nothing can be further from our thoughts. We believe popery
+to be Satan's master-piece, in the way of a religious system, although
+many of the people of God have been, and may yet be, involved therein.
+
+Further, let us at this stage plainly aver that we believe the saints of
+God are to be found in every Protestant community, both as ministers and
+members; and that the Lord uses them in many ways--blesses their work,
+service, and personal testimony.
+
+And, finally, we feel it right to declare that we would not move a
+finger to touch any one of those systems. It is not with the systems we
+have to do; the Lord will deal with them. Our business is with the
+saints in those systems, to seek by every spiritual and scriptural
+agency to get them to own and act upon the divine principles of the
+assembly of God.
+
+Having said thus much, in order to prevent misunderstanding, we return
+with increased power to our point, namely, that the thread of human
+authority runs through every religious system in Christendom, and that,
+in good truth, there is not a hair's breadth of consistent standing
+ground between the church of Rome and a true expression of the assembly
+of God. We believe that an honest seeker after truth, setting out from
+amid the dark shadows of popery, cannot possibly halt until he finds
+himself in the clear and blessed light of that which is a true
+expression of God's assembly. He may take years to travel over the
+intervening space. His steps may be slow and measured; but if only he
+follows the light, in simplicity and godly sincerity, he will find no
+rest between those two extremes. The ground of the assembly of God is
+the true position for all the children of God. Alas! they are not all
+there; but this is only their loss and their Lord's dishonor. They
+should be there because not only is God there, but He is allowed to act
+and _rule_ there.
+
+This latter is of all-importance, inasmuch as it may be truly said, Is
+not God everywhere? And does He not act in various places? True, He is
+everywhere, and He works in the midst of palpable error and evil. But He
+is not allowed to _rule_ in the systems of men, seeing that man's
+authority is really supreme, as we have already shown. And in addition
+to this, if the fact of God's converting and blessing souls in a system
+be a reason why we should be there, then we ought to be in the church of
+Rome, for how many have been converted and blessed in that awful system?
+Even in the recent revival we have heard of persons being stricken in
+Roman Catholic chapels. What proves too much proves nothing at all, and
+hence no argument can be based on the fact of God's working in a place.
+He is sovereign, and may work where He pleases. We are to be subject to
+His authority, and work where we are commanded, My Master may go where
+He pleases, but I must go where I am told.
+
+But some may ask, "Is there no danger of incompetent men intruding their
+ministry upon an assembly of God? And in the event of this, where is the
+difference between that assembly and the systems of men?" We reply,
+assuredly there is very great danger. But then such a thing would be
+_despite_, not in virtue of, the principle. This makes all the
+difference. Yes, indeed, we have seen mistakes and failures which are
+most humiliating.
+
+Let no one imagine that, while we contend for the truth concerning the
+assembly of God, we are at all ignorant or forgetful of the dangers and
+trials to which any carrying out its principles are exposed. Far from
+it. No one could be for twenty-eight years on that ground without being
+painfully conscious of the difficulty of maintaining it. But then the
+very trials, dangers, and difficulties only prove to be so many
+proofs--painful if you please, but proofs of the truth of the position;
+and were there no remedy but an appeal to human authority--a setting up
+of man in Christ's place--a return to worldly systems, we should without
+hesitation pronounce the remedy to be far worse than the disease. For
+were we to adopt the remedy, we should have the very worst symptoms of
+the disease, not to be mourned over as disease, but gloried in as the
+fruits of so-called order.
+
+But blessed be God, there is a remedy. What is it? "_There am I_ in the
+midst." This is enough. It is not, "There is a pope, a priest, a parson,
+or a president in their midst, at their head, in the chair, or in the
+pulpit." No thought of such a thing, from cover to cover of the New
+Testament. Even in the assembly of God at Corinth, where there was most
+grievous confusion and disorder, the inspired apostle never hints at
+such a thing as a human president, under any name whatsoever. "_God is
+the author_ of peace in all the assemblies of the saints" (I Cor. xiv.
+33). God was there to keep order. They were to look to Him, not to a
+man, under any name. To set up man to keep order in God's assembly is
+sheer unbelief, and an open insult to the Divine Presence.
+
+Now, we have been often asked to adduce Scripture in proof of the idea
+of divine presidency in an assembly. We at once reply, "There am I;" and
+"God is the Author." On these two pillars, even had we no more, we can
+triumphantly build the glorious truth of divine presidency--a truth
+which _must_ deliver all, who receive and hold it from God, from every
+system of man, call it by what name you please. It is, in our judgment,
+impossible to recognize Christ as the centre and sovereign ruler in the
+assembly, and continue to sanction the setting up of man. When once we
+have tasted the sweetness of being under Christ, we can never again
+submit to the servile bondage of being under man. This is not
+insubordination or impatience of control. It is only the utter refusal
+to bow to a false authority--to sanction a sinful usurpation. The moment
+we see man usurping authority in that which calls itself the church, we
+simply ask, "Who are you?" and retire to a sphere where God alone is
+acknowledged.
+
+"But, then, there are errors, evils, and abuses even in this very
+sphere." Doubtless; but if there are, we have the word of God to correct
+them. And hence, if an assembly should be troubled by the intrusion of
+ignorant and foolish men--men who have never yet measured themselves in
+the presence of God--men who boldly overleap the wide domain over which
+common sense, good taste, and moral propriety preside, and then vainly
+talk of being led by the Holy Spirit--restless men, who _will_ be at
+something, and who keep the assembly in a continual state of nervous
+apprehension, not knowing what is to come next--should any assembly be
+thus grievously afflicted, what should they do? Abandon the ground in
+impatience, chagrin, and disappointment? give all up as a myth, a fable,
+an idle chimera? go back to that from which they once came out? Alas!
+this is what some have done, thus proving that they never understood
+what they had been doing; or if they had understood it, that they had
+not faith to pursue it. May the Lord have mercy upon such, and open
+their eyes that they may see from whence they have fallen, and get a
+true view of the assembly of God, in contrast with the most attractive
+of the systems of men.
+
+But what is an assembly to do when abuses creep in? Correct them by the
+word of God. This is God's authoritative voice.
+
+We are fully aware of the difficulties and trials connected with any
+expression of the assembly of God. We believe its difficulties and
+trials are perfectly characteristic. There is nothing under the canopy
+of heaven that the devil hates as he hates that. He will leave no stone
+unturned to oppose it. We have seen this exemplified again and again. An
+evangelist may go to a place and preach the all-sufficiency of the name
+of Jesus for the salvation of the soul, and he will have thousands
+hanging on his lips. Let the same man return, and, while he preaches the
+same gospel, take another step and proclaim the all-sufficiency of that
+same Jesus for all the exigencies of an assembly of believers, and he
+will find himself opposed on all hands. Why is this? Because the devil
+hates the very feeblest expression of the assembly of God. You may see a
+town left for ages and generations to its dark and dull routine of
+religious formalism--a dead people gathering once a week to hear a dead
+man go through a dead service, and all the rest of the week living in
+sin and folly. There is not a breath of life, not a leaf stirring. The
+devil likes it well. But let some one come and unfurl the standard of
+the name of Jesus--Jesus for the soul and Jesus for the assembly--and
+you will soon see a mighty change. The rage of hell is excited, and the
+dark and dreadful tide of opposition rises.
+
+This, we most fully believe, is the true secret of many of the bitter
+attacks that have been recently made on those who maintain the
+principles of the assembly of God. No doubt we have to mourn over many
+mistakes, errors, and failures. We have given much occasion to the
+adversary in various ways. We have been a poor blotted epistle, a faint
+and feeble witness, a flickering light. For all this we have to be
+deeply humbled before our God. Nothing could be more unbecoming in us
+than pretention or assumption, or the putting forth of high-sounding
+ecclesiastical claims. The dust is our place. Yes, beloved brethren, the
+place of confession and self-judgment becomes us, in the presence of our
+God.
+
+Still, we are not to let slip the glorious principles of the assembly of
+God because we have so shamefully failed in carrying them out: we are
+not to judge the truth by our exhibition of it, but to judge our
+exhibition by the truth. It is one thing to occupy divine ground, and
+another thing to carry ourselves properly thereon; and while it is
+perfectly right to judge our practice by our principles, yet truth is
+truth for all that, and we may rest assured that the devil hates the
+truth which characterizes the assembly. A mere handful of poor people,
+gathered in the name of Jesus, as members of His body, to break bread in
+remembrance of Him, is a thorn in the side of the devil. True it is that
+such an assembly evokes the wrath of men, inasmuch as it throws their
+office and authority overboard, and they cannot bear that. Yet we
+believe the root of the whole matter will be found in Satan's hatred of
+the special testimony which such an assembly bears to the
+all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus for every possible need of the
+saints of God.
+
+This is a truly noble testimony, and we earnestly long to see it more
+faithfully carried out. We may fully count upon intense opposition. It
+will be with us as it was with the returned captives in the days of Ezra
+and Nehemiah. We may expect to encounter many a Rehum and many a
+Sanballat. Nehemiah might have gone and built any other wall in the
+whole world but the wall of Jerusalem, and Sanballat would never have
+molested him. But to build the wall of Jerusalem was an unpardonable
+offence. And why? Just because Jerusalem was God's earthly centre, round
+which He will yet gather the restored tribes of Israel. This was the
+secret of the enemy's opposition. And mark the affected contempt. "If a
+fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall." And yet Sanballat
+and his allies were not able to break it down. They might cause it to
+cease because of the Jews' lack of faith and energy; but they could not
+break it down when God would have it up. How like is this to the present
+moment! Surely there is nothing new under the sun. There is affected
+contempt, but real alarm. And, oh! if those who are gathered in the name
+of Jesus were only more true in heart to their blessed Centre, what
+testimony there would be! What power! What victory! How it would tell on
+all around. "Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there
+am I." There is nothing like this under the sun, be it ever so feeble
+and contemptible. The Lord be praised for raising up such a witness for
+Himself in these last days. May He greatly increase its effectiveness,
+by the power of the Holy Ghost!
+
+3. We must now very briefly glance at our third point, namely, what is
+the power by which the assembly is gathered. Here again man and his
+doings are set aside. It is not man's will choosing; nor man's reason
+discovering; nor man's judgment dictating; nor man's conscience
+demanding; it is the Holy Ghost gathering souls to Jesus. As Jesus is
+the only centre, so the Holy Ghost is the only gathering power. The one
+is as independent of man as the other. It is "where two or three are
+_gathered_." It does not say "where two or three are _met_." Persons may
+meet together round any centre, on any ground, by any influence, and
+merely form a society, an association, a community. But the Holy Ghost
+gathers saved souls only to Christ.
+
+An assembly may not embrace all the saints of God in a locality. In such
+a case they cannot be called the assembly of God in that place. But if
+they are assembled as members of the body of Christ, they occupy the
+ground of the assembly of God.
+
+This is a very simple truth. A soul led by the Holy Ghost will gather
+only to the name of the Lord; and if we gather to aught else, be it a
+point of truth, or some ordinance or another, we are not in that matter
+led by the Holy Ghost. It is not a question of life or salvation.
+Thousands are saved by Christ that do not own Him as their centre. They
+are gathered to some form of church government, some favorite doctrine,
+some special ordinance, some gifted man. The Holy Ghost will never
+gather to any one of these. He gathers only to a risen Christ. This is
+true of the whole Church of God upon earth; and each local assembly,
+wherever convened, is the expression of the whole.
+
+Now, the _power_ in an assembly will very much depend upon the measure
+in which each member thereof is gathered in integrity of heart to the
+name of Jesus. If I am gathered to a party holding peculiar opinions--if
+I am attracted by the people, or by the teaching--if, in a word, it be
+not the power of the Holy Ghost, leading me to the true Centre of God's
+assembly, I shall only prove a hindrance, a weight, a cause of weakness.
+I shall be to an assembly what a waster is to a candle; and instead of
+adding to the general light and usefulness, I shall do the very reverse.
+
+All this is deeply practical. It should lead to much exercise of heart
+and self-judgment as to what has drawn me to an assembly, and as to my
+ways therein. We are fully persuaded that the tone and testimony of an
+assembly have been greatly weakened by the presence of persons not
+understanding their position. Some present themselves there because they
+get teaching and blessing there which they cannot get anywhere else.
+Some come because they like the simplicity of the worship. Others come
+looking for love. None of these things are up to the mark. We should be
+in an assembly simply because the name of Jesus is the only standard set
+up there, and the Holy Spirit has "gathered" us thereto.
+
+No doubt ministry is most precious, and we shall have it, in more or
+less power, where all is ordered aright. So also as to simplicity of
+worship: we are sure to be simple, and real, and true, when the divine
+presence is realized, and the sovereignty of the Holy Ghost fully owned
+and submitted to. And as to love, if we go _looking for it_ we shall
+surely be thoroughly disappointed: but if we are enabled to _cultivate_
+and _manifest it_, we shall be sure to get a great deal more than we
+expect or deserve. It will generally be found that those persons who are
+perpetually complaining of want of love in others are utterly failing in
+love themselves; and, on the other hand, those who are really walking in
+love will tell you that they receive a thousand times more than they
+deserve. Let us remember that the best way to get water out of a dry
+pump is to pour a little water in. You may work at the handle until you
+are tired, and then go away in fretfulness and impatience, complaining
+of that horrible pump; whereas, if you would just pour in a little
+water, you would get in return a gushing stream to satisfy your utmost
+desire.
+
+We have but little conception of what an assembly would be were each one
+distinctly led by the Holy Ghost, and gathered _only_ to Jesus. We
+should not then have to complain of dull, heavy, unprofitable, trying
+meetings. We should have no fear of an unhallowed intrusion of mere
+nature and its restless doings--no _making_ of prayer--no talking for
+talking's sake--no hymn-book seized to fill a gap. Each one would know
+his place in the Lord's immediate presence--each gifted vessel would be
+filled, fitted, and used by the Master's hand--each eye would be
+directed to Jesus--each heart occupied with Him. If a chapter were read,
+it would be the very voice of God. If a word were spoken, it would tell
+with power upon the heart. If prayer were offered, it would lead the
+soul into the very presence of God. If a hymn were sung, it would lift
+the spirit up to God, and be like sweeping the strings of the heavenly
+harp. We should have no ready-made sermons--no teaching or preaching
+prayers, as though we would explain doctrines to God, or tell Him a
+whole host of things about ourselves--no praying _at_ our neighbors, or
+asking for all manner of graces for them, in which we ourselves are
+lamentably deficient--no singing for music's sake, or being disturbed if
+harmony be interfered with. All these evils should be avoided. We should
+feel ourselves in the very sanctuary of God, and enjoy a foretaste of
+that time when we shall worship in the courts above, and go no more out.
+
+We may be asked, "Where will you find all this down here?" Ah! this is
+the question. It is one thing to present a _beau ideal_ on paper, and
+another thing to realize it in the midst of error, failure, and
+infirmity. Through mercy, some of us have tasted, at times, a little of
+this blessedness. We have occasionally enjoyed moments of heaven upon
+earth. Oh, for more of it! May the Lord, in His great mercy, raise the
+tone of the assemblies everywhere! May He greatly enlarge our capacity
+for more profound communion and spiritual worship! May He enable us so
+to walk, in private life, from day to day so as to judge ourselves and
+our ways in His holy presence, that at least we may not prove a lump of
+lead or a waster to any of God's assemblies.
+
+And then, even though we may not be able to reach in experience the true
+expression of the assembly, yet let us never be satisfied with anything
+less. Let us honestly aim at the loftiest standard, and earnestly pray
+to be lifted up thereto. As to the _ground_ of God's assembly, we should
+hold it with jealous tenacity, and never consent for an hour to occupy
+any other. As to the tone and character of an assembly, they may and
+will vary immensely, and will depend upon the faith and spirituality of
+those gathered. Where the tone of things is felt to be low,--when
+meetings are felt to be unprofitable--where things are said and done
+repeatedly which are felt by the spiritual to be wholly out of place,
+let all who feel it wait on God--wait continually--wait believingly--and
+He will assuredly hear and answer. In this way the very trials and
+exercises which are peculiar to an assembly will have the happy effect
+of casting us more immediately upon Him, and thus the eater will yield
+meat, and the strong sweetness. We must count upon trials and
+difficulties in any expression of the assembly, just because it is _the_
+right and divine way for God's people on earth. The devil will put forth
+every effort to drive us from that true and holy ground. He will try the
+patience, try the temper, hurt the feelings, cause offence in nameless
+and numberless ways--anything and everything to make us forsake the true
+ground of the assembly.
+
+It is well to remember this. We can only hold the divine ground by
+faith. This marks the assembly of God, and distinguishes it from every
+human system. You cannot get on there save by faith. And, further, if
+you want to be somebody, if you are seeking a place, if you want to
+exalt _self_, you need not think of any true expression of the assembly.
+You will soon find your level there, if it be in any measure what it
+should be. Fleshly or worldly greatness, in any shape, will be of no
+account in such an assembly. The Divine Presence withers up everything
+of that kind, and levels all human pretension. Finally, you cannot get
+on in the assembly if you are living in secret sin. The Divine Presence
+will not suit you. Have we not often experienced in the assembly a
+feeling of uneasiness, caused by the recollection of many things which
+had escaped our notice during the week? Wrong thoughts--foolish
+words--unspiritual ways--all these things crowd in upon the mind, and
+exercise the conscience, in the assembly! How is this? Because the
+atmosphere of the assembly is more searching than that which we have
+been breathing during the week. We have not been in the presence of God
+in our private walk. We have not been judging ourselves; and hence, when
+we take our place in a spiritual assembly, our hearts are detected--our
+ways are exposed in the light; and that exercise which ought to have
+gone on in private--even the needed exercise of self-judgment, must go
+on at the table of the Lord. This is poor, miserable work for us, but it
+proves the power of the presence of God in the assembly. Things must be
+in a miserably low state in any assembly when hearts are not thus
+detected and exposed. It is a fine evidence of the power of the Holy
+Spirit in an assembly when careless, carnal, worldly, self-exalting,
+money-loving, unprincipled persons are compelled to judge themselves in
+God's presence, or, failing this, are driven away by the spirituality of
+the atmosphere. Such an assembly is no place for these. They can breathe
+more freely outside.
+
+Now, we cannot but judge that numbers that have departed from the ground
+of the assembly have done so because their practical ways did not
+comport with the purity of the place. No doubt it is easy, in all such
+cases, to find an excuse in the conduct of those who are left behind.
+But if the _roots_ of things were in every case laid bare, we should
+find that many leave an assembly because of inability or reluctance to
+bear its searching light. "Thy testimonies are very sure; holiness
+becometh Thy house, O Lord, forever." Evil _must_ be judged, for God
+cannot sanction it. If an assembly does not it is not practically God's
+assembly at all, though composed of Christians, as we say. To pretend to
+be an assembly of God, and not judge false doctrine and evil ways, would
+involve the blasphemy of saying that God and wickedness can dwell
+together. The assembly of God must keep itself pure, because it is His
+dwelling-place. Men may sanction evil, and call it liberality and
+large-heartedness so to do; but the house of God must keep itself pure.
+Let this great practical truth sink down into our hearts, and produce
+its sanctifying influence upon our course and character.
+
+4. A very few words will suffice to set forth, in the last place, "the
+_authority_" on which the assembly is gathered. It is the word of God
+alone. The charter of the assembly is the eternal Word of the living and
+true God. It is not the traditions, the doctrines, nor the commandments
+of men. A passage of Scripture, to which we have more than once referred
+in the progress of this paper, contains at once the standard round which
+the assembly is gathered, the power by which it is gathered, and the
+authority by which it is gathered--"the name of Jesus"--"the Holy
+Ghost"--"the word of God."
+
+Now these are the same all over the world. Whether I go to New Zealand,
+to Australia, to Canada, to London, to Paris, to Edinburg, or Dublin,
+the Centre, the gathering Power, and the authority are one and the same.
+We can own no other centre but Christ; no gathering energy but the Holy
+Ghost; no authority but the word of God; no characteristic but holiness
+of life and soundness in doctrine.
+
+Such is a true expression of the assembly of God, and we cannot
+acknowledge aught else. Saints of God we can acknowledge, love, and
+honor as such, wherever we find them; but human systems we look upon as
+dishonoring to Christ, and hostile to the true interest of the saints of
+God. We long to see all Christians on the true ground of the assembly.
+We believe it to be the place of real blessing and effective testimony.
+We believe there is a character of testimony yielded by carrying out the
+principles of the assembly which cannot be yielded otherwise, even were
+each member a Whitefield in evangelistic power. We say this not to lower
+evangelistic work. God forbid. We would that all were Whitefields. But
+then we cannot shut our eyes to the fact that many affect to despise the
+assembly, under the plea of going out as evangelists; and when we trace
+their path, and examine the results of their work, we find that they
+have no provision for the souls that have been converted by their means.
+They seem not to know what to do with them. They quarry the stones, but
+do not build them together. The consequence is that souls are scattered
+hither and thither, some persuing a desultory course, others living in
+isolation, all at fault as to true Church ground.
+
+Now, we believe that all these should be gathered on the ground of the
+assembly of God, to have "fellowship in the breaking of bread and in
+prayer." They should "come together on the first day of the week, to
+break bread," looking to the Lord Christ to edify them by the mouth of
+whom He will. This is the simple path--the normal, the divine idea,
+needing, it may be, more faith to realize it, because of the clashing
+and conflicting elements of the present day, but none the less simple
+and true on that account.
+
+We are aware, of course, that all this will be pronounced proselytizing,
+and party spirit, by those who seem to regard it as the very _beau
+ideal_ of Christian liberality and large-heartedness to be able to say,
+"I belong to nothing." Strange, anomalous position! It just resolves
+itself in this: it is _somebody_ professing _nothingism_ in order to get
+rid of all responsibility, and go with all and everything. This is a
+very easy path for nature, and amiable nature, but we shall see what
+will come of it in the day of the Lord. Even now we regard it as
+positive unfaithfulness to Christ, from which may the good Lord deliver
+His people.
+
+But let none imagine that we want to place the evangelist and the
+assembly in opposition. Nothing is further from our thoughts. The
+evangelist should go forth from the bosom of the assembly, in full
+fellowship therewith; he should work not only to gather souls to Christ,
+but also bring them to an assembly, where divinely-gifted pastors might
+watch over them, and divinely-gifted teachers instruct them. We do not
+want to clip the evangelist's wings, but only to guide his movements.
+We are unwilling to see real spiritual energy expended in desultory
+service. No doubt it is a grand result to bring souls to Christ. Every
+soul linked to Jesus is a work done forever. But ought not the lambs and
+sheep to be gathered and cared for? Would anyone be satisfied to
+purchase sheep, and then leave them to wander whithersoever they list?
+Surely not. But whither should Christ's sheep be gathered? Is it into
+the folds of man's erection, or into an assembly gathered on divine
+ground? Into the latter unquestionably; for that, we may rest assured,
+however feeble, however despised, however blackened and maligned, is the
+place for all the lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ.
+
+Here, however, there will be responsibility, care, anxiety, labor, a
+constant demand for watchfulness and prayer; all of which flesh and
+blood would like to avoid, if possible. There is much that is agreeable
+and attractive in the idea of going through the world as an evangelist,
+having thousands hanging on one's lips, and hundreds of souls as the
+seals of one's ministry: but what is to be done with these souls? By all
+means show them their true place with those gathered on the ground of
+the assembly of God, where, notwithstanding the ruin and apostasy of the
+professing body, they can enjoy spiritual communion, worship, and
+ministry. This will involve much trial and painful excise. It was so in
+apostolic times. Those who really cared for the flock of Christ had to
+shed many a tear, send up many an agonizing prayer, spend many a
+sleepless night. But, then, in all these things, they tasted the
+sweetness of fellowship with the chief Shepherd; and when He appears,
+their tears, their prayers, their sleepless nights will be remembered
+and rewarded; while those who are building up human systems will find
+them all come to an end, to be heard of no more forever; and the false
+shepherds, who ruthlessly seize the pastoral staff only to use it as an
+instrument of filthy gain to themselves, shall have their faces covered
+with everlasting confusion.
+
+But, we may be asked, "Is it not worse than useless to seek to carry out
+the principles of the assembly of God, seeing that the professing Church
+is in such complete ruin?" We reply by asking, "Are we to be disobedient
+because the Church is in ruin? Are we to continue in error because the
+dispensation has failed?" Surely not. We own the ruin, mourn over it,
+confess it, take our share in it, and in its sad consequences, seek to
+walk softly and humbly in the midst of it, confessing ourselves to be
+most unfaithful and unworthy. But though we have failed, Christ has not
+failed. He abideth faithful; He cannot deny Himself. He has promised to
+be with His people to the end of the age. Matt. xviii. 20 holds as good
+to-day as it did 1800 years ago. "Let God be true and every man a liar."
+We utterly repudiate the idea of men setting about church-making, or
+pretending to ordain ministers. We look upon it as a pure assumption,
+without a single shadow of Scripture authority. It is God's work to
+gather His Church and raise up ministers. We have no business to form
+ourselves into a church, or to ordain office-bearers. No doubt the Lord
+is very gracious, tender, and pitiful. He bears with our weakness, and
+overrules our mistakes, and where the heart is true to Him, even though
+in ignorance, He will assuredly lead on into higher light.
+
+But we must not use God's grace as a plea for unscriptural acting, any
+more than we should use the Church's ruin as a plea for sanctioning
+error. We have to confess the ruin, count on the grace, and act in
+simple obedience to the word of the Lord. Such is the path of blessing
+at all times. The remnant, in the days of Ezra, did not pretend to the
+power and splendor of Solomon's days, but they obeyed the word of
+Solomon's Lord, and they were abundantly blessed in their deed. They did
+not say, "Things are in ruin, and therefore we had better remain in
+Babylon, and do nothing." No; they simply confessed their own and their
+people's sin, and counted on God. This is precisely what we are to do.
+We are to own the ruin, and count on God.
+
+Finally, if we be asked, "Where is the true expression of this assembly
+of God now?" We reply, "Where Christ is truly the Centre of gathering;
+the one body the ground; the Holy Spirit the Leader; the Holy Scriptures
+the sole authority; and holiness the practice."
+
+Reader, are you assembled on this divine ground? If so, cling to it with
+your whole soul. Are you in this path? If so, press on with all the
+energies of your moral being. Never be content with anything short of
+His dwelling in you, and your conscious nearness to Him. Let not Satan
+rob you of your proper portion by leading you to rest in a mere name.
+Let him not tempt you to mistake your ostensible _position_ for your
+real _condition_. Cultivate secret communion--secret prayer--constant
+self-judgment. Be especially on your guard against every form of
+spiritual pride. Cultivate lowliness, meekness, and brokenness of
+spirit, tenderness of conscience, in your own private walk. Seek to
+combine the sweetest grace towards others with the boldness of a lion
+where truth is concerned. Then will you be a blessing in the assembly of
+God, and an effective witness of the all-sufficiency of the name of
+Jesus.
+
+ The veil is rent:--our souls draw near
+ Unto a throne of grace;
+ The merits of the Lord appear,
+ They fill the holy place.
+
+ His precious blood has spoken there,
+ Before and on the throne:
+ And His own wounds in heaven declare,
+ Th' atoning work is done.
+
+ 'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest,
+ His work can never fail:
+ By Him, our Sacrifice and Priest,
+ We pass within the veil.
+
+ Within the holiest of all,
+ Cleansed by His precious blood,
+ Before the throne we prostrate fall,
+ And worship Thee, O God!
+
+ Boldly the heart and voice we raise,
+ His blood, His name, our plea:
+ Assured our prayers and songs of praise
+ Ascend, by Christ, to Thee.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XVIII.] The same Greek word, _ecclesia_, has been rendered both
+"church" and "assembly" in our English translation--"assembly" gives the
+true meaning.
+
+[XIX.] It is of the utmost importance to distinguish between what Christ
+builds, and what man builds. "The gates of hell" shall assuredly prevail
+against all that is merely of man; and hence it would be a fatal mistake
+to apply to man's building words which only apply to Christ's. Man may
+build with "wood, hay, stubble," alas! he does; but all that our Lord
+Christ builds shall stand forever. The stamp of eternity is upon every
+work of His hand. All praise to His glorious name!
+
+[XX.] There is no such thing in Scripture as being a member of _a_
+church. Every true believer is a member of _the_ Church of God--the body
+of Christ, and can therefore no more be, properly, a member of anything
+else, than my arm can be a member of any other body.
+
+The only true ground on which believers can gather is set forth in that
+grand statement, "There is one body, and one Spirit." And again, "We
+being many are one loaf, and one body" (Eph. iv. 4; I Cor. x. 17). If
+God declares that there is but "one body," it must be contrary to His
+mind to own more than that one.
+
+Now, while it is quite true that no given number of believers in any
+given place can be called "the body of Christ," or "the assembly of
+God;" yet they should be gathered on the ground of that body and that
+assembly, and on no other ground. We call the reader's special attention
+to this principle. It holds good at all times, in all places, and under
+all circumstances. The fact of the ruin of the professing Church does
+not touch it. It has been true since the day of Pentecost; is true at
+this moment; and shall be true until the Church is taken to meet her
+Head and Lord in the clouds, that "_there is one body_." All believers
+belong to that body; and they should meet on that ground, and on no
+other.
+
+[XXI.] The reader will need to ponder the distinction between the Church
+viewed as "the body of Christ," and as "the house of God." He may study
+Eph. i. 22; I Cor. xii. for the former. Eph. ii. 21; I Cor. iii.; I Tim.
+iii. for the latter. The distinction is as interesting as it is
+important.
+
+[XXII.] The reader will do well to note the fact that, in Matt. xvi., we
+have the very earliest allusion to the Church, and there our Lord speaks
+of it as a future thing. He says, "On this rock I _will_ build My
+Church." He does not say, "I _have_ been, or I _am_ building." In short
+the Church had no existence until our Lord Christ was raised from the
+dead and glorified at the right hand of God. Then, but not until then,
+the Holy Ghost was sent down to baptize believers, whether Jews or
+Gentiles, into one body, and unite them to the risen and glorified Head
+in heaven. This body has been on the earth since the descent of the Holy
+Ghost; is here still, and shall be until Christ comes to fetch it to
+Himself. It is a perfectly unique thing. It is not to be found in Old
+Testament Scripture. Paul expressly tells us it was not revealed in
+other ages; it was hid in God, and never made known until it was
+committed to him. (See, carefully, Rom. xvi. 25, 26; Eph. iii. 3-11;
+Col. i. 24-27.) True it is--most blessedly true--that God had a people
+in Old Testament times. Not merely the nation of Israel, but a
+quickened, saved, spiritual people, who lived by faith, went to heaven,
+and are there "the spirits of just men made perfect." But the Church is
+never spoken of until Matt. xvi., and there only as a future thing. As
+to the expression used by Stephen, "The Church in the wilderness" (Acts
+vii. 38), it is pretty generally known that it simply refers to the
+congregation of Israel. The _termini_ of the Church's earthly history
+are Pentecost (Acts ii.), and the rapture (I Thess. iv. 16, 17).
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN
+
+HIS POSITION AND HIS WORK.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+What is the true position of a Christian? and what has he got to do? are
+questions of the very deepest practical importance. It is assumed, of
+course, that he has eternal life: without this, one cannot be a
+Christian at all. "He that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting
+life." This is the common portion of all believers. It is not a matter
+of attainment, a matter of progress, a thing which some Christians have
+and others have not. It belongs to the very feeblest babe in the family
+of God, as well as to the most matured and experienced servant of
+Christ. All are possessed of eternal life, and can never by any
+possibility lose it.
+
+But our present theme is not life, but position and work; and in
+considering it, we shall ask the reader to turn for a moment to a
+passage in Heb. xiii. Perhaps we cannot do better than quote it for him.
+There is nothing like the plain and solid word of Holy Scripture.
+
+"Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines; for it is a
+good thing that the heart be established with grace; not with meats,
+which have not profited them that have been occupied therein. We have an
+altar, whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle. For
+the bodies of those beasts, whose blood is brought into the sanctuary by
+the high priest for sin are burned without the camp. Wherefore Jesus
+also, that He might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered
+without the gate. Let us go forth therefore unto Him without the camp,
+bearing His reproach. For here have we no continuing city, but we seek
+one to come" (vers. 9-14).
+
+Here, then, we have one grand aspect of the Christian's position. It is
+defined by the position of his Lord. This makes it divinely simple; and,
+we may add, divinely settled. The Christian is identified with Christ.
+Amazing fact! "As He is so _are_ we in this world." It is not said, "As
+He is, so _shall_ we be in the world to come." No; this would not come
+up to the divine idea. It is, "so are we _in this world_." The position
+of Christ defines the position of the Christian.
+
+But this glorious fact tells in a double way; it tells upon the
+Christian's place before God; and it tells on his place as regards this
+present world. It is upon the latter that Heb. xiii. instructs us so
+blessedly, and it is that which is now more especially before us.
+
+Jesus suffered without the gate. This fact is the basis on which the
+apostle grounds his exhortation to the Hebrew believers to go forth
+without the camp. The cross of Christ closed his connection with the
+camp of Judaism; and all who desire to follow Him must go outside to
+where He is. The final breach with Israel is presented, morally, in the
+death of Christ; doctrinally, in the Epistle to the Hebrews;
+historically, in the destruction of Jerusalem. In the judgment of faith,
+Jerusalem was as thoroughly rejected when the Messiah was nailed to the
+cross, as it was when the army of Titus left it a smouldering ruin. The
+instincts of the divine nature, and the inspired teachings of Scripture,
+go before the actual facts of history.
+
+"Jesus suffered without the gate." For what end? "That He might sanctify
+(or set apart to God) the people with His own blood." What follows? What
+is the necessary practical result? "Let us go forth therefore unto Him
+without the camp, bearing His reproach."
+
+But what is "the camp?" Primarily, Judaism; but, most unquestionably, it
+has a moral application to every organized system of religion under the
+sun. If that system of ordinances and ceremonies which God Himself had
+set up--if Judaism, with its imposing ritual, its splendid temple, its
+priesthood and its sacrifices, has been found fault with, condemned, and
+set aside, what shall be said of any or all of those organizations which
+have rebuilt it? If our Lord Christ is outside of that, how much more
+out of these!
+
+Yes, Christian reader, we may rest assured that the outside place, the
+place of rejection and reproach is that to which we are called, if we
+would know aught of true fellowship with our Lord Jesus Christ. Mark the
+words! "Let us go forth." Will any Christian say, "No; I cannot go
+forth. My place is inside the camp. I must work there?" If so, then,
+there must be moral distance between you and Jesus, for He is as surely
+outside the camp as He is on the throne of God. If your sphere of work
+lies inside the camp, when your Master tells you to go forth, what shall
+we say for your work? Can it be "gold, silver, precious stones?" Can it
+have your Lord's approving smile? It may exhibit His overruling hand,
+and illustrate His sovereign goodness; but can it possibly have His
+unqualified approval while carried on in a sphere from which He commands
+you to go forth?
+
+The all-important thing for every true servant is to be found exactly
+where his Master would have him. The question is not, "Am I doing a
+great deal of work? but am I pleasing my Master? I may seem to be doing
+wonders in the way of work; my name may be heralded to the ends of the
+earth as a most laborious, devoted, and successful workman; and, all the
+while, I may be in an utterly false position, indulging my own unbroken
+will, pleasing myself, and seeking some personal end or object."
+
+All this is very solemn indeed, and demands the consideration of all who
+really desire to be found in the current of God's thoughts. We live in
+a day of much wilfulness. The commandments of Christ do not govern all.
+We think for ourselves, in place of submitting ourselves absolutely to
+the authority of the Word. When our Lord tells us to go forth without
+the camp, we, instead of yielding a ready obedience, begin to reason as
+to the results which we can reach by remaining within. Scripture seems
+to have little or no power over our souls. We do not aim at simply
+pleasing Christ. Provided we can make great show of work, we think all
+is right. We are more occupied with results which, after all, may only
+tend to magnify ourselves, than with the earnest purpose to do what is
+agreeable to the mind of Christ.
+
+But are we to be idle? Is there nothing for us to do in the outside
+place to which we are called? Is Christian life to be made up of a
+series of negations? Is there nothing positive? Let Heb. xiii. furnish
+the clear and forcible answer to all these inquiries. We shall find it
+quite as distinct in reference to our _work_ as it is in reference to
+our _position_.
+
+What, then, have we got to do? Two things; and these two in their
+comprehensive range take in the whole of a Christian's life in its two
+grand aspects. They give us the inner and the outer life of the true
+believer. In the first place, we read, "By Him therefore let us offer
+the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our
+lips, giving thanks to His name."
+
+Is not this something? Have we not here a very elevated character of
+work? Yes, verily, the most elevated that can possibly engage the
+energies of our renewed being. It is our privilege to be occupied,
+morning, noon, eventide, and midnight, in presenting the sacrifice of
+praise to God--a sacrifice which, He assures us, is ever most acceptable
+to Him. "Whoso offereth praise," He says, "glorifieth Me."
+
+Let us carefully note this. Praise is to be the primary and continual
+occupation of the believer. We, in our fancied wisdom, would put work in
+the first place. We are disposed to attach chief importance to bustling
+activity. We have such an overweening sense of the value of _doing_,
+that we lose sight of the place which worship occupies in the thoughts
+of God.
+
+Again, there are some who vainly imagine that they can please God by
+punishing their bodies. They think that He delights in their vigils,
+fastings, floggings, and flagellations. Miserable, soul-destroying,
+God-dishonoring delusion! Will not those who harbor it and act upon it
+bend their ears and their hearts to those gracious words which we have
+just penned, "Whoso offereth praise glorifieth Me?" True, it is, that
+those words are immediately followed by that grand practical statement,
+"And to him that ordereth his conversation aright, will I show the
+salvation of God." But still, here, as everywhere, the highest place is
+assigned to praise, not to work. And, most assuredly, no man can be
+said to be ordering his conversation aright who abuses his body and
+renders it unfit to be the vessel or instrument by which he can serve
+God.
+
+No, reader, if we really desire to please God, to gratify His heart and
+to glorify His name, we shall give our heart's attention to Heb. xiii.
+15, and seek to offer the sacrifice of praise _continually_. Yes,
+"continually." Not merely now and then, when all goes on smoothly and
+pleasantly. Come what may, it is our high and holy privilege to offer
+the sacrifice of praise to God. It does so glorify God when His people
+live in an atmosphere of praise. It imparts a heavenly tone to their
+character, and speaks more powerfully to the hearts of those around them
+than if they were preaching to them from morning till night. A Christian
+should "rejoice in the Lord alway," always reflecting back upon this
+dark world the blessed beams of his Father's countenance.
+
+Thus it should ever be. Nothing is so unworthy of a Christian as a
+fretful spirit, a gloomy temper, a sour, morose-looking face. And not
+only is it unworthy of a Christian, but it is dishonoring to God, and it
+causes the enemies of truth to speak reproachfully. No doubt, tempers
+and dispositions vary; and allowance must be made in cases of weak
+bodily health, and of circumstances of sorrow. It is not easy to look
+pleasant when the body is in suffering; and, further, we should be very
+far indeed from the commending anything like levity or the everlasting
+smile of mere unsubdued nature.
+
+But Scripture is clear and explicit. It tells us to "offer the sacrifice
+of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving
+thanks to His name." How simple! "_The fruit of our lips._" This is what
+our God delights in. It is His joy to be surrounded with the praises of
+hearts filled to overflowing with His abounding goodness. Thus it will
+be throughout eternity, in that bright home of love and glory to which
+we are so rapidly hastening.
+
+And let the reader specially note the words, "_By Him_." We are to offer
+our sacrifice of praise by the hand of our Great High Priest, who is
+ever in the presence of God for us. This is most consolatory and
+assuring to our hearts. Jesus presents our sacrifice of praise to God.
+It must therefore be ever acceptable, coming thus by the priestly hand
+of the Great Minister of the sanctuary. It goes up to God, not as it
+proceeds from us, but as it is presented by Him. Divested of all the
+imperfection and failure attaching to us, it ascends to God in all the
+fragrance and acceptancy belonging to Him. The feeblest note of praise,
+the simple "Thank God!" is perfumed with the incense of Christ's
+infinite preciousness. This is unspeakably precious: and it should
+greatly encourage us to cultivate a spirit of praise. We should be
+"continually" praising and blessing God. A murmuring or fretful word
+should never cross the lips of one who has Christ for his portion, and
+who stands identified with that blessed One in His position and His
+destiny.
+
+But we must draw this paper to a close by a rapid glance at the other
+side of the Christian's work. If it is our privilege to be continually
+praising and blessing God, it is also our privilege to be doing good to
+man. "But to do good and to communicate forget not; for with such
+sacrifices God is well pleased." We are passing through a world of
+misery, of sin and death and sorrow. We are surrounded by broken hearts
+and crushed spirits, if we would only look them out.
+
+Yes; this is the point; _if we would only look them out_. It is easy for
+us to close our eyes to such things, to turn away from them, to forget
+that there are such things always within reach of us. We can sit in our
+easy chair, and speculate about truth, doctrines, and the letter of
+Scripture; we can discuss the theories of Christianity, and split hairs
+about prophecy and dispensational truth, and, all the while, be
+shamefully failing in the discharge of our grand responsibility as
+Christians. We are in imminent danger of forgetting that Christianity is
+a living reality. It is not a set of dogmas, a number of principles
+strung together on a thread of systematized divinity, which unconverted
+people can have at their fingers' ends. Neither is it a set of
+ordinances to be gone through, in dreary formality, by lifeless,
+heartless professors. No; it is life--life eternal--life implanted by
+the Holy Ghost, and expressing itself in those two lovely forms on which
+we have been dwelling, namely, praise to God and doing good to man. Such
+was the life of Jesus when He trod this earth of ours. He lived in the
+atmosphere of praise; and He went about doing good.
+
+And He is our life, and He is our model on which the life is to be
+formed. The Christian should be the living expression of Christ, by the
+power of the Holy Ghost. It is not a mere question of leading what is
+called a religious life, which very often resolves itself into a
+tiresome round of duties which neither yield "praise" to God nor one
+atom of "good" to man. There must be _life_, or it is all perfectly
+worthless. "The kingdom of God is not meat or drink; but righteousness
+and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost. For he that in these things serveth
+Christ is acceptable to God, and approved of men" (Rom. xiv. 17, 18).
+
+Beloved Christian reader, let us earnestly apply our hearts to the
+consideration of these great practical truths. Let us seek to be
+Christians not merely in name but in reality. Let us not be
+distinguished as the mere vendors of peculiar "_views_." Oh! how
+worthless are views! How utterly profitless is discussion! How wearisome
+are theological hair-splittings! Let us have life, light, and love.
+These are heavenly, eternal, divine. All else is vanity. How we do long
+for reality in this world of sham--for deep thinkers and earnest workers
+in this day of shallow talkers!
+
+NOTE.--The reader will find it profitable to compare Heb. xiii. 13-16
+with I Peter ii. 4-9. "Let us go forth therefore unto Him," says Paul.
+"To whom coming," says Peter. Then we have "The holy priesthood"
+offering up spiritual sacrifices of praise. And "the royal priesthood"
+doing good and communicating--"showing forth the virtues of Him who hath
+called us out of darkness into His marvelous light." The two scriptures
+give us a magnificent view of fundamental, devotional and practical
+Christianity.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+We must ask the reader to open his Bible and read Heb. x. 7-24. In it he
+will find a very deep and marvelous view of the Christian's position and
+his work. The inspired writer gives us, as it were, three solid pillars
+on which the grand edifice of Christianity rests. These are, first, _the
+will of God_; secondly, _the work of Christ;_ and, thirdly, _the witness
+of the Holy Ghost_, in Scripture. If these grand realities be laid hold
+of in simple faith, the soul _must_ have settled peace. We may assert,
+with all possible confidence, that no power of earth or hell, men or
+devils, can ever disturb the peace which is founded upon Heb. x. 7-17.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, dwell, for a few moments, on the manner
+in which the apostle unfolds, in this magnificent passage,
+
+
+THE WILL OF GOD.
+
+In the opening of the chapter, we are instructed as to the utter
+inadequacy of the sacrifices under the law. They could never make the
+conscience perfect--they could never accomplish the will of God--never
+fulfil the gracious desire and purpose of His heart. "The law, having a
+shadow of good things to come, and not the very image of the things, can
+never with those sacrifices which they offered year by year continually
+make the comers thereunto perfect. For then would they not have ceased
+to be offered? because _the worshipers once purged_ should have had _no
+more conscience of sins_."
+
+Let the reader carefully note this. "The worshipers once purged should
+have had no more conscience of sins." He does not say--"No more
+_consciousness of sins_." There is an immense difference between these
+two things; and yet, it is to be feared, they are often confounded. The
+Christian has, alas, the consciousness of _sin in him_, but he ought to
+have no conscience of _sins on him_, inasmuch as he is purged once and
+forever, by the precious blood of Christ.
+
+Some of the Lord's people have a habit of speaking of their continual
+need of applying to the blood of Christ, which, to say the least of it,
+is by no means intelligent, or in accordance with the accurate teaching
+of Holy Scripture. It seems like humility; but, we may rest assured,
+true humility can only be found in connection with the full, clear,
+settled apprehension of the truth of God, and as to His gracious will
+concerning us. If it be His will that we should have "no more conscience
+of sins," it cannot be true humility, on our part, to go on from day to
+day, and year to year, with the burden of sins upon us. And, further, if
+it be true that Christ has borne our sins and put them away forever--if
+He has offered one perfect sacrifice for sins, ought we not assuredly to
+know that we are perfectly pardoned and perfectly purged? Is it--can it
+be, true humility to reduce the blood of Christ to the level of the
+blood of bulls and of goats? But this is what is virtually done,
+though, no doubt, unwittingly, by all who speak of applying continually
+to the blood of Christ. One reason why God found fault with the
+sacrifices under the law was, as the apostle tells us, "In those
+sacrifices there is a remembrance again made of sins every year." This,
+blessed be His name, was not according to His mind. He desired that
+every trace of guilt and every remembrance of it should be blotted out,
+once and forever; and hence it cannot be His will that His people should
+be continually bowed down under the terrible burden of unforgiven sin.
+It is _contrary_ to His will; it is subversive of their peace, and
+derogatory to the glory of Christ and the efficacy of His one sacrifice.
+
+One grand point of the inspired argument, in Hebrews x., is to show that
+the continual remembrance of sins and the continual repetition of the
+sacrifice go together; and therefore, if Christians now are to have the
+burden of sins constantly on the heart and conscience, it follows that
+Christ should be offered again and again--which were a blasphemy. His
+work is done, and hence our burden is gone--gone forever. "It is not
+possible that the blood of bulls and goats should take away sin.
+Wherefore, when He cometh into the world, He saith, Sacrifice and
+offering Thou wouldest not, but a body hast Thou prepared Me. In
+burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin Thou hast had no pleasure. Then
+said I, Lo, I come (in the volume of the book it is written of Me) to do
+Thy will, O God. Above, when He said, Sacrifice and offering and
+burnt-offerings and offerings for sin Thou wouldest not, neither hadst
+pleasure therein (which are offered by the law) then said He, Lo, I come
+to do Thy will, O God. He taketh away the first that He may establish
+the second. By the which will we are sanctified (or set apart) by the
+offering of the body of Jesus Christ _once_."
+
+Here we are conducted, in the most distinct and forcible manner, to the
+eternal source of the whole matter, namely, the will of God--the purpose
+and counsel formed in the divine mind, before the foundation of the
+world, before any creature was formed, before sin or Satan existed. It
+was the will of God, from all eternity, that the Son should, in due
+time, come forth and do a work which was to be the foundation of the
+divine glory and of all the counsels and purposes of the Trinity.
+
+It would be a very grave error indeed to suppose that redemption was an
+afterthought with God. He had not, blessed be His holy name, to sit down
+and plan what He would do, when sin entered. It was all settled
+beforehand. The enemy, no doubt, imagined that he was gaining a
+wonderful victory when he meddled with man in the garden of Eden. In
+point of fact, he was only giving occasion for the display of God's
+eternal counsels in connection with the work of the Son. There was no
+basis for those counsels, no sphere for their display in the fields of
+creation. It was the meddling of Satan--the entrance of sin--the ruin of
+man, that opened a platform on which a Saviour-God might display the
+riches of His grace, the glories of His salvation, the attributes of His
+nature, to all created intelligences.
+
+There is great depth and power in those words of the eternal Son, "In
+the volume of the book it is written of Me." To what "volume" does He
+here refer? Is it to Old Testament scripture merely? Surely not; the
+apostle quotes from the Old Testament, but it is nothing less than the
+roll of God's eternal counsels in which the "vast plan" was laid,
+according to which, in the appointed time, the eternal Son was to come
+forth and appear on the scene, in order to accomplish the divine will,
+vindicate the divine glory, confound the enemy utterly, put away sin,
+and save ruined man in a manner which yields a richer harvest of glory
+to God than ever He could have reaped in the fields of an unfallen
+creation.
+
+All this gives immense stability to the soul of the believer. Indeed it
+is utterly impossible for human language to set forth the preciousness
+and blessedness of this line of truth. It is such rich consolation to
+every pious soul to know that One has appeared in this world to do the
+will of God--whatever that will might be. "Lo, I come to do Thy will O
+God." Such was the one undivided purpose and object of that perfect
+human heart. He never did His own will in anything. He says, "I came
+down from heaven, not to do Mine own will, but the will of Him that sent
+Me." It mattered not to Him what that will might involve to Himself
+personally. The decree was written down in the eternal volume that He
+should come and do the divine will; and, all homage to His peerless
+name! He came and did it perfectly. He could say, "A body hast Thou
+prepared Me." "Mine ears hast Thou opened." "I clothe the heavens with
+blackness, and I make sackcloth their covering. The Lord God hath given
+Me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in
+season to him that is weary: He wakeneth morning by morning, He wakeneth
+Mine ear to hear as the learned. The Lord God hath opened Mine ear, and
+I was not rebellious, neither turned away back. I gave My back to the
+smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: I hid not My
+face from shame and spitting" (Isa. l. 3-6).
+
+But this leads us, in the second place, to contemplate
+
+
+THE WORK OF CHRIST.
+
+It was ever the delight of the heart of Jesus to do His Father's will
+and finish His work. From the manger at Bethlehem to the cross of
+Calvary, the one grand object that swayed His devoted heart was the
+accomplishment of the will of God. He perfectly glorified God, in all
+things. This, blessed be God, perfectly secures our full and everlasting
+salvation, as the apostle in this passage, so distinctly states. "By the
+which will we are sanctified, through the offering of the body of Jesus
+Christ once."
+
+Here our souls may rest, beloved reader, in sweetest peace and unclouded
+certainty. It was the will of God that we should be set apart to
+Himself, according to all the love of His heart, and all the claims of
+His throne; and our Lord Christ, in due time, in pursuance of the
+everlasting purpose as set forth "in the volume of the book," came forth
+from the glory which He had with the Father, before all worlds, to do
+the work which forms the imperishable basis of all the divine counsels
+and of our eternal salvation.
+
+And--forever be His name adored!--He has finished His work. He has
+perfectly glorified God in the midst of the scene in which He has been
+so dishonored. At all cost He has vindicated Him and made good His every
+claim. He magnified the law and made it honorable. He vanquished every
+foe, removed every obstacle, swept away every barrier, bore the judgment
+and wrath of a sin-hating God; destroyed death and him that had the
+power of it, extracted its sting, and spoiled the grave of its victory.
+In a word, He gloriously accomplished all that was written in the volume
+of the book concerning Him; and now we see Him crowned with glory and
+honor, at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. He travelled
+from the throne to the dust of death, in order to accomplish the will of
+God, and having done so, He has gone back to the throne, in a new
+character and on a new footing. His pathway from the throne to the cross
+was marked by the footprints of divine and everlasting love; and His
+pathway from the cross back to the throne is sprinkled by His atoning
+blood. He came from heaven to earth to do the will of God, and, having
+done it, He returned to heaven again, thus opening up for us "a new and
+living way" by which we draw nigh to God, in holy boldness and liberty,
+as purged worshipers.
+
+All is done. Every question is settled. Every barrier is removed. The
+vail is rent. That mysterious curtain which, for ages and generations,
+had shut God in from man, and shut man out from God, was rent in twain,
+from top to bottom, by the precious death of Christ; and now we can look
+right up into the opened heavens and see on the throne the Man who bore
+our sins in His own body on the tree. A seated Christ tells out, in the
+ear of faith, the sweet emancipating tale that all that had to be done
+is done--done forever--done for God--done for us. Yes; all is settled
+now, and God can, in perfect righteousness, indulge the love of His
+heart, in blotting out all our sins and bringing us nigh unto Himself in
+all the acceptance of the One who sits beside Him on the throne.
+
+And let the reader carefully note the striking and beautiful way in
+which the apostle contrasts _a seated Christ in heaven with the standing
+priest on earth_. "Every priest standeth daily ministering, and offering
+oftentimes the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But this
+Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins, forever ([Greek: eis
+to dięnekes]--in perpetuity) sat down on the right hand of God; from
+henceforth expecting till His enemies be made His footstool. For by one
+offering He hath perfected forever (in perpetuity) them that are
+sanctified."
+
+This is exceedingly blessed. The priest, under the Levitical economy,
+could never sit down, for the obvious reason that his work was never
+done. There was no seat provided in the temple or in the tabernacle.
+There is remarkable force and significance in the manner in which the
+inspired writer puts this. "_Every priest_"--"standeth _daily_"--"offering
+ _oftentimes_"--"_the same sacrifices_"--"which can _never take
+away sins_." No human language could possibly set forth, more
+graphically, the utter inefficacy of the Levitical ceremonial. How
+strange that, in the face of such a passage of Holy Scripture, Christendom
+should have set up a human priesthood, with its daily sacrifice!--a
+priesthood moreover, not belonging to the tribe of Levi, not
+springing from the house of Aaron, and therefore having no
+sort of divine title or sanction. And, then as to the sacrifice, it is,
+according to their own admission, a sacrifice without blood, and
+therefore a sacrifice without remission, for, "Without the shedding of
+blood there is no remission" (Heb. ix. 22).
+
+Hence, this self-made priesthood is a daring usurpation, and her
+sacrifices a worthless vanity--a positive lie--a mischievous delusion.
+The priests of whom the apostle speaks in Heb. x. were priests of the
+tribe of Levi and of the house of Aaron--the only house, the only tribe
+ever recognised of God as having any title to assume the office and the
+work of an earthly priest. And, further, the sacrifices which the
+Aaronic priests offered were appointed by God, for the time being, to
+serve as _figures_ of Him that was to come; but they never gave Him any
+pleasure, inasmuch as they could never take away sins; and the true
+Priest having come, the true sacrifice having been offered, the figures
+have been forever abolished.
+
+Now, in view of all this, what shall we say of Christendom's priests and
+Christendom's sacrifices? What will a righteous Judge say to them? We
+cannot attempt to dwell upon such an awful theme. We can merely say,
+alas! alas! for the poor souls that are deluded and ruined by such
+antichristian absurdities. May God in His mercy deliver them and lead
+them to rest in the one offering of Jesus Christ--that precious blood
+that cleanses from all sin. May many be led to see that a repeated
+sacrifice and a seated Christ are in positive antagonism. If the
+sacrifice must be repeated, Christ has no right to His seat and to His
+crown--God pardon the very penning of the words! If Christ has a divine
+right to His seat and to His crown, then to repeat a sacrifice is simply
+a blasphemy against His cross, His name, His glory. To repeat in any
+way, or under any form whatsoever, the sacrifice, is to deny the
+efficacy of Christ's one offering, and to rob the soul of anything like
+an approach to the knowledge of remission of sins. A repeated sacrifice
+and perfect remission are an absolute contradiction in terms.
+
+But we must turn, for a moment, to the third grand point in our subject,
+namely,
+
+
+THE WITNESS OF THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+This is of the deepest possible moment for the reader to understand. It
+gives great completeness to the subject. How are we to know that Christ
+has, by His work on the cross, absolutely and divinely accomplished the
+will of God? Simply by the witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture. This
+is the third pillar on which the Christian's position rests, and it is
+as thoroughly divine and, therefore, as thoroughly independent of man as
+the other two. It is very evident that man had nothing to do with the
+eternal counsels of the Trinity--nothing to do with the glorious work
+accomplished on the cross. All this is clear; and it is equally clear
+that man has nothing to do with the authority on which our souls receive
+the joyful news as to the _will of God_, and _the work of Christ_,
+inasmuch as it is nothing less than _the witness of the Holy Ghost_.
+
+We cannot be too simple as to this. It is not, by any means, a question
+of our feelings, our frames, our evidences, or our experiences--things
+interesting in their right place. We must receive the truth solely and
+simply on the authority of that august Witness who speaks to us in Holy
+Scripture. Thus we read, "Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness to
+us; for after that He had said before, This is the covenant that I will
+make with them after those days, saith the Lord; I will put My laws
+into their hearts, and in their minds will I write them; and their sins
+and iniquities will I remember no more."
+
+Here, then, we have fully before us the solid foundation of the
+Christian's position and the Christian's peace. It is all of God, from
+first to last. The _will_, the _work_, and the _witness_ are all divine.
+The Lord be praised for this glorious fact! What should we do, what
+would become of us, were it otherwise? In this day of confusion, when
+souls are tossed about by every wind of doctrine--when the beloved sheep
+of Christ are driven hither and thither, in bewilderment and
+perplexity--when ritualism with its ignorant absurdities, and
+rationalism with its impudent blasphemies, and spiritualism with its
+horrible traffic with demons, are threatening the very foundations of
+our faith, how important it is for Christians to know what those
+foundations really are, and that they should be consciously resting
+thereon!
+
+
+PART III.
+
+We would recall for a moment to the reader's attention the third point
+in our subject, namely, "The witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture." We
+feel it to be of too much importance to be dismissed with such a cursory
+glance as we were able to give it at the close of our last paper.
+
+It is absolutely essential to the enjoyment of settled peace that the
+heart should rest _solely_ on the authority of Holy Scripture. Nothing
+else will stand. Inward evidences, spiritual experiences, comfortable
+frames, happy feelings, are all very good, very valuable, and very
+desirable; indeed we cannot prize them too highly in their right place.
+But, most assuredly, their right place is not at the foundation of the
+Christian position. If we look to such things as the ground of our
+peace, we shall very soon become clouded, uncertain, and miserable.
+
+The reader cannot be too simple in his apprehension of this point. He
+must rest like a little child upon the testimony of the Holy Ghost in
+the Word. It is blessedly true that "He that believeth hath the witness
+in himself." And again, "The Spirit itself beareth witness with our
+spirit that we are the children of God." All this is essential to
+Christianity; but it must, in no wise, be confounded with the witness
+of the Holy Ghost, as given to us in Holy Scripture. The Spirit of God
+never leads any one to build upon His work as the ground of peace, but
+only upon the finished work of Christ, and the unchangeable word of God;
+and we may rest assured that the more simply we rest on these the more
+settled our peace will be, and the clearer our evidences, the brighter
+our frames, the happier our feelings, the richer our experiences. In
+short, the more we look away from self and all its belongings, and rest
+in Christ, on the clear authority of Scripture, the more spiritually
+minded we shall be; and the inspired apostle tells us that "to be
+spiritually minded (or, the minding of the Spirit) is life and peace."
+The best evidence of a spiritual mind is childlike repose in Christ and
+His Word. The clearest proof of an unspiritual mind is self-occupation.
+It is a poor affair to be trafficking in _our_ evidences, or _our_
+anything. It looks like piety, but it leads away from Christ--away from
+Scripture--away from God; and this is not piety, or faith, or
+Christianity.
+
+We are intensely anxious that the reader should seize, with great
+distinctness, the importance of committing his whole moral being to the
+divine authority of the word of God. It will never fail him. All else
+may go, but "the word of our God shall stand forever." Heart and flesh
+may fail. Internal evidences may become clouded; frames, feelings, and
+experiences may all prove unsatisfactory; but the word of the Lord, the
+testimony of the Holy Ghost, the clear voice of Holy Scripture, must
+ever remain unshaken. "And this is the Word which by the gospel is
+preached unto us."
+
+Thus much, then, as to the divine and everlasting basis of the
+Christian's position, as set forth in the tenth chapter of the Epistle
+to the Hebrews. Let us, now, see what this same scripture tells us of
+the Christian's work, and of the sphere in which that work is to be
+carried on.
+
+The Christian is brought into the immediate presence of God, inside the
+veil, into the holiest of all. This is his proper place, if indeed we
+are to listen to the voice of Scripture. "Having therefore, brethren,
+boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a _new_ and
+_living_ way which He hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is
+to say, His flesh; and having a high-priest over the house of God; _let
+us draw near_ with a true heart, in full assurance of faith, having our
+hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with
+pure water."
+
+Our God, blessed be His holy name, would have us near unto Himself. He
+has made out for us a title clear and indisputable in "_the blood of
+Jesus_." Nothing more is needed. That precious blood stands out before
+the eye of faith in all its infinite value. In it alone we read our
+title. It is not the blood _and_ something else--be that something what
+it may. The blood constitutes our exclusive title. We come before God in
+all the perfect efficacy of that blood which rent the veil, glorified
+God as to the question of sin, canceled our guilt according to all the
+demands of infinite holiness, silenced, forever, every accuser, every
+foe. We enter by a new and living way--a way which can never become old
+or dead. We enter by the direct invitation, yea, by the distinct command
+of God. It is positive disobedience not to come. We enter to receive the
+loving welcome of our Father's heart, it is an insult to that love not
+to come. He tells us to "come boldly"--to "draw near" with full,
+unclouded confidence--a boldness and confidence commensurate with the
+love that invites us; the word that commands us, and the blood that fits
+and entitles us. It is offering dishonor to the eternal Trinity not to
+draw near.
+
+Reader, is all this, think you, understood and taught in Christendom?
+Say, do Christendom's creeds, confessions, and liturgical services
+harmonize with apostolic teaching in Heb. x.? Alas! alas! they do not.
+Nay, they are in direct antagonism; and the state of souls, accordingly,
+is the very reverse of what it ought to be. In place of "draw near" it
+is keep off. In place of liberty and boldness, it is legality and
+bondage. In place of a heart sprinkled from an evil conscience, it is a
+heart bowed down beneath the intolerable burden of unforgiven sin. In
+place of a great High Priest seated on the throne of God, in virtue of
+accomplished redemption, we have poor mortal--not to say sinful--priests
+standing from week to week, all the year round in wearisome routine,
+actually contradicting, in their barren formularies, the very
+foundation truths of Christianity.
+
+How truly deplorable is all this! And then the sad condition of the
+Lord's dear people, the lambs and sheep of that precious flock for which
+He died! It is this that so deeply affects us. It is of little use
+attacking Christendom. We quite admit this; but we yearn over the souls
+of God's people. We long to see them fully delivered from false
+teaching, from Judaism, legalism, and every other _ism_ that robs them
+of a full salvation and a precious Saviour. We long to reach them with
+the clear and soul-satisfying teachings of Holy Scripture, so that they
+may know and enjoy the things that are freely given to them of God. We
+can truly say there is nothing which gives us such painful concern as
+the state of the Lord's dear people, scattered upon the dark mountains
+and desolate moors: and one special object for which we desire to live
+is to be the instrument of leading them into those green pastures and
+beside those still waters where the true Shepherd and Bishop of their
+souls longs to feed them, according to all the deep and tender love of
+His heart. He would have them near Himself, reposing in the light of His
+blessed countenance. It is not according to His mind or His loving heart
+that His people should be kept at a dim cold distance from His presence,
+in doubt and darkness. Ah, no; reader, His word tells us to draw
+near--to come boldly--to appropriate freely--to make our very own all
+the precious privileges to which a Father's love invites us, and a
+Saviour's blood entitles us.
+
+"_Let us draw near._" This is the voice of God to us. Christ has opened
+up the way. The veil is rent, our place is in the holiest of all, the
+conscience sprinkled, the body washed, the soul entering intelligently
+into the atoning value of the blood, and the cleansing, sanctifying
+power of the Word--its action upon our habits, our ways, our
+associations, our entire course and character.
+
+All this is of the very utmost practical value to every true lover of
+holiness--and every true Christian is a lover of holiness. "The body
+washed with pure water" is a perfectly delightful thought. It sets forth
+the purifying action of the word of God on the Christian's entire course
+and character. We must not be content with having the heart sprinkled by
+the blood; we must also have the body washed with pure water.
+
+And what then? "_Let us hold fast_ the profession of our hope ([Greek:
+elpidos]) without wavering (for He is faithful that promised)." Blessed
+parenthesis! We may well hold fast, seeing He is faithful. Our hope can
+never make ashamed. It rests, in holy calmness, upon the infallible
+faithfulness of Him who cannot lie, whose word is settled for ever in
+heaven, far above all the changes and chances of this mortal life, above
+the din of controversy, the strife of tongues, the impudent assaults of
+infidelity, the ignorant ravings of superstition--far away above all
+these things, eternally settled in heaven is that Word which forms the
+ground of our "hope."
+
+It well becomes us, therefore, to hold fast. We should not have a single
+wavering thought--a single question--a single misgiving. For a Christian
+to doubt is to cast dishonor upon the word of a faithful God. Let
+sceptics, and rationalists, and infidels doubt, for they have nothing to
+believe, nothing to rest upon, no certainty. But for a child of God to
+doubt, is to call in question the faithfulness of the divine Promiser.
+We owe it to His glory, to say nothing of our own peace, to "hold fast
+the confession of our hope without wavering." Thus may it be with every
+beloved member of the household of faith, until that longed-for moment
+"when faith and hope shall cease, and love abide alone."
+
+But there is one more interesting branch of Christian work at which we
+must glance ere closing this paper. "_Let us consider one another_, to
+provoke unto love and to good works."
+
+This is in lovely moral keeping with all that has gone before. The grace
+of God has so richly met all our personal need--setting before us such
+an array of precious privileges--an opened heaven--a rent veil--a
+crowned and seated Saviour--a great High Priest--a perfectly purged
+conscience--boldness to enter--a hearty welcome--a faithful Promiser--a
+sure and certain hope: having all these marvelous blessings in full
+possession, what have we got to do? To consider ourselves? Nay verily;
+this were superfluous and sinfully selfish. We could not possibly do so
+well for ourselves as God has done for us. He has left nothing unsaid,
+nothing undone, nothing to be desired. Our cup is full and running over.
+What remains? Simply to "consider one another;" to go out in the
+activities of holy love, and serve our brethren in every possible way;
+to be on the lookout for opportunities of doing good; to be ready for
+every good work; to seek in a thousand little ways to make hearts glad;
+to seek to shed a ray of light on the moral gloom around us; to be a
+stream of refreshing in this sterile and thirsty wilderness.
+
+These are some of the things that make up a Christian's work. May we
+attend to them! May we be found provoking one another, not to envy and
+jealousy, but to love and good works; exhorting one another daily;
+diligently availing ourselves of the public assembly, and so much the
+more, as we see the day approaching.
+
+May the Holy Spirit engrave upon the heart of both writer and reader
+these most precious exhortations so thoroughly characteristic of our
+glorious Christianity--"_Let us draw near_"--"_Let us hold fast_"--"_Let
+us consider one another!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+ The veil is rent:--our souls draw near
+ Unto a throne of grace;
+ The merits of the Lord appear,
+ They fill the holy place.
+
+His precious blood has spoken there. Before and on the throne:
+
+And His own wounds in heaven declare, The atoning work is done.
+
+'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest, His work can never fail: By
+Him, our Sacrifice and Priest, We pass within the veil.
+
+Within the holiest of all, Cleansed by His precious blood, Before the
+throne we prostrate fall And worship Thee, O God! */
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN PRIESTHOOD
+
+
+We want the reader to open his Bible and read I Pet. ii. I-9. In this
+lovely scripture he will find three words on which we will ask him to
+dwell with us for a little. They are words of weight and power--words
+which indicate three great branches of practical Christian truth--words
+conveying to our hearts a fact which we cannot too deeply ponder,
+namely, that Christianity is a living and divine reality. It is not a
+set of doctrines, however true; a system of ordinances, however
+imposing; a number of rules and regulations, however important.
+Christianity is far more than any or all of these things. It is a
+living, breathing, speaking, active, powerful reality--something to be
+seen in the every day life--something to be felt in the scenes of
+personal, domestic history, from hour to hour--something formative and
+influential--a divine and heavenly power introduced into the scenes and
+circumstances through which we have to move, as men, women, and
+children, from Sunday morning to Saturday night. It does not consist in
+holding certain views, opinions, and principles, or in going to this
+place of worship or that.
+
+Christianity is the life of Christ communicated to the
+believer--dwelling _in_ him--and flowing out _from_ him, in the ten
+thousand little details which go to make up our daily practical life. It
+has nothing ascetic, or sanctimonious about it. It is genial, pure,
+elevated, holy, divine. Such is Christianity. It is Christ dwelling in
+the believer, and reproduced, by the power of the Holy Ghost, in the
+believer's daily practical career.
+
+But let us turn to our three words; and may the Eternal Spirit expound
+their deep and holy meaning to our souls!
+
+And first, then, we have the word "living." "To whom coming, as unto a
+living Stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious,
+ye also, as living stones, are built up."
+
+Here we have what we may call the foundation of Christian priesthood.
+There is evidently an allusion here to that profoundly interesting scene
+in Matt. xvi. to which we must ask the reader to turn for a moment.
+
+"When Jesus was come into the coasts of Cćsarea Philippi, He asked His
+disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?[XXIII.]
+And they said, 'Some say Thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and
+others, Jeremias, or one of the prophets.'"
+
+There was endless speculation, simply because there was no real
+heart-work respecting the blessed One. Some said this, some said that;
+and, in result, no one cared who or what He was; and hence He turns away
+from all this heartless speculation, and puts the pointed question to
+His own, "But whom say ye that I am?" He desired to know what they
+thought about Him--what estimate their hearts had formed of Him. "And
+Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
+_living_ God."
+
+Here we have the true confession. Here lies the solid foundation of the
+whole edifice of the Church of God and all true practical
+Christianity--"Christ the Son of the _living_ God." No more dim
+shadows--no more powerless forms--no more lifeless ordinances--all must
+be permeated by this new, this divine, this heavenly life which has come
+into this world, and is communicated to all who believe in the name of
+the Son of God.
+
+"And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona;
+for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which
+is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter; and upon
+this rock I _will build_ My Church; and the gates of hell shall not
+prevail against it."
+
+Now, it is evidently to this magnificent passage that the apostle Peter
+refers in the second chapter of his first epistle, when he says, "To
+whom coming, as unto a _living_ stone, disallowed indeed of men, but
+chosen of God, and precious, ye also, as _living_ stones (the same
+words), are built up," etc. All who believe in Jesus are partakers of
+His risen, victorious, _rock_ life. The life of Christ, the Son of the
+living God, flows through all His members, and through each in
+particular. Thus we have the _living_ God, the _living_ Stone, the
+_living_ stones. It is all life together--life flowing down from a
+living source, through a living channel, and imparting itself to all
+believers, thus making them living stones.
+
+Now, this life having been tried and tested, in every possible way, and
+having come forth victorious, can never again be called to pass through
+any process of trial, testing, or judgment whatsoever. It has passed
+through death and judgment. It has gone down under all the waves and
+billows of divine wrath, and come forth at the other side in
+resurrection, in divine glory and power--a life victorious, heavenly,
+and divine, beyond the reach of all the powers of darkness. There is no
+power of earth or hell, men or devils, that can possibly touch the life
+which is possessed by the very smallest and most insignificant stone in
+Christ's assembly. All believers are built upon the living Stone,
+Christ; and are thus constituted living stones. He makes them like
+Himself in every respect, save of course, in His incommunicable deity.
+Is He a living Stone? They are living stones. Is He a precious Stone?
+They are precious stones. Is He a rejected Stone? They are rejected
+stones--rejected, disallowed of men. They are, in every respect,
+identified with Him. Ineffable privilege!
+
+Here, then, we repeat, is the solid foundation of the Christian
+priesthood--the priesthood of all believers. Before any one can offer up
+a spiritual sacrifice, he must come to Christ, in simple faith, and be
+built on Him as the foundation of the whole spiritual building.
+"Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture (Isa. xxviii. 16),
+Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone, elect, precious; and he that
+believeth in Him shall not be confounded."
+
+How precious are these words! God Himself has laid the foundation, and
+that foundation is Christ; and all who simply believe in Christ--all who
+give Him the confidence of their hearts--all who rest satisfied with
+Him, are made partakers of His resurrection-life, and thus made living
+stones.
+
+How blessedly simple is this! We are not asked to assist in laying the
+foundation. We are not called upon to add the weight of a feather to it.
+God has laid the foundation, and all we have to do is to believe and
+rest thereon; and He pledges His faithful word that we shall never be
+confounded. The very feeblest believer in Jesus has God's own gracious
+assurance that he shall never be confounded--never be ashamed--never
+come into judgment. He is as free from all charge of guilt and every
+breath of condemnation as that living Rock on whom he is built.
+
+Beloved reader, are you on this foundation? Are you built on Christ?
+Have you come to Him as God's living Stone, and given Him the full
+confidence of your heart? Are you thoroughly satisfied with God's
+foundation? or are you seeking to add something of your own--your own
+works, your prayers, your ordinances, your vows and resolutions, your
+religious duties? If so, if you are seeking to add the smallest jot to
+God's foundation, you may rest assured, you will be confounded. God will
+not suffer such dishonor to be offered to His tried, elect, precious,
+chief corner Stone. Think you that He could allow aught, no matter what,
+to be placed beside His beloved Son, in order to form, with Him, the
+foundation of His spiritual edifice? The bare thought were an impious
+blasphemy. No; it must be Christ alone. He is enough for God, and He may
+well be enough for us; and nothing is more certain than that all who
+reject, or neglect, turn away from, or add to, God's foundation, shall
+be covered with everlasting confusion.
+
+But, having glanced at the foundation, let us look at the
+superstructure. This will lead us to the second of our three weighty
+words. "To whom coming as unto a _living_ Stone ... ye also, as living
+stones, are built up a spiritual house, a _holy_ priesthood, to offer
+up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ."
+
+All true believers are holy priests. They are made this by spiritual
+birth, just as Aaron's sons were priests in virtue of their natural
+birth. The apostle does not say, Ye _ought to be_ living stones, and, Ye
+ought to be holy priests. He says ye _are_ such. No doubt, being such,
+we are called upon to act accordingly; but we must be in a position
+before we can discharge the duties belonging to it. We must be in a
+relationship before we can know the affections which flow out of it. We
+do not become priests by offering priestly sacrifices. But being,
+through grace, made priests, we are called upon to present the
+sacrifice. If we were to live a thousand years twice told, and spend all
+that time working, we could not work ourselves into the position of holy
+priests; but the moment we believe in Jesus--the moment we come to Him
+in simple faith--the moment we give Him the full confidence of our
+hearts, we are born anew into the position of holy priests, and are then
+privileged to draw nigh and offer the priestly sacrifice. How could any
+one, of old, have constituted himself a son of Aaron? Impossible. But
+being born of Aaron, he was thereby made a member of the priestly house.
+We speak not now of capacity, but simply of the position. This latter
+was reached not by effort, but by birth.
+
+And now, let us enquire as to the nature of the sacrifice which, as holy
+priests, we are privileged to offer. We are "to offer up spiritual
+sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." So also in Heb. xiii.
+15, we read, "By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to
+God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to His
+name."
+
+Here, then, we have the true nature and character of that sacrifice
+which, as holy priests, we are to offer. It is praise--"praise to God
+continually." Blessed occupation! Hallowed exercise! Heavenly
+employment! And this is not to be an occasional thing. It is not merely
+at some peculiarly favored moment, when all looks bright and smiling
+around us. It is not to be merely amid the glow and fervor of some
+specially powerful public meeting, when the current of worship flows
+deep, wide, and rapid. No; the word is, "praise _continually_." There is
+no room, no time for complaining or murmuring, fretfulness and
+discontent, impatience and irritability, lamenting about our
+surroundings, whatever these may be, complaining about the weather,
+finding fault with those who are associated with us, whether in public
+or in private, whether in the congregation, in the business, or in the
+family circle.
+
+Holy priests should have no time for any of these things. They are
+brought nigh to God, in holy liberty, peace, and blessing. They breathe
+the atmosphere and walk in the sunlight of the divine presence, in the
+new creation, where there are no materials for a sour and discontented
+mind to feed upon. We may set it down as a fixed principle--an
+axiom--that whenever we hear anyone pouring out a string of complaints
+about circumstances, his neighbors etc., such an one is not realizing
+the place of holy priesthood, and, as a consequence, not exhibiting its
+practical fruits. A holy priest should "rejoice in the Lord
+always"--ever ready to praise God. True, he may be tried in a thousand
+ways; but he brings his trials to God in communion, not to his
+fellow-man in complaining. "Hallelujah" is the proper utterance of the
+very feeblest member of the Christian priesthood.
+
+But we must now look, for a moment, at the third and last branch of our
+present theme. This is presented in that highly expressive word "royal."
+The apostle goes on to say, "But ye are a chosen generation, a _royal_
+priesthood ... that ye should show forth the virtues (see margin) of Him
+who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous light."
+
+This completes the lovely picture of the Christian priesthood.[XXIV.] As
+_holy_ priests, we draw nigh to God, and present the sacrifice of
+praise. As royal priests we go forth among our fellow-men, in all the
+details of practical daily life, to show forth the virtues--the
+graces--the lovely moral features of Christ. Every movement of a royal
+priest should emit the fragrance of the grace of Christ.
+
+Mark again, the apostle does not say, _Ye ought to be_ royal priests. He
+says ye _are_; and as such we are to show forth the virtues of Christ.
+Nothing else becomes a member of the royal priesthood. To be occupied
+with myself, to be taking counsel for my own ease, my own interest, my
+own enjoyment, to be seeking my own ends, and caring about my own
+things, is not the act of a royal priest at all. Christ never did so;
+and I am told to show forth His virtues. He, blessed be His name, grants
+to His people, in this the time of His absence, to anticipate the day
+when He shall come forth as a Royal Priest, and sit upon His throne, and
+send forth the benign influence of His dominion to the ends of the
+earth. We are called to be the present expression of the kingdom of
+Christ--the expression of Himself.
+
+And let none suppose that the actings of a royal priest are to be
+confined to the matter of _giving_. This would be a grave mistake. No
+doubt, a royal priest will give, and give liberally if he has it; but to
+limit him to the mere matter of communicating would be to rob him of
+some of the most precious functions of his position. The very man who
+penned the words on which we are dwelling said on one occasion--and said
+it without shame, "Silver and gold have I none;" and yet at that very
+moment, he was acting as a royal priest, by bringing the precious
+virtue of the name of Jesus to bear on the impotent man (Acts. iii.).
+The blessed Master Himself, we know, possessed no money; but He went
+about doing good; and so should we: nor do we need money to do it.
+Indeed it very often happens that we do mischief instead of good with
+our silver and gold. We may take people off the ground on which God has
+placed them, namely, the ground of honest industry, and make them
+dependent upon human alms. Moreover, we may often make hypocrites and
+sycophants of people by our injudicious use of money.
+
+Hence, therefore, let no one imagine that he cannot act as a royal
+priest without earthly riches. What riches are required to speak a
+kindly word--to drop the tear of sympathy--to give the soothing, genial
+look? None whatever save the riches of God's grace--the unsearchable
+riches of Christ, all of which are laid open to the most obscure member
+of the Christian priesthood. I may be poorly clad, without a penny in
+the world, and yet carry myself truly as a royal priest, by diffusing
+around me the fragrance of the grace of Christ.
+
+But, perhaps, we cannot more suitably close these few remarks on the
+Christian priesthood, than by giving a very vivid illustration drawn
+from the inspired page--the narrative of two beloved servants of Christ
+who were enabled, under the most distressing circumstances, to acquit
+themselves as holy and royal priests.
+
+Turn to Acts xvi. 19-34. Here we have Paul and Silas thrust into the
+innermost part of the prison at Philippi, their backs covered with
+stripes, and their feet fast in the stocks, in the darkness of the
+midnight hour. What were they doing? murmuring and complaining? Ah, no!
+They had something better and brighter to do. Here were two really
+"living stones," and nothing that earth or hell could do could hinder
+the life that was in them expressing itself in its proper accents.
+
+But what, we repeat, were these living stones doing? these partakers of
+the rock-life--the victorious, resurrection-life of Christ--how did they
+employ themselves? Well, then, in the first place, as _holy_ priests
+they offered the sacrifice of praise to God. Yes, "at midnight, Paul and
+Silas prayed and sang praises to God." How precious is this! How morally
+glorious! How truly refreshing! What are stripes, or stocks, or prison
+walls, or gloomy nights, to living stones and holy priests? Nothing more
+than a dark background to throw out into bright and beauteous relief the
+living grace that is in them. Talk of circumstances! Ah, it is little
+any of us know of trying circumstances. Poor things that we are, the
+petty annoyances of daily life are often more than enough to cause us to
+lose our mental balance. Paul and Silas were really in trying
+circumstances; but they were there as living stones and holy priests.
+
+Yes, reader, and they were there as royal priests, likewise. How does
+this appear? Certainly not by scattering silver and gold. It is not
+likely the dear men had much of these to scatter. But oh, they had what
+was better, even "the virtues of Him who had called them out of darkness
+into His marvelous light." And where do these virtues shine out? In
+those touching words addressed to the jailer, "_Do thyself no harm_."
+These were the accents of a _royal_ priest, just as the song of praise
+was the voice of a _holy_ priest. Thank God for both! The voices of the
+holy priests went directly up to the throne of God and did their work
+there; and the words of the royal priests went directly to the jailer's
+hard heart and did their work there. God was glorified and the jailer
+saved by two men rightly discharging the functions of "_the Christian
+priesthood_."
+
+
+
+
+ Father! Thy sovereign love has sought
+ Captives to sin, gone far from Thee:
+ The work that Thine own Son hath wrought,
+ Has brought us back, in peace, and free!
+
+ And now, as sons before Thy Face,
+ With joyful steps the path we tread,
+ Which leads us on to that blest place
+ Prepared for us, by Christ our Head.
+
+ Thou gav'st us, in eternal love,
+ To Him, to bring us home to Thee;
+ Suited to Thine own thoughts above
+ As sons, like Him, with Him to be.
+
+ Oh, boundless grace! What fills with joy
+ Unmingled all that enter there;
+ God's Nature, Love without alloy,
+ Our hearts are given e'en now to share!
+
+ Oh, keep us, Love Divine, near Thee!
+ That we our nothingness may know;
+ And ever to Thy glory be,
+ Walking in faith while here below.
+
+ J. N. D.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIII.] Let the reader note this title, "_Son of Man_." It is
+infinitely precious. It is a title indicating our Lord's rejection as
+the Messiah, and leading out into that wide, that universal sphere over
+which He is destined in the counsels of God, to rule. It is far wider
+than Son of David, or Son of Abraham, and has peculiar charms for us,
+inasmuch as it places Him before our hearts as the lonely, outcast
+Stranger, and yet as the One who links Himself in perfect grace with us
+in all our need--One whose footprints we can trace all across this
+dreary desert. "The Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." And yet
+it is as Son of Man that He shall, by-and-by, exercise that universal
+dominion reserved for Him according to the eternal counsels of God. See
+Daniel vii.
+
+[XXIV.] The intelligent reader does not need to be told that all
+believers are priests; and, further, that there is no such thing as a
+priest upon earth, save in the sense in which all true Christians are
+priests. The idea of a certain set of men, calling themselves priests in
+contrast with the people--a certain caste distinguished by title and
+dress from the body of Christians, is not Christianity at all, but
+Judaism or intelligently worse. All who read the Bible and bow to its
+authority will be perfectly clear as to these things.
+
+
+
+
+
+PAPERS ON EVANGELIZATION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+A WORD TO THE EVANGELIST.
+
+
+We trust it may not be deemed out of place if we venture to offer a word
+of counsel and encouragement to all who have been and are engaged in the
+blessed work of preaching _the gospel of the grace of God_. We are, in
+some measure, aware of the difficulties and discouragements which attend
+upon the path of every evangelist, whatever may be his sphere of labor
+or measure of gift; and it is our heart's desire to hold up the hands
+and cheer the hearts of all who may be in danger of falling under the
+depressing power of these things. We increasingly feel the immense
+importance of an earnest, fervent gospel testimony everywhere; and we
+dread exceedingly any falling off therein. We are imperatively called to
+"do the work of an evangelist," and not to be moved from that work by
+any arguments or considerations whatsoever.
+
+Let none imagine that, in writing thus, we mean to detract, in the
+smallest degree, from the value of teaching, lecturing, or exhortation.
+Nothing is further from our thoughts. "These things ought ye to have
+done, and not to leave the other undone." We mean not to compare the
+work of the evangelist with that of the teacher, or to exalt the former
+at the expense of the latter. Each has its own proper place, its own
+distinctive interest and importance.
+
+But is there not a danger, on the other hand, of the evangelist
+abandoning his own precious work in order to give himself to the work of
+teaching and lecturing? Is there not a danger of the evangelist becoming
+merged in the teacher? We fear there is; and it is under the influence
+of this very fear that we pen these few lines. We observe, with deep
+concern, some who were once known amongst us as earnest and eminently
+successful evangelists, now almost wholly abandoning their work and
+becoming teachers and lecturers.
+
+This is most deplorable. _We really want evangelists._ A true evangelist
+is almost as great a rarity as a true pastor. Alas! alas! how rare are
+both! The two are closely connected. The evangelist gathers the sheep;
+the pastor feeds and cares for them. The work of each lies very near the
+heart of Christ--the Divine Evangelist and Pastor; but it is with the
+former we have now more immediately to do--to encourage him in his work,
+and to warn him against the temptation to turn aside from it. We cannot
+afford to lose a single ambassador just now, or to have a single
+preacher silent. We are perfectly aware of the fact that there is in
+some quarters a strong tendency to throw cold water upon the work of
+evangelization. There is a sad lack of sympathy with the preacher of the
+gospel; and, as a necessary consequence, of active co-operation with
+him in his work. Further, there is a mode of speaking of gospel
+preaching which argues but little sympathy with the heart of Him who
+wept over impenitent sinners, and who could say, at the very opening of
+His blessed ministry, "The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He
+hath anointed Me _to preach the gospel to the poor_" (Isa. lxi.; Luke
+iv.). And again, "Let us go into the next towns, that I may preach there
+also: for therefore came I forth" (Mark i. 38).
+
+Our blessed Lord was an indefatigable preacher of the gospel, and all
+who are filled with His mind and spirit will take a lively interest in
+the work of all those who are seeking in their feeble measure to do the
+same. This interest will be evinced, not only by earnest prayer for the
+divine blessing upon the work, but also by diligent and persevering
+efforts to get immortal souls under the sound of the gospel.
+
+This is the way to help the evangelist, and this way lies open to every
+member of the Church of God--man, woman, or child. All can thus help
+forward the glorious work of evangelization. If each member of the
+assembly were to work diligently and prayerfully in this way, how
+different would it be with the Lord's dear servants who are seeking to
+make known the unsearchable riches of Christ.
+
+But, alas! how often is it otherwise. How often do we hear even those
+who are of some repute for intelligence and spirituality, when referring
+to meetings for gospel testimony, say, "Oh, I am not going there; it is
+_only_ the gospel." Think of that! "_Only the gospel._" If they would
+put the idea into other words, they might say, "It is _only_ the heart
+of God--_only_ the precious blood of Christ--_only_ the glorious record
+of the Holy Ghost."
+
+This would be putting the thing plainly. Nothing is more sad than to
+hear professing Christians speak in this way. It proves too clearly that
+their souls are very far away from the heart of Jesus. We have
+invariably found that those who think and speak slightingly of the work
+of the evangelist are persons of very little spirituality; and on the
+other hand, the most devoted, the most true hearted, the best taught
+saints of God, are always sure to take a profound interest in that work.
+How could it be otherwise? Does not the voice of Holy Scripture bear the
+clearest testimony to the fact of the interest of the Trinity in the
+work of the gospel? Most assuredly it does. Who first preached the
+gospel? Who was the first herald of salvation? Who first announced the
+good news of the bruised Seed of the woman? The Lord God Himself, in the
+garden of Eden. This is a telling fact in connection with our theme. And
+further, let us ask, who was the most earnest, laborious, and faithful
+preacher that ever trod this earth? The Son of God. And who has been
+preaching the gospel for the last eighteen centuries? The Holy Ghost
+sent down from heaven.
+
+Thus then we have the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost all actually
+engaged in the work of evangelization; and if this be so, who are we to
+dare to speak slightingly of such a work? Nay, rather may our whole
+moral being be stirred by the power of the Spirit of God so that we may
+be able to add our fervent and deep Amen to those precious words of
+inspiration, "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel
+of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!" (Isa. lii. 7; Rom. x.
+15.)
+
+But it may be that these lines shall be scanned by some one who has been
+engaged in the work of preaching the gospel, and is beginning to feel
+rather discouraged. It may be that he has been called to preach in the
+same place for years, and he feels burdened by the thought of having to
+address the same audience, on the same subject, week after week, month
+after month, year after year. He may feel at a loss for something new,
+something fresh, some variety. He may sigh for some new sphere, where
+the subjects which are familiar to him will be new to the people. Or, if
+this cannot be, he may feel led to substitute lectures and expositions
+for the fervid, pointed, earnest preaching of the gospel.
+
+If we have in any measure set forth the reader's feelings on this
+subject, we think it will greatly help him in his work to bear in mind
+that the one grand theme of the true evangelist is Christ. The power to
+handle that theme is the Holy Ghost. The one to whom that theme is to be
+unfolded is the poor lost sinner. Now, Christ is ever new; the power of
+the Holy Ghost is ever fresh; the soul's condition and destiny ever
+intensely interesting. Furthermore, it is well for the evangelist to
+bear in mind, on every fresh occasion of rising to preach, that his
+unconverted hearers are totally ignorant of the gospel, and hence he
+should preach as though it were the first time they had ever heard the
+message, and the first time he had ever delivered it. For, be it
+remembered, the preaching of the gospel, in the divine acceptation of
+the phrase, is not a mere barren statement of evangelical doctrine--a
+certain form of words enunciated over and over again in wearisome
+routine. Far, very far from it. The gospel is really the large loving
+heart of God welling up and flowing forth toward the poor lost sinner in
+streams of life and salvation. It is the presentation of the atoning
+death and glorious resurrection of the Son of God; and all this in the
+present energy, glow, and freshness of the Holy Ghost, from the
+exhaustless mine of Holy Scripture. Moreover, _the_ one absorbing object
+of the preacher is to win souls for Christ, to the glory of God. For
+this he labors and pleads; for this he prays, weeps, and agonizes; for
+this he thunders, appeals, and grapples with the heart and conscience of
+his hearer. His object is not to teach doctrines, though doctrines may
+be taught; his object is not to expound Scripture, though Scripture may
+be expounded. These things lie within the range of the teacher or
+lecturer; but let it never be forgotten, the preacher's object is to
+bring the Saviour and the sinner together--to win souls to Christ. May
+God by His Spirit keep these things ever before our hearts, so that we
+may have a deeper interest in the glorious work of evangelization!
+
+We would, in conclusion, merely add a word of exhortation in reference
+to the Lord's Day evening. We would, in all affection, say to our
+beloved and honored fellow-laborers, Seek to give that one hour to the
+great business of the soul's salvation. There are 168 hours in the week,
+and, surely, it is the least we may devote _one_ of these to this
+momentous work. It so happens that during that interesting hour we can
+get the ear of our fellow-sinner. Oh, let us use it to pour in the sweet
+story of God's free love and of Christ's full salvation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A MOTTO FOR THE EVANGELIST.
+
+(2 Cor. x. 16.)
+
+
+"To _preach the gospel in the regions beyond you_." These words, while
+they set forth the large-heartedness of the self-denying and devoted
+apostle, do also furnish a fine model for the evangelist, in every age.
+The gospel is a traveler; and the preacher of the gospel must be a
+traveler likewise. The divinely-qualified and divinely-sent evangelist
+will fix his eye upon "_the world_." He will embrace, in his benevolent
+design, the human family. From house to house; from street to street;
+from city to city; from province to province; from kingdom to kingdom;
+from continent to continent; from pole to pole. Such is the range of the
+"good news" and the publisher thereof. "The regions beyond" must ever be
+the grand gospel motto. No sooner has the gospel lamp cast its cheering
+beams over a district, than the bearer of that lamp must think of the
+regions beyond. Thus the work goes on. Thus the mighty tide of grace
+rolls, in enlightening and saving power, over a dark world which lies in
+"the region of the shadow of death."
+
+ "Waft, waft, ye winds, the story,
+ And you, ye waters, roll,
+ Till, like the sea of glory,
+ It spreads from pole to pole."
+
+Christian reader, are you thinking of "the regions beyond you?" This
+expression may, in your case, mean the next house, the next street, the
+next village, the next city, the next kingdom, or the next continent.
+The application is for your own heart to ponder: but say, are you
+thinking of "the regions beyond you?" I do not want you to abandon your
+present post at all; or, at least, not until you are fully persuaded
+that your work, at the post, is done. But, remember, the gospel plough
+should never stand still. "_Onward_" is the motto of every true
+evangelist. Let the shepherds abide by the flocks; but let the
+evangelists betake themselves hither and thither, to gather the sheep.
+Let them sound the gospel trump, far and wide, o'er the dark mountains
+of this world, to gather together the elect of God. This is the design
+of the gospel. This should be the object of the evangelist, as he sighs
+after "the regions beyond." When Cćsar beheld, from the coast of Gaul,
+the white cliffs of Britain, he earnestly longed to carry his arms
+thither. The evangelist, on the other hand, whose heart beats in unison
+with the heart of Jesus, as he casts his eye over the map of the world,
+longs to carry the gospel of peace into regions which have heretofore
+been wrapped in midnight gloom, covered with the dark mantle of
+superstition, or blasted beneath the withering influences of "a form of
+godliness without the power."
+
+It would, I believe, be a profitable question for many of us to put to
+ourselves, how far are we discharging our holy responsibilities to "the
+regions beyond." I believe the Christian who is not cultivating and
+manifesting an evangelistic spirit, is in a truly deplorable condition.
+I believe, too, that the assembly which is not cultivating and
+manifesting an evangelistic spirit is in a dead state. One of the truest
+marks of spiritual growth and prosperity, whether in an individual or in
+an assembly, is earnest anxiety after the conversion of souls. This
+anxiety will swell the bosom with most generous emotions; yea, it will
+break forth in copious streams of benevolent exertion, ever flowing
+toward "the regions beyond." It is hard to believe that "the word of
+Christ" is "dwelling richly" in any one who is not making some effort to
+impart that word to his fellow-sinners. It matters not what may be the
+amount of the effort; it may be to drop a few words in the ear of a
+friend, to give a tract, to pen a note, to breathe a prayer. But one
+thing is certain, namely, that a healthy, vigorous Christian will be an
+evangelistic Christian--a teller of good news--one whose sympathies,
+desires, and energies, are ever going forth toward "the regions beyond."
+"I must preach the gospel to other cities also, for therefore am I
+sent." Such was the language of the true Evangelist.
+
+It is very doubtful whether many of the servants of Christ have not
+erred in allowing themselves, through one influence or another, to
+become too much localized--too much tied in one place. They have dropped
+into routine work--into a round of stated preaching in the same place,
+and, in many cases, have paralyzed themselves and paralyzed their
+hearers also. I speak not, now, of the labors of the pastor, the elder,
+or the teacher, which must, of course, be carried on in the midst of
+those who are the proper subjects of such labors. I refer more
+particularly to the evangelist. Such an one should never suffer himself
+to be localized. The world is his sphere--"the regions beyond," his
+motto--to gather out God's elect, his object--the current of the Spirit,
+his line of direction. If the reader should be one whom God has called
+and fitted to be an evangelist, let him remember these four things--the
+sphere, the motto, the object, and the line of direction, which all must
+adopt if they would prove fruitful laborers in the gospel field.
+
+Finally, whether the reader be an evangelist or not, I would earnestly
+intreat him to examine how far he is seeking to further the gospel of
+Christ. We must not stand idle. Time is short! Eternity is rapidly
+posting on! The Master is most worthy! Souls are most precious! The
+season for work will soon close! Let us, then, in the name of the Lord,
+be up and doing. And when we have done what we can, in the regions
+around, let us carry the precious seed into "THE REGIONS BEYOND."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE WORK OF AN EVANGELIST.
+
+(Acts xvi. 8-31.)
+
+
+We ventured to offer a word to the evangelist, which we now follow up
+with a paper on the evangelist's work; and we cannot do better than
+select, as the basis of our remarks, a page from the missionary record
+of one of the greatest evangelists that ever lived. The passage of
+Scripture that stands at the head of this article furnishes specimens of
+three distinct classes of hearers, and also the method in which they
+were met by the great apostle of the Gentiles, guided, most surely, by
+the Holy Ghost. We have, first, _the earnest seeker_; secondly, _the
+false professor_; and thirdly, _the hardened sinner_. These three
+classes are to be met everywhere, and at all times, by the Lord's
+workman; and hence we may be thankful for an inspired account of the
+right mode of dealing with such. It is most desirable that those who go
+forth with the gospel should have skill in dealing with the various
+conditions of soul that come before them, from day to day; and there can
+be no more effectual way of attaining this skill than the careful study
+of the models given us by God the Holy Ghost.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, look at the narrative of
+
+
+THE EARNEST SEEKER.
+
+The laborious apostle, in the course of his missionary journeyings,
+came to Troas, and there a vision appeared to him in the night, "There
+stood a man of Macedonia, and prayed him, saying, Come over into
+Macedonia and help us. And after he had seen the vision, immediately we
+endeavored to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the Lord had
+called us for to preach the gospel unto them. Therefore loosing from
+Troas, we came with a straight course to Samothracia, and the next day
+to Neapolis; and from thence to Philippi, which is the chief city of
+that part of Macedonia, and a colony: and we were in that city abiding
+certain days. And on the Sabbath we went out of the city by a river
+side, where prayer was wont to be made; and we sat down, and spake unto
+the women which resorted thither. And a certain woman named Lydia, a
+seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira, which worshiped God, heard
+us; whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended unto the things that
+were spoken of Paul. And when she was baptized, and her household, she
+besought us, saying, If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord,
+come into my house and abide there. And she constrained us" (Acts xvi.
+8-15).
+
+Here, then, we have a touching picture--something well worth gazing at
+and pondering. It is a picture of one who, having through grace gotten a
+measure of light, was living up to it, and was earnestly seeking for
+more. Lydia, the seller of purple, belonged to the same interesting
+generation as the eunuch of Ethiopia, and the centurion of Cćsarea. All
+three appear on the page of inspiration as quickened souls not
+emancipated--not at rest--not satisfied. The eunuch had gone from
+Ethiopia to Jerusalem in search of something on which to rest his
+anxious soul. He had left that city still unsatisfied, and was devoutly
+and earnestly hanging over the precious page of inspiration. The eye of
+God was upon him, and He sent His servant Philip with the very message
+that was needed to solve his difficulties, answer his questions, and set
+his soul at rest. God knows how to bring the Philips and the eunuchs
+together. He knows how to prepare the heart for the message and the
+message for the heart. The eunuch was a worshiper of God; but Philip is
+sent to teach him how to see God in the face of Jesus Christ. This was
+precisely what he wanted. It was a flood of fresh light breaking in upon
+his earnest spirit, setting his heart and conscience at rest, and
+sending him on his way rejoicing. He had honestly followed the light as
+it broke in upon his soul, and God sent him more.
+
+Thus it is ever. "To him that hath shall more be given." There never was
+a soul who sincerely acted up to his light that did not get more light.
+This is most consolatory and encouraging to all anxious enquirers. If
+the reader belongs to this class, let him take courage. If he is one of
+those with whom God has begun to work, then let him rest assured of
+this, that He who hath begun a good work will perform the same until the
+day of Jesus Christ. He will, most surely, perfect that which
+concerneth His people.
+
+But let no one fold his arms, settle upon his oars, and coolly say, "I
+must wait God's time for more light. I can do nothing--my efforts are
+useless. When God's time comes I shall be all right; till then, I must
+remain as I am." These were not the thoughts or feelings of the
+Ethiopian eunuch. He was one of the earnest seekers; and all earnest
+seekers are sure to be happy finders. It must be so, for "God is a
+rewarder of them that diligently seek Him" (Heb. xi. 6).
+
+So also with the centurion of Cćsarea. He was a man of the same stamp.
+He lived up to his light. He fasted, he prayed, and gave alms. We are
+not told whether he had read the sermon on the mount: but it is
+remarkable that he exercised himself in the three grand branches of
+practical righteousness set forth by our Lord in the sixth chapter of
+Matthew.[XXV.] He was moulding his conduct and shaping his way according
+to the standard which God had set before him. His righteousness exceeded
+the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, and therefore he entered
+the kingdom. He was, through grace, a real man, earnestly following the
+light as it streamed in upon his soul, and he was led into the full
+blaze of the gospel of the grace of God. God sent a Peter to Cornelius,
+as he had sent a Philip to the eunuch. The prayers and alms had gone up
+as a memorial before God, and Peter was sent with a message of full
+salvation through a crucified and risen Saviour.
+
+Now it is quite possible that there are persons who, having been rocked
+in the cradle of easy-going evangelical profession, and trained up in
+the flippant formalism of a self-indulgent, heaven-made-easy religion,
+are ready to condemn the pious conduct of Cornelius, and pronounce it
+the fruit of ignorance and legality. Such persons have never known what
+it was to deny themselves a single meal, or to spend an hour in real,
+earnest prayer, or to open their hand, in true benevolence, to meet the
+wants of the poor. They have heard and learnt, perchance, that salvation
+is not to be gained by such means--that we are justified by faith
+without works--that it is to him that worketh not, but believeth on Him
+that justifieth the ungodly.
+
+All this is most true; but what right have we to imagine that Cornelius
+was praying, fasting, and giving alms in order to earn salvation? None
+whatever--at least if we are to be governed by the inspired narrative,
+and we have no other means of knowing aught about this truly excellent
+and interesting character. He was informed by the angel that his prayers
+and his alms had gone up as a memorial before God. Is not this a clear
+proof that these prayers and alms were not the trappings of
+self-righteousness, but the fruits of a righteousness based on the
+knowledge which he had of God? Surely the fruits of self-righteousness
+and legality could never have ascended as a memorial to the throne of
+God; nor could Peter ever have said concerning a mere legalist that he
+was one who feared God and worked righteousness.
+
+Ah, no, reader; Cornelius was a man thoroughly in earnest. He lived up
+to what he knew, and he would have been quite wrong to go further. To
+him the salvation of his immortal soul, the service of God, and
+eternity, were grand and all-absorbing realities. He was none of your
+easy-going professors, full of flippant, vapid, worthless talk, but
+_doing_ nothing. He belonged to another generation altogether. He
+belonged to the _working_, not the _talking_ class. He was one on whom
+the eye of God rested with complacency, and in whom the mind of heaven
+was profoundly interested.
+
+And so was our friend of Thyatira, Lydia, the seller of purple. She
+belonged to the same school--she occupied the same platform as the
+centurion and the eunuch. It is truly delightful to contemplate these
+three precious souls--to think of one in Ethiopia; another at Cćsarea;
+and a third at Thyatira or Philippi. It is particularly refreshing to
+contrast such downright thorough-going, earnest souls, with many in this
+our day of boasted light and knowledge, who have got the plan of
+salvation, as it is termed, in their heads, the doctrines of grace on
+the tongue, but the world in the heart; whose absorbing object is self,
+self, self,--miserable object!
+
+We shall have occasion to refer more fully to these latter under our
+second head; but, for the present, we shall think of the earnest Lydia;
+and we must confess it is a far more grateful exercise. It is very plain
+that Lydia, like Cornelius and the eunuch, was a quickened soul; she was
+a worshiper of God; she was one who was right glad to lay aside her
+purple-selling, and betake herself to a prayer-meeting, or to any such
+like place where spiritual profit was to be had, and where there were
+good things going. "Birds of a feather flock together," and so Lydia
+soon found out where a few pious souls, a few kindred spirits, were in
+the habit of meeting to wait on God in prayer.
+
+All this is lovely. It does the heart good to be brought in contact with
+this deep-toned earnestness. Surely the Holy Ghost has penned this
+narrative, like all Holy Scripture, for our learning. It is a specimen
+case, and we do well to ponder it. Lydia was found diligently availing
+herself of any and every opportunity; indeed she exhibited the real
+fruits of divine life, the genuine instincts of the new nature. She
+found out where saints met for prayer, and took her place among them.
+She did not fold her arms and settle down on her lees, to wait, in
+antinomian indolence and culpable idleness, for some extraordinary
+undefinable thing to come upon her, or some mysterious change to come
+over her. No; she went to a prayer-meeting--the place of expressed
+need--the place of expected blessing: and there God met her, as He is
+sure to meet all who frequent such scenes in Lydia's spirit. God never
+fails an expectant heart. He has said, "They shall not be ashamed that
+wait for Me;" and, like a bright and blessed sunbeam on the page of
+inspiration, shines that pregnant, weighty, soul-stirring sentence, "God
+is a rewarder of them that DILIGENTLY seek Him." He sent a Philip to the
+eunuch in the desert of Gaza. He sent a Peter to the centurion, in the
+town of Cćsarea. He sent a Paul to a seller of purple, in the suburbs of
+Philippi; and He will send a message to the reader of these lines, if he
+be a really earnest seeker after God's salvation.
+
+It is ever a moment of deepest interest when a prepared soul is brought
+in contact with the full gospel of the grace of God. It may be that that
+soul has been under deep and painful exercise for many a long day,
+seeking rest but finding none. The Lord has been working by His Spirit,
+and preparing the ground for the good seed. He has been making deep the
+furrows so that the precious seed of His Word may take permanent root,
+and bring forth fruit to His praise. The Holy Ghost is never in haste.
+His work is deep, sure and solid. His plants are not like Jonah's gourd,
+springing up in a night and perishing in a night. All that He does will
+stand, blessed be His name. "I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall
+be forever." When He convicts, converts, and liberates a soul, the stamp
+of His own eternal hand is upon the work, in all its stages.
+
+Now, it must have been a moment of intense interest when one in Lydia's
+state of soul was brought in contact with that most glorious gospel
+which Paul carried (Acts xvi. 14). She was thoroughly prepared for his
+message; and surely his message was thoroughly prepared for her. He
+carried with him truth which she had never heard and never thought of.
+As we have already remarked, she had been living up to her light; she
+was a worshiper of God; but we are bold to assert that she had no idea
+of the glorious truth which was lodged in the heart of that stranger who
+sat beside her at the prayer-meeting. She had come thither--devout and
+earnest woman that she was--to pray and to worship, to get some little
+refreshment for her spirit, after the toils of the week. How little did
+she imagine that at that meeting she should hear the greatest preacher
+that ever lived, save One, and that she should hear the very highest
+order of truth that had ever fallen upon mortal ears.
+
+Yet thus it was. And, oh, how important it was for Lydia to have been at
+that memorable prayer meeting! How well it was she had not acted as so
+many, now-a-days, act, who after a week of toil in the shop, the
+warehouse, the factory, or the field, take the opportunity of lying in
+bed on Sunday!
+
+How many there are whom you will see at their post from Monday morning
+till Saturday night, working away with all diligence at their calling,
+but for whom you will look in vain at the meeting on the Lord's day. How
+is this? They will tell you, perhaps, that they are so worn out on
+Saturday night that they have no energy to rise on Sunday, and therefore
+they spend this day in sloth, lounging, and self-indulgence. They have
+no care for their souls, no care for eternity, no care for Christ. They
+care for themselves, for their families, for the world, for
+money-making; and hence you will find them up with the dawn of Monday
+and off to their work.
+
+Lydia did not belong to this class at all. No doubt she attended to her
+business, as every right-minded person will. We dare say--indeed, we are
+sure--she kept very excellent purple, and was a fair, honest trader, in
+every sense of the word. But she did not spend her Sabbath in bed, or
+lounging about her house, or nursing herself up, and making a great fuss
+about all she had to do during the week. Neither do we believe that
+Lydia was one of those self-occupied folk whom a shower of rain is
+sufficient to keep away from a meeting. No; Lydia was of a different
+stamp altogether. She was an earnest woman, who felt she had a soul to
+save, and an eternity before her, and a living God to serve and worship.
+
+Would to God we had more Lydias in this our day! It would give a charm,
+and an interest, and a freshness to the work of an evangelist, for
+which many of the Lord's workmen have to sigh in vain. We seem to live
+in a day of terrible unreality as to divine and eternal things. Men,
+women, and children are real enough at their money-making, their
+pursuits, and their pleasures; but oh, when the things of God, the
+things of the soul, the things of eternity, are in question, the aspect
+of people is that of a yawning indifference. But the moment is rapidly
+approaching--every beat of the pulse, every tick of the watch, brings us
+nearer to it--when the yawning indifference shall be exchanged for
+"weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth." If this were more deeply
+felt, we should have many more Lydias, prepared to lend an attentive ear
+to Paul's gospel.
+
+What force and beauty in those words, "Whose heart the Lord opened, that
+_she attended_ unto the things that were spoken of Paul." Lydia was not
+one of those who go to meetings to think of anything and everything but
+the things that are spoken by the Lord's messengers. She was not
+thinking of her purple, or of the prices, or the probable gains or
+losses. How many of those who fill our preaching rooms and lecture halls
+follow the example of Lydia? Alas! we fear but very few indeed. The
+business, the state of the markets, the state of the funds, money,
+pleasure, dress, folly--a thousand and one things are thought of, and
+dwelt upon, and attended to, so that the poor vagrant, volatile heart is
+at the ends of the earth instead of "_attending_" to the things that are
+spoken.
+
+All this is very solemn, and very awful. It really ought to be looked
+into and thought of. People seem to forget the responsibility involved
+in hearing the gospel preached. They do not seem to be in the smallest
+degree impressed with the weighty fact that the gospel never leaves any
+unconverted person where it finds him. He is either saved by receiving,
+or rendered more guilty by rejecting it. Hence it becomes a serious
+matter to hear the gospel. People may attend gospel meetings as a matter
+of custom, as a religious service, or because they have nothing else to
+do, and the time would hang heavy upon their hands; or they may go
+because they think that the mere act of going has a sort of merit
+attached to it. Thus thousands attend preachings at which Christ's
+servants, though not Pauls in gift, power, or intelligence, unfold the
+precious grace of God in sending His only begotten Son into the world to
+save us from everlasting torment and misery. The virtue and efficacy of
+the atoning death of the divine Saviour--the Lamb of God--the dread
+realities of eternity--the awful horrors of hell, and the unspeakable
+joys of heaven--all these weighty matters are handled, according to the
+measure of grace bestowed upon the Lord's messengers, and yet how little
+impression is produced! They "reason of righteousness, temperance, and
+judgment to come," and yet how few are made even to "tremble!"
+
+And why? Will anyone presume to excuse himself for rejecting the gospel
+message on the ground of his inability to believe it? Will he appeal to
+the very case before us, and say, "The Lord opened her heart; and if He
+would only do the same for me, I, too, should attend; but until He does,
+I can do nothing"? We reply, and with deep seriousness, Such an argument
+will not avail thee in the day of judgment. Indeed we are most
+thoroughly convinced that thou wilt not dare to use it then. Thou art
+making a false use of Lydia's charming history. True it is, blessedly
+true, the Lord opened her heart; and He is ready to open thine also, if
+there were in thee but the hundredth part of Lydia's earnestness.
+
+And dost thou not know full well, reader, that there are two sides to
+this great question, as there are to every question? It is all very
+well, and sounds very forcibly, for thee to say, "I can do nothing." But
+who told thee this? Where hast thou learnt it? We solemnly challenge
+thee, in the presence of God, Canst thou look up to Him and say, "I can
+do nothing--I am not responsible?" Say, is the salvation of thy
+never-dying soul just _the_ one thing in which thou canst do nothing?
+Thou canst do a lot of things in the service of the world, of self, and
+of Satan; but when it becomes a question of God, the soul, and eternity,
+you coolly say, "I can do nothing--I am not responsible."
+
+Ah! it will never do. All this style of argument is the fruit of a
+one-sided theology. It is the result of the most pernicious reasoning of
+the human mind upon certain truths in Scripture which are turned the
+wrong way and sadly misapplied. But it will not stand. This is what we
+urge upon the reader. It is of no possible use arguing in this way. The
+sinner is responsible; and all the theology, and all the reasoning, and
+all the fallacious though plausible objections that can be scraped
+together, can never do away with this weighty and most serious fact.
+
+Hence, therefore, we call upon the reader to be, like Lydia, in earnest
+about his soul's salvation--to let every other question, every other
+point, every other subject, sink into utter insignificance in comparison
+with this one momentous question--the salvation of his precious soul.
+Then, he may depend upon it, the One who sent Philip to the eunuch, and
+sent Peter to the centurion, and sent Paul to Lydia, will send some
+messenger and some message to him, and will also open his heart to
+attend. Of this there cannot possibly be a doubt, inasmuch as Scripture
+declares that "God is not willing that any should perish, but that all
+should come to repentance." All who perish, after having heard the
+message of salvation--the sweet story of God's free love, of a Saviour's
+death and resurrection--shall perish without a shadow of an excuse,
+shall descend into hell with their blood upon their guilty heads. Their
+eyes shall then be open to see through all the flimsy arguments by which
+they have sought to prop themselves up in a false position, and lull
+themselves to sleep in sin and worldliness.
+
+But let us dwell for a moment on "the things that were spoken of Paul."
+The Spirit of God hath not thought proper to give us even a brief
+outline of Paul's address at the prayer-meeting. We are therefore left
+to other passages of Holy Scripture to form an idea of what Lydia heard
+from his lips on that interesting occasion. Let us take, for example,
+that famous passage in which he reminds the Corinthians of the gospel
+which he had preached to them. "Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you
+the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and
+wherein ye stand; by which also ye are saved if ye keep in memory what I
+preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain. For I delivered unto
+you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for
+our sins according to the Scriptures; and that He was buried, and that
+He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures" (I Cor. xv.
+I-4).
+
+Now we may safely conclude that the foregoing passage of Scripture
+contains a compendium of the things that were spoken of Paul at the
+prayer-meeting at Philippi. The grand theme of Paul's preaching was
+Christ--Christ for the sinner--Christ for the saint--Christ for the
+conscience--Christ for the heart. He never allowed himself to wander
+from this great centre, but made all his preachings and all his
+teachings circulate round it with admirable consistency. If he called on
+men, both Jews and Gentiles, to repent, the lever with which he worked
+was Christ. If he urged them to believe, the object which he held up
+for faith was Christ, on the authority of Holy Scripture. If he reasoned
+of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, the One that gave
+cogency and moral power to his reasoning was Christ. In short, Christ
+was the very gist and marrow, the sum and substance, the foundation and
+top stone of Paul's preaching and teaching.
+
+But, for our present purpose, there are three grand subjects, found in
+Paul's preaching, to which we desire to call the reader's attention.
+These are, first, the grace of God; secondly, the Person and work of
+Christ; and thirdly, the testimony of the Holy Ghost as given in the
+Holy Scriptures.
+
+We do not attempt to go into these vast subjects here; we merely name
+them, and entreat the reader to ponder them, to muse over them, and seek
+to make them his own.
+
+(I) The grace of God--His free, sovereign favor--is the source from
+whence salvation flows--salvation in all the length, breadth, height,
+and depth of that most precious word--salvation which stretches, like a
+golden chain, from the bosom of God, down to the very deepest depths of
+the sinner's guilty and ruined condition, and back again to the throne
+of God--meets all the sinner's necessities, overlaps the whole of the
+saint's history, and glorifies God in the highest possible manner.
+
+(2) Then, in the second place, the Person of Christ and His finished
+work are the _only_ channel through which salvation can possibly flow to
+the lost and guilty sinner. It is not the Church and her sacraments,
+religion and its rites and ceremonies--man or his doings in any shape or
+form. It is the death and resurrection of Christ. "He died for our sins,
+was buried, and rose again the third day." This was the gospel which
+Paul preached, by which the Corinthians were saved, and the apostle
+declares, with solemn emphasis, "If any man preach any other gospel, let
+him be accursed." Tremendous words for this our day!
+
+(3) But, thirdly, the authority on which we receive the salvation is the
+testimony of the Holy Ghost in Scripture. It is "according to the
+Scriptures." This is a most solid and comforting truth. It is not a
+question of feelings, or experiences, or evidences; it is a simple
+question of faith in God's word wrought in the heart by God's Spirit.
+
+It is a serious reflection for the evangelist, that wherever God's
+Spirit is at work, there Satan is sure to be busy. We must remember and
+ever be prepared for this. The enemy of Christ and the enemy of souls is
+always on the watch, always hovering about to see what he can do, either
+to hinder or corrupt the work of the gospel. This need not terrify or
+even discourage the workman; but it is well to bear it in mind and be
+watchful. Satan will leave no stone unturned to mar or hinder the
+blessed work of God's Spirit. He has proved himself the ceaseless,
+vigilant enemy of that work, from the days of Eden down to the present
+moment.
+
+Now, in tracing the history of Satan, we find him acting in two
+characters, namely, as a serpent, or as a lion--using craft or violence.
+He will try to deceive; and, if he cannot succeed, then he will use
+violence. Thus it is in this sixteenth chapter of the Acts. The
+apostle's heart had been cheered and refreshed by what we moderns should
+pronounce, "a beautiful case of conversion." Lydia's was a very real and
+decided case, in every respect. It was direct, positive, and
+unmistakable. She received Christ into her heart, and forthwith took
+Christian ground by submitting to the deeply significant ordinance of
+baptism. Nor was this all. She immediately opened her house to the
+Lord's messengers. Hers was no mere lip profession. It was not merely
+_saying_ she believed. She proved her faith in Christ, not only by going
+down under the water of baptism, but also by identifying herself and her
+household with the name and cause of that blessed One whom she had
+received into her heart by faith.
+
+All this was clear and satisfactory. But we must now look at something
+quite different. The serpent appears upon the scene in the person of
+
+
+THE DECEIVER.
+
+"It came to pass, as we went to prayer, a certain damsel possessed with
+a spirit of divination met us, which brought her masters much gain by
+soothsaying. The same followed Paul and us, and cried, saying, These men
+are the servants of the most high God, which show unto us the way of
+salvation. And this did she many days. But Paul, being grieved, turned
+and said to the spirit, I command thee in the name of Jesus Christ to
+come out of her. And he came out the same hour" (vers. 16-18).
+
+Here, then, was a case eminently calculated to test the spirituality and
+integrity of the evangelist. Most men would have hailed such words from
+the lips of this damsel as an encouraging testimony to the work. Why
+then was Paul grieved? Why did he not allow her to continue to bear
+witness to the object of his mission? Was she not saying the truth? Were
+they not the servants of the most high God? And were they not showing
+the way of salvation? Why be grieved with--why silence such a witness?
+Because it was of Satan; and, most assuredly, the apostle was not going
+to receive testimony from him. He could not allow Satan to help him in
+his work. True, he might have walked about the streets of Philippi owned
+and honored as a servant of God, if only he had consented to let the
+devil have a hand in the work. But Paul could never consent to this. He
+could never suffer the enemy to mix himself up with the work of the
+Lord. Had he done so, it would have given the deathblow to the testimony
+at Philippi. To have permitted Satan to put his hand to the work, would
+have involved the total shipwreck of the mission to Macedonia.
+
+It is deeply important for the Lord's workman to weigh this matter. We
+may rest assured that this narrative of the damsel has been written for
+our instruction.
+
+It is not only a statement of what has occurred, but a sample of what
+may and indeed what does occur every day.[XXVI.]
+
+Besides Christendom is full of false profession. There are multitudes of
+false professors at this moment, throughout the wide domain of Christian
+profession. It is sad to have to say it, but so it is, and we must press
+the fact upon the attention of the reader. We are surrounded, on all
+sides, by those who give a merely nominal assent to the truths of the
+Christian religion. They go on, from week to week, and from year to
+year, professing to believe certain things which they do not in reality
+believe at all. There are thousands who, every Lord's Day, profess to
+believe in the forgiveness of sins, and yet, were such persons to be
+examined, it would be found that they either do not think about the
+matter at all, or, if they do think, they deem it the very height of
+presumption for any one to be sure that his sins are forgiven.
+
+This is very serious. Only think of a person standing up in the presence
+of God and saying, "I believe in the forgiveness of sins," and all the
+while he does not believe any such thing! Can anything be more
+hardening to the heart, or more deadening to the conscience than this?
+It is our firm persuasion that the forms and the formularies of
+professing Christianity are doing more to ruin precious souls than all
+the forms of moral pravity put together. It is perfectly appalling to
+contemplate the countless multitudes that are at this moment rushing
+along the well-trodden highway of religious profession, down to the
+eternal flames of hell. We feel bound to raise a warning note. We want
+the reader most solemnly to take heed as to this matter.
+
+We have only instanced one special formulary, because it refers to a
+subject of very general interest and importance. How few, comparatively,
+are clear and settled as to the question of forgiveness of sins! How few
+are able, calmly, decidedly, and intelligently, to say, "_I know_ that
+my sins are forgiven!" How few are in the real enjoyment of full
+forgiveness of sins, through faith in that precious blood that cleanseth
+from all sin! How solemn, therefore, to hear people giving utterance to
+such words as these, "I believe in the forgiveness of sins," while, in
+fact, they do not believe their own very utterance! Is the reader in the
+habit of using such a form of words? Does he believe it? Say, dear
+friend, are thy sins forgiven? Art thou washed in the precious atoning
+blood of Christ? If not, why not? The way is open. There is no
+hindrance. Thou art perfectly welcome, this moment, to the free benefits
+of the atoning work of Christ. Though thy sins be as scarlet; though
+they be black as midnight, black as hell; though they rise like a
+dreadful mountain before the vision of thy troubled soul, and threaten
+to sink thee into eternal perdition; yet do these words shine with
+divine and heavenly lustre on the page of inspiration, "_The blood of
+Jesus Christ, God's Son, cleanseth us from_ ALL _sin_" (I John i. 7).
+
+But mark, friend, do not go on, week after week, mocking God, hardening
+thine own heart, and carrying out the schemes of the great enemy of
+Christ, by a false profession. This marks the damsel possessed by a
+spirit of divination, and here her history links itself with the present
+awful condition of Christendom. What was the burden of her song, during
+those "many days" in the which the apostle narrowly considered her case?
+"These men are the servants of the most high God, which _show unto us_
+the way of salvation." But she was not saved--she was not delivered--she
+was, all the while, under Satan's power herself.
+
+Thus it is with Christendom--thus it is with each false professor
+throughout the length and breadth of the professing Church. We know of
+nothing, even in the deepest depths of moral evil, or in the darkest
+shades of heathenism, more truly awful than the state of careless,
+hardened, self-satisfied, fallow-ground professors, who on each
+successive Lord's Day give utterance, either in their prayers or their
+singing, to words which, so far as they are concerned, are wholly
+false.
+
+The thought of this is, at times, almost over-whelming. We cannot dwell
+upon it. It is really too sorrowful. We shall therefore pass on, having
+once more solemnly warned the reader against every shade and degree of
+false profession. Let him not say or sing aught that he does not
+heartily believe. The devil is at the bottom of all false profession,
+and by means thereof he seeks to bring discredit on the work of the
+Lord.
+
+But how truly refreshing to contemplate the actings of the faithful
+apostle in the case of the damsel. Had he been seeking his own ends, or
+had he been merely a minister of religion, he might have welcomed her
+words as a tributary stream to swell the tide of his popularity, or
+promote the interest of his cause. But Paul was not a mere minister of
+religion; he was a minister of Christ--a totally different thing. And we
+may notice that the damsel does not say a word about Christ. She
+breathes not the precious, peerless name of Jesus. There is total
+silence as to Him. This stamps the whole thing as of Satan. "No man can
+call Jesus Lord but by the Holy Ghost." People may speak of God, and of
+religion; but Christ has no place in their hearts. The Pharisees, in the
+ninth of John, could say to the poor man, "Give God the praise;" but in
+speaking of Jesus, they could say, "This man is a sinner."
+
+Thus it is ever in the case of corrupt religion, or false profession.
+Thus it was with the damsel in Acts xvi. There was not a syllable about
+Christ.
+
+There was no truth, no life, no reality. It was hollow and false. It was
+of Satan; and hence Paul would not and could not own it; he was grieved
+with it and utterly rejected it.
+
+Would that all were like him! Would that there were the singleness of
+eye to detect, and the integrity of heart to reject the work of Satan in
+much that is going on around us! Such an eye Paul, through grace,
+possessed. He was not to be deceived. He saw that the whole affair was
+an effort of Satan to mix himself up with the work, that thus he might
+spoil it altogether. "But Paul, being grieved, turned and said to the
+spirit, I command thee, in the name of Jesus Christ, to come out of her.
+And he came out the same hour."
+
+This was true spiritual action. Paul was not in any haste to come into
+collision with the evil one, or even to pronounce upon the case at all;
+he waited many days; but the very moment that the enemy was detected he
+is resisted and repulsed with uncompromising decision. A less spiritual
+workman might have allowed the thing to pass, under the idea that it
+might turn to account and help forward the work. Paul thought
+differently; and he was right. He would take no help from Satan. He was
+not going to work by such an agency; and hence, in the name of Jesus
+Christ--that name which the enemy so sedulously excluded--he puts Satan
+to flight.
+
+But no sooner was Satan repulsed as the serpent, than he assumed the
+character of a lion. Craft having failed, he tried violence. "And when
+her masters saw that the hope of their gains was gone, they caught Paul
+and Silas and drew them into the market-place unto the rulers, and
+brought them to the magistrates, saying, These men, being Jews, do
+exceedingly trouble our city, and teach customs which are not lawful for
+us to receive, neither to observe, being Romans. And the multitude rose
+up together against them; and the magistrates rent off their clothes,
+and commanded to beat them. And when they had laid many stripes upon
+them, they cast them into prison, charging the jailor to keep them
+safely" (vers. 19-23).
+
+Thus the enemy seemed to triumph; but be it remembered that Christ's
+warriors gain their most splendid victories by apparent defeat. The
+devil made a great mistake when he cast the apostle into prison. Indeed
+it is consolatory to reflect that he has never done anything else but
+make mistakes, from the moment that he left his first estate down to the
+present moment. His entire history, from beginning to end, is one tissue
+of errors.
+
+And thus, as has been already remarked, the devil made a great mistake
+when he cast Paul into prison at Philippi. To nature's view it might
+have seemed otherwise; but in the judgment of faith, the servant of
+Christ was much more in his right place in prison for the truth's sake,
+than outside at his Master's expense. True, Paul might have saved
+himself. He might have been an honored man, owned and acknowledged as "a
+servant of the most high God," if he had only accepted the damsel's
+testimony, and suffered the devil to help him in his work. But he could
+not do this, and hence he had to suffer. "And the multitude (ever fickle
+and easily swayed) rose up together against them: and the magistrates
+rent off their clothes, and commanded to beat them. And when they had
+laid many stripes upon them, they cast them into prison, charging the
+jailor to keep them safely. Who, having received such a charge, _thrust_
+them into the inner prison, and made their feet fast in the stocks"
+(vers. 22-24).
+
+Here, then, some might have said, was an end to the work of the
+evangelist in the city of Philippi. Here was an effectual stop to the
+preaching. Not so; the prison was the very place, at the moment, for the
+evangelist. His work was there. He was to find a congregation within the
+prison walls which he could not have found outside. But this leads us,
+in the third and last place, to the case of
+
+
+THE HARDENED SINNER.
+
+It was very unlikely that the jailor would ever have found his way to
+the prayer-meeting at the river side. He had little care for such
+things. He was neither an earnest seeker, nor a deceiver. He was a
+hardened sinner, pursuing a very hardening occupation. Jailors, from the
+occupation of their office, are, generally speaking, hard and stern men.
+No doubt there are exceptions. There are some tender-hearted men to be
+found in such situations; but, as a rule, jailors are not tender. It
+would hardly suit them to be so. They have to do with the very worst
+class of society. Much of the crime of the whole country comes under
+their notice; and many of the criminals come under their charge.
+Accustomed to the rough and the coarse, they are apt to become rough and
+coarse themselves.
+
+Now, judging from the inspired narrative before us, we may well question
+if the Philippian jailor was an exception to the general rule with
+respect to men of his class. Certainly he does not seem to have shown
+much tenderness to Paul and Silas. "He _thrust_ them into the _inner_
+prison, and made their feet _fast_ in the stocks." He seems to have gone
+to the utmost extreme in making them uncomfortable.
+
+But God had rich mercy in store for that poor, hardened, cruel jailor;
+and, as it was not at all likely that he would go to hear the gospel,
+the Lord sent the gospel to him; and, moreover, He made the devil the
+instrument of sending it. Little did the jailor know whom he was
+thrusting into the inner prison--little did he anticipate what was to
+happen ere another sun should rise. And we may add, little did the devil
+think of what he was doing when he sent the preachers of the gospel into
+jail, there to be the means of the jailor's conversion. But the Lord
+Jesus Christ knew what He was about to do, in the case of a poor
+hardened sinner. He can make the wrath of man to praise Him and restrain
+the remainder.
+
+ "He everywhere hath sway,
+ And all things serve His might,
+ His ev'ry act pure blessing is,
+ His path unsullied light.
+
+ "When He makes bare His arm,
+ Who shall His work withstand?
+ When He His people's cause defends,
+ Who then shall stay His hand?"
+
+It was His purpose to save the jailor; and so far from Satan's being
+able to frustrate that purpose, he was actually made the instrument of
+accomplishing it. "God's purpose shall stand; and He will do all His
+pleasure." And where He sets His love upon a poor, wretched, guilty
+sinner, He will have him in heaven, spite of all the malice and rage of
+hell.
+
+As to Paul and Silas, it is very evident that they were in their right
+place in the prison. They were there _for the truth's sake_, and
+therefore _the Lord was with them_. Hence they were perfectly happy.
+What, though they were confined within the gloomy walls of the prison,
+with their feet made fast in the stocks, prison walls could not confine
+their spirits. Nothing can hinder the joy of one who has the Lord with
+him. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, were happy in the fiery furnace.
+Daniel was happy in the lions' den; and Paul and Silas were happy in the
+dungeon of Philippi: "And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang
+praises to God: and the prisoners heard them."
+
+What sounds to issue from the inner prison! We may safely say that no
+such sounds had ever issued thence before. Curses and execrations and
+blasphemous words might have been heard; sighs, cries, and groans come
+forth from those walls. But to hear the accents of prayer and praise,
+ascending at the midnight hour, must have seemed strange indeed. Faith
+can sing as sweetly in a dungeon as at a prayer-meeting. It matters not
+where we are, provided always that we have God with us. His presence
+lights up the darkest cell, and turns a dungeon into the very gate of
+heaven. He can make His servants happy anywhere, and give them victory
+over the most adverse circumstances, and cause them to shout for joy in
+scenes where nature would be overwhelmed with sorrow.
+
+But the Lord had His eye upon the jailor. He had written his name in the
+Lamb's book of life before the foundation of the world, and He was now
+about to lead him into the full joy of His salvation. "And suddenly
+there was a great earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were
+shaken: and immediately all the doors were opened, and every one's bands
+were loosed" (ver. 26).
+
+Now if Paul had not been in full communion with the mind and heart of
+Christ, he would assuredly have turned to Silas and said, "Now is the
+moment for us to make our escape. God has most manifestly appeared for
+us, and set before us an open door. If ever there was an opening of
+divine Providence surely this is one." But no; Paul knew better. He was
+in the full current of His blessed Master's thoughts, and in full
+sympathy with his Master's heart. Hence he made no attempt to escape.
+The claims of _truth_ had brought him into prison; the activities of
+_grace_ kept him there. Providence opened the door; but faith refused to
+walk out. People talk of being guided by Providence; but if Paul had
+been so guided, the jailor would never have been a jewel in his crown.
+
+"And the keeper of the prison awaking out of his sleep and seeing the
+prison doors open, he drew out his sword, and would have killed himself,
+supposing that the prisoners had been fled" (ver. 27). This proves, very
+plainly, that the earthquake, with all its attendant circumstances, had
+not touched the heart of the jailor. He naturally supposed, when he saw
+the doors open, that the prisoners were all gone. He could not imagine a
+number of prisoners sitting quietly in jail when the doors lay open and
+their chains were loosed. And then what was to become of him if the
+prisoners were gone? How could he face the authorities? Impossible.
+Anything but that. Death, even by his own hand, was preferable to that.
+
+Thus the devil had conducted this hardened sinner to the very brink of
+the precipice, and he was about to give him the final and fatal push
+over the edge, and down to the eternal flames of hell; when lo, a voice
+of love sounded in his ear. It was the voice of Jesus through the lips
+of His servant--a voice of tender and deep compassion--"_Do thyself no
+harm_."
+
+This was irresistible. A hardened sinner could meet an earthquake; he
+could meet death itself; but he could not withstand the mighty melting
+power of love. The hardest heart must yield to the moral influence of
+love. "Then he called for a light, and sprang in, and came _trembling_,
+and fell down before Paul and Silas, and brought them out, and said,
+Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" Love can break the hardest heart. And
+surely there was love in those words, "Do thyself no harm," coming from
+the lips of one to whom he had done so much harm a few hours before.
+
+And, be it noted, there was not a single syllable of reproach, or even
+of reflection, uttered by Paul to the jailor. This was Christ-like. It
+was the way of divine grace. If we look through the Gospels, we never
+find the Lord casting reproach upon the sinner. He has tears of sorrow;
+He has touching words of grace and tenderness; but no reproaches--no
+reflections--no reproach to the poor distressed sinner. We cannot
+attempt to furnish the many illustrations and proofs of this assertion;
+but the reader has only to turn to the gospel story to see its truth.
+Look at the prodigal: look at the thief. Not one reproving word to
+either.
+
+Thus it is in every case; and thus it was with God's Spirit in Paul. Not
+a word about the harsh treatment--the thrusting into the inner
+prison--not a word about the stocks. "Do thyself no harm." And then,
+"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy
+house."
+
+Such is the rich and precious grace of God. It shines, in this scene,
+with uncommon lustre. It delights in taking up hardened sinners, melting
+and subduing their hard hearts, and leading them into the sunlight of a
+full salvation; and all this in a style peculiar to itself. Yes, God has
+His style of doing things, blessed be His name; and when He saves a
+wretched sinner, He does it after such a fashion as fully proves that
+His whole heart is in the work. It is His joy to save a sinner--even the
+very chief--and He does it in a way worthy of Himself.
+
+And now, let us look at the fruit of all this. The jailor's conversion
+was most unmistakable. Saved from the very brink of hell, he was brought
+into the very atmosphere of heaven. Preserved from self-destruction, he
+was brought into the circle of God's salvation; and the evidences of
+this were as clear as could be desired. "And they spake unto him the
+word of the Lord, and to all that were in his house. And he took them
+the same hour of the night, and washed their stripes; and was baptized,
+he and all his straightway. And when he had brought them into his house,
+he set meat before them, and rejoiced, _believing in God, with all his
+house_."
+
+What a marvelous change! The ruthless jailor has become the generous
+host! "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are
+passed away: behold, all things are become new." How clearly we can now
+see that Paul was right in not being guided by _providences_! How much
+better and higher to be led by the "eye" of God! What an eternal loss
+it would have proved to him had he walked out at the open door! How much
+better to be conducted out by the very hand that had thrust him in--a
+hand once the instrument of cruelty and sin, now the instrument of
+righteousness and love! What a magnificent triumph! What a scene,
+altogether! How little had the devil anticipated such a result from the
+imprisonment of the Lord's servants! He was thoroughly outwitted. The
+tables were completely turned upon him. He thought to hinder the gospel,
+and, behold! he was made to help it on. He had hoped to get rid of two
+of Christ's servants, and, lo! he lost one of his own. Christ is
+stronger than Satan; and all who put their trust in Him and move in the
+current of His thoughts shall most assuredly share in the triumphs of
+His grace now, and shine in the brightness of His glory forever.
+
+Thus much, then, as to "the work of an evangelist." Such are the scenes
+through which he may have to pass--such the cases with which he may have
+to come in contact. We have seen the earnest seeker satisfied; the
+deceiver silenced; the hardened sinner saved. May all who go forth with
+the gospel of the grace of God know how to deal with the various types
+of character that may cross their path! May many be raised up to do the
+work of an evangelist!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXV.] The reader will notice that in Matthew vi. I, the marginal
+reading is the correct one: "Take heed that ye do not your
+_righteousness_ before men, to be seen of them." Then we have the three
+departments of this righteousness, namely, alms-giving (ver. 2); prayer
+(ver. 3); fasting (ver. 16). These were the very things Cornelius was
+doing. In short, he feared God, and was working righteousness, according
+to his measure of light.
+
+[XXVI.] [An evangelist will not travel far in our day to find persons
+who will take him warmly by the hand, and profess lively interest in his
+work. A moment's intercourse with them, however, will disclose them to
+be agents of "Christian Science," of "Millennial Dawn" of "Seventh Day
+Adventism" or of some one or other of like systems--messengers of Satan,
+all professing Christianity, though in reality destroyers of it; pluming
+themselves with its name, only to get inside and work destruction the
+more easily. ED.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+LETTERS TO AN EVANGELIST.
+
+
+DEAREST A----,
+
+I have been much interested, and I trust profited, of late, by tracing,
+through the Gospels and the Acts, the various notices of the work of
+evangelization; and it has occured to me that it may not be amiss to
+present to you, as one much occupied in the blessed work, a few of the
+thoughts that have suggested themselves to my mind. I shall feel myself
+much more free in this way, than if I were writing a formal treatise.
+
+And, first of all, I have been greatly struck with the simplicity with
+which the work of evangelizing was carried on in primitive times; so
+very unlike a great deal of what obtains among us. It seems to me that
+we moderns are quite too much hampered by conventional rules--too much
+fettered by the habits of Christendom. We are sadly deficient in what I
+may call spiritual elasticity. We are apt to think that in order to
+evangelize there must be a special gift; and even where there is this
+special gift, there must be a great deal of machinery and human
+arrangement. When we speak of doing the work of an evangelist, we, for
+the most part, have before our minds great public halls, and crowded
+audiences, for which there is a demand for considerable gift and power
+for speaking.
+
+Now you and I thoroughly believe, that in order to preach the gospel
+publicly, there must be a special gift from the Head of the Church; and,
+moreover, we believe according to Eph. iv. 11, that Christ has given,
+and does still give, "evangelists." This is clear, if we are to be
+guided by Scripture. But I find in the Gospels, and in the Acts of the
+Apostles, that a quantity of most blessed evangelistic work was done by
+persons who were not specially gifted at all, but who had an earnest
+love for souls, and a deep sense of the preciousness of Christ and His
+salvation. And, what is more, I find in those who were specially gifted,
+called, and appointed by Christ to preach the gospel, a simplicity,
+freedom, and naturalness in their mode of working, which I greatly covet
+for myself and for all my brethren.
+
+Let us look a little into Scripture. Take that lovely scene in John i.
+36-45. John pours out his heart in testimony to Jesus: "Behold the Lamb
+of God!" His soul was absorbed with the glorious Object. What was the
+result? "Two disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus." What
+then? "One of the two which heard John speak, and followed Him, was
+Andrew, Simon Peter's brother." And what does he do? "_He first findeth
+his own brother_ Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias,
+which is, being interpreted, the Christ. And he brought him to Jesus."
+Again, "The day following, Jesus would go forth into Galilee, and
+findeth Philip, and saith unto him, Follow Me.... _Philip findeth
+Nathanael_, and saith unto him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in the
+law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of
+Joseph.... _Come and see._"
+
+Here then, dearest A., is the style of thing for which I earnestly long:
+this individual work, this laying hold of the first man that comes in
+our way, this finding one's own brother, and bringing him to Jesus. I do
+feel we are deficient in this. It is all right enough to gather
+congregations, and address them, as God gives ability and opportunity.
+Neither you nor I would pen a single word to detract from the value of
+such a line of work. By all means hire rooms, halls, and theatres; put
+out bills inviting people to come; leave no lawful means untried to
+spread the gospel. Seek to get at souls as best you can. Far be it from
+me to cast a damp upon any who are seeking to carry on the work in this
+public way.
+
+But does it not strike you that we want more of the individual work?
+more of the private, earnest, personal dealing with souls? Do you not
+think that if we had more "Philips" we should have more "Nathanaels?" If
+we had more "Andrews," we should have more "Simons?" I cannot but
+believe it. There is amazing power in an earnest personal appeal. Do you
+not often find that it is after the more formal public preaching is
+finished, and the close personal work begins, that souls are reached?
+How is it then that there is so little of this latter? Does it not often
+happen at our public preachings, that when the formal address is
+delivered, a hymn sung, and a word of prayer offered, all disperse
+without any attempt at individual work? I speak not now, mark you, of
+the preacher--who cannot possibly reach every case, but of the scores of
+Christians who have been listening to him. They have seen strangers
+enter the room, they have sat beside them; they have, it may be, noticed
+their interest, seen the tear stealing down the cheek; and yet they have
+let them pass away without a single loving effort to reach them, or to
+follow up the good work.
+
+No doubt it may be said, "It is much better to allow the Spirit of God
+to follow up His own work. We may do more harm than good. And besides,
+people do not like to be spoken to: they will look upon it as an
+impertinent intrusion, and they will be driven away from the place
+altogether." There is considerable weight in all this. I fully
+appreciate it; and I am sure you do likewise, dearest A. I fear great
+blunders are committed by injudicious persons intruding upon the sacred
+privacy of the soul's deep and holy exercises. It needs tact and
+judgment; in short, it needs direct spiritual guidance to be able to
+deal with souls; to know whom to speak to, and what to say.
+
+But allowing all this, as we do in the fullest possible manner, I think
+you will agree with me that there is, as a rule, something lacking in
+connection with our public preachings. Is there not a want of that deep,
+personal, loving interest in souls which will express itself in a
+thousand ways that act powerfully on the heart? I confess that I have
+often been pained by what has come under my own notice in our
+preaching-rooms. Strangers come in and are left to find a seat wherever
+they can. No one seems to think of them. Christians are there, and they
+will hardly move to make room for them. No one offers them a Bible or
+hymn-book. And when the preaching is over, they are allowed to go as
+they came; not a loving word of inquiry as to whether they enjoyed the
+truth preached; not even a kindly look which might win confidence and
+invite conversation. On the contrary, there is a chilling reserve,
+amounting almost to repulsiveness.
+
+All this is very sorrowful; and perhaps you will tell me that I am
+drawing too highly colored a picture. Alas! the picture is only too
+true. And what makes it all the more deplorable is, that one knows as a
+fact that many persons frequent our preaching-rooms and lecture-halls in
+the deepest exercise, and they are only longing to open their hearts to
+some one who could offer them a little spiritual counsel; but through
+timidity, reserve, or nervousness, they shrink from making any advance,
+and have but to retire to their homes and to their bedchambers, lonely
+and sad, there to weep in solitude because no man cares for their
+precious souls. Now I feel persuaded that much of this might be remedied
+if those Christians who attend the gospel preachings were more _on the
+look out_ for souls: if they would attend, not so much for their own
+profit, as in order to be co-workers with God, in seeking to bring souls
+to Jesus. No doubt it is very refreshing to Christians to hear the
+gospel fully and faithfully preached. But it would not be the less
+refreshing because they were intensely interested in the conversion of
+souls, and in earnest prayer to God in the matter. And, besides, it
+could in no wise interfere with their personal enjoyment and profit to
+cultivate and manifest a lively and loving interest in those who
+surround them, and to seek at the close of the meeting to help any who
+may need and desire to be helped. It has a surprising effect upon the
+preacher, upon the preaching, upon the whole meeting, when the
+Christians who attend are really entering into, and discharging, their
+high and holy responsibilities to Christ and to souls. It imparts a
+certain tone and creates a certain atmosphere which must be felt in
+order to be understood; but when once felt it cannot easily be dispensed
+with.
+
+But, alas, how often is it otherwise! How cold, how dull, how
+dispiriting is it at times to see the whole congregation clear out the
+moment the preaching is over! No loving, lingering groups gathering
+round young converts or anxious inquirers. Old experienced Christians
+have been present; but, instead of pausing with the fond hope that God
+would graciously use them to speak a word in season to him that is
+weary, they hasten away as though it were a matter of life and death
+that they should be home at a certain hour.
+
+Do not suppose, dearest A., that I wish to lay down rules for my
+brethren. Far be the thought.
+
+I am merely, in the freest possible manner, pouring out the thoughts of
+my heart to one with whom I have been linked in the work of the gospel
+for many years. I feel convinced there is a something lacking. It is my
+firm persuasion that no Christian is in a right condition, if he is not
+seeking in some way to bring souls to Christ. And, on the same
+principle, no assembly of Christians is in a right condition if it be
+not a thoroughly evangelistic assembly. We should all be on the lookout
+for souls; and then we may rest assured we should see soul-stirring
+results. But if we are satisfied to go on from week to week, month to
+month, and year to year, without a single leaf stirring, without a
+single conversion, our state must be truly lamentable.
+
+But I think I hear you saying, "Where is all the Scripture we were to
+have had? where the many quotations from the Gospels and the Acts?"
+Well, I have gone on jotting down the thoughts which have for some
+considerable time occupied my mind; and now, space forbids my going
+further at present. But if you so desire, I shall write you a second
+letter on the subject. Meanwhile, may the Lord, by His Spirit, make us
+more earnest in seeking the salvation of immortal souls, by every
+legitimate agency. May our hearts be filled with genuine love for
+precious souls, and then we shall be sure to find ways and means of
+getting at them!
+
+Ever, believe me, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+There is one point in connection with our subject which has much
+occupied my mind; and that is, the immense importance of cultivating an
+earnest faith in the presence and action of the Holy Ghost. We want to
+remember, at all times, that we can do nothing, and that God the Holy
+Ghost can do all. It holds good in the great work of evangelization, as
+in all beside, that it is "not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit,
+saith the Lord of hosts." The abiding sense of this would keep us
+humble, and yet full of joyful confidence. Humble, because we can do
+nothing; full of joyful confidence, because God can do all. Moreover, it
+would have the effect of keeping us very sober and quiet in our
+work--not cold and indifferent, but calm and serious, which is a great
+matter just now. I was much struck with a remark lately made by an aged
+workman, in a letter to one who had just entered the field.
+"Excitement," says this writer, "is not power, but weakness. Earnestness
+and energy are of God."
+
+This is most true and most valuable. But I like the two sentences taken
+together. If we were to take either apart, I think you and I would
+prefer the latter; and for this reason: there are many, I fear, who
+would regard as "excitement" what you and I might really consider to be
+"earnestness and energy." Now I do confess, I love a deep-toned
+earnestness in the work. I do not see how a man can be otherwise than
+deeply and thoroughly in earnest, who realizes in any measure the
+awfulness of eternity, and the state of all those who die in their sins.
+How is it possible for any one to think of an immortal soul standing on
+the very brink of hell, and in danger at any moment of being dashed
+over, and not be serious and earnest?
+
+But this is not excitement. What I understand by excitement is the
+working up of mere nature, and the putting forth of such efforts of
+nature as are designed to work on the natural feelings--all high
+pressure--all that is merely sensational. This is all worthless. It is
+evanescent. And not only so, but it superinduces weakness. We never find
+aught of this in the ministry of our blessed Lord or His apostles: and
+yet what earnestness! what untiring energy! what tenderness! We see an
+earnestness which wore the appearance of being beside oneself; an energy
+which hardly afforded a moment for rest or refreshment; and a tenderness
+which could weep over impenitent sinners. All this we see; but no
+excitement. In a word, all was the fruit of the Eternal Spirit; and all
+was to the glory of God. Moreover, there was ever that calmness and
+solemnity which becomes the presence of God, and yet that deep
+earnestness which proved that man's serious condition was fully
+realized.
+
+Now, dear brother, this is precisely what we want, and what we ought
+diligently to cultivate. It is a signal mercy to be kept from all
+merely natural excitement; and, at the same time, to be duly impressed
+with the magnitude and solemnity of the work. Thus the mind will be kept
+properly balanced, and we shall be preserved from the tendency to be
+occupied with _our_ work merely because it is ours. We shall rejoice
+that Christ is magnified, and souls are saved, whoever be the instrument
+used.
+
+I have been thinking a good deal lately of that memorable time, now
+exactly ten years ago, when the Spirit of God wrought so marvelously in
+the province of Ulster. I think I gathered up some valuable instruction
+from what then came under my notice. That was a time never to be
+forgotten by those who were privileged to be eyewitnesses of the
+magnificent wave of blessing which rolled over the land. But I now refer
+to it in connection with the subject of the Spirit's action. I have no
+doubt whatever that the Holy Ghost was grieved and hindered in the year
+1859, by man's interference. You remember how that work began. You
+remember the little school-house by the road side, where two or three
+men met, week after week, to pour out their hearts in prayer to God,
+that He would be pleased to break in upon the death and darkness which
+reigned around: and that He would revive His work, and send out His
+light and His truth in converting power. You know how these prayers were
+heard and answered. You and I were privileged to move through these
+soul-stirring scenes in the province of Ulster; and I doubt not the
+memory of them is fresh with you, as it is with me, this day.
+
+Well, what was the special character of that work in its earlier stages?
+Was it not most manifestly a work of God's Spirit? Did not He take up
+and use instruments the most unfit and unfurnished, according to human
+thinking, for the accomplishment of His gracious purpose? Do we not
+remember the style and character of the agents who were chiefly used in
+the conversion of souls? Were they not for the most part "unlearned and
+ignorant men?" And further, can we not distinctly recall the fact that
+there was a most decided setting aside of all human arrangement and
+official routine? Working men came from the field, the factory, and the
+workshop, to address crowded audiences; and we have seen hundreds
+hanging in breathless interest upon the lips of men who could not speak
+five words of good grammar. In short, the mighty tide of spiritual life
+and power rolled in upon us, and swept away for the time being a
+quantity of human machinery, and ignored all question of man's authority
+in the things of God and the service of Christ.
+
+Now we can well remember, that just in so far as the Holy Ghost was
+owned and honored, did the glorious work progress; and, on the other
+hand, in proportion as man intruded himself, in bustling
+self-importance, upon the domain of the Eternal Spirit, was the work
+hindered and quashed. I saw the truth of this illustrated in numberless
+cases. There was a vigorous effort made to cause the living water to
+flow in official and denominational channels, and this the Holy Ghost
+would not sanction. Moreover, there was a strong desire manifested, in
+many quarters, to make sectarian capital out of the blessed movement;
+and this the Holy Ghost resented.
+
+Nor was this all. The work and the workman were _lionized_ in all
+directions. Cases of conversion which were judged to be "striking" were
+blazed abroad and paraded in the public prints. Travellers and tourists
+from all parts visited these persons, took notes of their words and
+ways, and wafted the report of them to the ends of the earth. Many poor
+creatures, who had up to that time lived in obscurity, unknown and
+unnoticed, found themselves, all of a sudden, objects of interest to the
+wealthy, the noble, and the public at large. The pulpit and the press
+proclaimed their sayings and doings; and, as might be expected, they
+completely lost their balance. Knaves and hypocrites abounded on all
+hands. It became a grand point to have some strange and extravagant
+experience to tell; some remarkable dream or vision to relate. And even
+where this ill-advised line of action did not issue in producing knavery
+and hypocrisy, the young converts became heady and high-minded, and
+looked with a measure of contempt upon old established Christians, or
+those who did not happen to be converted after their peculiar
+fashion--"stricken," as it was termed.
+
+In addition to this, some very remarkable characters--men of desperate
+notoriety, who seemed to be converted, were conveyed from place to
+place, and placarded about the various streets, and crowds gathered to
+see them and hear them recount their history; which history was very
+frequently a disgusting detail of immoralities and excesses which ought
+never to have been named. Several of these remarkable men afterwards
+broke down, and returned with increased ardor to their former practices.
+
+These things, dearest A., I witnessed in various places. I believe the
+Holy Ghost was grieved and hindered, and the work marred thereby. I am
+thoroughly convinced of this: and hence it is that I think we should
+earnestly seek to honor the blessed Spirit; to lean upon Him in all our
+work; to follow where He leads, not run before Him. His work will stand:
+"Whatsoever God doeth it shall be forever." "The works that are done
+upon the earth, He is the doer of them." The remembrance of this will
+ever keep the mind well balanced. There is great danger of young workmen
+getting so excited about _their_ work, _their_ preaching, _their_ gifts,
+as to lose sight of the blessed Master Himself. Moreover, they are apt
+to make preaching the _end_ instead of the _means_. This works badly in
+every way. It injures themselves, and it mars their work. The moment I
+make preaching my end, I am out of the current of the mind of God, whose
+end is to glorify Christ; and I am out of the current of the heart of
+Christ, whose end is the salvation of souls and the full blessing of His
+Church. But where the Holy Ghost gets His proper place, where He is duly
+owned and trusted, there all will be right. There will be no exaltation
+of man; no bustling self-importance; no parading of the fruits of our
+work; no excitement. All will be calm, quiet, real, and unpretending.
+There will be the simple, earnest, believing, patient waiting upon God.
+Self will be in the shade; Christ will be exalted.
+
+I often recall a sentence of yours. I remember your once saying to me,
+"Heaven will be the best and safest place to hear the results of our
+work." This is a wholesome word for all workmen. I shudder when I see
+the names of Christ's servants paraded in the public journals, with
+flattering allusion to their work and its fruits. Surely those who pen
+such articles ought to reflect upon what they are doing: they should
+consider that they may be ministering to the very thing which they ought
+to desire to see mortified and subdued. I am most fully persuaded that
+the quiet, shady, retired path is the best and safest for the Christian
+workman. It will not make him less earnest but the contrary. It will not
+cramp his energy, but increase and intensify it. God forbid that you or
+I should pen a line or utter a sentence which might in the most remote
+way tend to discourage or hinder a single worker in all the vineyard of
+Christ. No, no, this is not the moment for aught of this kind. We want
+to see the Lord's laborers thoroughly in earnest; but we believe, most
+assuredly, that true earnestness will ever result from the most absolute
+dependence upon God the Holy Ghost.
+
+But only see how I have run on! And yet I have not referred to those
+passages of Scripture of which I spoke in my last. Well, dearly beloved
+in the Lord, I am addressing one who is happily familiar with the
+Gospels and Acts, and who therefore knows that the great Workman
+Himself, and all those who sought to tread in His blessed footsteps,
+owned and honored the Eternal Spirit as the One by whom all their works
+were to be wrought.
+
+I must now close for the present, my much loved brother and
+fellow-laborer; and I do so with a full heart, commending you, in spirit
+and soul and body, to Him who has loved us, and washed us from our sins
+in His own blood, and called us to the honored post of workers in His
+gospel field. May He bless you and yours, most abundantly, and increase
+your usefulness a thousandfold!
+
+As ever, and for ever, Your deeply affectionate work-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+There is another point which stands intimately connected with the
+subject of my last letter, and that is, the place the word of God
+occupies in the work of evangelization. In my last letter, as you will
+remember, I referred to the work of the Holy Ghost, and the immense
+importance of giving Him His proper place. How clearly the precious word
+of God is connected with the action of the Holy Spirit, I need not say.
+Both are inseparably linked in those memorable words of our Lord to
+Nicodemus--words so little understood--so sadly misapplied: "Except a
+man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
+of God" (John iii).
+
+Now, you and I, dearest A., fully believe that in the above passage the
+Word is presented under the figure of "water." Thank God, we are not
+disposed to give any credit to the ritualistic absurdity of baptismal
+regeneration. We are, I believe, most thoroughly convinced that no one
+ever did, ever will, or ever could, get life by water baptism. That all
+who believe in Christ ought to be baptized we fully admit; but this is a
+totally different thing from the fatal error that substitutes an
+ordinance for the atoning death of Christ, the regenerating power of the
+Holy Ghost, and the life-giving virtues of the word of God. I shall not
+waste your time or my own in combating this error, but at once assume
+that you agree with me in thinking that when our Lord speaks of being
+"born of water and of the Spirit," He refers to the Word and the Holy
+Ghost.
+
+Thus, then, the Word is the grand instrument to be used in the work of
+evangelization. Many passages of holy Scripture establish this point
+with such clearness and decision as to leave no room whatever for
+dispute. In the first chapter of James, ver. 18, we read, "Of His own
+will begat He us _with the word of truth_." Again, in I Pet. i. 23, we
+read, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible,
+_by the word of God_, which liveth and abideth forever." I must quote
+the whole passage because of its immense importance in connection with
+our subject: "For all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the
+flower of grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth
+away; but the word of the Lord endureth forever. _And this is the word
+which by the gospel is preached unto you._"
+
+This last clause is of unspeakable value to the evangelist. It binds
+him, in the most distinct manner, to the word of God as the
+instrument--the only instrument--the all-sufficient instrument, to be
+used in his glorious work. He is to give the Word to the people; and the
+more simply he gives it the better. The pure water should be allowed to
+flow from the heart of God to the heart of the sinner, without receiving
+a tinge from the channel through which it flows. The evangelist is to
+preach the Word; and he is to preach it in simple dependence upon the
+power of the Holy Ghost. This is the true secret of success in
+preaching.
+
+But while I urge this great cardinal point in the work of preaching--and
+I believe it cannot be too strongly urged--I am very far indeed from
+thinking that the evangelist should give his hearers a quantity of
+truth. So far from this, I consider it a very great mistake. He ought to
+leave this to the teacher, lecturer, or pastor. I often fear that very
+much of our preaching shoots over the heads of the people, owing to the
+fact of our seeking rather to unfold truth than to reach souls. We rest
+satisfied, it may be, with having delivered a very clear and forcible
+lecture, a very interesting and instructive exposition of Scripture,
+something very valuable for the people of God; but the unconverted
+hearer has sat unmoved, unreached, unimpressed. There has been nothing
+for him. The lecturer has been more occupied with his lecture than with
+the sinner--more taken up with his subject than with the soul.
+
+Now I am thoroughly convinced that this is a serious mistake, and one
+into which we all--at least I am--very apt to fall. I deplore it deeply,
+and I earnestly desire to correct it. I question if this very mistake
+may not be viewed as the true secret of our lack of success. But,
+dearest A., I should not perhaps say "_our_ lack" but _my_ lack. I do
+not think--so far as I know aught of your ministry--that you are exactly
+chargeable with the defect to which I am now just referring. Of this,
+however, you will be the best judge yourself; but of one thing I am
+certain, namely, that the most successful evangelist is the one who
+keeps his eye fixed on the sinner, who has his heart bent on the
+salvation of souls, yea, the one with whom the love for precious souls
+amounts almost to a passion. It is not the man who unfolds the most
+truth, but the man who longs most after souls, that will have the most
+seals to his ministry.
+
+I assert all this, mark you, in the full and clear recognition of the
+fact with which I commenced this letter, namely, that the Word is the
+grand instrument in the work of conversion. This fact must never be lost
+sight of, never weakened. It matters not what agency may be used to make
+the furrow, or in what form the Word may clothe itself, or by what
+vehicle it may be conveyed; it is only by "the Word of truth" that souls
+are begotten.
+
+All this is divinely true, and we would ever bear it in mind. But do we
+not often find that persons who undertake to preach the gospel
+(particularly if they continue long in one place) are very apt to leave
+the domain of the evangelist--most blessed domain!--and travel into that
+of the teacher and lecturer? This is what I deprecate and deeply
+deplore. I know I have erred in this way myself, and I mourn over the
+error. I write in all loving freedom to you--the Lord has of late
+deepened immensely in my soul the sense of the vast importance of
+earnest gospel preaching. I do not--God forbid that I should--think the
+less of the work of a teacher or pastor. I believe that wherever there
+is a heart that loves Christ, it will delight to feed and tend the
+precious lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ, that flock which He
+purchased with His own blood.
+
+But the sheep must be gathered before they can be fed; and how are they
+to be gathered but by the earnest preaching of the gospel? It is the
+grand business of the evangelist to go forth upon the dark mountains of
+sin and error, to sound the gospel trumpet and gather the sheep; and I
+feel convinced that he will best accomplish this work, not by elaborate
+exposition of truth; not by lectures however clear, valuable, and
+instructive; not by lovely unfoldings of prophetic, dispensational, or
+doctrinal truth--most precious and important in the right place--but by
+fervid, pointed, earnest dealing with immortal souls; the warning voice,
+the solemn appeal, the faithful reasoning of righteousness, temperance,
+and judgment to come--the awakening presentation of death and judgment,
+the dread realities of eternity, the lake of fire and the worm that
+never dies.
+
+In short, beloved, it strikes me we want awakening preachers. I fully
+admit that there is such a thing as _teaching_ the gospel, as well as
+_preaching_ it. For example, I find Paul teaching the gospel in Rom.
+i.-viii. just as I find him preaching the gospel in Acts xiii. or xvii.
+This is of the very last importance at all times, inasmuch as there are
+almost sure to be a number of what we call "exercised souls" at our
+public preachings, and these need an emancipating gospel--the full,
+clear, elevated, resurrection gospel.
+
+But admitting all this, I still believe that what is needed for
+successful evangelization is, not so much a great quantity of truth as
+an intense love for souls. Look at that eminent evangelist George
+Whitefield. What think you was the secret of his success? No doubt you
+have looked into his printed sermons. Have you found any great breadth
+of truth in them? I question it. Indeed I must say I have been struck
+with the contrary. But oh! there was that in Whitefield which you and I
+may well covet and long to cultivate. There was a burning love for
+souls--a thirst for their salvation--a mighty grappling with the
+conscience--a bold, earnest, face-to-face dealing with men about their
+past ways, their present state, their future destiny. These were the
+things that God owned and blessed; and He will own and bless them still.
+I am persuaded--I write as under the very eye of God--that if our hearts
+are bent upon the salvation of souls, God will use us in that divine and
+glorious work. But on the other hand, if we abandon ourselves to the
+withering influences of a cold, heartless, godless fatalism; if we
+content ourselves with a formal and official statement of the gospel--a
+very cheerless sort of thing; if, to use a vulgar phrase, our preaching
+is on the principle of "take it or leave it," need we wonder if we do
+not see conversions? The wonder would be if there were any to see.
+
+No, no; I believe we want to look seriously into this great practical
+subject. It demands the solemn and dispassionate consideration of all
+who are engaged in the work. There are dangers on all sides. There are
+conflicting opinions on all sides. But I cannot conceive how any
+Christian man can be satisfied to shirk the responsibility of looking
+after souls. A man may say, "I am not an evangelist; that is not my
+line; I am more of a teacher, or a pastor." Well, I understand this; but
+will any one tell me that a teacher or pastor may not go forth in
+earnest longing after souls? I cannot admit it for a moment. Nay more;
+it does not matter in the least what a man's gift is, or even though he
+should not possess any prominent gift at all, he can and ought,
+nevertheless, to cultivate a longing desire for the salvation of souls.
+Would it be right to pass a house on fire, without giving warning, even
+though one were not a member of the Fire Brigade? Should we not seek to
+save a drowning man, even though we could not command the use of a
+patent life-boat? Who in his senses would maintain aught so monstrous?
+So, in reference to souls, it is not so much a gift or knowledge of
+truth that is needed, as a deep and earnest longing for souls--a keen
+sense of their danger, and a desire for their rescue.
+
+Ever, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+When I took up my pen to address you in my first letter, I had no idea
+that I should have occasion to extend the series to a fourth. However,
+the subject is one of intense interest to me; and there are just two or
+three points further on which I desire very briefly to touch.
+
+And in the first place I deeply feel our lack of a prayerful spirit in
+carrying on the work of evangelization. I have referred to the subject
+of the Spirit's work; and also to the place which God's word ought ever
+to get; but it strikes me we are very deficient in reference to the
+matter of earnest, persevering, believing prayer. This is the true
+secret of power. "We," say the apostles, "will give ourselves
+continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word."
+
+Here is the order: "Prayer, and the ministry of the Word." Prayer brings
+in the power of God; and this is what we want. It is not the power of
+eloquence, but the power of God; and this can only be had by waiting
+upon Him. "He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might
+He increaseth strength. Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and
+the young men shall utterly fall: but they that wait upon the Lord shall
+renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they
+shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint" (Isa.
+xl. 29-31).
+
+It seems to me, dearest A., that we are far too mechanical, if I may so
+express myself, in the work. There is too much of what I may call going
+through a service. I greatly fear that some of us are more on our legs
+than on our knees; more in the railway carriage than in the closet; more
+on the road than in the sanctuary; more before men than before God. This
+will never do. It is impossible that our preaching can be marked by
+power and crowned with results, if we fail in waiting upon God. Look at
+the blessed Master Himself--that great Workman. See how often He was
+found in prayer. At His baptism; at His transfiguration; previous to the
+appointment and mission of the twelve. In short, again and again we find
+that blessed One in the attitude of prayer. At one time He rises up a
+great while before day, in order to give Himself to prayer. At another
+time He spends the whole night in prayer, because the day was given up
+to work.
+
+What an example for us! May we follow it! May we know a little better
+what it is to agonize in prayer. How little we know of this!--I speak
+for myself. It sometimes appears to me as if we were so much taken up
+with preaching engagements that we have no time for prayer--no time for
+closet work--no time to be alone with God. We get into a sort of whirl
+of public work; we rush from place to place, from meeting to meeting, in
+a prayerless, barren condition of soul. Need we wonder at the little
+result? How could it be otherwise when we so fail in waiting upon God?
+_We_ cannot convert souls--God alone can do this; and if we go on
+without waiting on Him, if we allow public preaching to displace private
+prayer, we may rest assured our preaching will prove barren and
+worthless. We really must "give ourselves to prayer" if we would succeed
+in the "ministry of the Word."
+
+Nor is this all. It is not merely that we are lacking in the holy and
+blessed practice of private prayer. This is, alas! too true, as I have
+said. But there is more than this. We fail in our public meetings for
+prayer. The great work of evangelization is not sufficiently remembered
+in our prayer-meetings. It is not definitely, earnestly, and constantly
+kept before God in our public reunions. It may occasionally be
+introduced in a cursory, formal manner, and then dismissed. Indeed, I
+feel there is a great lack of earnestness and perseverance in our
+prayer-meetings generally, not merely as to the work of the gospel, but
+as to other things as well. There is frequently great formality and
+feebleness. We do not seem like men in earnest. We lack the spirit of
+the widow in Luke xviii., who overcame the unjust judge by the bare
+force of her importunity. We seem to forget that God will be inquired
+of; and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.
+
+It is of no use for any one to say, "God can work without our earnest
+pleading; He will accomplish His purposes; He will gather out His own."
+We know all this; but we know also that He who has appointed the end
+has appointed the means; and if we fail in waiting on Him, He will get
+others to do His work. The work will be done, no doubt, but we shall
+lose the dignity, the privilege, and the reward of working. Is this
+nothing? Is it nothing to be deprived of the sweet privilege of being
+co-workers with God, of having fellowship with Him in the blessed work
+which He is carrying on? Alas! alas! that we prize it so little. Still
+we do prize it; and perhaps there are few things in which we can more
+fully taste this privilege than in united earnest prayer. Here every
+saint can join. Here all can add their cordial Amen. All may not be
+preachers; but all can pray--all join in prayer; all can have
+fellowship.
+
+And do you not find, beloved brother, that there is always a stream of
+deep and real blessing where _the assembly_ is drawn out in earnest
+prayer for the gospel, and for the salvation of souls? I have invariably
+seen it, and hence it is always a source of unspeakable comfort, joy,
+and encouragement to my heart when I see the assembly stirred up to
+pray, for then I am sure God is going to give copious showers of
+blessing.
+
+Moreover, when this is the case, when this most excellent spirit
+pervades the whole assembly, you may be sure there will be no trouble as
+to what is called "The responsibility of the preaching." It will be all
+the same who does the work, provided it is done as well as it can be. If
+the assembly is waiting upon God, in earnest intercession for the
+progress of the work, it will not be a question as to the one who is to
+take the preaching, provided Christ is preached and souls are blessed.
+
+Then there is another thing which has of late occupied my mind a good
+deal; and that is our method of dealing with young converts. Most surely
+there is immense need of care and caution, lest we be found accrediting
+what is not the genuine work of God's Spirit at all. There is very great
+danger here. The enemy is ever seeking to introduce spurious materials
+into the assembly, in order that he may mar the testimony and bring
+discredit upon the truth of God.
+
+All this is most true, and demands our serious consideration. But does
+it not seem to you, beloved, that we often err on the other side? Do we
+not often, by a stiff and peculiar style, cast a chill upon young
+converts? Is there not frequently something repulsive in our spirit and
+deportment? We expect young Christians to come up to a standard of
+intelligence which has taken us years to attain. Nor this only. We
+sometimes put them through a process of examination which only tends to
+harass and perplex.
+
+Now assuredly this is not right. The Spirit of God would never puzzle,
+perplex, or repulse a dear anxious inquirer--never, no never. It could
+never be according to the mind or heart of Christ to chill the spirit of
+the very feeblest lamb in all His blood-bought flock. He would have us
+seeking to lead them on gently and tenderly--to soothe, nourish, and
+cherish them, according to all the deep love of His heart. It is a great
+thing to lay ourselves out, and hold ourselves open to discern and
+appreciate the work of God in souls, and not to mar it by placing our
+own miserable crotchets as stumbling-blocks in their pathway. We need
+divine guidance and help in this as much as in any other department of
+our work. But, blessed be God, He is sufficient for this as for all
+beside. Let us only wait on Him: let us cling to Him, and draw upon His
+exhaustless treasury for each case as it arises, for exigence of every
+hour. He will never fail a trusting, expectant, dependent heart.
+
+I must now close this series of letters. I think I have touched most, if
+not all, of the points which I had in my mind. You will, I trust, bear
+in mind, beloved in the Lord, that I have, in all these letters, simply
+jotted down my thoughts in the utmost possible freedom, and in all the
+intimacy of true brotherly friendship. I have not been writing a formal
+treatise, but pouring out my heart to a beloved friend and yoke-fellow.
+This must be borne in mind by all who may read these letters.
+
+May God bless and keep you, dearest A. May He crown your labours with
+His richest and best blessing! May He keep you from every evil work, and
+preserve you unto His own everlasting kingdom!
+
+Ever believe me, My dearest A., Your deeply affectionate * * *
+
+
+LETTER V.
+
+It seems as though I must once more take up my pen to address you on
+certain matters connected with the work of evangelization, which have
+forced themselves upon my attention for some time past. There are three
+distinct branches of the work which I long to see occupying a far more
+definite and prominent place among us; and these are, the Tract depot,
+the Gospel preaching, and the Sunday-school.
+
+It strikes me that the Lord is awakening attention to the importance of
+the Tract depot as a valuable agency in the work of evangelization; but
+I question if we, on this side of the Atlantic, are thoroughly in
+earnest on the subject. How is this? Have books and tracts lost their
+interest and value in our eyes? Or does the fault lie in the mode of
+conducting our Tract depots? To my mind there seems to be something
+lacking in reference to this matter.
+
+I would fain see a well-conducted depot in every important town; by
+"well-conducted" I mean one taken up and carried on as a direct service
+to the Lord, in true love for souls, deep interest in the spread of the
+truth, and at the same time in a sound business way. I have known
+several depots fall to the ground through lack of business habits on the
+part of the conductors. They seemed very earnest, sincere persons, but
+quite unfit to conduct a business. In short, they were persons in whose
+hands any business would have fallen through. Then in many places there
+is the most deplorable failure as to the valuable and interesting work
+of conducting a depot.
+
+And how can we best reach the people, for whom the tracts and books are
+prepared? I believe by having the books and tracts exposed for sale in a
+shop window, where that is possible, so that people may see them as they
+pass, and step in and purchase what they want. Many a soul has been laid
+hold of in this way. Many, I doubt not, have been saved and blessed by
+means of tracts, seen for the first time in a shop window or arranged on
+a counter. But where there is no such opportunity, the assembly's
+meeting-room is the Tract depot's natural home.
+
+There is, manifestly, a real want of a Tract depot in every large town,
+conducted by some one of intelligence and sound business habits, who
+would be able to speak to persons about the tracts, and to recommend
+such as might prove helpful to anxious inquirers after truth. In this
+way, I feel persuaded, much good might be done. The Christians in the
+town would know where to go for tracts, not only for their own personal
+reading, but also for general distribution. Surely if a thing is worth
+doing at all, it is worth doing well; and if the Tract depot be not
+worth attending to, we know not what is.
+
+The Tract depot must be taken up in direct service to Christ. And I feel
+assured that where it is so taken up and so carried on, in energy,
+zeal, and integrity, the Lord will own it and He will make it a
+blessing. Is there no one who will take up this valuable work for
+Christ's sake and not for the sake of remuneration? Is there no one who
+will enter upon it in simple faith, looking to the living God?
+
+Here lies the root of the matter, dearest A. For this branch of the
+work, as for every other branch, we need those who trust God and deny
+themselves. It seems to me that a grand point would be gained if the
+Tract depot were placed on its proper footing, and viewed as an integral
+part of the evangelistic work, to be taken up in responsibility to the
+Lord, and carried on in the energy of faith in the living God. Every
+branch of gospel work--the Depot, the Preaching, the Sunday-school--must
+be carried on in this way. It is all well and most valuable to have
+fellowship--full cordial fellowship, in all our service; but if we wait
+for fellowship and co-operation in the starting of work which comes
+within the range of personal, as well as collective, responsibility, we
+shall find ourselves very much behind--or the work may not be done at
+all.
+
+I shall have occasion to refer more particularly to this point, when I
+come to treat of the Preaching and the Sunday-school. All I want now, is
+to establish the fact that the Tract depot is a branch, and a most
+important and efficient branch, of evangelistic work. If this be
+thoroughly grasped by our friends, a great point is gained. I must
+confess to you, dearest A., that my moral sense has often been
+grievously offended by the cold, commercial style in which the
+publishing and sale of books and tracts are spoken of--a style befitting
+perhaps a mere commercial business, but most offensive when adopted in
+reference to the precious work of God. I admit in the fullest way--nay,
+I actually contend for it--that the proper management of the depot
+demands good sound business habits, and upright business principles. But
+at the same time I am persuaded that the Tract depot will never occupy
+its true ground--never realize the true idea, never reach the desired
+end--until it is firmly fixed on its holy basis, and viewed as an
+integral part of that most glorious work to which we are called--even
+the work of active, earnest, persevering evangelization.
+
+And this work must be taken up in the sense of responsibility to Christ,
+and in the energy of faith in the living God. It will not do for an
+assembly of Christians, or some wealthy individual, to take up an
+inefficient protégé, and commit to such an one the management of the
+affair in order to afford a means of living. It is most blessed for all
+to have fellowship in the work; but I am thoroughly convinced that the
+work must be taken up in direct service to Christ, to be carried on in
+love for souls, and real interest in the spread of the truth.
+
+I hope to address you again on the other two branches of my theme.
+
+Meanwhile, I remain, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, *
+* *
+
+
+LETTER VI.
+
+I have, in some of the earlier letters of this series, dwelt upon the
+unspeakable importance of keeping up with zeal and constancy, a faithful
+preaching of the gospel--a distinct work of evangelization, carried on
+in the energy of love to precious souls, and with direct reference to
+the glory of Christ--a work bearing entirely upon the unconverted, and
+therefore quite distinct from the work of teaching, lecturing, or
+exhorting, in the bosom of the assembly; which latter is, I need not
+say, of equal importance in the mind of our Lord Christ.
+
+My object in referring again to this subject is to call your attention
+to a point in connection with it, respecting which, it seems to me,
+there is a great want of clearness amongst some of our friends. I
+question if we are, as a rule, thoroughly clear as to the question of
+individual responsibility in the work of the gospel. I admit, of course,
+that the teacher or lecturer is called to exercise his gift, to a very
+great extent, on the same principle as the evangelist; that is, on his
+own personal responsibility to Christ; and that the assembly is not
+responsible for his individual services; unless indeed he teach unsound
+doctrine, in which case the assembly is bound to take it up.
+
+But my business is with the work of the evangelist; and he is to carry
+on his work outside of the assembly. His sphere of action is the wide,
+wide world. "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
+creature." Here is the sphere and here the object of the
+evangelist--"_All_ the world"--"_Every_ creature." He may go forth from
+the bosom of the assembly, and return thither again laden with his
+golden sheaves; nevertheless he goes forth in the energy of personal
+faith in the living God, and on the ground of personal responsibility to
+Christ; nor is the assembly responsible for the peculiar _mode_ in which
+he may carry on his work. No doubt the assembly is called into action
+when the evangelist introduces the _fruit_ of his work in the shape of
+souls professing to be converted, and desiring to be received into
+fellowship at the Lord's table. But this is another thing altogether,
+and must be kept distinct. The evangelist must be left free: this is
+what I contend for. He must not be tied down to certain rules or
+regulations, nor cramped by special conventionalities. There are many
+things which a large-hearted evangelist will feel perfectly free to do
+which might not commend themselves to the spiritual judgment and
+feelings of some in the assembly; but, provided he does not traverse any
+vital or fundamental principle, such persons have no right to interfere
+with him.
+
+And be it remembered, dearest A., that when I use the expression,
+"spiritual judgment and feelings," I am taking the very highest possible
+view of the case, and treating the objector with the highest respect. I
+feel this is but right and proper. Every true man has a right to have
+his feelings and judgment--not to speak of conscience--treated with all
+due respect. There are, alas! everywhere, men of narrow mind, who object
+to everything that does not square with their own notions--men who would
+fain tie the evangelist down to the exact line of things and mode of
+acting which according to their thinking would suit the assembly of
+God's people when gathered for worship at the table of the Lord.
+
+All this is a thorough mistake. The evangelist should pursue the even
+tenor of his way, regardless of all such narrowness and meddling. Take,
+for example, the matter of singing hymns. The evangelist may feel
+perfectly free to use a class of hymns or gospel songs which would be
+wholly unsuitable for the assembly. The fact is, he _sings_ the gospel
+for the same object that he _preaches_ it, namely, to reach the sinner's
+heart. He is just as ready to sing "Come" as to preach it.
+
+Such, dearest A., is the judgment which I have had on this subject for
+many years, though I am not quite sure if it will fully commend itself
+to your spiritual mind. It strikes me we are in danger of slipping into
+Christendom's false notion of "establishing a cause," and "organizing a
+body." Hence it is that the four walls in which the assembly meets are
+regarded by many as a "chapel," and the evangelist who happens to preach
+there is looked upon as "the minister of the chapel."
+
+All this has to be carefully guarded against: but my object in referring
+to it now is to clear up the point with respect to the gospel preaching.
+The true evangelist is not the minister of any chapel; or the organ of
+any congregation; or the representative of a body; or the paid agent of
+any society. No; he is the ambassador of Christ--the messenger of a God
+of love--the herald of glad tidings. His heart is filled with love to
+souls; his lips anointed by the Holy Ghost; his words clothed with
+heavenly power. Let him alone! Fetter him not by your rules and
+regulations! Leave him to his work and to his Master! And further, bear
+in mind that the Church of God can afford a platform broad enough for
+all sorts of workmen and every possible style of work, _provided only_
+that foundation truth be not disturbed. It is a fatal mistake to seek to
+reduce every one and every thing to a dead level. Christianity is a
+living, a divine reality. Christ's servants are sent by Him, and to Him
+they are responsible. "Who art thou that judgest another man's servant?
+To his own master he standeth or falleth" (Rom. xiv.).
+
+We may depend upon it, dearest A., these things demand our serious
+consideration, if we do not want to have the blessed work of
+evangelization marred in our hands.
+
+I have just one other point that I would refer to before closing my
+letter, as it has been rather a vexed question in certain places--I
+allude to what has been termed "the responsibility of the preaching."
+
+How many of our friends have been and are harassed about this question!
+And why? I am persuaded that it is from not understanding the true
+nature, character, and sphere of the work of evangelization. Hence we
+have had some persons contending for it that the Sunday evening
+preaching should be left open. "Open to what?" That is the question. In
+too many cases it has proved to be "open" to a character of speaking
+altogether unsuited to many who had come there, or who had been brought
+by friends, expecting to hear a full, clear, earnest gospel. On such
+occasions our friends have been disappointed, and the unconverted
+perfectly unable to understand the meaning of the service. Surely such
+things ought not to be; nor would they be if men would only discern the
+simplest thing possible, namely, the distinction between all meetings in
+which Christ's servants exercise their ministry on their own personal
+responsibility, and all meetings which are purely reunions of the
+assembly, whether for the Lord's Supper, for prayer, or for any other
+purpose whatsoever.
+
+Your deeply affectionate, * * *
+
+
+LETTER VII.
+
+Through want of space I was obliged to close my last letter without even
+touching upon the subject of the Sunday-school: I must, however, devote
+a page or two to a branch of work which has occupied a very large place
+in my heart for thirty years. I should deem my series incomplete were
+this subject left untouched.
+
+Some may question how far the Sunday-school can be viewed as an integral
+part of the work of evangelization. I can only say it is mainly in this
+light I regard it. I look upon it as one great and most interesting
+branch of gospel work. The superintendent of the Sunday-school and the
+teacher of the Sunday-school class are workers in the wide gospel field,
+just as distinctly as the evangelist or preacher of the gospel.
+
+I am fully aware that a Sunday-school differs materially from an
+ordinary gospel preaching. It is not convened in the same way, or
+conducted in the same manner. There is, if I may so express myself, a
+union of the parent, the teacher, and the evangelist, in the person of
+the Sunday-school worker. For the time being he takes the place of the
+parent: he seeks to do the duty of a teacher; but he aims at the object
+of the evangelist--that priceless object, the salvation of the souls of
+the precious little ones committed to his charge. As to the mode in
+which he gains his end--as to the details of his work--as to the varied
+agencies which he may bring to bear, he alone is responsible.
+
+I am aware that exception is taken to the Sunday-school on the ground
+that its tendency is to interfere with parental or domestic training.
+Now I must confess, dearest A., that I cannot see any force whatever in
+this objection. The true object of the Sunday-school is, not to
+supersede parental training, but to help it where it exists, or to
+supply its lack where it does not exist. There are, as you and I well
+know, hundreds of thousands of dear children who have no parental
+training at all. Thousands have no parents, and thousands more have
+parents who are far worse than none. Look at the multitudes that throng
+the lanes, alleys, and courtyards of our large cities and towns, who
+seem hardly a degree above mere animal existence--yea, many of them like
+little incarnate demons.
+
+Who can think upon all these precious souls without wishing a hearty
+God-speed to all _true_ Sunday-school workers, and earnestly longing for
+more thorough earnestness and energy in that most blessed work?
+
+I say "_true_" Sunday-school workers, because I fear that many engage in
+the work who are not true, not real, not fit. Many, I fear, take it up
+as a little bit of fashionable religious work, suited to the younger
+members of religious communities. Many, too, view it as a kind of
+set-off to a week of self-indulgence, folly, and worldliness. All such
+persons are an actual hindrance rather than a help to this sacred
+service.
+
+Then again, there are many who sincerely love Christ, and long to serve
+Him in the Sunday-school, but who are not really fitted for the work.
+They are deficient in tact, energy, order, and rule. They lack that
+power to adapt themselves to the children, and to engage their young
+hearts, which is so essential to the Sunday-school worker. It is a great
+mistake to suppose that every one who stands idle in the market-place is
+fit to turn into this particular branch of Christian labor. On the
+contrary, it needs a person thoroughly fitted of God for it; and if it
+be asked, "How are we ever to be supplied with suited agents for this
+branch of evangelistic service?" I reply, Just in the same way as you
+are to be supplied in any other department--by earnest, persevering,
+believing prayer. I am most thoroughly persuaded that if Christians were
+more stirred up by God's Spirit to feel the importance of the
+Sunday-school--if they could only seize the idea that it is, like the
+Tract depot and the preaching, part and parcel of that most glorious
+work to which we are called in these closing days of Christendom's
+history--if they were more permeated by the idea of the evangelistic
+nature and object of Sunday-school work, they would be more instant and
+earnest in prayer, both in the closet and in the public assembly, that
+the Lord would raise up in our midst a band of earnest, devoted,
+whole-hearted Sunday-school workers.
+
+This is the lack, dearest A.; and may God, in His abounding mercy,
+supply it! He is able, and surely He is willing. But then He will be
+waited on and inquired of; and "He is the rewarder of them that
+_diligently_ seek Him." I think we have much cause for thankfulness and
+praise for what has been done in the way of Sunday-schools during the
+last few years. I well remember the time when many of our friends seemed
+to overlook this branch of work altogether. Even now many treat it with
+indifference, thus weakening the hand and discouraging the hearts of
+those engaged in it.
+
+But I shall not dwell upon this, inasmuch as my theme is the
+Sunday-school, and not those who neglect or oppose it. I bless God for
+what I see in the way of encouragement. I have often been exceedingly
+refreshed and delighted by seeing some of our very oldest friends rising
+from the table of their Lord, and proceeding to arrange the benches on
+which the dear little ones were soon to be ranged to hear the sweet
+story of a Saviour's love. And what could be more lovely, more touching,
+or more morally suited, than for those who had just been remembering the
+Saviour's dying love to seek, even by the arrangement of the benches, to
+carry out His living words, "Suffer the little children to come unto
+Me?"
+
+There is very much I should like to add as to the mode of working the
+Sunday-school; but perhaps it is just as well that each worker should be
+wholly cast upon the living God for counsel and help as to details. We
+must ever remember that the Sunday-school, like the Tract depot and the
+preaching, is entirely a work of individual responsibility. This is a
+grand point; and where it is fully understood, and where there is real
+earnestness of heart and singleness of eye, I believe there will be no
+great difficulty as to the particular mode of working. A large heart,
+and a fixed purpose to carry on the great work and fulfil the glorious
+mission committed to us, will effectually deliver us from the withering
+influence of crotchets and prejudices--those miserable obstructions to
+all that is lovely and of good report.
+
+May God pour out His blessing on all Sunday-schools, upon the pupils,
+the teachers, and the superintendents! May He also bless all who are
+engaged, in any way, in the instruction of the young! May He cheer and
+refresh their spirits by giving them to reap many golden sheaves in
+their special corner of the one great and glorious gospel field!
+
+Ever believe me, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE LIVING GOD AND A LIVING FAITH
+
+
+There is one great substantial fact standing prominently forth on every
+page of the volume of God, and illustrated in every stage of the history
+of God's people--a fact of immense weight and moral power at all times,
+but specially in seasons of darkness, difficulty, and discouragement,
+occasioned by the low condition of things among those who profess to be
+on the Lord's side. The fact is this, _That faith can always count on
+God, and God will always answer faith_.
+
+Such is our fact, such our thesis; and if the reader will turn with us,
+for a few moments, to 2 Chron xx., he will find a very beautiful and
+very striking illustration.
+
+This chapter shows us the good king Jehoshaphat under very heavy
+pressure indeed--it records a dark moment in his history. "It came to
+pass after this also, that the children of Moab, and the children of
+Ammon, and with them other besides the Ammonites, came against
+Jehoshaphat to battle. Then" (for people are ever quick to run with evil
+tidings) "there came some that told Jehoshaphat, saying, There cometh a
+great multitude against thee from beyond the sea, on this side Syria."
+Here was a difficulty of no ordinary nature. This invading host was made
+up of the descendants of Lot and of Esau; and this fact might give rise
+to a thousand conflicting thoughts and distracting questions in the mind
+of Jehoshaphat. They were not Egyptians or Assyrians, concerning whom
+there could be no question whatever; but both Esau and Lot stood in
+certain relations to Israel, and a question might suggest itself as to
+how far such relations were to be recognized.
+
+Not this only. The practical state of the entire nation of Israel--the
+actual condition of God's people, was such as to give rise to the most
+serious misgivings. Israel no longer presented an unbroken front to the
+invading foe. Their visible unity was gone. A grievous breach had been
+made in their battlements. The ten tribes and the two were rent asunder,
+the one from the other. The condition of the former was terrible, and
+that of the latter, shaky enough.
+
+Thus the circumstances of king Jehoshaphat were dark and discouraging in
+the extreme; and, even as regards himself and his practical course, he
+was but just emerging from the consequences of a very humiliating fall,
+so that his reminiscences would be quite as cheerless as his
+surroundings.
+
+But it is just here that our grand substantial fact presents itself to
+the vision of faith, and flings a mantle of light over the whole scene.
+Things looked gloomy, no doubt; but God was to be counted upon by faith,
+and faith could count upon Him. God is a never failing resource--a great
+reality, at all times, and under all circumstances.
+
+"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.
+Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the
+mountains be carried into the midst of the sea. Though the waters
+thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the
+swelling thereof. There is a river, the stream whereof shall make glad
+the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the Most High. God
+is in the midst of her, she shall not be moved: God shall help her, and
+that right early. The heathen raged, the kingdoms were moved: He uttered
+His voice, the earth melted. The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of
+Jacob is our refuge" (Psa. xlvi. I-7).
+
+Here, then, was Jehoshaphat's resource in the day of his trouble; and to
+it he at once betook himself, in that earnest faith which never fails to
+draw down power and blessing from the living and true God, to meet every
+exigency of the way. "And Jehoshaphat feared, and set himself to seek
+the Lord, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah. And Judah gathered
+themselves together, to ask help of the Lord; even out of all the cities
+of Judah they came to seek the Lord. And Jehoshaphat stood in the
+congregation of Judah and Jerusalem, in the house of the Lord, before
+the new court, and said, O Lord God of our fathers, art not Thou God in
+heaven? and rulest not Thou over all the kingdoms of the heathen? and in
+Thy hand is there not power and might, so that none is able to withstand
+Thee? Art not Thou our God, who didst drive out the inhabitants of this
+land before Thy people Israel, and gavest it to _the seed of Abraham Thy
+friend for ever_?"
+
+These are the breathings of faith--faith that enables the soul to take
+the very highest possible ground. It mattered not what unsettled
+questions there might be between Esau and Jacob; there were none between
+Abraham and the Almighty God. Now, God had given the land to Abraham,
+His friend. For how long? _For ever._ This was enough. "The gifts and
+calling of God are without repentance." God will never cancel His call,
+or take back a gift. This is a fixed foundation principle; and on this
+faith always takes its stand with firm decision. The enemy might throw
+in a thousand suggestions; and the poor heart might throw up a thousand
+reasonings. It might seem like presumption and empty conceit, on the
+part of Jehoshaphat, to plant his foot on such lofty ground. It was all
+well enough in the days of David, or of Solomon, or of Joshua, when the
+unity of the nation was unbroken, and the banner of Jehovah floated in
+triumph over the twelve tribes of Israel. But things were sadly changed;
+and it ill became one in Jehoshaphat's circumstances to use such lofty
+language or assume to occupy such a high position.
+
+What is faith's reply to all this? A very simple, but a very powerful
+one--God never changes. He is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever.
+Had He not made Abraham a present of the land of Canaan? Had He not
+bestowed it upon his seed forever? Had He not ratified the gift by His
+word and His oath--these two immutable things in which it was impossible
+for Him to lie? Unquestionably. But then what of the law? Did not that
+make some difference? None whatever, as regards God's gift and promise.
+Four centuries previous to the giving of the law, was the great
+transaction settled and stablished between the Almighty God and Abraham
+His friend--and settled and stablished forever. Hence nothing can
+possibly touch this. There were no legal conditions proposed to Abraham.
+All was pure and absolute grace. God gave the land to Abraham by
+promise, and not by law, in any shape or form.
+
+Now, it was on this original ground that Jehoshaphat took his stand; and
+he was right. It was the only thing for him to do. He had not one hair's
+breadth of solid standing ground, short of these golden words, "Thou
+gavest it to the seed of Abraham Thy friend forever." It was either this
+or nothing. _A living faith always lays hold on the living God._ It
+cannot stop short of Him. It looks not at men or their circumstances. It
+takes no account of the changes and chances of this mortal life. It
+lives and moves and has its being in the presence of the living God; it
+rejoices in the cloudless sunlight of His blessed countenance. It
+carries on all its artless reasonings in the sanctuary, and draws all
+its happy conclusions from the facts discovered there. It does not lower
+the standard according to the condition of things around, but boldly
+and decidedly takes up its position on the very highest ground.
+
+Now, these actings of faith are always most grateful to the heart of
+God. The living God delights in a living faith. We may be quite sure
+that the bolder the grasp of faith, the more welcome it is to God. We
+need never suppose that the blessed One is either gratified or glorified
+by the workings of a legal mind. No, no; He delights to be trusted
+without a shadow of reserve or misgiving. He delights to be fully
+counted upon and largely used; and the deeper the need, and the darker
+the surrounding gloom, the more is He glorified by the faith that draws
+upon Him.
+
+Hence, we may assert with perfect confidence, that the attitude and the
+utterances of Jehoshaphat, in the scene before us, were in full
+accordance with the mind of God. There is something perfectly beautiful
+to see him, as it were, opening the original lease, and laying his
+finger on that clause in virtue of which Israel held as tenants forever
+under God. Nothing could cancel that clause or break that lease. No flaw
+there. All was ordered and sure. "Thou _gavest_ it to the seed of
+Abraham Thy friend _forever_."
+
+This was solid ground--the ground of God--the ground of faith, which no
+power of the enemy can ever shake. True, the enemy might remind
+Jehoshaphat of sin and folly, failure and unfaithfulness. Nay, he might
+suggest to him that the very fact of the threatened invasion proved
+that Israel had fallen, for had they not done so, there would be neither
+enemy nor evil.
+
+But for this, too, grace had provided an answer--an answer which faith
+knew well how to appropriate. Jehoshaphat reminds Jehovah of the house
+which Solomon had built to His name. "They have built Thee a sanctuary
+therein for Thy name, saying, If, when evil cometh upon us, as a sword,
+judgment, or pestilence, or famine, we stand before this house, and in
+Thy presence (for Thy name is in this house), and cry unto Thee in our
+affliction, then Thou will hear and help. And now, behold, the children
+of Ammon, and Moab, and Mount Seir, whom Thou wouldest not let Israel
+invade, when they came out of the land of Egypt, but they turned from
+them, and distroyed them not. Behold, I say, how they reward us, to come
+to cast us out of _Thy possession, which Thou hast given us to inherit_.
+O our God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have no might against this
+great company that cometh against us; neither know we what to do, but
+_our eyes are upon Thee_" (vers. 8-12).
+
+Here, truly, is a living faith dealing with the living God. It is no
+mere empty profession--no lifeless creed--no cold uninfluential theory.
+It is not a man "saying he has faith." Such things will never stand in
+the day of battle. They may do well enough when all is calm, smooth, and
+bright; but when difficulties have to be grappled with--when the enemy
+has to be met face to face, all merely nominal faith, all mere lip
+profession, will prove like autumn leaves before the blast. Nothing will
+stand the test of actual conflict but a living personal faith in a
+living personal Saviour-God. This is what is needed. It is this which
+alone can sustain the heart, come what may. Faith brings God into the
+scene, and all is strength, victory, and perfect peace.
+
+Thus it was with the king of Judah, in the days of 2 Chron. xx. "We have
+no might; neither know we what to do; but our eyes are upon Thee." This
+is the way to occupy God's ground, even with the eyes fixed on God
+Himself. This is the true secret of stability and peace. The devil will
+leave no stone unturned to drive us off the true ground which, as
+Christians, we ought to occupy in these last days; and we, in ourselves,
+have no might whatever against him. Our only resource is in the living
+God. If our eyes are upon Him, nothing can harm us. "Thou wilt keep him
+in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee, because he trusteth in
+Thee."
+
+Reader, art thou on God's ground? Canst thou give a "Thus saith the
+Lord" for the position which thou occupiest, at this moment? Art thou
+consciously standing on the solid ground of holy Scripture? Is there
+anything questionable in thy surroundings and associations? We beseech
+thee to weigh these questions solemnly as in the divine presence. Be
+assured they are of moment just now. We are passing through critical
+moments.
+
+Men are taking sides; principles are working and coming to a head. Never
+was it more needful to be thoroughly and unmistakably on the Lord's
+side. Jehoshaphat never could have met the Ammonites, Moabites, and
+Edomites, had he not been persuaded that his feet were on the very
+ground which God had given to Abraham. If the enemy could have shaken
+his confidence as to this, he would have had an easy victory. But
+Jehoshaphat knew where he was; he knew his ground. He understood his
+bearings; and therefore he could fix his eyes with confidence upon the
+living God. He had no misgivings as to his position. He did not say, as
+many do, now-a-days, "I am not quite sure. I hope I am; but sometimes
+clouds come over my soul, and make me hesitate as to whether I am really
+on divine ground." Ah! no, reader, the king of Judah would not have
+understood such language at all. All was clear to him. His eye rested on
+the original grant. He felt sure he was on the true ground of the Israel
+of God; and albeit all Israel were not there with him, yet God was with
+him, and that was enough. His was a living faith in the living God--the
+only thing that will stand in the day of trial.
+
+There is something in the attitude and utterance of the king of Judah,
+on that memorable occasion, well worthy of the reader's profound
+attention. His feet were firmly fixed on God's ground, and his eyes as
+firmly fixed on God Himself; and in addition to this, there was the deep
+sense of his own thorough nothingness. He had not so much as a shadow
+of a doubt as to the fact of his being in possession of the very
+inheritance which God had given him. He knew that he was in his right
+place. He did not _hope_ it; still less did he doubt it; no, he knew it.
+He could say, "I believe and am sure."
+
+This is all-important. It is impossible to stand against the enemy, if
+there is anything equivocal in our position. If there be any secret
+misgiving as to our being in our right place--if we cannot give a "Thus
+saith the Lord" for the position which we occupy, the path we tread, the
+associations in which we stand, the work in which we are engaged, there
+will, most assuredly, be weakness in the hour of conflict. Satan is sure
+to avail himself of the smallest misgiving in the soul. All must be
+settled as to our positive standing, if we would make any headway
+against the enemy. There must be an unclouded confidence as to our real
+position before God, else the foe will have an easy victory.
+
+Now, it is precisely here that there is so much weakness apparent among
+the children of God. Very few, comparatively, are clear, sound, and
+settled as to their foundation--very few are able, without any reserve,
+to take the blessed ground of being washed in the blood of Jesus, and
+sealed with the Holy Spirit. At times they hope it. When things go well
+with them; when they have had a good time in the closet; when they have
+enjoyed nearness to God in prayer, or over the Word; while they are
+sitting under a clear, fervent, forcible ministry--at such moments,
+perhaps, they can venture to speak hopefully about themselves. But, very
+soon, dark clouds gather; they feel the workings of indwelling sin; they
+are afflicted with wandering thoughts; or it may be, they have been
+betrayed into some levity of spirit, or irritability of temper; then
+they begin to _reason_ about themselves, and to question whether they
+are, in reality, the children of God. And from reasonings and
+questionings, they very speedily slip into positive unbelief, and then
+plunge into the thick gloom of a despondency bordering on despair.
+
+All this is most sad. It is, at once, dishonoring to God, and
+destructive to the soul's peace; and as to progress, in such a
+condition, it is wholly out of the question. How can any one run a race,
+if he has not cleared the starting post? How can he erect a building, if
+he has not laid the foundation? And, on the same principle, how can a
+soul grow in the divine life, if he is always liable to doubt whether he
+has that life or not?
+
+But it may be that some of our readers are disposed to put such a
+question as the following, "How can I be sure that I am on God's
+ground?--that I am washed in the blood of Jesus and sealed with the Holy
+Spirit?" We reply, How do you know that you are a lost sinner? Is it
+because you feel it? Is mere feeling the ground of your faith? If so, it
+is not a divine faith at all. True faith rests _only_ on the testimony
+of holy Scripture. No doubt, it is by the gracious energy of the Holy
+Ghost that any one can exercise this living faith; but we are speaking
+now of the true ground of faith--the authority--the basis on which it
+rests, and that is simply the holy Scriptures which, as the inspired
+apostle tells us, are able to make us wise unto salvation, and which
+even a child could know, without the church, the clergy, the fathers,
+the doctors, the councils, the colleges, or any other human intervention
+whatsoever.
+
+"Abraham believed God." Here was divine faith. It was not a question of
+feeling. Indeed, if Abraham had been influenced by his feelings, he
+would have been a doubter instead of a believer. For what had he to
+build upon in himself? "His own body now dead." A poor ground surely on
+which to build his faith in the promise of an innumerable seed. But, we
+are told, "He considered not his own body now dead" (Rom. iv.). What,
+then, did he consider? He considered the word of the living God, and on
+that he rested. Now this is faith. And mark what the apostle says: "He
+staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief" (for unbelief is
+always a staggerer), "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."
+
+"Ah! but," the anxious reader may say, "what has all this to say to my
+case? I am not an Abraham--I cannot expect a special revelation from
+God. How am I to know that God has spoken to me? How can I possess this
+precious faith?" Well, dear friend, mark the apostle's further
+statement. "Now," he adds, "it was not written for his (Abraham's) sake
+alone, that it was imputed to him; but for us also, to whom it shall be
+imputed, if"--if what?--if we feel, realize, or experience aught in
+ourselves? Nay, but "if we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord
+from the dead; who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again
+for our justification."
+
+All this is full of solid comfort and richest consolation. It assures
+the anxious inquirer that he has the self-same ground and authority to
+rest upon that Abraham had, with an immensely higher measure of light
+thrown on that ground, inasmuch as Abraham was called to believe in a
+promise, whereas we are privileged to believe in an accomplished fact.
+He was called to look forward to something which was to be done; we look
+back at something that is done, even an accomplished redemption,
+attested by the fact of a risen and glorified Saviour, at the right hand
+of the Majesty in the heavens.
+
+But as to the ground or authority on which we are called to rest our
+souls, it is the same in our case as in Abraham's and all true
+believers' in all ages--it is the word of God--the holy Scriptures.
+There is no other foundation of faith but this; and the faith that rests
+on any other is not true faith at all. A faith resting on human
+tradition--on the authority of the Church--on the authority of so-called
+general councils--on the clergy--or on learned men, is not divine
+faith, but mere superstition; it is a faith which "stands in the wisdom
+of men," and "not in the power of God" (I Cor. ii. 5).
+
+Now, it is utterly impossible for any human pen or mortal tongue to
+overstate the value or importance of this grand principle--this
+principle of a living faith. Its value at the present moment is
+positively unspeakable. We believe it to be the divine antidote against
+most, if not all, the leading errors, evils, and hostile influences of
+the day in which our lot is cast. There is a tremendous shaking going on
+around us. Minds are agitated. Disturbing forces are abroad. There is a
+loosening of the foundations. Old institutions, to which the human mind
+clings, as the ivy to the oak, are tottering on every side; and many are
+actually fallen: and thousands of souls that have been finding shelter
+in them are dislodged and scared, and know not whither to turn. Some are
+saying, "The bricks are thrown down, but we will build with hewn stone."
+Many are at their wit's end, and most are ill at ease.
+
+Nor is this all; there is a numerous class, for the most part, of those
+who are not so much concerned about the condition and destiny of
+religious institutions and ecclesiastical systems, as about the
+condition and destiny of their own precious souls--of those who are not
+so much agitated by questions about "Broad Church," "High Church," "Low
+Church," "State Church," or "Free Church," as about this one great
+question, "What must I do to be saved?" What have we to say to these
+latter? What is the real want of their souls? Simply this, "A living
+faith in the living God." This is what is needed for all who are
+disturbed by what they see without, or feel within. Our unfailing
+resource is in the living God and in His Son Jesus Christ, as revealed
+by the Holy Spirit in the holy Scriptures.
+
+Here is the true resting-place of faith, and to this we do, most
+earnestly, most urgently and solemnly, invite the anxious reader. In one
+word, we entreat him to stay his whole soul on the word of God--the holy
+Scriptures. Here we have authority for all that we need to know, to
+believe, or to do.
+
+Is it a question of anxiety about my eternal salvation? Hear the
+following words, "Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in
+Zion _for a foundation_, a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner
+stone, _a sure foundation_: he that believeth shall not make haste"
+(Isa. xxviii. 16). These precious words, so pregnant with tranquilizing
+power, are quoted by the inspired apostle in the New Testament
+Scriptures: "Wherefore also it is contained in the scripture, Behold, I
+lay in Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and _he that
+believeth on Him shall not be confounded_" (I Peter ii. 6).
+
+What solid comfort--what deep and settled repose for the anxious soul is
+here! God has laid the foundation, and that foundation is nothing less
+than His own eternal and co-equal Son, the Son who had dwelt from all
+eternity in His bosom.
+
+This foundation is, in every respect, adequate to sustain the whole
+weight of the counsels and purposes of the eternal THREE IN ONE--to meet
+all the claims of the nature, the character, and the throne of God.
+
+Being all this, it must needs be fully adequate to meet all the need of
+the anxious soul, of what kind soever that need may be. If Christ is
+enough for God He must of necessity be enough for man--for any man--for
+the reader; and that He is enough is proved by the very passage just
+quoted. He is God's own foundation, laid by His own hand, the foundation
+and centre of that glorious system of royal and victorious grace set
+forth in the word "Zion." (See Heb. xii. 22-24.) He is God's own
+precious, tried, chief corner stone--that blessed One who went down into
+death's dark waters--bore the heavy judgment and wrath of God against
+sin--robbed death of its sting, and the grave of its victory--destroyed
+him that had the power of death--wrested from the enemy's grasp that
+terrible weapon with which sin had armed him, and made it the very
+instrument of his eternal defeat and confusion. Having done all this, He
+was received up into glory, and seated at the right hand of the Majesty
+in the heavens.
+
+Such is God's foundation, to which He graciously calls the attention of
+every one who really feels the need of something divinely solid on which
+to build, in view of the hollow and shadowy scenes of this world, and in
+prospect of the stern realities of eternity.
+
+Dear reader, you are now invited to build upon this foundation. Be
+assured it is for you as positively and distinctly as though you heard a
+voice from heaven speaking to your own very self. The word of the living
+God is addressed "to every creature under heaven"--"Whosoever will" is
+invited to come. The inspired volume has been placed in your hand and
+laid open before your eyes; and for what think you? Is it to mock or to
+tantalize you by presenting before you what was never intended for you?
+Ah! no, reader; such is not God's way. Does He send His sunlight and
+showers to mock and to tantalize, or to gladden and refresh? Do you ever
+think of calling in question your own very personal welcome to study the
+book of Creation? Never; and yet there might be some show of foundation
+of such a question, inasmuch as, since that wondrous volume was thrown
+open, sin has entered and thrown its dark blots over the pages thereof.
+But, spite of sin and all its forms and all its consequences, spite of
+Satan's power and malice, God has spoken. He has caused His voice to be
+heard in this dark and sinful world. And what has He said? "Behold, I
+lay in Zion a foundation." This is something entirely new. It is as
+though our blessed, loving, and ever gracious God had said to us, "Here,
+I have begun on the new. I have laid a foundation, on the ground of
+redemption, which nothing can ever touch, neither sin, or Satan, or
+aught else. I _lay_ the foundation, and pledge My word that whosoever
+believes--whosoever commits himself, in childlike, unquestioning
+confidence, to My foundation--whosoever rests in My Christ--whosoever is
+satisfied with My precious, tried, chief corner stone, shall never--no,
+never--no, never be confounded--never be put to shame--never be
+disappointed--shall never perish, world without end."
+
+Beloved reader, dost thou still hesitate? We solemnly avow we cannot see
+even the shadow of a foundation of a reason why thou shouldest. If there
+were any question raised, or any condition proposed, or any barrier
+erected, reason would that thou mightest hesitate. If there were so much
+as a single preliminary to be settled by thee--if it were made a
+question of feeling or of experience, or of aught else that thou couldst
+do, or feel, or be, then verily thou mightest justly pause. But there is
+absolutely nothing of the sort. There is the Christ of God and the word
+of God, and--what then? "He that believeth shall not be confounded." In
+short it is simply "A living faith in the living God." It is taking God
+at His word. It is believing what He says because He says it. It is
+committing your soul to the word of Him who cannot lie. It is doing what
+Abraham did when he believed God and was counted righteous. It is doing
+what Jehoshaphat did when he planted his foot firmly on those immortal
+words, "Thou gavest it to the seed of Abraham Thy friend, forever." It
+is doing what the patriarchs, the prophets, the apostles, the saints in
+all ages have done, when they rested their souls for time and eternity
+upon that Word which "is settled forever in heaven," and thus lived in
+peace and died in hope of a glorious resurrection. It is resting calmly
+and sweetly on the immovable rock of holy Scripture, and thus proving
+the divine and sustaining virtue of that which has never failed any who
+who trusted it, and never will, and never can.
+
+Oh! the unspeakable blessedness of having such a foundation in a world
+like this where death, decay, and change are stamped upon all; where
+friendship's fondest links are snapped in the twinkling of an eye by
+death's rude hand; where all that seems, to nature's view, most stable,
+is liable to be swept away in a moment by the rushing tide of popular
+revolution; where there is absolutely nothing on which the heart can
+lean, and say, "I have now found permanent repose." What a mercy, in
+such a scene, to have "A living faith in the living God."
+
+"They shall not be ashamed that wait for Me." Such is the veritable
+record of the living God--a record made good in the experience of all
+those who have been enabled, through grace, to exercise a living faith.
+But then we must remember how much is involved in those three words,
+"_wait for Me_." The waiting must be a real thing. It will not do to
+_say_ we are waiting on God, when, in reality, our eye is askance upon
+some human prop or creature confidence. We must be absolutely "shut up"
+to God. We must be brought to the end of self, and to the bottom of
+circumstances, in order fully to prove what the life of faith is, and
+what God's resources are. God and the creature can never occupy the
+same platform. It must be God alone. "My soul, wait thou _only_ upon
+God; for my expectation is from Him. He _only_ is my rock and my
+salvation" (Psa. lxii. 5, 6).
+
+Thus it was with Jehoshaphat, in that scene recorded in 2 Chron. xx. He
+was wholly cast upon God. It was either God or nothing. "We have no
+might." But what then? "Our eyes are upon Thee." This was enough. It was
+well for Jehoshaphat not to have so much as a single atom of might--a
+single ray of knowledge. He was in the very best possible attitude and
+condition to prove what God was. It would have been an incalculable loss
+to him to have been possessed of the very smallest particle of creature
+strength or creature wisdom, inasmuch as it could only have proved a
+hindrance to him in leaning exclusively upon the arm and the counsel of
+the Almighty God. If the eye of faith rests upon the living God--if He
+fills the entire range of the soul's vision, then what do we want with
+might or knowledge of our own? Who would think of resting in that which
+is human when he can have that which is divine? Who would lean on an arm
+of flesh, when he can lean on the arm of the living God?
+
+Reader, art thou, at this moment in any pressure, in any trial, need, or
+difficulty? If so, let us entreat thee to look simply and solely to the
+living God. Turn away thine eyes completely from the creature: "Cease
+from man, whose breath is in his nostrils."
+
+Let thy faith take hold now on the strength of God Himself. Put thy
+whole case into His omnipotent hand. Cast thy burden, whatever it is,
+upon Him. Let there be no reserve. He is as willing as He is able, and
+as able as He is willing, to bear all. Only trust Him fully. He loves to
+be trusted--loves to be used. It is His joy, blessed be His name, to
+yield a ready and a full response to the appeal of faith. It is worth
+having a burden, to know the blessedness of rolling it over upon Him. So
+the king of Judah found it in the day of his trial, and so shall the
+reader find it now. God never fails a trusting heart. "They shall not be
+ashamed that wait for Me." Precious words! Let us mark how they are
+illustrated in the narrative before us.
+
+No sooner had Jehoshaphat cast himself completely upon the Lord, than
+the divine response fell, with clearness and power, upon his ear.
+"Harken ye, all Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem, and thou king
+Jehoshaphat; thus saith the Lord unto you, Be not afraid or dismayed by
+reason of this great multitude; for the battle is not yours, but
+God's ... ye shall not need to fight in this battle. Set yourselves,
+stand ye still, and see the salvation of the Lord with you, O Judah and
+Jerusalem: fear not, nor be dismayed; to-morrow go out against them; for
+the Lord will be with you."
+
+What an answer! "The battle is not yours, but God's." Only think of
+God's having a battle with people! Assuredly there could be little
+question as to the issue of such a battle. Jehoshaphat had put the
+whole matter into God's hands, and God took it up and made it entirely
+His own. It is always thus. Faith puts the difficulty, the trial, and
+the burden into God's hands, and leaves Him to act. This is enough. God
+never refuses to respond to the appeal of faith; nay, it is His delight
+to answer it. Jehoshaphat had made it a question between God and the
+enemy. He had said, "They have come to cast us out of _Thy_ possession,
+which Thou hast given us to inherit." Nothing could be simpler. God had
+given Israel the land, and He could keep them in it, spite of ten
+thousand foes. Thus faith would reason. The self-same Hand that had
+placed them in the land could keep them there. It was simply a question
+of divine power. "O our God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have no
+might against this great company that cometh against us; neither know we
+what to do; but our eyes are upon Thee."
+
+It is a wonderful point in the history of any soul, to be brought to
+say, "I have no might." It is the sure precursor of divine deliverance.
+The moment a man is brought to the discovery of his utter powerlessness,
+the divine word is, "Stand still, and see the salvation of God." One
+does not want "might" to "stand still." It needs no effort to "see the
+salvation of God." This holds good in reference to the sinner in coming
+to Christ, at the first; and it holds equally good in reference to the
+Christian in his whole career from first to last. The great difficulty
+is to get to the end of our own strength.
+
+Once there, the whole thing is settled. There may be a vast amount of
+struggle and exercise ere we are brought to say "without strength!" But,
+the moment we take that ground, the word is, "Stand still, and see the
+salvation of God." Human effort, in every shape and form, can but raise
+a barrier between our souls and God's salvation. If God has undertaken
+for us, we may well be still. And has He not? Yes, blessed be His holy
+name, He has charged Himself with all that concerns us, for time and
+eternity; and hence we have only to let Him act for us, in all things.
+It is our happy privilege to let Him go before us, while we follow on
+"in wonder, love, and praise."
+
+Thus it was in that interesting and instructive scene on which we have
+been dwelling. "Jehoshaphat bowed his head, with his face to the ground:
+and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell before the Lord,
+worshiping the Lord. And the Levites, of the children of the Kohathites,
+and of the children of the Korhites, stood up to praise the Lord God of
+Israel with a loud voice on high."
+
+Here we have the true attitude and the proper occupation of the
+believer. Jehoshaphat withdrew his eyes from "that great company that
+had come against him," and fixed them upon the living God. Jehovah had
+come right in and placed Himself between His people and the enemy, just
+as He had done in the day of the exodus, at the Red Sea, so that instead
+of looking at the difficulties, they might look at Him.
+
+This, beloved reader, is the secret of victory at all times, and under
+all circumstances. This it is which fills the heart with praise and
+thanksgiving, and bows the head in wondering worship. There is something
+perfectly beautiful in the entire bearing of Jehoshaphat and the
+congregation, on the occasion before us. They were evidently impressed
+with the thought that they had nothing to do but to praise God. And they
+were right. Had He not said to them, "Ye shall not need to fight"? What
+then had they to do? What remained for them? Nothing but praise. Jehovah
+was going out before them to fight; and they had but to follow after Him
+in adoring worship.
+
+"And they rose early in the morning, and went forth in the wilderness of
+Tekoa: and as they went forth, Jehoshaphat stood and said, Hear me, O
+Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem; believe in the Lord your God, so
+shall ye be established; believe His prophets, so shall ye prosper" (2
+Chron. xx. 20).
+
+It is of the very last importance that God's word should ever have its
+own supreme place in the heart of the Christian. God has spoken. He has
+given us His Word; and it is for us to lean unshaken thereon. We want
+nothing more. The divine Word is amply sufficient to give confidence,
+peace, and stability to the soul. We do not need evidences from man to
+prove the truth of God's word. That Word carries its own powerful
+evidences with it. To suppose that we require human testimony to prove
+that God's word is true, is to imply that man's word is more valid, more
+trustworthy, more authoritative, than the word of God. If we need a
+human voice to interpret, to ratify, to make God's revelation available,
+then we are virtually deprived of that revelation altogether.
+
+We call the special attention of the reader to this point. It concerns
+the integrity of Holy Scripture. The grand question is this, Is God's
+word sufficient or not? Do we really want man's authority to make us
+sure that God has spoken? Far be the thought! This would be placing
+man's word above God's word, and thus depriving us of the _only_ solid
+ground on which our souls can lean. This is precisely what the devil has
+been aiming at from the very beginning, and it is what he is aiming at
+now. He wants to remove from beneath our feet the solid rock of divine
+revelation, and to give us instead the sandy foundation of human
+authority. Hence it is that we do so earnestly press upon our readers
+the urgent need of keeping close to God's word, in simple unquestioning
+faith. It is really the true secret of stability and peace. If God's
+word be not enough for us, without man's interference, we are positively
+left without any sure basis of our soul's confidence; yea, we are cast
+adrift on the wild watery waste of skepticism, we are plunged in doubt
+and dark uncertainty: we are most miserable.
+
+But, thanks and praise be to God, it is not so. "_Believe in the Lord
+your God, so shall ye be established: believe His prophets, so shall ye
+prosper._"
+
+Here is the resting-place of faith in all ages. God's eternal Word,
+which is settled forever in heaven, which He has magnified according to
+all His name, and which stands forth in its own divine dignity and
+sufficiency before the eye of faith. We must utterly reject the idea
+that aught in the way of human authority, human evidences, or human
+feelings, is needful to make the testimony of God full weight in the
+balances of the soul. Grant us but this, that God has spoken, and we
+argue with bold decision that nothing more is needed as a foundation for
+genuine faith. In a word, if we want to be established and to prosper,
+we have simply to "Believe in the Lord our God." It was this that
+enabled Jehoshaphat to bow his head in holy worship. It was this that
+enabled him to praise God for victory ere a single blow was struck. It
+was this that conducted him into "the valley of Berachah" (_blessing_)
+and surrounded him with spoil more than he could carry away.
+
+And now we have the soul-stirring record: "And when he had consulted
+with the people, he appointed _singers unto the Lord_, and that should
+praise the beauty of holiness, as they went out before the army, and to
+say, Praise the Lord: for His mercy endureth forever." What a strange
+advance guard for an army! A company of singers! Such is faith's way of
+ordering the battle.
+
+"And when they began to sing and to praise, the Lord set ambushments
+against the children of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir, which were come
+against Judah, and they were smitten." Only think of the Lord setting
+ambushments! Think of His engaging in the business of military tactics!
+How wonderful! God will do any thing that His people need, if only His
+people will confide in Him, and leave themselves and their affairs
+absolutely in His hand.
+
+"And when Judah came toward the watch-tower in the wilderness, they
+looked unto the multitude, and, behold, they were dead bodies fallen to
+the earth, and none escaped." Such was the end of "that great
+company"--that formidable host--that terrible foe. All vanished away
+before the presence of the God of Israel. Yes, and had they been a
+million times more numerous, and more formidable, the issue would have
+been the same, for circumstances are nothing to the living God, and
+nothing to a living faith. When God fills the vision of the soul,
+difficulties fade away, and songs of praise break forth from joyful
+lips.
+
+"And when Jehoshaphat and his people came to take away the spoil of
+them" (for that was all they had to do) "they found among them in
+abundance both riches with the dead bodies, and precious jewels, which
+they stripped off for themselves, more than they could carry away; and
+they were three days in gathering of the spoil, it was so much. And on
+the fourth day, they assembled themselves in the valley of Berachah; for
+there they blessed the Lord."
+
+Such, beloved reader, must ever be the result of a living faith in the
+living God. More than two thousand five hundred years have rolled away
+since the occurrence of the event on which we have been dwelling; but
+the record is as fresh as ever. No change has come over the living God,
+or over the living faith which ever takes hold of His strength, and
+counts on His faithfulness. It is as true to-day as it was in the day of
+Jehoshaphat, that those who believe in the Lord our God shall be
+established, and shall prosper. They shall be endowed with strength,
+crowned with victory, clothed with spoils, and filled with songs of
+praise. May we, then through the gracious energy of the Holy Spirit,
+ever be enabled to exercise "A LIVING FAITH IN THE LIVING GOD!"
+
+
+
+
+A SCRIPTURAL INQUIRY
+
+AS TO THE TRUE NATURE OF
+
+THE SABBATH, THE LAW, AND CHRISTIAN MINISTRY
+
+
+THE SABBATH.
+
+If it were merely a question of the observance or non-observance of a
+day, it might be easily disposed of, inasmuch as the apostle teaches us
+in Rom. xiv. 5, 6, and also in Col. ii. 16, that such things are not to
+be made a ground of judgment. But seeing there is a great principle
+involved in the Sabbath question, we deem it to be of the very last
+importance to place it upon a clear and Scriptural basis. We shall quote
+the Fourth Commandment at full length: "Remember the sabbath day, to
+keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work; but the
+seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do
+any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy
+maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:
+for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in
+them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the
+sabbath day, and hallowed it" (Ex. xx. 8-11). This same law is repeated
+in Exodus xxxi. 12-17. And in pursuance thereof we find in Numbers xv. a
+man stoned for gathering sticks on the sabbath day. All this is plain
+and absolute enough. Man has no right to alter God's law in reference to
+the sabbath; no more than he has to alter it in reference to murder,
+adultery, or theft. This, we presume, will not be called in question.
+The entire body of old Testament Scripture fixes the seventh day as the
+sabbath; and the Fourth Commandment lays down the mode in which that
+sabbath was to be observed. Now where, we ask, is this precedent
+followed? Where is this command obeyed? Is it not plain that the
+professing Church neither keeps the right day as the sabbath, nor does
+she keep it after the Scripture mode? The commandments of God are made
+of none effect by human traditions, and the glorious truths which hang
+around "the Lord's day" are lost sight of. The Jew is robbed of his
+distinctive day and all the privileges therewith connected, which are
+only suspended for the present, while judicial blindness hangs over that
+loved and interesting, though now judged and scattered, people. And
+furthermore, the Church is robbed of her distinctive day and all the
+glories therewith connected, which if really understood would have the
+effect of lifting her above earthly things into the sphere which
+properly belongs to her, as linked by faith to her glorified Head in
+heaven. In result, we have neither pure Judaism nor pure Christianity,
+but an anomalous system arising out of an utterly unscriptural
+combination of the two.
+
+However, we desire to refrain from all attempt at developing the deeply
+spiritual doctrine involved in this great question, and confine
+ourselves to the plain teaching of Scripture on the subject; and in so
+doing we maintain that if the professing Church quotes the Fourth
+Commandment and parallel scriptures in defense of keeping the sabbath,
+then it is evident that in almost every case the law is entirely set
+aside. Observe, the word is, "Thou shalt not do any work." This ought to
+be perfectly binding on all who take the Jewish ground. There is no room
+here for introducing what we deem to be "works of necessity." We may
+think it necessary to kindle fires, to make servants harness our horses
+and drive us hither and thither. But the law is stern and absolute,
+severe and unbending. It will not, it can not, lower its standard to
+suit our convenience or accommodate itself to our thoughts. The mandate
+is, "Thou shalt not do _any_ work," and that, moreover, on "the seventh
+day," which answers to our Saturday. We ask for a single passage of
+Scripture in which the day is changed, or in which the strict observance
+of the day is in the smallest degree relaxed.
+
+We request the reader of these lines to pause and search out this matter
+thoroughly in the light of Scripture. Let him not be scared as by some
+terrible bugbear, but let him, in true Berean nobility of spirit,
+"search the Scriptures." By so doing he will find that from the second
+chapter of Genesis down to the very last passage in which the sabbath is
+named, it means the _seventh_ day and none other; and further, that
+there is not so much as a shadow of divine authority for altering the
+mode of observing that day. Law is law, and if we are under the law we
+are bound to keep it or else be cursed; for "it is written, Cursed is
+every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the
+book of the law to do them" (Deut. xxvii. 26; Gal. iii. 10).
+
+But it will be said, "We are not under the Mosaic law; we are the
+subjects of the Christian economy." Granted; most fully, freely and
+thankfully granted. All true Christians are, according to the teaching
+of Romans vii. and viii. and Galatians iii. and iv., the happy and
+privileged subjects of the Christian dispensation. But if so, what is
+the day which specially characterizes that dispensation? Not "the
+seventh day," but "the first day of the week"--"THE LORD'S DAY." This is
+pre-eminently the Christian's day. Let him observe this day with all the
+sanctity, the sacred reverence, the hallowed retirement, the elevated
+tone, of which his new nature is capable. We believe the Christian's
+retirement from all secular things cannot possibly be too profound on
+the Lord's day. The idea of any one, calling himself a Christian, making
+the Lord's day a season of what is popularly called recreation,
+unnecessary traveling, personal convenience, or profit in temporal
+things, is perfectly shocking. We are of opinion that such acting could
+not be too severely censured. We can safely assert that we never yet
+came in contact with a godly, intelligent, right-minded Christian person
+who did not love and reverence the Lord's day; nor could we have any
+sympathy with any one who could deliberately desecrate that holy and
+happy day.
+
+We are aware, alas, that some persons have through ignorance or
+misguided feelings said things in reference to the Lord's day which we
+utterly repudiate, and that they have done things on the Lord's day of
+which we wholly disapprove. We believe that there is a body of New
+Testament teaching on the important subject of the Lord's day quite
+sufficient to give that day its proper place in every well-regulated
+mind. The Lord Jesus rose from the dead on that day (Matt, xxviii. I-6;
+Mark xvi. I, 2; Luke xxiv. I; John xx. I). He met His disciples once and
+again on that day (John xx. 19, 26). The early disciples met to break
+bread on that day (Acts xx. 7). The apostle, by the Holy Ghost, directs
+the Corinthians to lay by their contributions for the poor on that day
+(I Cor. xvi. 2). And finally, the exiled apostle was in the Spirit and
+received visions of the future on that day (Rev. i. 10). The above
+scriptures are conclusive. They prove that the Lord's day occupies a
+place quite unique, quite heavenly, quite divine. But they as fully
+prove the entire distinctness of the Jewish sabbath and the Lord's day.
+The two days are spoken of throughout the New Testament with fully as
+much distinctness as we speak of Saturday and Sunday. The only
+difference is that the latter are heathen titles, and the former divine.
+(Comp. Matt. xxviii. I; Acts xiii. 14, xvii. 2, xx. 7; Col. ii. 16).
+
+Having said thus much as to the question of the Jewish sabbath and the
+Lord's day, we shall suggest the following questions to the reader,
+namely: Where in the word of God is the sabbath said to be changed to
+the first day of the week? Where is there any repeal of the law as to
+the sabbath? Where is the authority for altering the day or the mode of
+observing it? Where in Scripture have we such an expression as "the
+Christian sabbath"? Where is the Lord's day ever called the
+sabbath?[XXVII.]
+
+We would not yield to any of our dear brethren in the various
+denominations around us in the pious observance of the Lord's day. We
+love and honor it with all our hearts; and were it not that the gracious
+providence of God has so ordered it in these realms that we can enjoy
+the rest and retirement of the Lord's day without pecuniary loss, we
+should feel called upon to abstain from business, and give ourselves
+wholly up to the worship and service of God on that day--not as a matter
+of cold legality, but as a holy and happy privilege.
+
+It would be the deepest sorrow to our hearts to think that a true
+Christian should be found taking common ground with the ungodly, the
+profane, the thoughtless, and the pleasure-hunting multitude, in
+desecrating the Lord's day. It would be sad indeed if the children of
+the kingdom and the children of this world were to meet in an excursion
+train on the Lord's day. We feel persuaded that any who in any wise
+profane or treat with lightness the Lord's day act in direct opposition
+to the Word and Spirit of God.
+
+
+THE LAW.
+
+As regards the law, it is looked at in two ways; first, as a ground of
+justification; and secondly, as a rule of life. A passage or two of
+Scripture will suffice to settle both the one and the other: "Therefore
+by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight:
+for by the law is the knowledge of sin" (Rom. iii. 20). "Therefore we
+conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law"
+(ver. 28). Again: "Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of
+the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in
+Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not
+by the works of the law; for by the works of the law shall no flesh be
+justified" (Gal. ii. 16).
+
+Then, as to its being a rule of life, we read, "Wherefore, my brethren,
+ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should
+be married to another, even to Him that is raised from the dead, that we
+should bring forth fruit unto God" (Rom. vii. 4). "But now are we
+delivered from the law, being dead to that (see margin) wherein we were
+held: that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness
+of the letter" (ver. 6). Observe in this last-quoted passage two
+things: first, "we are delivered from the law;" second, not that we may
+do nature's pleasure, but "that we should _serve_ in newness of spirit."
+Being delivered from bondage, it is our privilege to "serve" in liberty.
+Again we read, further on in the chapter, "And the commandment which was
+ordained to life, I found to be _unto death_" (ver. 10). It evidently
+did not prove as a rule of _life_ to him. "I was _alive without the law_
+once; but _when the commandment came_, sin revived, and _I died_" (ver.
+9). Whoever "I" represents in this chapter was alive until the law came,
+and then he died. Hence, therefore, the law could not have been a rule
+of life to him; yea, it was the very opposite, even a rule of death.
+
+In a word, then, it is evident that a sinner cannot be justified by the
+works of the law; and it is equally evident that the law is not the rule
+of the believer's life. "For as many as are of the works of the law are
+under the curse" (Gal. iii. 10). The law knows no such thing as a
+distinction between a regenerated and an unregenerated man: it curses
+all who attempt to stand before it. It rules and curses a man so long as
+he lives; nor is there any one who will so fully acknowledge that he
+cannot keep it as the true believer, and hence no one would be more
+thoroughly under the curse.
+
+What, therefore, is the ground of our justification? and what is our
+rule of life? The word of God answers, "We are justified by the faith of
+Christ," and Christ is our rule of life. He bore all our sins in His
+own body on the tree; He was made a curse for us; He drained on our
+behalf the cup of God's righteous wrath; He deprived death of its sting,
+and the grave of its victory; He gave up His life for us; He went down
+into death, where we lay, in order that He might bring us up in eternal
+association with Himself in life, righteousness, favor and glory, before
+our God and His God, our Father and His Father. (See carefully the
+following scriptures: John xx. 17; Rom. iv. 25; v. I-10; vi. I-11; vii.
+_passim_, viii. I-4; I Cor. i. 30, 31; vi. 11; xv. 55-57; 2 Cor. v.
+17-21; Gal. iii. 13, 25-29; iv. 31; Eph. i. 19-23; ii. I-6; Col. ii.
+10-15; Heb. ii. 14, 15; I Peter i. 23.) If the reader will prayerfully
+ponder all these passages of Scripture he will see clearly that we are
+not justified by the works of the law; and not only so, but he will see
+how we are justified. He will see the deep and solid foundations of the
+Christian's life, righteousness and peace planned in God's eternal
+counsels, laid in the finished atonement of Christ, developed by God the
+Holy Ghost in the Word, and made good in the happy experience of all
+true believers.
+
+Then, as to the believer's rule of life, the apostle does not say, To me
+to live is the law; but, "To me to live is Christ" (Phil. i. 21). Christ
+is our rule, our model, our touchstone, our all. The continual inquiry
+of the Christian should be, not is this or that according to law? but is
+it like Christ? The law never could teach me to love, bless and pray for
+my enemies; but this is exactly what the gospel teaches me to do, and
+what the divine nature leads me to do. "Love is the fulfilling of the
+law;" and yet, were I to seek justification by the law, I should be
+lost; and were I to make the law my standard of action, I should fall
+far short of my proper mark. We are predestinated to be conformed, not
+to the law, but to the image of God's Son. We are to be like Him. (See
+Matt. v. 21-48; Rom. viii. 29; I Cor. xiii. 4-8; Rom. xiii. 8-10; Gal.
+v. 14-26; Eph. i. 3-5; Phil. iii. 20, 21; ii. 5; iv. 8; Col. iii. I-17.)
+
+It may seem a paradox to some to be told that "the righteousness of the
+law is fulfilled in us" (Rom. viii. 4), and yet that we cannot be
+justified by the law, nor make the law our rule of life. Nevertheless,
+thus it is if we are to form our convictions by the word of God. Nor is
+there any difficulty to the renewed mind in understanding this blessed
+doctrine. We are by nature "dead in trespasses and sins," and what can a
+dead man do? How can a man get life by keeping that which requires life
+to keep it--a life which he has not? And how do we get life? Christ is
+our life. We live in Him who died for us; we are blessed in Him who
+became a curse for us by hanging on a tree; we are righteous in Him who
+was made sin for us; we are brought nigh in Him who was cast out for us
+(Rom. v. 6-15; Eph. ii. 4-6; Gal. iii. 13). Having thus life and
+righteousness in Christ, we are called to walk as He walked, and not
+merely to walk as a Jew. We are called to purify ourselves even as He
+is pure; to walk in His footsteps; to show forth His virtues; to
+manifest His spirit (John xiii. 14, 15; xvii. 14-19; I Peter ii. 21; I
+John ii. 6, 29; iii. 3).
+
+We shall close our remarks on this head by suggesting two questions to
+the reader, namely, Would the Ten Commandments without the New Testament
+be a sufficient rule of life for the believer? Is not the New Testament
+a sufficient rule without the Ten Commandments? Surely that which is
+insufficient cannot be our rule of life.
+
+We receive the Ten Commandments as part of the canon of inspiration; and
+moreover, we believe that the law remains in full force to rule and
+curse a man as long as he liveth. Let a sinner only try to get life by
+it, and see where it will put him; and let a believer only shape his way
+according to it, and see what it will make of him. We are fully
+convinced that if a man is walking according to the spirit of the
+gospel, he will not commit murder nor steal; but we are also convinced
+that a man, confining himself to the standard of the law of Moses would
+fall very far short of the spirit of the gospel.
+
+The subject of "the law" would demand much more elaborate exposition,
+but the limits of this paper do not admit of it, and we therefore
+entreat of the reader to look out the various passages of Scripture
+referred to and ponder them carefully. In this way we feel assured he
+will arrive at a sound conclusion, and be independent of all human
+teaching and influence. He will see how that a man is justified freely
+by the grace of God through faith in a crucified and risen Christ; that
+he is made a partaker of divine life, and introduced into a condition of
+divine and everlasting righteousness, and consequent exemption from all
+condemnation; that in this holy and elevated position Christ is his
+object, his theme, his model, his rule, his hope, his joy, his strength,
+his all; that the hope which is set before him is to be with Jesus where
+He is, and to be like Him forever. And he will also see that if as a
+lost sinner he has found pardon and peace at the foot of the cross, he
+is not, as an accepted and adopted son, sent back to the foot of Mount
+Sinai, there to be terrified and repulsed by the terrible anathemas of a
+broken law. The Father could not think of ruling with an iron law the
+prodigal whom He had received to His bosom in purest, deepest, richest
+grace. Oh no! "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God through
+our Lord Jesus Christ; by whom also we have access by faith into this
+grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God" (Rom.
+v. I, 2). The believer is justified not by works, but by _faith_; he
+stands not in law, but in _grace_; and he waits not for judgment, but
+for _glory_.
+
+We come now, in the third place, to treat of the subject of
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY;
+
+in reference to which we have only to say, that we hold it to be a
+divine institution: its source, its power, its characteristics, are all
+divine and heavenly. We believe that the great Head of the Church
+received in resurrection gifts for His body. He, and not the Church, or
+any section of the Church, is the reservoir of the gifts. They are
+vested in Him, and not in the Church. He imparts them as, and to whom,
+He will. No man, nor body of men, can impart gifts. This is Christ's
+prerogative, and His alone; and we believe that when He imparts a gift,
+the man who receives that gift is responsible to exercise the same,
+whether as an evangelist, a pastor or a teacher, quite independently of
+all human authority.
+
+We do not by any means believe that all are endowed with the above
+gifts, though all have some ministry to fulfil. All are not evangelists,
+pastors, and teachers. Such precious gifts are only administered
+according to the sovereign will of the divine Head of the Church. Man
+has no right to interfere with them. Wherever they really exist, it is
+the place of the assembly to recognize them with devout thankfulness.
+Christians are exhorted to remember them that are over them in the Lord,
+to know them that guide them, and those who addict themselves to the
+ministry of the saints, and those who have spoken to them the word of
+life. Were they to refuse to do so, they would only be forsaking and
+rejecting their own mercies, for all things are theirs. (See Rom. xii.
+3-8; I Cor. iii. 21-23; xii., xiv., xvi. 15; Gal. i. 11-17; Eph. iv.
+7-16; I Thess. v. 12, 13; Heb. xiii. 7, 17; I Peter iv. 10, 11.)
+
+All this is simple enough. We can easily see where a man is divinely
+qualified for any department of ministry. It is not if a man _say_ he
+has a gift, but if he in reality has it. A man may say he has a gift on
+the same principle as he may say he has faith (James ii. 14), and it may
+only be, after all, an empty conceit of his own ill-adjusted mind, which
+a spiritual assembly could not recognize for a moment. God deals in
+realities. A divinely-gifted evangelist is a reality; a teacher is a
+reality; a pastor is a reality; and such will be duly recognized,
+thankfully received, and counted worthy of all esteem and honor for
+their work's sake.
+
+Now we hold that unless a man has a _bona fide_ gift imparted to him by
+the Head of the Church, all the instruction, all the education, and all
+the training that men could impart to him would not constitute him a
+Christian minister. If a man has a gift, he is responsible to exercise,
+to cultivate, and to wait upon his gift.
+
+But unless a man has a direct gift from Christ, though he had all the
+learning of a Newton, all the philosophy of a Bacon, all the eloquence
+of a Demosthenes, he is not a Christian minister. He may be a very
+gifted and efficient minister of religion, so called; but a minister of
+religion and a minister of Christ are two different things. And further,
+we believe that where the Lord Christ has bestowed a gift, that gift
+makes the possessor thereof a Christian minister, whom all true
+Christians are bound to own and receive, quite apart from all human
+appointment: whereas, though a man had all the human qualifications,
+human titles and human authority which it is possible to possess, and
+yet lacked that one grand reality, namely, Christ's gift, he is not a
+minister of Christ.
+
+We thank God for Christian ministry; and we feel assured that there are
+many truly gifted servants of Christ in the various denominations around
+us; but they are ministers of Christ on the ground of possessing His
+gift, and not, by any means, on the ground of man's ordination. Man
+cannot add aught to a heaven-bestowed gift. As well might he attempt to
+add a shade to the rainbow, a tint to the violet, motion to the waves,
+height to the snow-capped mountains, or daub with a painter's brush the
+peacock's plumage, as attempt to render more efficient by his puny
+authority the gift which has come down from the risen and glorified Head
+of the Church. Ah no! the vine, the olive and the fig-tree, in Jotham's
+parable (Judges ix.) needed not the appointment of the other trees. God
+had implanted in each its specific virtue. It was only the worthless
+bramble which hailed with delight an appointment that raised it from the
+position of _a real nothing_ to be _an official something_. Thus it is
+with a divinely-gifted man. He has what God has given him: he wants, he
+asks no more. He rises above the narrow enclosure which man's authority
+would erect around him, and plants his foot upon that elevated ground
+where prophets and apostles have stood. He feels that it lies not within
+the range of the schools and colleges of this world to open to him his
+proper sphere of action. It appertains not to them to provide a setting
+for the precious gem which sovereign grace has imparted. The hand which
+has bestowed the gem can alone provide the proper setting. The grace
+which has implanted the gift can alone throw open a proper sphere for
+its exercise. What! can it be possible that those gifts which emanate
+from the Church's triumphant and glorious Lord are not available for her
+edification until they are dragged through the mire of a heathen
+mythology? Alas for the heart that can think so! As well might we say
+that the fatness of the olive and the pure blood of the grape must be
+mingled with the contents of a quagmire to render them available for
+human use.
+
+But it will be asked, "Were there not elders and deacons in the early
+Church, and ought we not to have such likewise?" Unquestionably there
+were elders and deacons in the early Church. They were appointed by the
+apostles, or those whom the apostles deputed: that is to say, they were
+appointed by the Holy Ghost--the only One who could then, or can now,
+appoint them. We believe that none but God can make or appoint an elder,
+and therefore for man to set about such work is but a powerless form, an
+empty name. Men may, and do, point us to the shadows of their own
+creation, and call upon us to recognize in those shadows divine
+realities; but alas! when we examine them in the light of Holy
+Scripture, we cannot even trace the outline, to say nothing of the
+living, speaking features of the divine original. We see
+divinely-appointed elders in the New Testament, and we see
+humanly-appointed elders in the professing Church; but we can by no
+means accept the latter as a substitute for the former. We cannot accept
+a mere shadow in lieu of the substance. Neither do we believe that men
+have any divine authority for their act when they set about making and
+appointing elders. We believe that when Paul, or Timothy, or Titus,
+ordained elders, they did so as acting by the power and under the direct
+authority of the Holy Ghost; but we deny that any man, or body of men,
+can so act now. We believe it was the Holy Ghost then, and it must be
+the Holy Ghost now. Human assumption is perfectly contemptible. If God
+raises up an elder or a pastor we thankfully own him. He both can and
+does raise up such. He does raise up men fitted by His Spirit to take
+the oversight of His flock, and to feed His lambs and sheep. His hand is
+not shortened that He cannot provide those blessings for His Church even
+amid its humiliating ruins. The reservoir of spiritual gift in Christ
+the Head is not so exhausted that He cannot shed forth upon His body all
+that is needed for the edification thereof. We are of opinion that were
+it not for our impatient attempts to provide for ourselves by making
+pastors and elders of our own, we should be far more richly endowed with
+pastors and teachers after God's own heart. We need not marvel that He
+leaves us to our own resources when by our unbelief we limit Him in
+His.
+
+Instead of "proving" Him, we "limit" Him, and therefore we are shorn of
+our strength and left in barrenness and desolation; or, what is worse,
+we betake ourselves to the miserable provisions of human expediency.
+However, we believe it is far better, if we have not God's reality, to
+remain in the position of real, felt, confessed weakness than to put
+forth the hollow assumption of strength; we believe it is better to be
+real in our poverty than to put on the appearance of wealth. It is
+infinitely better to wait on God for whatever He may be pleased to
+bestow, than to limit His grace by our unbelief, or hinder His provision
+for us by making provision for ourselves.
+
+We ask, where is the Church's warrant for calling, making or appointing
+pastors? Where have we an instance in the New Testament of a Church
+electing its own pastor? Acts i. 23-26 has been adduced in proof. But
+the very wording of the passage is sufficient to prove that it furnishes
+no warrant whatever. Even the eleven apostles could not elect a brother
+apostle, but had to commit it to higher authority. Their words are,
+"THOU, LORD, _which knowest the hearts of all_, show whether of these
+two _Thou hast chosen_." This is very plain. They did not attempt to
+choose. God knew the heart. He had formed the vessel. He had put the
+treasure therein, and He alone could appoint it to its proper place.
+
+It is very evident, therefore, that the case of the eleven apostles
+calling upon the Lord to choose a man to fill up their number affords
+no precedent whatever for a congregation electing a pastor: it is
+entirely against any such practice. God alone can make or appoint an
+apostle or an elder, an evangelist or a pastor. This is our firm belief,
+and we ask for Scripture proof of its unsoundness. Human opinion will
+not avail; tradition will not avail; expediency will not avail. Are we
+taught from the word of God that the early Church ever elected its own
+pastors or teachers? We positively affirm that there is not so much as a
+single line of Scripture in proof of any such custom. If we could only
+find direction in the word of God to make and appoint pastors, we should
+at once seek to carry such direction into effect; but in the absence of
+any divine warrant we could only regard it as a mimicry on our part to
+attempt any such a thing. Why was not the church at Ephesus, or why were
+not the churches at Crete, directed to elect or appoint elders? Why was
+the direction given to Timothy and Titus without the slightest reference
+to the Church, or to any part of the Church? Because, as we believe,
+Timothy and Titus acted by the direct power and under the direct
+authority of God the Holy Ghost, and hence their appointment was to be
+regarded by the Church as divine.[XXVIII.]
+
+But where have we anything like this now? Where is the Timothy or the
+Titus now? Where is there the least intimation in the New Testament that
+there should be a succession of men invested with the power to ordain
+elders or pastors? True, the apostle Paul, in his second epistle to
+Timothy, says, "The things which thou hast heard of me among many
+witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to
+teach others also" (2 Tim. ii. 2). But there is not a word here about a
+succession of men having power to ordain elders and pastors. Assuredly
+teaching is not ordination; still less is it imparting the power to
+ordain. If the inspired apostle had meant to convey to the mind of
+Timothy that he was to commit to others authority to ordain, and that
+such authority was to descend by a regular chain of succession, he could
+and would have done so; and in that case the passage would have run
+thus: "The power which has been vested in you, the same do thou vest in
+faithful men, that they may be able also to ordain others." Such,
+however, is not the case; and we deny that there is any man or body of
+men now upon earth possessing power to ordain elders, nor was that power
+or authority ever committed to the Church. We hold it to be absolutely
+divine; and therefore, when God sends an elder or a pastor, an
+evangelist or a teacher, we thankfully hail the heaven-bestowed
+gift;[XXIX.] but we desire to be delivered from all empty pretension. We
+will have God's reality or nothing. We will have heaven's genuine coin,
+not earth's counterfeit. Like the Tirshatha of old, who said "that they
+should not eat of the most holy things till there stood up a priest
+with Urim and Thummim" (Ezra ii.63), so would we say, let us rather, if
+it must be so, remain without office-bearers than substitute for God's
+realities the shadows of our own creation. Ezra could not accept the
+pretensions of men. Men might _say_ they were priests; but if they could
+not produce the divine warrant and the divine qualifications, they were
+utterly rejected. In order for a man to be entitled to approach the
+altar of the God of Israel, he should not only be descended from Aaron,
+but also be free from every bodily blemish. (See Lev. xxi. 16-23.) So
+now, in order for any man to minister in the Church of God, he must be a
+regenerated man, and he must have the necessary spiritual
+qualifications. Even St. Paul, in his powerful appeal to the conscience
+and judgment of the church at Corinth, refers to his spiritual gifts and
+the fruits of his labor as the indisputable evidences of his
+apostleship. (See 2 Cor. x., xii.)
+
+Before dismissing the subject of the Christian Ministry, we would offer
+a remark upon the practise of laying on of hands, which is presented in
+the New Testament in two ways. First, we find it connected with the
+communication of a positive gift. "Neglect not the gift that is in thee,
+which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the hands of the
+presbytery" (I Tim. iv. 14). This is again referred to in the second
+epistle: "Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift
+of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands" (2 Tim. i. 6).
+This latter passage fixes the import of the expression "presbytery," as
+used in the first epistle. Both passages prove that the act of laying on
+of hands in Timothy's case was connected with the imparting of a gift.
+But secondly, we find the laying on of hands adopted simply for the
+purpose of expressing full fellowship and identification, as in Acts
+xiii. 3. It could not possibly mean ordination in this passage, inasmuch
+as Paul and Barnabas had been in the ministry long before. It simply
+gave beautiful expression to the full identification of their brethren
+in that work unto which the Holy Ghost had called them, and to which He
+alone could send them forth.
+
+Now we believe that the laying on of hands as expressing ordination, if
+there be not the power to impart a gift, is worth nothing, if indeed it
+be not mere assumption; but if it be merely adopted as the expression of
+full fellowship in any special work or mission, we should quite rejoice
+in it. For example, if two or three brethren felt themselves called of
+God to go on an evangelistic mission to some foreign land, and that
+those with whom they were in communion perceived in them the needed gift
+and grace for such a work, we should deem it exceedingly happy were they
+to set forth their unqualified approval and their brotherly fellowship
+by the act of laying on of hands. Beyond this we can see no value
+whatever in that act.
+
+Having thus, so far as our limits would permit, treated of the questions
+of the Sabbath, the Law, and the Christian Ministry; having shown that
+we honor and observe the Lord's day, that we give the Law its divinely
+appointed place, and finally, that we hold the sacred and precious
+institution of the Christian Ministry, we might close this paper, did we
+not feel called upon to present a few other points. In our general
+teaching and preaching we seek to set forth the fundamental truths of
+the gospel, such as the doctrine of the Trinity; the eternal Sonship;
+the personality of the Holy Ghost; the plenary inspiration of Holy
+Scripture; the eternal counsels of God in reference to His elect; the
+fullest and freest presentation of His love to a lost world; the solemn
+responsibility of every one who hears the glad tidings of salvation to
+accept the same; man's total ruin by nature and by practice; his
+inability to help himself in thought, word, or deed; the utter
+corruption of his will; Christ's incarnation, death, and resurrection;
+His absolute deity and perfect humanity in one person; the perfect
+efficacy of His blood to cleanse from all sin; perfect justification and
+sanctification by faith in Christ, through the operation of God the Holy
+Ghost; the eternal security of all true believers; the entire separation
+of the Church in calling, standing and hope from this present world.
+
+Then, again, we hold, in common with many of our brethren in the
+denominations, that the hope of the believer is set forth in these words
+of Christ: "I will come again and receive you unto myself; that where I
+am, there ye may be also" (John xiv.3). We believe that the early
+Christians were converted to "that blessed hope"--that it was the common
+hope of Christians in apostolic times. To adduce proofs would swell this
+paper into a volume.
+
+Furthermore, we believe that all disciples should meet on the first day
+of the week to break bread (Acts xx. 7); and when so met, they should
+look to the Head of the Church to furnish the needed gifts, and to the
+Holy Ghost to guide in the due administration of these gifts.
+
+As to the Scriptural ordinance of baptism, we look upon it as a
+beautiful exhibition of the truth of the believer's identification with
+Christ in death. (See Matt. xxviii. 19; Mark xvi. 16; Acts ii. 38, 41;
+viii. 38; x. 47, 48; xvi. 33; Rom. vi. 3, 4.)
+
+As regards the precious institution of the Lord's Supper, we believe
+that Christians should celebrate it on every Lord's day, and that in so
+doing they commemorate the Lord's death until He come. We believe that
+as baptism sets forth our death with Christ, so the Lord's Supper sets
+forth Christ's death for us. We do not see any authority in the word of
+God for regarding the Lord's Supper as "a sacrifice," "a sacrament," or
+"a covenant." The word is, "This do in remembrance of Me." (See Matt.
+xxvi. 26-28; Mark xiv. 22-24; Luke xxii. 19, 20; I Cor. xi. 23-26.)
+
+The above is a very brief but explicit statement of what we hold, and
+preach and practise. We meet in public: our worship meetings, our prayer
+meetings, our reading meetings, our lectures, our gospel preachings,
+are all open to the public.
+
+But we have done. We would in this closing line entreat the reader to
+"search the Scriptures." Let him try everything by that standard. Let
+him see to it that he has plain Scripture for everything with which he
+stands connected. "To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not
+according to this word, it is because there is no light in them" (Isa.
+viii. 20.).
+
+We can honestly say we love with all our hearts all those who love our
+Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity; and wherever there is one who preaches a
+full, free and an everlasting salvation to perishing sinners, through
+the blood of the Lamb, we wish him godspeed in the name of the Lord.
+
+We now commend the reader to the blessing of the Father, and of the Son,
+and of the Holy Ghost. If he be a true believer, we pray that in his
+course down here he may be a bright and faithful witness for his absent
+Lord. But if he be one who has not yet found peace in Jesus, we would
+say to him, with solemn emphasis and earnest affection, "BEHOLD THE LAMB
+OF GOD, WHICH TAKETH AWAY THE SIN OF THE WORLD!" (John i. 29).
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXVII.] For a fuller exposition of the doctrine of the sabbath, see
+"Notes on Genesis" (chap. ii.); also, "Notes on Exodus" (chaps. xvi. and
+xxxi.).
+
+[XXVIII.] We would here offer a remark in reference to the appointment
+of deacons in Acts vi. This case has been adduced in proof of the
+rightness of a congregation electing its own pastor; but the proof fails
+in every particular. In the first place, the business of those deacons
+was "to serve tables." Their functions as deacons were temporal, not
+spiritual. They might possess spiritual gift independently altogether of
+their deaconship. Stephen did possess such.
+
+But more than this. Although the disciples were called upon to look out
+for men competent to take charge of their temporal affairs, yet the
+apostles alone could appoint them. Their words are, "Whom _we_ may
+appoint over this business." In other words, although there is a vast
+difference between a deacon and a pastor, between taking charge of money
+and taking the oversight of souls, yet even in the matter of a deacon
+the appointment in Acts vi. was entirely divine; and hence it affords no
+warrant for a church electing its own pastor.
+
+We might further add that _office_ and _gift_ are clearly distinguished
+in the word of God. There might be, and were, many elders and deacons in
+any given church, and yet the fullest and freest exercise of gift when
+the whole church came together into one place. Elders and deacons might
+or might not have the gift of teaching or exhortation. Such gift was
+quite independent of their special office. In I Cor. xiv., where it is
+said, "Ye may all prophesy one by one," and where we have a full view of
+the public assembly, there is not a word about an elder or a president
+of any kind whatever.
+
+[XXIX.] Let the reader carefully note that _gifts_, as evangelists,
+pastors, teachers, prophets, being given directly by the Head of the
+Church for the edification of His people on earth (see Eph. iv. 8-13)
+were never appointed or "licensed" by apostolic hands or any others.
+Elders and deacons were to act as guides and to serve in the assemblies
+in which they had their place. To this position or _office_ they were
+appointed by an apostle, or one sent by him. [ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THE MINISTRY OF CHRIST
+
+PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE
+
+(Scriptures read before lecture, Exodus xxi. I-6; John xiii. I-10; Luke
+xii. 37.)
+
+"For even the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to
+minister, and to give His life a ransom for many." (Mark x. 45.)
+
+
+It is very necessary, beloved friends, to retire from all thoughts about
+our service to the Lord, and our work for Him, and to have our hearts
+occupied with His service toward us. And when I say this, you will not
+suppose for a moment that it is my desire or thought to weaken in any
+heart in this assembly, in the smallest degree, the desire to work for
+Christ, whatever sphere He may open for you, or according to whatever
+gift He may have bestowed upon you. Quite the reverse; indeed, I would
+seek in every way to strengthen and intensify that desire. But then one
+knows, both from experience and observation, that we may be so occupied
+with _our_ work and _our_ services that our hearts may lose the sense of
+what Christ is toward us in His marvelous character as a servant.
+
+And here let me say that my immediate thesis to-night is the Lord Jesus
+as the servant of His people's necessities. That is the field into which
+we are introduced by those scriptures which have been read in your
+hearing. The Lord Jesus is the servant of the soul's necessities in
+every stage of its history, from first to last,--from the depths of your
+ruin and degradation as sinners, in all your weakness and failure as
+saints from day to day, until He plants you in the joys of His own
+kingdom. And His services will not end there; for, as we read in Luke
+xii. 37, He will gird Himself, and serve us in the glory. Thus His work
+as a servant overlaps the whole of the soul's history, past, present,
+and future. He has served us in the past, He is serving us now, and He
+will serve us forever.
+
+And here allow me to say that the line of truth which I have to bring
+before you to-night is of a directly individual character. We were
+speaking, on this night week, of the truth with respect to our corporate
+condition and character, and therefore I feel all the more free on this
+occasion to enter upon what is more directly personal--to speak of truth
+which bears directly on the soul's individual condition and wants. And I
+would ask you, my beloved hearers, to place yourselves, so far as
+through grace you can, in all simplicity and reality, straight in view
+of this theme--Christ the servant of our necessities.
+
+It is possible there may be souls in this room who want to begin at the
+very beginning with this most precious theme. They want to know Christ
+as the One who came into this world to serve them in all their deep and
+varied need as lost, self-destroyed, guilty, hell-deserving sinners. If
+there be any such present to-night, I would ask them to ponder deeply
+that verse which I have read, "The Son of Man is come to serve and to
+give."
+
+This is a divine reality. Jesus came into this world to meet our need,
+to serve us in all that in which we need His precious service, and to
+give His life a ransom for many; to serve us by bearing our sins in His
+own body on the tree, and working out a full and an eternal salvation.
+He did not come to get--He did not come to take--He did not come to be
+ministered to--He did not come to be gazed at--He came to be used; and
+therefore, while the soul that is exercised may be raising this
+harassing question, "What can I do for the Lord?" the answer is, "You
+must pause and see and believe what the Lord has done for you. You must
+stand still and see the salvation of God." Remember those words of
+divine and evangelistic sweetness, "To him that _worketh not_, but
+believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
+righteousness." (Rom. iv. 5.) You can never intelligently or properly
+serve Christ until you know and believe how He has served you. You must
+cease your restless doings, and rest in a divinely accomplished work.
+Then, but not until then, will you be able to start on a career of
+Christian service. It is most necessary for all anxious souls to
+understand that all true Christian service begins with the possession of
+eternal life, and is rendered in the power of the Holy Ghost, the
+indwelling Spirit, in the light and on the authority of holy Scripture.
+This is the divine idea of Christian work and service.
+
+Now, though the primary object of this meeting, brethren, is for those
+who are saints of God, who have set out on their course, still I do not
+think it would be according to the heart and sympathies of Christ to
+overlook the fact that there may be some soul in this congregation that
+wants, as I said, just to begin at the very beginning with this precious
+mystery--Christ the servant. I say, there may be some here to-night that
+have never taken the attitude of simple repose in Christ's finished
+work. They have, it may be, begun to think of their soul's salvation, to
+think about eternity; but they are occupied with the thought that the
+Lord is claiming something from them: "I must do this, I must do that,
+and I must do the other." Now, my beloved friends, if such be here, I
+repeat, with deepest earnestness, you must cease altogether from your
+own doings, cease from your own reasonings, cease from your own
+feelings; because, be assured of it, it is neither feeling nor thinking
+nor reasoning nor doing at all, but it is pausing and gazing. It is
+hearing and believing. It is looking off from yourselves and your
+service to Christ and His service. It is ceasing from your restless and
+worthless doings, and reposing in full, unquestioning confidence in the
+one offering of Jesus Christ, which has perfectly satisfied and
+perfectly glorified God as to the great question of your sin and guilt.
+Here lies the divine secret of peace--peace in Jesus--peace with
+God--eternal peace. Nothing will ever be right till you get on this
+ground. If you are occupied with your doings for Christ, you will never
+get peace; but if you will only take God at His word, and rest in His
+Christ, you shall possess a peace which no power of earth or hell can
+ever disturb.
+
+Now, my beloved hearers, I ask you, before I proceed, this question, Is
+there a heart in this congregation that has not yet rested here? Is
+there a heart here to-night that will say, I am not satisfied with
+Christ's service: I cannot rest in His work? What! The Son of God has
+stooped to serve you. The One who made you, the One who gave you life
+and breath and all things, the One to whom all are responsible, He has
+stooped to become your servant. It is not a question of asking you to do
+any thing, or asking you to give any thing, because--mark those
+words--they are words which sweep all through the history of the Son of
+Man--they are words which, in all their length and breadth and fullness,
+you can take up and use as if you were the only object of this service
+in the world--"The Son of Man is come to serve and to give." He is not
+come to get; He is not come to ask. The legal mind leads you to think
+that God is an exactor--that He is making demands upon you--that He
+wants your services in one way or another. But oh remember, I pray you,
+that your first great business, your primary and all-important work, is
+to believe in Jesus--to rest sweetly in Him, and in what He has done for
+you on the cross, and in what He is doing for you on the throne. "This
+is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent." You
+remember the interesting question of the Psalmist--a question asked when
+his eye rested on the magnitude and multitude of Jehovah's
+benefits--"What shall I render unto the Lord for all His benefits?" What
+is the reply? "I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the name
+of the Lord."
+
+Is this the way to "render unto the Lord"? Yes, this is just the way
+that gratifies and glorifies Him. If you really want to _render_, you
+must _take_. Take what? "The cup of salvation"--a full and brimming cup,
+most surely; and as you drink of that cup, as the glories of God's
+salvation shine in the vision of your soul, then will streams of living
+praise flow from your grateful heart. And you know He says, "Whoso
+offereth praise, glorifieth Me."
+
+In a word, then, you must, first of all, allow your soul to dwell upon
+the marvelous mystery of Christ's service toward you in all the depth of
+your need; and the more you dwell upon that, the more will you be in the
+true attitude to serve Him.
+
+Take another striking illustration. When David, as you remember, in that
+remarkable passage in the second book of Samuel (chap. vii.), sat in his
+house of cedar, and looked around at all that God had done for him, he
+said, "I must rise and build a house." Immediately the prophet was
+despatched to David to correct him on this point: "You shall not build
+Me a house, but I will build you a house." You must reverse the matter.
+God wants you to sit down and gaze yet more fully and intently upon His
+actings on your behalf. He wants you to look, not only at the past and
+the present, but to look on into the bright future; to see your entire
+history overlapped by His own magnificent grace.
+
+And what, let me ask, was the effect of all this upon the heart of
+David? We have the answer in that one pithy statement: "Then went King
+David in, and sat before the Lord, and said, 'Who am I?'" Mark the
+attitude, and ponder the question. They are full of deep meaning. "_He
+sat._" This is rest and sweet repose. He wanted to go to work too soon.
+No, says God, you must sit down and look at my work, and trace my
+actings on your behalf in the past, the present, and the future.
+
+And then the question, "_Who am I?_" In this we see the blessed fact
+that self was for the moment lost sight of. It was flung into the shade
+by the lustre of divine revelation. Self and its poor little actings
+were set aside by the glory of God and the rich magnificence of His
+actings on behalf of His servant.
+
+Now, some might have thought that David was an active, useful man when
+he was rising to take the trowel to build the house; and they might have
+thought him a good-for-nothing man to be sitting still when there was
+work to be done. But, brethren, let us remember that God's thoughts are
+not as our thoughts. He prizes our worship much more highly than our
+work. Indeed, it is only the true and intelligent worshiper that can be
+a true and intelligent workman. No doubt God most graciously accepts our
+poor services, even stamped as they so often are with mistakes of all
+sorts. But when it becomes a question of the comparative value of
+service and worship, the former must give place to the latter; and we
+know that when our brief span of working time shall have expired, our
+eternity of worship shall begin. Sweet thought!
+
+And let me further remark, ere leaving this part of our subject, that no
+one need fear in the least that the practical effect of what I have been
+saying will be to cripple your service, or lead you to fold your arms in
+culpable idleness or cold indifference. The very reverse is the case, as
+you may see in the history of David himself. Study at your leisure, I
+Chronicles xxviii, xxix. There you have a splendid presentation of
+service--a most triumphant answer to all who would place work before
+worship. There you see, as it were, King David rising from the attitude
+of a worshiper into that of a workman, and making ample provision for
+the building of that very house of which he was not allowed to set one
+stone upon another. And not only does he make provision according to the
+claims of holiness, but, as he says, "Because I have set my affection to
+the house of my God, I have of mine own proper good, of gold and silver,
+which I have given to the house of my God, _over and above all_ that I
+have prepared for the holy house, even three thousand talents of gold,
+of the gold of Ophir, and seven thousand talents of refined silver, to
+overlay the walls of the house." In other words, as we should express
+it, out of his own private purse, he gave the princely sum of over
+sixteen millions as a free gift toward the house which was to be reared
+by the hand of another. This, as he informs us, was "over and above what
+he had prepared for the holy house," which latter greatly exceeded the
+amount of England's national debt.
+
+Thus we see that it is the true worshiper that makes the effective
+servant. It is when we have sat and gazed on the actings of Christ for
+us that we are enabled in any small degree to act for Him. And then,
+too, we shall be able to say with David, as he surveyed the untold
+wealth prepared for the house of God, "It is all Thine, and of Thine own
+have we given Thee."
+
+I. But we must now turn for a few moments to the opening paragraph of
+Exodus xxi--"If thou buy a Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve; and
+in the seventh, he shall go out free for nothing. If he came in by
+himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married, then his wife
+shall go out with him. If his master have given him a wife, and she
+have borne him sons or daughters; the wife and her children shall be
+her master's, and he shall go out by himself. And if the servant shall
+plainly say, I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go
+out free: then his master shall bring him unto the judges; he shall also
+bring him to the door, or unto the door-post; and his master shall bore
+his ear through with an awl; and he shall serve him forever."
+
+Here, then, we have one of the shadows of good things to come--a shadow
+or figure of the True Servant, the Lord Jesus Christ, that blessed One
+who loved the Church and gave Himself for it. The Hebrew servant, having
+served the legal time, was perfectly free to go out; but he loved his
+wife and his children, and that, too, with such a love as led him to
+surrender his own personal liberty for their sakes. He proved his love
+for them by sacrificing himself. He might have gone forth and enjoyed
+his freedom, but what of them? How could he leave them behind?
+Impossible. He loved them too well for that; and hence he deliberately
+walked to the door-post, and there, in the presence of the judges, had
+his ear bored in token of perpetual service.
+
+This was love indeed. There was no mistake about it. The wife and each
+child, as they gazed ever after on that bored ear, could read the
+touching and powerful proof of the love of that servant's heart.
+
+Here, beloved, is something for the heart to dwell upon--yea, something
+over which the heart may well break itself. We see in this Old-Testament
+type the everlasting Lover of our souls--Jesus, the true servant. You
+remember that remarkable occasion in our Lord's life when He was setting
+before His disciples the solemn fact of His approaching cross and
+passion. You will find it in the eighth chapter of the gospel of Mark:
+"And He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things,
+and be rejected of the elders, and of the chief priests, and scribes,
+and be killed, and after three days rise again. And He spake that saying
+openly. And Peter took Him, and began to rebuke Him." Peter would fain,
+though he knew it not, have interrupted the True Servant in His movement
+to the door-post. He would have Him pity Himself, and maintain His own
+personal freedom. But oh, brethren, hearken to the withering rebuke
+administered to the very man who just before had made such a fine
+confession of Christ! "But when He had turned about and looked on His
+disciples, He rebuked Peter, saying, 'Get thee behind Me, Satan; for
+thou savorest not the things that be of God, but the things that be of
+men.'"
+
+Mark the action. "He turned and looked on His disciples," as though He
+would say, If I hearken to your counsel, Peter--if I pity Myself--if I
+retreat from that cross which lies before Me, then what is to become of
+these? It is the Hebrew servant saying, "I love my wife, I love my
+children, I will not go out free."
+
+It is of the very last possible importance for us to see that there was
+no necessity whatever laid upon the Lord Jesus Christ to walk to the
+cross; there was no necessity whatever laid upon Him to leave the glory
+which He had with the Father from all eternity and come down here; and
+when He had come down into this world, and taken perfect humanity upon
+Him, there was no necessity laid upon Him that He should have gone to
+the cross; for at any moment during the whole of His blessed history,
+from the manger of Bethlehem to the cross of Calvary, He might have gone
+back to where He came from. Death had no claim upon Him. The prince of
+this world came and had nothing in Him. He could say, speaking of His
+life, "No man taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself." (John x.
+18.) And on His way from the garden to the cross we hear Him saying,
+"Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to My Father, and He shall
+presently give Me more than twelve legions of angels? But how then shall
+the Scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be?" And may we not say
+there was much more truth than the utterers were aware of in these
+accents of mockery which fell on the blessed Saviour's ear as He hung on
+the cross--"He saved others; Himself He cannot save"? But they might
+have said, Himself He will not save.
+
+Ah, no! blessed forever be His name! He did not pity or spare Himself,
+but He pitied us. He beheld us in our hopeless ruin, guilt, misery, and
+danger. He saw that there was no eye to pity, no arm to save; and--all
+praise to His matchless name!--He laid aside His glory, came down into
+this wretched world, became a man, that as a man He might, by the
+sacrifice of Himself, deliver us from the lake of fire, and associate us
+with Himself on the new and eternal ground of accomplished redemption,
+in the power of resurrection-life, according to the eternal counsels of
+God, and to the praise of His glory.
+
+Now, we cannot possibly overestimate the importance of dwelling upon the
+fact that there was no necessity whatever laid upon our blessed Lord
+Jesus Christ to die on the cross, and to endure the wrath of God.
+Neither in His person, in His nature, nor in His relations was He
+obnoxious to death. He was God over all, blessed forever. He was the
+Eternal Son of God. And in His human nature He was pure, spotless,
+sinless, perfect. He knew no sin. He did always and only the things that
+pleased God. He glorified Him, and finished His work; and He has saved
+us in such a way as to glorify God in the most wonderful manner. He was,
+to use the language of our type, free to go out by Himself; but ah,
+beloved, had He done so, your place and mine must inevitably have been
+the lake of fire forever.
+
+To all this the Holy Ghost delights to bear testimony, as one of our own
+poets has sweetly sung--
+
+ "And, Lord, Thy perfect fitness
+ To do a Saviour's part,
+ The Holy Ghost doth witness
+ To each believer's heart."
+
+Most true; and we might with equal truth say, "His fitness to do a
+servant's part," because it was the very height of His glory, the very
+dignity of His person; it was the glory whence He had descended, that
+enabled Him to stoop down to the very depths of His people's
+necessities. There is not a necessity--no, not one--in the deepest range
+of His people's history, or in the lowest depths of their condition,
+that He has not reached in His marvelous character and His divine
+ministry as the servant of His people's necessities.
+
+Brethren, let us never forget this. Nay, rather let us constantly
+cherish in our hearts the most grateful remembrance of it. The more we
+dwell upon the height of Christ's personal glory, the more fully we
+shall see the depths of His humiliation. The more profoundly we meditate
+upon the glory of what He _was_, the more we must be arrested by the
+grace of what He _became_. "Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor, that ye
+through His poverty might be rich."
+
+Who can measure the heights and the depths of those two words, "rich"
+and "poor," in their application to our adorable Lord and Saviour? No
+created intelligence can fathom them; but most assuredly we should
+cultivate the habit of dwelling upon the love that shines all along the
+pathway of the divine Servant as He walked to the cross for us. It is as
+we dwell upon His love to us that our hearts shall be drawn out by the
+Holy Ghost in the power of responsive love to Him. "The love of Christ
+constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if One died for all, then
+were all dead; and that He died for all, that they which live should not
+henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them, and
+rose again." (2 Cor. v. 14, 15.)
+
+II. Having thus glanced at our Lord's service toward us in the past, let
+us look for a few moments at His present service--at what He is now
+doing for us continually in the presence of God. This we have most
+blessedly presented to us in that part of John xiii. which I have read
+for you this evening. The same precious grace shines in this as in all
+that on which we have been dwelling. If we look back at the past, we
+behold the Perfect Servant nailed to the cross for us; if we look up to
+the throne now, we behold Him girded for us, not only according to our
+present need, but according to the perfect love of His heart--His love
+to the Father, His love to the Church, His love to each individual
+believer from the beginning to the end of time.
+
+"Now before the feast of the passover, when Jesus knew that His hour was
+come that He should depart out of this world unto the Father, having
+loved His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end. And
+during supper [see Greek], the devil having now put into the heart of
+Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, to betray Him; Jesus knowing that the
+Father had given all things into His hands, and that He was come from
+God, and went to God; He riseth from supper, and laid aside His
+garments; and took a towel, and girded Himself. After that He poureth
+water into a basin, and began to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe
+them with the towel wherewith He was girded."
+
+Here, then, we have a most marvelous presentation of Christ's present
+service toward "His own which are in the world." There is something
+peculiarly precious in the expression, "_His own_." It brings us so very
+near to the heart of Christ. It is so sweet to think that He can look at
+such poor, feeble, failing creatures as we are, and say, They are Mine.
+It matters not what others may think about them; they belong to Me, and
+I must have them in a condition worthy of the place whence I came, and
+whither I am going.
+
+This, brethren, is ineffably precious and edifying for our souls. It was
+in the sense of His personal glory, in the consciousness that He had
+come from God and was going to God, that He could stoop down and wash
+His people's feet. There was nothing, could be nothing, higher than the
+place whence Jesus had come; there was nothing, could be nothing, lower
+than the defiled feet of His disciples: but, blessed and praised forever
+be His name! He fills up in His own divine person and marvelous service
+every point between those two extremes. He can lay one hand on the
+throne of God, and the other on our feet, and be Himself the divine and
+eternal link between.
+
+Now, there are three things in this scripture which I am anxious to put
+clearly before you this evening. In the first place, we have the special
+action of our Lord toward His own in the world; secondly, the spring of
+that action; and thirdly, the measure of the action:--the action, its
+spring, and its measure.
+
+(I.) And first, the action itself. You will bear in mind, beloved in the
+Lord, that what we have presented here is not "the washing of
+regeneration." That pertains to the first stage of our Lord's service on
+our behalf. "His own which are in the world"--all who belong to that
+highly privileged class (and that is simply all who believe in His name)
+have passed through that great washing, in virtue of which Christ can
+pronounce them "clean every whit."
+
+There is not a spot or a stain upon the very feeblest of that blessed
+number whom He calls "His own." "He that is washed needeth not save to
+wash his feet, but _is clean every whit_: and _ye are clean_, but not
+all." If a single spot could be detected on one of Christ's own, it
+would be a dishonor cast upon Him, inasmuch as He has washed us from all
+our guilt according to the perfection of His work as the Servant of our
+need, and, far above all, the Servant of the eternal counsels, purposes,
+and glory of God. He found us clean never a whit, and He has made us
+"clean every whit."
+
+This is the washing of regeneration, which is never repeated. We have a
+figure of this in the case of the priests of the Mosaic economy. On the
+great day of their inauguration they were washed in water. This action
+was never repeated. But after this, from day to day, in order to fit
+them for the daily discharge of their priestly functions, they had to
+wash their hands and their feet in the brazen laver in the tabernacle,
+or the brazen sea in the temple. This daily washing is the figure of the
+action in John xiii. The two washings, being distinct, must never be
+confounded; and being intimately connected, must never be separated. The
+washing of regeneration is divinely and eternally complete: the washing
+of sanctification is being divinely and continually carried on. The
+former is never repeated; the latter is never interrupted. That gives us
+a part _in_ Christ, of which nothing can rob us; and this gives us a
+part _with_ Christ, of which any thing may deprive us. The one is the
+basis of our eternal life; the other is the ground of our daily
+communion.
+
+Beloved brethren, see that you understand the meaning of having your
+feet washed, moment by moment, by the hands of that blessed One who is
+girded as the divine Servant of your present need. It is utterly
+impossible for any one to overestimate the importance of this work; but
+we may at least gather something of its value from our Lord's words to
+Peter; for Peter, like ourselves, alas! was very far from seizing the
+full significance of what his Lord was doing. "Then cometh He to Simon
+Peter; and Peter saith unto Him, 'Lord, dost Thou wash my feet?' Jesus
+answered and said unto him, 'What I do thou knowest not now; but thou
+shalt know hereafter. Peter saith unto Him, 'Thou shalt never wash my
+feet.' Jesus answered him, 'If I wash thee not, thou hast no part _with_
+Me.'"
+
+Here is the grand point--"part with Me." The washing of regeneration
+gives us a part _in_ Christ: the daily washing of sanctification gives
+us a part _with_ Christ. In order to full, intelligent, happy communion,
+we must have a clean conscience, and clean feet. The blood of atonement
+secures the former; the water of purification maintains the other. But
+both the blood and the water flowed from a crucified Christ. The death
+of Christ is the necessary basis of every thing. He died to make us
+clean; He lives to keep us clean. We are made as clean as His death can
+make us; we are kept as clean as His life can keep us.
+
+And, be it remembered, this marvelous ministry of Christ on our behalf
+never ceases. He ever liveth to act _for_ us on high, and to act _on_ us
+and _in_ us by His Word and Spirit. He speaks to God for us, and He
+speaks to us for God. He came from God, and traveled down to the
+profoundest depths of our need. He has gone back to God, to bear us ever
+on His heart, to meet our daily need, and to maintain us in the
+integrity of the position and relationship into which He has introduced
+us.
+
+This is replete with solid comfort for the soul. We are passing through
+a defiling world, where we are constantly liable to contract evils of
+one kind or another which, though they cannot touch our eternal life,
+can very seriously affect our communion. It is impossible for us to
+tread the sanctuary of the divine presence with soiled feet; and hence
+the deep and unspeakable blessedness of having One ever in the presence
+of God for us--One who, having been in this scene, knows its true
+character; and One who, having come from God, and gone back to Him,
+knows the full extent of His claims, and all that is needful to fit us
+for fellowship with Him. The provision is divinely perfect. Sin or
+uncleanness can never be found in the presence of God. If we can make
+light of either the one or the other, God cannot and will not. The
+holiness that shines in the demand for purity is as bright as the grace
+that provides it. Grace has made the provision, but holiness demands the
+application thereof. The goodness of God provided a laver for the
+priests of old, but the holiness of God demanded that the priests should
+use that laver. The great washing of inauguration introduced them to the
+office of the priesthood; the washing in the laver fitted them for the
+duties of that office. How could acceptable priestly service be
+discharged with unclean hands? Impossible. And we may say it is as
+impossible that we can walk in the pathway of holiness if our feet are
+not washed and wiped by that blessed One who has girded Himself to serve
+us in this matter perpetually.
+
+All this is divinely simple. There are two links in Christianity;
+namely, the link of eternal life, which can never be snapped by any
+thing; and the link of personal communion, which can be snapped in a
+moment by the weight of a feather. Now, it is as our ways are cleansed
+by the holy action of the Word, through the Holy Ghost, that our
+communion is maintained in its unbroken integrity. But if I am afraid to
+face the Word of God, or if I am willfully refusing its action, how can
+I enjoy communion with God?
+
+I am not speaking now of ignorance of the Word of God. The Lord bears
+with a wonderful amount of ignorance in us--far more than we could bear
+with in one another. I do not now refer to the question of ignorance.
+But suppose a case. A young person entered these walls a few weeks ago,
+and took her seat on one of these benches. She was dressed out in all
+the fashion of this world--her head adorned with feathers and flowers,
+and her fingers with jewels. Her heart full of vanity and folly. Here
+the grace of God met her in all its fullness and freeness. The arrow of
+divine conviction entered her soul. She was broken down under the mighty
+power of the Word, in the hands of the Holy Ghost. She was brought to
+repentance toward God, and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. She was
+saved, there and then, and left the place rejoicing in a full salvation.
+This joy continued for many days. She was engrossed with her newly found
+treasure. She never thought about her feathers, her flowers, or her
+jewels. True, she continued to wear them, simply because she as yet saw
+nothing wrong in so doing. She knew not as yet that there was so much as
+a single sentence in the Word of God bearing upon such things.
+
+Brethren, let me just remind you that we should be prepared for such a
+case as this, and be prepared to meet it. Some of us, I fear, have but
+little wisdom or patience to deal with cases of this type. We are in
+undue haste to enter upon what I may call the stripping process. This is
+a mistake. We must allow time for the hidden virtues of the kingdom of
+God to develop themselves. We must not attempt to reduce the Christian
+assembly into a place in which a certain livery is adopted. This will
+never do. We really cannot reduce all to a dead level. We must allow the
+Word of God to act on the life which the Spirit of God has implanted. I
+do nothing but mischief to people if I get them to adopt a certain style
+of dress merely at my suggestion. The grand thing is to allow the
+kingdom of God to assert its holy sway over the entire character. This
+is to His glory and the soul's genuine progress.
+
+Let us pursue our case. Our young friend, in the course of her reading,
+is arrested by the following pointed passage: "In like manner also, that
+women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness and
+sobriety; not with broidered hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array;
+but (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works." (I
+Tim. ii. 9, 10.) And again, "Whose adorning let it not be that outward
+adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, or of putting on
+of apparel; but let it be the hidden man of the heart, in that which is
+not corruptible, even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is
+in the sight of God of great price." (I Pet. iii. 3, 4.)
+
+Now, here, brethren, we have illustrated for us the present ministry of
+Christ--the action of the Word upon the soul--the application of the
+basin to the feet--the washing of water by the Word. It is Jesus
+stooping down to wash the feet of this young disciple. The question is,
+How will she receive the action? Will she resist it, or yield to it?
+Will she push away the basin? Will she refuse the gracious ministry? "If
+I wash thee not, thou hast no part _with_ Me."
+
+This is very solemn, and it demands our most serious attention. Next in
+moral importance to having the conscience purged by the blood of Christ
+stands this cleansing of our ways by the action of the Word, through the
+power of the Holy Ghost. The former gives us a part _in_ Christ; the
+latter, a part _with_ Christ. That is never repeated; this must never be
+interrupted. If we really desire fellowship with Christ, we must allow
+Him to wash our feet moment by moment. We cannot tread the pure
+precincts of the sanctuary of God with defiled feet any more than we can
+enter them with a defiled conscience.
+
+Hence, therefore, dearly beloved in the Lord, let us look well to it
+that we have our ways continually submitted to the purifying action of
+the precious Word of God. Let us put away every thing which that Word
+condemns; let us abandon every position and every association and every
+practice which that Word condemns, that so our holy fellowship with
+Christ may be maintained in its freshness and integrity. Nothing is more
+dangerous than to trifle with evil in any shape or form. Ignorance God
+can and does most graciously bear with, but the willful resistance of
+His Word in any one point is sure to lead to disastrous results. The
+heart becomes hardened, the conscience seared, the moral sense blunted,
+and the whole moral being gets into a most deplorable condition. We get
+away from the Lord, and make shipwreck of faith and a good conscience.
+May the Lord keep us near to Himself, walking with Him in tenderness of
+conscience and uprightness of heart. May His Word ever tell in living
+formative power upon our souls, that so our way be cleansed according to
+the claims of the sanctuary of God.
+
+(2.) But let us now inquire for a moment into the spring of this action
+on which we have been dwelling. This is presented with touching
+sweetness and power in the first verse of John xiii.--"Having loved His
+own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end."
+
+Here, then, brethren, we have the mighty spring of Christ's present
+ministry. It is the changeless love of His heart--a love that was
+stronger than death, and which many waters could not quench. "Christ
+loved the Church, and gave Himself for it; that He might sanctify and
+cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word." (Eph. v. 25, 26.)
+This is the blessed basis and the motive-spring of that marvelous
+ministry which our Lord Jesus Christ is now carrying on for us and
+toward us. He knew what He was undertaking when He uttered those words
+in the fortieth Psalm, "Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God." He knew what
+it would cost Him when He took up our case. But His love was and is
+divinely equal to all. We need not be afraid of exhausting that love
+which triumphed over all the unutterable horrors of Calvary, and went
+down under the deep and dark waters of death and judgment. We may at
+times feel ashamed to have so often to bring our defiled feet to that
+blessed One to cleanse them; but His love is equal to all, and that love
+is the spring of His precious and indispensable ministry.
+
+It is a common saying that love is blind, but I look upon it as a libel
+upon love. Most certainly it does not and could not apply to the love of
+Christ. He knew all that was in us, and He knows now all our ways and
+all our weakness and all our follies; but He loves us notwithstanding
+all, and in the power of that love He acts toward us in order to deliver
+us from all that He sees in us and about us which would hinder our holy
+fellowship with the Father and with His Son.
+
+Brethren, of what use, may I ask you, would a blind love be to you or to
+me? Surely, none whatever. How could we ever repose in a love which only
+acted toward us in ignorance of our blots and blemishes! Impossible.
+What we want is a love superior to all our imperfections, and a love
+that can deliver us from them. This love we have in Christ, blessed be
+His name! It is a love that, however it may expose us to ourselves, will
+never expose us to another. It is a love that comes to us with the basin
+and towel, and stoops down in infinite tenderness and lowly, matchless
+grace to wash away every soil, and give us the comfortable sense of
+being "clean every whit." This, brethren, is the love which you and I
+need, and this is the love which we have found in divine fullness and
+power in the heart of that perfect Servant who is girded for us ever
+before the throne. "Having loved _His own_ which were in the world, He
+loved them"--how long? As long as they behaved themselves, and walked
+with unsoiled feet? Ah, no! this would never do for such as we. "He
+loved them _unto the end_." Precious, perfect, divine, everlasting love!
+a love that overlaps and underlies and outlives all our blots and
+blemishes, our failings and falterings, our wants and weaknesses, our
+wanderings and waywardness; a love that has come to us armed with all
+that our condition could possibly demand; a love that will never cease
+to act for us and toward us and in us, until it presents us in
+unblemished perfectness before the throne of God.
+
+(3.) And now one word as to the measure of Christ's present action for
+us and toward us. This is a point of unspeakable value and importance.
+It is essential for us to know that, whether it be a question of
+Christ's service for us in the past or His present service, the measure
+of both the one and the other is and can be nothing less than the claims
+of the sanctuary, the throne, and the nature of God. We might suppose
+that the measure would be our necessities, but this would never do. If
+we think of Christ's atoning work, we know, and rejoice to know, that
+precious work has done very much more than meet the deepest measure of
+our necessities as sinners. Blessed be God! the work of the cross has
+divinely met all the claims of God. It could never give solid peace to
+our souls merely to know that the very highest claims of human
+conscience had been met by the atoning death of Christ. We must be
+assured on divine authority that the highest claims of the government,
+the character, the nature, and the glory of God have all been perfectly
+met by the precious work of Christ.
+
+Thus it is through infinite grace, and here every divinely exercised
+soul can find settled and eternal peace. Nor is it otherwise in respect
+to Christ's present work for us. It could never satisfy our souls,
+brethren, to be told that that work is measured by our very deepest
+need. That need is met, no doubt; but it is because Christ's present
+ministry goes far beyond that need, and reaches to, and satisfies the
+claims of, the sanctuary of God.
+
+Unspeakable mercy! Here we may rest in perfect tranquillity. We have One
+on high undertaking for us, ever living in the presence of God for us;
+One who not only knows our necessities, but knows also the claims of
+God. He knows what this scene is through which we are passing, and He
+knows what that scene is into which He has entered; and, all praise to
+His name! He meets in His own perfect ministry both the one and the
+other. He must needs meet all our claims since He meets all God's
+claims, for the less must ever be included in the greater.
+
+What solid comfort is here! What unruffled repose! We have One in the
+presence of God for us, in whose hands all our affairs are perfectly,
+because divinely, safe. They can never fall through, never go wrong. We
+may say that ere ever the very weakest of those whom Christ calls "His
+own in the world" can fail, Christ Himself must fail, and that can be
+_never_. His own are as safe as Himself.
+
+What a grand reality! With what perfect confidence may we refer every
+objector, every accuser, every opposer, to this blessed manager! And
+what folly, on our part, to attempt to answer such ourselves! Oh,
+beloved brethren, may we learn to lean more confidently on that blessed
+One who thus presents Himself before our souls as the girded servant of
+our deep and manifold necessities. May we prize His precious ministry
+more and more--His ministry for us, His ministry to us. May we repose
+more sweetly in the assurance that He is speaking to the Father for us,
+in all our failures, in all our shortcomings, in all our sins. May we
+remember, for our exceeding comfort, that even before we slip, He has
+been pleading for us, as He pleaded for Peter. "I have prayed for thee,"
+said the loving One, "that thy faith fail not." Oh, the matchless grace
+of these words! He did not pray that Peter might not fall, but that,
+having fallen, his confidence might not give way, his faith might not
+fail. Thus, too, He pleads for us, and thus we are sustained, and thus
+we are restored when we fall, else we should very speedily go from bad
+to worse, and make shipwreck altogether. "He ever liveth to make
+intercession for us." We are sustained by His precious and powerful
+ministry every moment. We could not stand for a single hour without Him.
+Things are continually turning up which would prove destructive of our
+fellowship, if we had not that blessed One acting for us, whose
+intervention on our behalf never ceases. He knows not only our need, but
+He knows what the sanctuary demands; and not only does He know it, but
+He provides for it, according to His own infinite perfectness and
+acceptance before God, meeting His people's necessities.
+
+Now, there are some people--I do not know whether there are any here
+to-night--but there are some people who have got such a one-sided notion
+of the standing of the believer, that they throw the Lord's priestly
+ministry overboard altogether. I say it is one-sided, and there is
+nothing more dangerous than one-sided truth--nothing. I would far rather
+see a man going through the length and breadth of London publishing
+palpable error, such as the simplest mind could detect. I would have far
+less apprehension of the mischievous result of his ministry than of the
+teaching of a man who takes up one side of a truth, and presses it in
+such a way as to interfere with some other truth.
+
+Now, there is an adjusting power in the truth of God--an adjusting power
+in Scripture that constitutes one of its brightest moral glories; and
+hence we find that while the Word of God most fully and blessedly
+establishes the truth that the believer stands complete in Christ,
+justified from all things, accepted in the Beloved, "clean every whit,"
+it, at the same time, with equal clearness and fullness, sets forth the
+fact that the believer is, in himself, a poor feeble creature, exposed
+to manifold snares, temptations, and hostile influences; liable at any
+moment to fall into error and evil; utterly unable to keep himself, or
+to grapple with the difficulties and dangers which surround him; liable
+at any moment to contract defilement, which would unfit him for the holy
+fellowship and worship of the sanctuary.
+
+How, then, are all those things to be met? How is the Christian to be
+kept in the face of such things? Having an evil nature, a crafty foe,
+and a hostile world to cope with, how is he to get on? How is he to be
+kept? How is he to be restored if he wanders? How is he to be lifted up
+if he falls? The answer to all these questions is found in that
+ever-precious sentence of inspiration, "He ever liveth to make
+intercession for us;" and again, "He is able to save to the uttermost;"
+and again, "We shall be saved by His life;" and again, "Because I live,
+ye shall live also;" and again, "We have an advocate with the Father."
+
+Brethren, how the heart delights to give forth and to ponder over such
+utterances as these! They are marrow and fatness to the soul. How can
+any one, in the face of such passages--to say nothing of his own
+necessary experiences as to himself and his surroundings--think of
+calling in question the grand foundation-truth of the priesthood of
+Christ, in its application to believers now? I can only say, I know not.
+But alas! alas! there is no accounting for the depths of error into
+which we may fall, if we allow our minds to work, and get away from the
+direct authority of holy Scripture. And we may truly say that a most
+palpable proof of our need of the intercession of Christ is to be found
+in the sad fact that any of His servants should be found to deny it.
+
+I shall add no more on this point, save to warn all the Lord's dear
+people against the terrible error of denying our continual need of the
+priestly ministry, the precious intercession and all-prevailing
+advocacy of our Lord Jesus Christ--an error second only to the denial of
+His atoning work. For most surely our need of His priesthood is second
+only to our need of His atoning blood.
+
+III. Having then briefly, and, alas! imperfectly, glanced at our Lord's
+ministry in the past and in the present, we cannot close without a
+reference to His ministry in the future. Some may feel disposed to say,
+I do not understand how our Lord can ever be found serving us in the
+future. I can understand His serving us now on the throne, but how He is
+to serve us in the kingdom is, I confess, beyond me.
+
+No doubt it is most marvelous, and had we not His own veritable words
+for it, we might well hesitate in our statement of the fact that our
+Lord Christ shall serve His people in the very brightness of the glory.
+But let us hear what He Himself saith to us. Turn for a moment to Luke
+xii. 35: "Let your loins be girded about, and your lights burning; and
+ye yourselves like unto men that wait for their lord, when he will
+return from the wedding; that when he cometh and knocketh, they may open
+unto him immediately. Blessed are those servants, whom the lord when he
+cometh shall find watching: verily I say unto you, that _he shall gird
+himself, and make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and
+serve them_."
+
+This is distinct and unmistakable. Most marvelous, no doubt, but as
+plain as it is marvelous. Christ will serve us in the kingdom. He will
+serve us forever. His ministry overlaps our entire history. It reaches
+down to the very deepest depths of our need as sinners, and up to the
+very loftiest heights of the glory. It goes back to the past, it covers
+the present, and it stretches away into the boundless future. Blessed be
+His name! He loves to serve us, and He gives us the assurance that the
+very moment, as it were, that He enters upon the glory of name! has
+given us a whole heart, and nothing can satisfy Him in return but a
+whole heart from us. His entire service--past, present, and future--is
+the fruit of His perfect love; and nothing can meet His desire, with
+respect to us, save a heart responsive in its affections to Him. And
+where there is this, it will express itself in an anxious, earnest
+longing for His coming. "Blessed are those servants, whom their lord
+when he cometh shall find watching."
+
+May the eternal Spirit fill our hearts with genuine love to the Person
+of our own adorable Lord and Saviour; that so our one grand and
+undivided purpose may be to live for Him in this scene from which He has
+been cast out, and to wait for that moment when we shall see Him as He
+is, and be like Him and with Him forever.
+
+_C. H. M._
+
+
+
+
+PRAYER AND THE PRAYER-MEETING
+
+
+In considering the deeply important subject of prayer, two things claim
+our attention; first, the moral basis of prayer; secondly, its moral
+conditions.
+
+I. The basis of prayer is set forth in such words as the following: "_If
+ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you_, ye shall ask what ye will,
+and it shall be done unto you." (John xv. 7.) Again, "Beloved, _if our
+heart condemn us not_, then have we confidence toward God. And
+whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, _because we keep His
+commandments_, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight." (I
+John iii. 21, 22.) So also, when the blessed apostle seeks an interest
+in the prayers of the saints, he sets forth the moral basis of his
+appeal--"Pray for us; _for we trust we have a good conscience_, in all
+things willing to live honestly." (Heb. xiii. 18.)
+
+From these passages, and many more of like import, we learn that, in
+order to effectual prayer, there must be an obedient heart, an upright
+mind, a good conscience. If the soul be not in communion with God--if it
+be not abiding in Christ--if it be not ruled by His holy
+commandments--if the eye be not single, how could we possibly look for
+answers to our prayers? We should, as the apostle James says, be "asking
+amiss, that we may consume it upon our lusts." How could God, as a holy
+Father, grant such petitions? Impossible.
+
+How very needful, therefore, it is to give earnest heed to the moral
+basis on which our prayers are presented. How could the apostle have
+asked the brethren to pray for him, if he had not a good conscience, a
+single eye, an upright mind--the moral persuasion that in all things he
+really wished to live honestly? We may safely assert, he could do no
+such thing.
+
+But may we not often detect ourselves in the habit of lightly and
+formally asking others to pray for us? It is a very common formulary
+amongst us--"Remember me in your prayers," and most surely nothing can
+be more blessed or precious than to be borne upon the hearts of God's
+dear people in their approaches to the mercy-seat; but do we
+sufficiently attend to the moral basis? When we say, "Brethren pray for
+us," can we add, as in the presence of the Searcher of hearts, "For we
+trust we have a good conscience, in all things willing to live
+honestly"? and when we ourselves bow before the throne of grace, is it
+with an uncondemning heart--an upright mind--a single eye--a soul really
+abiding in Christ, and keeping His commandments?
+
+These, beloved reader, are searching questions. They go right to the
+very centre of the heart--down to the very roots and moral springs of
+our being. But it is well to be thoroughly searched--searched in
+reference to every thing, but especially in reference to prayer. There
+is a terrible amount of unreality in our prayers--a sad lack of the
+moral basis--a vast amount of "asking amiss."
+
+Hence, the want of power and efficacy in our prayers--hence, the
+formality--the routine--yea, the positive hypocrisy. The Psalmist says,
+"If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me." How
+solemn this is! Our God will have reality; He desireth truth in the
+inward parts. He, blessed be His name, is real with us, and He will have
+us real with Him. He will have us coming before Him as we really are,
+and with what we really want.
+
+How often, alas! it is otherwise, both in private and in public! How
+often are our prayers more like orations than petitions--more like
+statements of doctrine than utterances of need! It seems, at times, as
+though we meant to explain principles to God, and give Him a large
+amount of information.
+
+These are the things which cast a withering influence over our
+prayer-meetings, robbing them of their freshness, their interest, and
+their value. Those who really know what prayer is--who feel its value,
+and are conscious of their need of it, attend the prayer-meeting in
+order to pray, not to hear orations, lectures, and expositions from men
+on their knees. If they want lectures, they can attend at the
+lecture-hall or the preaching-room; but when they go to the
+prayer-meeting, it is to pray. To them, the prayer-meeting is the place
+of expressed need and expected blessing--the place of expressed weakness
+and expected power. Such is their idea of "the place where prayer is
+wont to be made;" and therefore when they flock thither, they are not
+disposed or prepared to listen to long preaching prayers, which would be
+deemed barely tolerable if delivered from the desk, but which are
+absolutely insufferable in the shape of prayer.
+
+We write plainly, because we feel the need of great plainness of speech.
+We deeply feel our want of reality, sincerity, and truth in our prayers
+and prayer-meetings. Not unfrequently it happens that what we call
+prayer is not prayer at all, but the fluent utterance of certain known
+and acknowledged truths and principles, to which one has listened so
+often that the reiteration becomes tiresome in the extreme. What can be
+more painful than to hear a man on his knees explaining principles and
+unfolding doctrines? The question forces itself upon us, "Is the man
+speaking to God, or to us?" If to God, surely nothing can be more
+irreverent or profane than to attempt to explain things to Him; but if
+to us, then it is not prayer at all, and the sooner we rise from the
+attitude of prayer the better, inasmuch as the speaker will do better on
+his legs and we in our seats.
+
+And, having referred to the subject of attitude, we would very lovingly
+call attention to a matter which, in our judgment, demands a little
+serious consideration; we allude to the habit of sitting during the holy
+and solemn exercise of prayer. We are fully aware, of course, that the
+grand question in prayer is, to have the _heart_ in a right attitude.
+And further, we know, and would ever bear in mind, that many who attend
+our prayer-meetings are aged, infirm, and delicate people, who could not
+possibly kneel for any length of time--perhaps not at all. Then again,
+it often happens that, even where there is not physical weakness, and
+where there would be real desire to kneel down, as feeling it to be the
+proper attitude, yet, from actual want of space, it is impossible to
+change one's position.
+
+All these things must be taken into account; but, allowing as broad a
+margin as possible in which to insert these modifying clauses, we must
+still hold to it that there is a very deplorable lack of reverence in
+many of our public reunions for prayer. We frequently observe young men,
+who can neither plead physical weakness nor want of space, sitting
+through an entire prayer-meeting. This, we confess, is offensive, and we
+cannot but believe it grieves the Spirit of the Lord. We ought to kneel
+down when we can; it expresses reverence and prostration. The blessed
+Master "kneeled down and prayed." (Luke xxii. 41.) His apostle did the
+same, as we read in Acts xx. 36, "When he had thus spoken, he kneeled
+down and prayed with them all."
+
+And is it not comely and right so to do? Assuredly it is. And can aught
+be more unseemly than to see a number of people sitting, lolling,
+lounging, and gaping about while prayer is being offered? We consider it
+perfectly shocking, and we do here most earnestly beseech all the Lord's
+people to give this matter their solemn consideration, and to endeavor,
+in every possible way, both by precept and example, to promote the godly
+habit of kneeling at our prayer-meetings. No doubt those who take part
+in the meeting would greatly aid in this matter by short and fervent
+prayers; but of this, more hereafter.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+We shall now proceed to consider, in the light of holy Scripture, the
+moral conditions or attributes of prayer. There is nothing like having
+the authority of the divine Word for every thing in the entire range of
+our practical Christian life. Scripture must be our one grand and
+conclusive referee in all our questions. Let us never forget this.
+
+What, then, saith the Scripture as to the necessary moral conditions of
+prayer? Turn to Matthew xviii. 19--"Again I say unto you, that _if two
+of you shall agree_ on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask,
+it shall be done for them of My Father which is in heaven."
+
+Here we learn that one necessary condition of our prayers is,
+_unanimity_--cordial agreement--thorough oneness of mind. The true force
+of the words is, "If two of you shall symphonize"--shall make one common
+sound. There must be no jarring note, no discordant element.
+
+If, for example, we come together to pray about the progress of the
+gospel--the conversion of souls, we must be of one mind in the
+matter--we must make one common sound before our God. It will not do for
+each to have some special thought of his own to carry out. We must come
+before the throne of grace in holy harmony of mind and spirit, else we
+cannot claim an answer, on the ground of Matthew xviii. 19.
+
+Now, this is a point of immense moral weight. Its importance, as bearing
+upon the tone and character of our prayer-meetings, cannot possibly be
+overestimated. It is very questionable indeed whether any of us have
+given sufficient attention to it. Have we not to deplore the objectless
+character of our prayer-meetings? Ought we not to come together more
+with some definite object on our hearts, as to which we are going to
+wait together upon God? We read in the first chapter of Acts, in
+reference to the early disciples, "These all continued _with one accord_
+in prayer and supplication, with the women, and Mary the mother of
+Jesus, and with His brethren."[XXX.] And again, in the second chapter,
+we read, "When the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were _all with
+one accord in one place_."
+
+They were waiting, according to our Lord's instructions, for the promise
+of the Father--the gift of the Holy Ghost. They had the sure word of
+promise. The Comforter was, without fail, to come; but this, so far from
+dispensing with prayer, was the very ground of its blessed exercise.
+They prayed; they prayed in one place; they prayed with one accord. They
+were thoroughly agreed. They all, without exception, had one definite
+object before their hearts. They were waiting for the promised Spirit;
+they continued to wait; and they waited with one accord, until He came.
+Men and women, absorbed with one object, waited in holy concord, in
+happy symphony--waited on, day after day, earnestly, fervently,
+harmoniously waited until they were indued with the promised power from
+on high.
+
+Should not we go and do likewise? Is there not a sad lack of this "one
+accord," "one place" principle in our midst? True it is, blessed be God,
+we have not to ask for the Holy Ghost to come,--He has come; we have not
+to ask for the outpouring of the Spirit,--He has been poured out: but we
+have to ask for the display of His blessed power in our midst. Supposing
+our lot is cast in a place where spiritual death and darkness reign.
+There is not so much as a single breath of life--not a leaf stirring.
+The heaven above seems like brass; the earth beneath, iron. Such a thing
+as a conversion is never heard of. A withering formalism seems to have
+settled down upon the entire place. Powerless profession, dead routine,
+stupefying mechanical religiousness, are the order of the day. What is
+to be done? Are we to allow ourselves to fall under the fatal influence
+of the surrounding malaria? are we to yield to the paralyzing power of
+the atmosphere that inwraps the place? Assuredly not.
+
+If not, what then? Let us, even if there be but two who really feel the
+condition of things, get together, with one accord, and pour out our
+hearts to God. Let us wait on Him, in holy concord, with united, firm
+purpose, until He send a copious shower of blessing upon the barren
+spot. Let us not fold our arms and vainly say, "The time is not come."
+Let us not yield to that pernicious offshoot of a one-sided theology,
+which is rightly called fatalism, and say, "God is sovereign, and He
+works according to His own will. We must wait His time. Human effort is
+in vain. We cannot get up a revival. We must beware of mere
+excitement."
+
+All this seems very plausible; and the more so because there is a
+measure of truth in it; indeed it is all true, so far as it goes: but it
+is only one side of the truth. It is truth, and nothing but the truth;
+but it is not _the whole truth_. Hence its mischievous tendency. There
+is nothing more to be dreaded than one-sided truth; it is far more
+dangerous than positive, palpable error. Many an earnest soul has been
+stumbled and turned completely out of the way by one-sided or misapplied
+truth. Many a true-hearted and useful workman has been chilled,
+repulsed, and driven out of the harvest-field by the injudicious
+enforcement of certain doctrines having a measure of truth, but not
+_the_ full truth of God.
+
+Nothing, however, can touch the truth, or weaken the force of Matthew
+xviii. 19. It stands in all its blessed fullness, freeness, and
+preciousness before the eye of faith; its terms are clear and
+unmistakable. "If two of you shall agree upon earth, as touching _any
+thing_ that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of My Father which
+is in heaven." Here is our warrant for coming together to pray for any
+thing that may be laid on our hearts. Do we mourn over the coldness,
+barrenness, and death around us? Are we discouraged by the little
+apparent fruit from the preaching of the gospel--the lack of power in
+the preaching itself, and the total absence of practical result? Are our
+souls cast down by the barrenness, dullness, heaviness, and low tone of
+all our reunions, whether at the table of our Lord, before the
+mercy-seat, or around the fountain of holy Scripture?
+
+What are we to do? Fold our arms in cold indifference? give up in
+despair? or give vent to complaining, murmuring, fretfulness, or
+irritation? God forbid! What then? Come together, "with one accord in
+one place;" get down on our faces before our God, and pour out our
+hearts, as the heart of one man, pleading Matthew xviii. 19.
+
+This, we may rest assured, is the grand remedy--the unfailing resource.
+It is perfectly true that "God is sovereign," and this is the very
+reason why we should wait on Him; perfectly true that "human effort is
+in vain," and that is the very reason for seeking divine power;
+perfectly true that "we cannot get up a revival," and that is the very
+reason for seeking to get it _down_; perfectly true that "we must beware
+of mere excitement;" equally true that we must beware of coldness,
+deadness, and selfish indifference.
+
+The simple fact is, there is no excuse whatever--so long as Christ is at
+the right hand of God--so long as God the Holy Ghost is in our midst and
+in our hearts--so long as we have the Word of God in our hands--so long
+as Matthew xviii. 19 shines before our eyes--there is, we repeat, no
+excuse whatever for barrenness, deadness, coldness, and indifference--no
+excuse for heavy and unprofitable meetings--no excuse whatever for lack
+of freshness in our reunions or of fruitfulness in our service. Let us
+wait on God, in holy concord, and the blessing is sure to come.
+
+
+PART III.
+
+If we turn to Matthew xxi. 22, we shall find another of the essential
+conditions of effectual prayer. "And all things whatsoever ye shall ask
+in prayer, _believing_, ye shall receive." This is a truly marvelous
+statement. It opens the very treasury of heaven to faith. There is
+absolutely no limit. Our blessed Lord assures us that we shall receive
+whatsoever we ask in simple faith.
+
+The apostle James, under the inspiration of the
+
+Holy Ghost, gives us a similar assurance in reference to the matter of
+asking for wisdom. "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that
+_giveth to all liberally_, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
+him. But"--here is the moral condition--"let him ask _in faith, nothing
+wavering_. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with
+the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall obtain any
+thing of the Lord."
+
+From both these passages we learn that if our prayers are to have an
+answer, they must be prayers of faith. It is one thing to utter words in
+the form of prayer, and another thing altogether to pray in simple
+faith, in the full, clear, and settled assurance that we shall have what
+we are asking for. It is greatly to be feared that many of our so-called
+prayers never go beyond the ceiling of the room. In order to reach the
+throne of God, they must be borne on the wings of faith, and proceed
+from hearts united and minds agreed, in holy purpose, to wait on our God
+for the things which we really require.
+
+Now, the question is, are not our prayers and prayer-meetings sadly
+deficient on this point? Is not the deficiency manifest from the fact
+that we see so little result from our prayers? Ought we not to examine
+ourselves as to how far we really understand these two conditions of
+prayer, namely, unanimity and confidence? If it be true--and it is true,
+for Christ has said it--that two persons agreed to ask in faith can have
+whatsoever they ask, why do we not see more abundant answers to our
+prayers? Must not the fault be in us?--are we not deficient in concord
+and confidence?
+
+Our Lord, in Matthew xviii. 19, comes down, as we say, to the very
+smallest plurality--the smallest congregation--even to "two;" but of
+course the promise applies to dozens, scores, or hundreds. The grand
+point is, to be thoroughly agreed and fully persuaded that we shall get
+what we are asking for. This would give a different tone and character
+altogether to our reunions for prayer. It would make them very much more
+real than our ordinary prayer-meeting, which, alas! alas! is often poor,
+cold, dead, objectless, and desultory, exhibiting any thing but cordial
+agreement and unwavering faith.
+
+How vastly different it would be if our prayer-meetings were the result
+of a cordial agreement on the part of two or more believing souls, to
+come together and wait upon God for a certain thing, and to persevere in
+prayer until they receive an answer! How little we see of this! We
+attend the prayer-meeting from week to week--and very right we
+should--but ought we not to be exercised before God as to how far we are
+agreed in reference to the object or objects which are to be laid before
+the throne? The answer to this question links itself on to another of
+the moral conditions of prayer.
+
+Let us turn to Luke xi. "And He said unto them, 'Which of you shall have
+a friend, and shall go unto him at midnight, and say unto him, Friend,
+lend me three loaves; for a friend of mine in his journey is come to me,
+and I have nothing to set before him? And he from within shall answer
+and say, Trouble me not; the door is now shut, and my children are with
+me in bed; I cannot rise and give thee. I say unto you, though he will
+not rise and give him because he is his friend, yet because of his
+_importunity_ he will rise and give him as many as he needeth. And I say
+unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find;
+knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh
+receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it
+shall be opened.'" (Ver. 5-10.)
+
+These words are of the very highest possible importance, inasmuch as
+they contain part of our Lord's reply to the request of His disciples,
+"Lord, teach us to pray." Let no one imagine for a moment that we would
+dare to take it upon ourselves to teach people how to pray. God forbid!
+Nothing is further from our thoughts. We are merely seeking to bring the
+souls of our readers into direct contact with the Word of God--the
+veritable sayings of our blessed Lord and Master--so that, in the light
+of those sayings, they may judge for themselves as to how far our
+prayers and our prayer-meetings come up to the divine standard.
+
+What, then, do we learn from Luke xi? what are the moral conditions
+which it sets before us? In the first place, it teaches us to be
+_definite_ in our prayers. "Friend, lend me three loaves." There is a
+positive need felt and expressed; there is the one thing before the mind
+and on the heart, and to this one thing he confines himself. It is not a
+long, rambling, desultory statement about all sorts of things: it is
+distinct, direct, and pointed,--I want three loaves, I cannot do without
+them, I must have them, I am shut up, the case is urgent, the time of
+night--all the circumstances give definiteness and earnestness to the
+appeal. He cannot wander from the one point, "Friend, lend me three
+loaves."
+
+No doubt it seems a very untoward time to come--"midnight." Every thing
+looks discouraging. The friend has retired for the night, the door is
+shut, his children are with him in bed, he cannot rise. All this is very
+depressing; but still the definite need is pressed: he must have the
+three loaves.
+
+Now, we cannot but judge that there is a great practical lesson here
+which may be applied, with immense profit, to our prayers and our
+prayer-meetings. Must we not admit that our reunions for prayer suffer
+sadly from long, rambling, desultory prayers? Do we not frequently give
+utterance to a whole host of things of which we do not really feel the
+need, and which we have no notion of waiting for at all? Should we not
+sometimes be taken very much aback were the Lord to appear to us at the
+close of our prayer-meeting and ask us, What do you really want Me to
+give or to do?
+
+We feel most thoroughly persuaded that all this demands our serious
+consideration. We believe it would impart great earnestness, freshness,
+glow, depth, reality, and power to our prayer-meetings were we to attend
+with something definite on our hearts, as to which we could invite the
+fellowship of our brethren. Some of us seem to think it necessary to
+make one long prayer about all sorts of things--many of them very right
+and very good, no doubt--but the mind gets bewildered by the
+multiplicity of subjects. How much better to bring some one object
+before the throne, earnestly urge it, and pause, so that the Holy Spirit
+may lead out others, in like manner, either for the same thing or
+something else equally definite.
+
+Long prayers are often wearisome; indeed, in many cases, they are a
+positive infliction. It will perhaps be said that we must not prescribe
+any time to the Holy Spirit. True indeed;--away from us be the thought!
+Who would venture upon such a piece of daring blasphemy? We are simply
+comparing what we find in Scripture (where their brief pointedness is
+characteristic--see Matt. vi, John xvii., Acts iv. 24-30, Eph. i, iii,
+etc.) with what we too often--not always, thank God!--find in our
+prayer-meetings.
+
+Let it, then, be distinctly borne in mind that "long prayers" are not
+the rule in Scripture. They are referred to in Mark xii. 40, etc., in
+terms of withering disapproval. Brief, fervent, pointed prayers impart
+great freshness and interest to the prayer-meeting; but on the other
+hand, as a general rule, long and desultory prayers exert a most
+depressing influence upon all.
+
+But there is another very important moral condition set forth in our
+Lord's teaching in Luke xi, and that is, "_importunity_." He tells us
+that the man succeeds in gaining his object simply by his importunate
+earnestness. He is not to be put off; he must get the three loaves.
+Importunity prevails even where the claims of friendship prove
+inoperative. The man is bent on his object; he has no alternative. There
+is a demand, and he has nothing to meet it--"I have nothing to set
+before my traveling friend." In short, he will not take a refusal.
+
+Now, the question is, how far do we understand this great lesson? It is
+not, blessed be God, that He will ever answer us "from within." He will
+never say to us, "Trouble me not"--"I cannot rise and give thee." He is
+ever our true and ready "Friend"--"a cheerful, liberal, and unupbraiding
+Giver." All praise to His holy name! Still, He encourages importunity,
+and we need to ponder His teaching. There is a sad lack of it in our
+prayer-meetings. Indeed, it will be found that in proportion to the lack
+of definiteness is the lack of importunity. The two go very much
+together. Where the thing sought is as definite as the "three loaves,"
+there will generally be the importunate asking for it, and the firm
+purpose to get it.
+
+The simple fact is, we are too vague and, as a consequence, too
+indifferent in our prayers and prayer-meetings. We do not seem like
+people _asking for what they want, and waiting for what they ask_. This
+is what destroys our prayer-meetings, rendering them pithless,
+pointless, powerless; turning them into teaching or talking-meetings,
+rather than deep-toned, earnest prayer-meetings. We feel convinced that
+the whole Church of God needs to be thoroughly aroused in reference to
+this great question; and this conviction it is which compels us to offer
+these hints and suggestions, with which we are not yet done.
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+The more deeply we ponder the subject which has been for some time
+engaging our attention, and the more we consider the state of the entire
+Church of God, the more convinced we are of the urgent need of a
+thorough awakening every where in reference to the question of prayer.
+We cannot--nor do we desire to--shut our eyes to the fact that deadness,
+coldness, and barrenness seem, as a rule, to characterize our
+prayer-meetings. No doubt we may find here and there a pleasing
+exception, but speaking generally, we do not believe that any sober,
+spiritual person will call in question the truth of what we state,
+namely, that the tone of our prayer-meetings is fearfully low, and that
+it is absolutely imperative upon us to inquire seriously as to the
+cause.
+
+In the papers already put forth on this great, all-important, and deeply
+practical subject, we have ventured to offer to our readers a few hints
+and suggestions. We have briefly glanced at our lack of confidence, our
+failure in cordial unanimity, the absence of definiteness and
+importunity. We have referred in plain terms--and we must speak plainly
+if we are to speak at all--to many things which are felt by all the
+truly spiritual amongst us to be not only trying and painful, but
+thoroughly subversive of the real power and blessing of our reunions for
+prayer. We have spoken of the long, tiresome, desultory, preaching
+prayers which, in some cases, have become so perfectly intolerable, that
+the Lord's dear people are scared away from the prayer-meetings
+altogether. They feel that they are only wearied, grieved, and
+irritated, instead of being refreshed, comforted, and strengthened; and
+hence they deem it better to stay away. They judge it to be more
+profitable, if they have an hour to spare, to spend it in the privacy of
+their closet, where they can pour out their hearts to God in earnest
+prayer and supplication, than to attend a so-called prayer-meeting,
+where they are absolutely wearied out with incessant, powerless,
+hymn-singing, or long preaching prayers.
+
+Now, we more than question the rightness of such a course. We seriously
+doubt if this be at all the way to remedy the evils of which we
+complain. Indeed, we are thoroughly persuaded it is not. If it be right
+to come together for prayer and supplication--and who will question the
+rightness?--then surely it is not right for any one to stay away merely
+because of the feebleness, failure, or even the folly of some who may
+take part in the meeting. If all the really spiritual members were to
+stay away on such a ground, what would become of the prayer-meeting? We
+have very little idea of how much is involved in the elements which
+compose a meeting. Even though we may not take part audibly in the
+action, yet if we are there in a right spirit--there really to wait upon
+God, we marvelously help the tone of a meeting.
+
+Besides, we must remember that we have something more to do in attending
+a meeting than to think of our own comfort, profit, and blessing. We
+must think of the Lord's glory; we must seek to do His blessed will, and
+try to promote the good of others in every possible way; and neither of
+these ends, we may rest assured, can be attained by our deliberately
+absenting ourselves from the place where prayer is wont to be made.
+
+We repeat, and with emphasis, the words, "_deliberately_ absenting
+ourselves"--staying away because we are not profited by what takes place
+there. Many things may crop up to hinder our being present--ill-health,
+domestic duties, lawful claims upon our time if we are in the employment
+of others,--all these things have to be taken into account; but we may
+set it down as a fixed principle that _the one who can designedly absent
+himself from the prayer-meeting is in a bad state of soul_. The healthy,
+happy, earnest, diligent soul will be sure to be found at the
+prayer-meeting.
+
+But all this conducts us, naturally and simply, to another of those
+moral conditions at which we have been glancing in this series of
+papers. Let us turn for a moment to the opening lines of Luke xviii.
+"And He spake a parable unto them to this end, _that men ought always to
+pray, and not to faint_: saying, 'There was in a city a judge, which
+feared not God, neither regarded man. And there was a widow in that
+city, and she came unto him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary. And he
+would not for a while; but afterward he said within himself, Though I
+fear not God, nor regard man, yet, because this widow troubleth me, I
+will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary me.' And the
+Lord said, 'Hear what the unjust judge saith. And shall not God avenge
+His own elect, which cry day and night unto Him, though He bear long
+with them? I tell you that He will avenge them speedily.'" (Ver. I-8.)
+
+Here, then, we have pressed upon our attention the important moral
+condition of _perseverance_. "Men ought _always_ to pray, and _not to
+faint_." This is intimately connected with the definiteness and
+importunity to which we have already referred. We want a certain thing;
+we cannot do without it. We importunately, unitedly, believingly, and
+perseveringly wait on our God until He graciously send an answer, as He
+most assuredly will, if the moral basis and the moral conditions be duly
+maintained.
+
+_But we must persevere._ We must not faint, and give up, though the
+answer does not come as speedily as we might expect. It may please God
+to exercise our souls by keeping us waiting on Him for days, months, or
+perhaps years. The exercise is good. It is morally healthful; it tends
+to make us real; it brings us down to the roots of things. Look, for
+example, at Daniel. He was kept for "three full weeks" waiting on God,
+in profound exercise of soul. "In those days I Daniel was mourning three
+full weeks. I ate no pleasant bread, neither came flesh nor wine in my
+mouth, neither did I anoint myself at all, till three full weeks were
+fulfilled."
+
+All this was good for Daniel. There was deep blessing in the spiritual
+exercises through which this beloved and honored servant of God was
+called to pass during those three weeks. And what is specially worthy of
+note is, that the answer to Daniel's cry had been despatched from the
+throne of God at the very beginning of his exercise, as we read at verse
+12, "Then said he unto me, 'Fear not Daniel; for _from the first day
+that thou didst set thine heart to understand, and to chasten thyself
+before thy God, thy words were heard, and I am come for thy words_.
+But"--how marvelous and mysterious is this!--"the prince of the kingdom
+of Persia withstood me one and twenty days; but, lo, Michael, one of the
+chief princes, came to help me; and I remained there with the kings of
+Persia. Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall thy
+people in the latter days."
+
+All this is full of interest. Here was the beloved servant of God
+mourning, chastening himself, and waiting upon God. The angelic
+messenger was on his way with the answer. The enemy was permitted to
+hinder; but Daniel continued to wait: he prayed, and fainted not; and in
+due time the answer came.
+
+Is there no lesson here for us? Most assuredly there is. We, too, may
+have to wait long in the holy attitude of expectancy, and in the spirit
+of prayer; but we shall find the time of waiting most profitable for
+our souls. Very often our God, in His wise and faithful dealing with us,
+sees fit to withhold the answer, simply to prove us as to the reality of
+our prayers. The grand point for us is, to have an object laid upon our
+hearts by the Holy Ghost--an object as to which we can lay the finger of
+faith upon some distinct promise in the Word, and to persevere in prayer
+until we get what we want. "Praying _always_ with all prayer and
+supplication in the Spirit, and _watching_ thereunto _with all
+perseverance_ and supplication for all saints." (Eph. vi. 18.)
+
+All this demands our serious consideration. We are as sadly deficient in
+perseverance as we are in definiteness and importunity. Hence the
+feebleness of our prayers and the coldness of our prayer-meetings. We do
+not come together with a definite object, and hence we are not
+importunate, and we do not persevere. In short, our prayer-meetings are
+often nothing but a dull routine--a cold, mechanical service--something
+to be gone through--a wearisome alternation of hymn and prayer, hymn and
+prayer, causing the spirit to groan beneath the heavy burden of mere
+profitless bodily exercise.
+
+We speak plainly and strongly: we speak as we feel. We must be permitted
+to speak without reserve. We call upon the whole Church of God, far and
+wide, to look this great question straight in the face--to look to God
+about it--to judge themselves about it. Do we not feel the lack of power
+in all our public reunions? Why those barren seasons at the Lord's
+table? Why the dullness and feebleness in the celebration of that
+precious feast which ought to stir the very deepest depths of our
+renewed being? Why the lack of unction, power, and edification in our
+public readings--the foolish speculations and the silly questions which
+have been advanced and answered for the last forty years? Why those
+varied evils on which we have been dwelling, and which are being mourned
+over almost every where by the truly spiritual? Why the barrenness of
+our gospel services? Why are souls not smitten down under the Word? Why
+is there so little gathering-power?
+
+Brethren, beloved in the Lord, let us rouse ourselves to the solemn
+consideration of these weighty matters. Let us not be satisfied to go on
+with the present condition of things. We call upon all those who admit
+the truth of what we have been putting forth in these pages on "Prayer
+and the Prayer-Meeting," to unite in cordial, earnest, united prayer and
+supplication. Let us seek to get together according to God; to come as
+one man and prostrate ourselves before the mercy-seat, and perseveringly
+wait upon our God for the revival of His work, the progress of His
+gospel, the ingathering and upbuilding of His beloved people. Let our
+prayer-meetings be really prayer-meetings, and not occasions for giving
+out our favorite hymns, and starting our fancy tunes. The prayer-meeting
+ought to be the place of expressed heed and expected blessing--the place
+of expressed weakness and expected power--the place where God's people
+assemble with one accord, to take hold of the very throne of God, to get
+into the very treasury of heaven, and draw thence all we want for
+ourselves, for our households, for the Whole Church of God, and for the
+vineyard of Christ.
+
+Such is the true idea of a prayer-meeting, if we are to be taught by
+Scripture. May it be more fully realized amongst the Lord's people every
+where. May the Holy Spirit stir us all up, and press upon our souls the
+value, importance, and urgent necessity of unanimity, confidence,
+definiteness, importunity, and perseverance in all our prayers and
+prayer-meetings.
+
+ Yes, there's a power which man can wield,
+ When mortal aid is vain;
+ That eye, that arm, that love to reach,
+ That list'ning ear to gain.
+
+ That power is prayer, which soars on high,
+ Through Jesus, to the throne,
+ And moves the hand which moves the world
+ To bring deliverance down.
+
+_C. H. M._
+
+NOTE.--It may perhaps be useful to notice that in the foregoing most
+needful pages, the beloved author has been speaking of the
+_prayer-meeting_, and the moral basis and conditions of prayer in
+general, not of personal, secret prayer. The importance of it can hardly
+be overestimated. The lack or neglect of this soon tells in the
+spiritual life of the Christian. Is not the lack of this the explanation
+of much leanness of soul, from which knowledge alone is not able to lift
+us up? It is, as it were, the spiritual gauge of our soul's condition.
+There, in the secret of the closet, the godly soul ever loves to pour
+out in its Father's ear its trials, its fears, its desires, its wants,
+its thanksgivings, in all their details. And what comfort, what joy,
+what godly strength and purpose, the soul carries from thence! what
+preparation to go through the daily toil, and testings of the day!
+Beloved of the Lord, let us wait on God, that we may know more of this
+secret power, gotten in our closet with Him.
+
+[Ed.]
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[XXX.] How interesting to find "Mary the mother of Jesus" named here, as
+being at the prayer-meeting! What would she have said if any one had
+told her that millions of professing Christians would yet be praying to
+her?
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber Notes:
+
+Common puctuation errors repaired obvious typos repaired
+
+Page 3-07-03 an "a" added" I shall only prove a hindrance, "a" weight,
+a cause of weakness.
+
+Page 3-01-012 heavy laden changed to heavy-laden
+
+Page 3-01-018 "thradom" misspelled "thralldom"
+
+Page 3-03-004 "diciples" misspelled "disciples" page 3-01-027 true
+hearted changed to true-hearted page 3-01-001 well regulated changed to
+well-regulated
+
+Page 3-04-004 "O death, where is thy sing" changed to "O death, where is
+thy sting.
+
+Page 3-06-043 "The breaking of break" changed to "The breaking
+of bread".
+
+Page 3-05-004 "decalogue" should be a proper noun (Ten
+Commandments), changed to "Decalogue".
+
+Page 3-05-012 "compentency" misspelled "competency".
+
+Page 3-06-003 "eucharist" is a proper noun, changed to "Eucharist".
+
+Page 3-10-011 "paraylzed" misspelled, changed to "paralyzed".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Assembly of God
+ Miscellaneous Writings of C. H. Mackintosh, volume III
+
+Author: C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+Release Date: August 30, 2011 [EBook #37274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark Young, Júlio Reis, Moisés S. Gomes and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>The Assembly</h1>
+<h1>of God</h1>
+
+<h2><i>Miscellaneous Writings of</i></h2>
+<h2>C. H. MACKINTOSH</h2>
+
+<h3><i>Volume III</i></h3>
+
+<h2>LOIZEAUX BROTHERS</h2>
+<h3><i>New York</i></h3>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>FIRST EDITION 1898<br />
+TENTH PRINTING 1960<br />
+<br />
+LOIZEAUX BROTHERS, <span class="smcap">Inc.</span>, PUBLISHERS<br />
+<br />
+<i>A Nonprofit Organization, Devoted to the Lord's Work<br />
+and to the Spread of His Truth</i><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">19 West 21st Street, New York 10, N. Y.</span><br />
+<br />
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA<br /></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<ul class="left">
+<li><a href="#The_Man_of_God">The Man of God</a></li>
+<li><a href="#DECISION_FOR_CHRIST">Decision for Christ</a></li>
+<li><a href="#PRAYER">Prayer in its Proper Place</a></li>
+<li><a href="#GILGAL">"Gilgal"</a></li>
+<li><a href="#THO">Thoughts on Confirmation Vows</a></li>
+<li><a href="#SUPPER">Thoughts on the Lord's Supper</a></li>
+<li><a href="#THE_ASSEMBLY_OF_GOD">The Assembly of God</a></li>
+<li><a href="#THE_CHRISTIAN">The Christian: His Position and his Work</a></li>
+<li><a href="#THE_CHRISTIAN_PRIESTHOOD">The Christian Priesthood</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Sovereign">Father! Thy Sovereign Love--<i>Poem</i></a></li>
+<li><a href="#PAPERS_ON_EVANGELIZATION">Papers on Evangelization</a></li>
+<li><a href="#THE_LIVING_GOD_AND_A_LIVING_FAITH">The Living God and a Living Faith</a></li>
+<li><a href="#A_SCRIPTURAL_INQUIRY">A Scriptural Inquiry as to the Sabbath,</a></li>
+<li><span class="indent">the Law, and Christian Ministry</span></li>
+<li><a href="#THE_MINISTRY_OF_CHRIST">The Ministry of Christ; Past, Present,</a></li>
+<li><span class="indent">and Future</span></li>
+<li><a href="#PRAYER_AND_THE_PRAYER-MEETING">Prayer and the Prayer Meeting</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'><i>The original numbering of these writings has been retained,
+Many of the above may be had separately in pamphlet form.</i></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="The_Man_of_God" id="The_Man_of_God"></a>THE MAN OF GOD</h2>
+
+
+<p>The sentence which we have just penned occurs
+in Paul's second Epistle to his beloved son
+Timothy&mdash;an epistle marked, as we know, by intense
+individuality. All thoughtful students of Scripture
+have noticed the striking contrast between the two
+Epistles of Paul to Timothy. In the first, the
+Church is presented in its order, and Timothy is
+instructed as to how he is to behave himself therein.
+In the second, on the contrary, the Church is
+presented in its ruin. The house of God has become
+the great house, in the which there are vessels
+to dishonor as well as vessels to honor; and where,
+moreover, errors and evils abound&mdash;heretical
+teachers and false professors, on every hand.</p>
+
+<p>It is in this epistle of individuality, then, that the
+expression, "The man of God" is used with such
+obvious force and meaning. It is in times of general
+declension, of ruin and confusion that the
+faithfulness, devotedness, and decision of the individual
+man of God are specially called for. And
+it is a signal mercy for such an one to know that,
+spite of the hopeless failure of the Church as a responsible
+witness for Christ, it is the privilege of
+the individual to tread as holy a path, to taste as
+deep communion, and to enjoy as rich blessings,
+as could be known in the Church's brightest days.</p>
+
+<p>This is a most encouraging and consolatory fact&mdash;a
+fact established by many infallible proofs, and
+set forth in the very passage from which our heading4
+is taken. We shall here quote at length this
+passage of singular weight and power:</p>
+
+<p>"But continue thou in the things which thou
+hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of
+whom thou hast learned them; and that from a
+child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which
+are able to make thee wise unto salvation through
+faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is
+given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
+doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
+in righteousness, that the man of God may be <i>perfect</i>,
+throughly <i>furnished unto all good works</i>"<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+(2 Tim. iii. 14-17).</p>
+
+<p>Here we have "the man of God," in the midst of
+all the ruin and confusion, the heresies and moral
+pravities of the last days, standing forth in his own
+distinct individuality, "perfect, thoroughly furnished
+unto all good works." And, may we not
+ask, what more could be said in the Church's
+brightest days? If we go back to the day of Pentecost
+itself, with all its display of power and glory,
+have we anything higher, or better, or more solid
+than that which is set forth in the words "perfect,
+thoroughly furnished unto all good works?"</p>
+<p>And is it not a signal mercy for anyone who desires
+to stand for God, in a dark and evil day, to be
+told that, spite of all the darkness, the evil, the error
+and confusion, he possesses that which can make a
+child <i>wise</i> unto salvation, and make a man <i>perfect</i>
+and thoroughly furnished unto all good works? Assuredly
+it is; and we have to praise our God for it,
+with full and overflowing hearts. To have access,
+in days like these, to the eternal fountain of inspiration,
+where the child and the man can meet and
+drink and be satisfied&mdash;that fountain so clear that
+the honest, simple soul can understand; and so deep
+that you cannot reach the bottom&mdash;that peerless,
+priceless volume which meets the child at his mother's
+knee, and makes him wise unto salvation; and
+meets the man in the most advanced stage of his
+practical career and makes him perfect and fully
+furnished for the exigence of every hour.</p>
+
+<p>However, we shall have occasion, ere we close
+this paper, to look more particularly at "the man of
+God," and to consider what is the special force and
+meaning of this term. That there is very much
+more involved in it than is ordinarily understood,
+we are most fully persuaded.</p>
+
+<p>There are three aspects in which man is presented
+in Scripture: in the first place, we have <i>man in nature</i>;
+secondly, <i>a man in Christ</i>; and, thirdly, we
+have, <i>the man of God</i>. It might perhaps be thought
+that the second and third are synonymous; but we
+shall find a very material difference between them.
+True, I must be a man in Christ before I can be a
+man of God; but they are by no means interchangeable
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>Let us then, in the first place, consider</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>MAN IN NATURE.</h3>
+
+<p>This is a very comprehensive term indeed. Under
+this title, we shall find every possible shade of
+character, temperament, and disposition. Man, on
+the platform of nature, graduates between two extremes.
+You may view him at the very highest
+point of cultivation, or at the very lowest point of
+degradation. You may see him surrounded with
+all the advantages, the refinements and the so-called
+dignities of civilized life; or you may find him
+sunk in all the shameless and barbarous customs of
+savage existence. You may view him in the almost
+numberless grades, ranks, classes, and <i>castes</i> into
+which the human family has distributed itself.</p>
+
+<p>Then again, in the self-same class, or caste, you
+will find the most vivid contrasts, in the way of
+character, temper, and disposition. There, for example,
+is a man of such an atrocious temper that
+he is the very horror of every one who knows him.
+He is the plague of his family circle, and a perfect
+nuisance to society. He can be compared to a
+porcupine with all his quills perpetually up; and if
+you meet him once you will not wish to meet him
+again. There, on the other hand, is a man of the
+sweetest disposition and most amiable temper. He
+is just as attractive as the other is repulsive. He
+is a tender, loving, faithful husband; a kind, affectionate,
+considerate father; a thoughtful, liberal master;
+a kindly, genial neighbor; a generous friend,
+beloved by all, and justly so: the more you know
+him the more you must like him, and if you meet
+him once you are sure to wish to meet him again.</p>
+
+<p>Further, you may meet on the platform of nature,
+a man who is false and deceitful to the very heart's
+core. He delights in lying, cheating, and deception.
+He is mean and contemptible in his thoughts,
+words and ways; a man to whom all who know him
+would like to give as wide a berth as possible. And,
+on the other hand, you may meet a man of high principle,
+frank, honorable, generous, upright; one who
+would scorn to tell a lie, or do a mean act; whose
+reputation is unblemished, his character unexceptionable.
+His word would be taken for any amount;
+he is one with whom all who know him would be
+glad to have dealings; an almost perfect natural
+character; a man of whom it might be said, he
+lacks but one thing.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, as you pass to and fro on nature's platform,
+you may meet the atheist who affects to deny
+the existence of God; the infidel who denies God's
+revelation; the skeptic and the rationalist who disbelieves
+everything. And, on the other hand, you
+will meet the superstitious devotee who spends his
+time in prayers and fastings, ordinances, and ceremonies;
+and who feels sure he is earning a place in
+heaven by a wearisome round of religious observances
+that actually <i>un</i>fit him for the proper functions
+and responsibilities of domestic and social
+life. You may meet men of every imaginable shade
+of religious opinion, high church, low church, broad
+church, and no church; men who, without a spark
+of divine life in their souls, are contending for the
+powerless forms of a traditionary religion.</p>
+
+<p>Now, there is one grand and awfully solemn fact
+common to all these various classes, castes, grades,
+shades, and conditions of men who occupy the platform
+of nature, and that is there is not so much as
+a single link between them and heaven&mdash;there is no
+link with the Man who sits at the right hand of
+God&mdash;no link with the new creation. They are unconverted,
+and without Christ. As regards God,
+and Christ, and eternal life, and heaven, they all&mdash;however
+they may differ morally, socially, and religiously&mdash;stand
+on one common ground; they are
+far from God&mdash;they are out of Christ&mdash;they are in
+their sins&mdash;they are in the flesh&mdash;they are of the
+world&mdash;they are on their way to hell.</p>
+
+<p>There is really no getting over this, if we are to
+listen to the voice of Holy Scripture. False
+teachers may deny it. Infidels may pretend to
+smile contemptuously at the idea; but Scripture is
+plain as can be. It speaks in manifold places of a
+fire that <span class="smcap">NEVER</span> shall be quenched, and of a worm
+that shall never die.</p>
+
+<p>It is the very height of folly for anyone to seek
+to set aside the plain testimony of the word of God
+on this most solemn and weighty subject. Better
+far to let that testimony fall, with all its weight and
+authority, upon the heart and conscience&mdash;infinitely
+better to flee from the wrath to come than to attempt
+to deny that it is coming, and that, when it
+does come, it will abide forever&mdash;yes, forever, and
+forever, and forever! Tremendous thought!&mdash;over-whelming
+consideration! May it speak with living
+power to the soul of the unconverted reader, leading
+him to cry out in all sincerity, "What is to be
+done?"</p>
+
+<p>Yes, here is the question, "What must I do to be
+saved?" The divine answer is wrapped up in the
+following words which dropped from the lips of two
+of Christ's very highest and most gifted ambassadors.
+"Repent and be converted," said Peter to
+the Jew. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and
+thou shalt be saved and thy house," said Paul to
+the Gentile. And again, the latter of these two
+blessed messengers, in summing up his own ministry,
+thus defines the whole matter, "Testifying
+both to the Jews, and also to the Greeks, repentance
+toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus
+Christ."</p>
+
+<p>How simple! But how real! How deep! How
+thoroughly practical! It is not a nominal, national
+head belief. It is not saying, in mere flippant profession,
+"I believe." Ah! no; it is something far
+deeper and more serious than this. It is much to
+be feared that a large amount of the professed faith
+of this our day is deplorably superficial, and that
+many who throng our preaching rooms and lecture
+halls are, after all, but wayside and stony ground
+hearers. The plough of conviction and repentance
+has not passed over them. The fallow ground has
+never been broken up. The arrow of conviction has
+never pierced them through and through. They
+have never been broken down, turned inside out&mdash;thoroughly
+revolutionized. The preaching of the
+gospel to all such is just like scattering precious
+seed on the hard pavement or the beaten highway.
+It does not penetrate. It does not enter into the
+depths of the soul; the conscience is not reached;
+the heart is not affected. The seed lies on the surface,
+it has not taken root, and is soon carried
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all. It is also much to be feared that
+many of the preachers of the present day, in their
+efforts to make the gospel simple, lose sight of the
+abiding necessity of repentance, and the essential
+necessity of the action of the Holy Ghost, without
+which so-called faith is a mere human exercise and
+passes away like the vapors of the morning, leaving
+the soul still in the region of nature, satisfied with
+itself, daubed with the untempered mortar of a
+merely human gospel that cries peace, peace, where
+there is no peace, but the most imminent danger.</p>
+
+<p>All this is very serious, and should lead the soul
+into profound exercise. We want the reader to give
+it his grave and immediate consideration. We
+would put this pointed question to him, which we
+entreat him to answer, now, "<i>Have you got eternal
+life</i>?" Say, dear friend, <i>have you</i>? "He that believeth
+on the Son of God hath eternal life." Grand
+reality! If you have not got this, you have nothing.</p>
+
+<p>You are still on that platform of nature of which we
+have spoken so much. Yes, you are still there; no
+matter though you were the very fairest specimen
+to be found there&mdash;amiable, polished, affable, frank,
+generous, truthful, upright, honorable, attractive,
+beloved, learned, cultivated, and even pious after a
+merely human fashion. You may be all this, and
+yet not have a single pulsation of eternal life in
+your soul.</p>
+
+<p>This may sound harsh and severe. But it is
+true; and you will find out its truth sooner or later.
+We want you to find it out <i>now</i>. We want you to
+see that you are a thorough bankrupt, in the fullest
+sense of that word. A deed of bankruptcy has been
+filed against you in the high court of heaven. Here
+are its terms, "<i>They that are in the flesh cannot please
+God</i>." Have you ever pondered these words?
+Have you ever seen their application to yourself?
+So long as you are unrepentant, unconverted, unbelieving,
+you cannot do a single thing to please
+God&mdash;not one. "In the flesh" and "on the platform
+of nature" mean one and the same thing; and
+so long as you are there, you cannot please God.
+"You must be born again"&mdash;must be renewed in the
+very deepest springs of your being: unrenewed nature
+is wholly unable to see, and unfit to enter, the
+kingdom of God. You must be born of water and
+of the Spirit&mdash;that is by the living word of God, and
+of the Holy Ghost. There is no other way by which
+to enter the kingdom. It is not by self-improvement,
+but by new birth we reach the blessed kingdom of
+God. "That which is born of the flesh is flesh;"
+and "the flesh profiteth nothing," for "they that
+are in the flesh cannot please God."</p>
+
+<p>How distinct is all this! How pointed! How
+personal! How earnestly we desire that the unawakened
+or undecided reader should, just now,
+take it home to himself, as though he were the only
+individual upon the face of the earth. It will not
+do to generalize&mdash;to rest satisfied with saying, "We
+are all sinners." No; it is an intensely individual
+matter. "You <i>must</i> be born again." If you again
+ask, "How?" hear the divine response from the
+lips of the Master Himself, "As Moses lifted up
+the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son
+of man be lifted up; that whosoever believeth in
+Him should not perish, but have eternal life."</p>
+
+<p>Here is the sovereign remedy, for every poor
+broken-hearted, conscience-smitten, hell-deserving
+sinner&mdash;for every one who owns himself lost&mdash;who
+confesses his sins, and judges himself&mdash;for every
+weary, <a name="heavy-laden" id="heavy-laden"></a>heavy-laden, sin-burdened soul&mdash;here is
+God's own blessed promise: Jesus died, that you
+might live. He was condemned, that you might be
+justified. He drank the cup of wrath, that you
+might drink the cup of salvation. Behold Him
+hanging on yonder cross for thee. See what He
+did for thee. Believe that He satisfied, on your
+behalf, <i>all</i> the claims of justice before the throne of
+God. See all your sins laid on Him&mdash;your guilt
+imputed to Him&mdash;your entire condition represented
+and disposed of by Him. See His atoning death
+answering perfectly for all that was or ever could be
+brought against you. See Him rising from the
+dead, having accomplished all. See Him ascending
+into the heavens, bearing in His divine Person the
+marks of His finished atonement. See Him seated
+on the throne of God, in the very highest place of
+power. See Him crowned with glory and honor.
+Believe in Him, and you will receive remission of
+sins, the gift of eternal life, the seal of the Holy
+Ghost. You will pass off the platform of nature&mdash;you
+will be "<i>A man in Christ</i>."</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+<p>To all whose eyes have been opened to see their
+true condition by nature, who have been
+brought under the convicting power of the Holy
+Ghost, who know something of the real meaning of
+a broken heart and a contrite spirit&mdash;to all such it
+must be of the deepest possible interest to know
+the divine secret of rest and peace. If it be true&mdash;and
+it is true, because God says it&mdash;that "they that
+are <i>in the flesh</i> cannot please God," then how is any
+one to get <i>out of the flesh</i>? How can he pass off the
+platform of nature? How can he reach the blessed
+position of those to whom the Holy Ghost declares,
+"Ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit"?</p>
+
+<p>These are momentous questions, surely. For, be
+it thoroughly known and ever remembered, that no
+improvement of our old nature is of any value whatsoever
+as to our standing before God. It may be
+all very well, so far as this life is concerned, for a
+man to improve himself by every means within his
+reach, to cultivate his mind, furnish his memory,
+elevate his moral tone, advance his social position.
+All this is quite true, so true as not to need a moment's
+argument.</p>
+
+<p>But, admitting in the fullest manner the truth of
+all this, it leaves wholly untouched the solemn and
+sweeping statement of the inspired apostle that,
+"they that are in the flesh cannot please God."
+There <i>must</i> be a new standing altogether, and this
+new standing cannot be reached by any change in
+the old nature&mdash;by any doings or formalities, feelings,
+ordinances of religion, prayers, alms or sacraments.
+Do what you will with nature and it is nature
+still. "That which is born of the flesh is flesh;"
+and do what you will with flesh you cannot make it
+spirit. There must be a new life&mdash;a life flowing
+from the new man, the last Adam, who has become,
+in resurrection, the Head of a new race.</p>
+
+<p>How is this most precious life to be had? Hear
+the memorable answer&mdash;hear it, anxious reader,
+hear it and live. "Verily, verily, I say unto you,
+he that heareth My word, and believeth on Him
+that sent Me, <i>hath</i> everlasting life, and shall not
+come into judgment; but <i>is passed</i> from death unto
+life" (John v. 24).</p>
+
+<p>Here we have a total change of standing; a passing
+from death to life; from a position in which
+there is not so much as a single link with heaven,
+with the new creation, with the risen Man in glory,
+into a position in which there is not a single link
+with the first man, with the old creation, and this
+present evil world. And all this is through believing
+on the Son of God&mdash;not <i>saying</i> we believe, but
+really, truly, heartily, believing on the Son of God;
+not by a mere intellectual faith, but believing with
+the heart.</p>
+
+<p>Thus only does any one become</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>A MAN IN CHRIST.</h3>
+
+<p>Every true believer is a man in Christ. Whether
+it be the convert of yesterday or the hoary headed
+saint of fifty or sixty years' standing as a Christian,
+each stands in precisely the same blessed position&mdash;he
+is in Christ. There can be no difference here.
+The practical <i>state</i> may differ immensely; but the
+positive standing is one and the same. As on the
+platform of nature, you may meet with every imaginable
+shade, class, grade, and condition (though
+all having one common standing) so on the new,
+the divine, the heavenly platform, you may meet
+with every possible variety of practical condition:
+the greatest possible difference in intelligence, experience,
+and spiritual power, while all possessing
+the same standing before God, all being in Christ.
+There can be no degrees as to standing, whatever
+there may be as to state. The convert of yesterday,
+and the hoary headed father in Christ are both
+alike as to standing. Each is a man in Christ, and
+there can be no advance upon this. We sometimes
+hear of, "The higher Christian life:" but, strictly
+speaking, there is no such thing as a higher or a
+lower Christian life, inasmuch as Christ is the life
+of every believer. It may be that those who use
+the term mean a right thing. They probably refer
+to the higher stages of the Christian life&mdash;greater
+nearness to God, greater likeness to Christ, greater
+power in the Spirit, more devotedness, more separation
+from the world, more entire consecration of
+heart to Christ. But all these things belong to the
+question of our <i>state</i>, not to our standing. This
+latter is absolute, settled, unchangeable. It is in
+Christ&mdash;nothing less, nothing more, nothing different.
+If we are not in Christ, we are in our sins;
+but if we are in Christ, we cannot possibly be
+higher, as to standing.</p>
+
+<p>If the reader will turn with us, for a few moments,
+to I Cor. xv. 45-48, he will find some powerful
+teaching on this great foundation truth. The apostle
+speaks here of two men, "The first and the second."
+And let it be carefully noted that the Second
+Man is by no means federally connected with the
+first, but stands in contrast with him&mdash;a new, independent,
+divine, heavenly source of life in Himself.
+The first man has been entirely set aside, as a
+ruined, guilty, outcast creature. We speak of Adam
+federally, as the head of a race. Personally, Adam
+was saved by grace; but if we look at him from a
+federal standpoint, we see him a hopeless wreck.</p>
+
+<p>The first man is an irremediable ruin. This is
+proved by the fact of a <i>second</i> Man; for truly we
+may say of the men as of the covenants, "If the
+first had been found faultless, then should no place
+have been sought for the Second." But the very
+fact of a second Man being introduced demonstrates
+the hopeless ruin of the first. Why a second,
+if aught could be made of the first? If our old
+Adam nature was, in any wise, capable of being
+improved, there was no need of something new.
+But "they that are in the flesh cannot please God."
+"For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth
+anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation"
+(Rom. viii.: Gal. vi.).</p>
+
+<p>There is immense moral power in all this line of
+teaching. It sets forth Christianity in vivid and
+striking contrast with every form of religiousness
+under the sun. Take Judaism or any other <i>ism</i> that
+ever was known or that now exists in this world,
+and what do you find it to be? Is it not invariably
+something designed for the testing, or experimenting
+for the improvement, or advancement of the
+first man? Unquestionably.</p>
+
+<p>But what is Christianity? It is something entirely
+new&mdash;heavenly, spiritual, divine. It is based
+upon the cross of Christ, in the which the first man
+came to his end, where sin was put away, judgment
+borne, the old man crucified and put out of God's
+sight forever, so far as all believers are concerned.
+The cross closes, for faith, the history of the first
+man. "I am crucified with Christ," says the apostle.
+And again, "They that are Christ's have crucified
+the flesh with its affections and lusts."</p>
+
+<p>Are these mere figures of speech, or do they set
+forth, in the mighty words of the Holy Ghost, the
+grand fact of the entire setting aside of the first
+man, as utterly worthless and condemned? The
+latter, most assuredly. Christianity starts, as it
+were, from the open grave of the Second Man, to
+pursue its bright career onward to eternal glory. It
+is, emphatically, a new creation in which there is
+not so much as a single shred of the old thing&mdash;for
+in this "all things are of God." And if "<i>all things</i>"
+are of God, there can be nothing of man.</p>
+
+<p>What rest! What comfort! What strength!
+What moral elevation! What sweet relief for the
+poor burdened soul that has been vainly seeking,
+for years perhaps, to find peace in self-improvement!
+What deliverance from the wretched <a name="thralldom" id="thralldom"></a>thralldom of
+legality, in all its phases, to find out the precious
+secret that my guilty, ruined, bankrupt self&mdash;the
+very thing that I have been trying by every means
+in my power to improve, has been completely and
+forever set aside&mdash;that God is not looking for any
+amendment in it&mdash;that He has condemned it and
+put it to death in the cross of His Son! What an
+answer is here to the monk, the ascetic, and the
+ritualist! Oh, that it were understood in all its
+emancipating power! This heavenly, this divine,
+this spiritual Christianity. Surely were it only
+known in its living power and reality, it would deliver
+the soul from the thousand and one forms of
+corrupt religion whereby the arch-enemy and deceiver
+is ruining the souls of untold millions. We
+may truly say that Satan's most successful effort
+against the truth of the gospel, against the Christianity
+of the New Testament, is seen in the fact of
+his leading unconverted people to take and apply
+to themselves ordinances of the Christian religion,
+and to profess many of its doctrines. In this way
+he blinds their eyes to their own true condition, as
+utterly ruined, guilty, and undone; and strikes a
+deadly blow at the pure gospel of Christ. The best
+piece that was ever put upon the "old garment" of
+man's ruined nature is the profession of Christianity;
+and, the better the piece, the worse the rent.
+See Mark ii. 21.</p>
+
+<p>Let us bend an attentive ear to the following
+weighty words of the greatest teacher and best exponent
+of true Christianity the world ever saw. "For
+<i>I</i> through the law <i>am dead</i> to the law, that I might
+live to God. <i>I am crucified</i> with Christ; nevertheless
+I live; yet <i>not I</i>, but Christ liveth in me."
+Mark this, "I&mdash;not I&mdash;but Christ." The old "I"&mdash;"crucified."
+The new "I"&mdash;Christ. "And the
+life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith
+of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself
+for me" (Gal. ii. 19, 20).<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>This, and nothing else, is Christianity. It is not
+"the old man," the first man, becoming religious,
+even though the religion be the profession of the
+doctrines, and the adopting of the ordinances of
+Christianity. No; it is the death and burial of the
+old man&mdash;the old I&mdash;and becoming a new man in
+Christ. Every true believer is a new man in Christ.
+He has passed clean out of the old creation-standing&mdash;the
+old estate of sin and death, guilt and condemnation;
+and he has passed into a new creation-standing&mdash;a
+new estate of life and righteousness in
+a risen and glorified Christ, the Head of the new
+creation, the last Adam.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the position and unalterable standing of
+the feeblest believer in Christ. There is absolutely
+no other standing for any Christian. I must either
+be in the first man or in the Second. There is no
+<i>third</i> man, for the Second Man is the last Adam.
+There is no middle ground. I am either <i>in Christ</i>,
+or I am <i>in my sins</i>. But if I am in Christ, I am as
+He is before God. "As <i>He is so are we</i>, in this world."
+He does not say, "As He <i>was</i>" but "as He <i>is</i>."
+That is, the Christian is viewed by God as one with
+Christ&mdash;the Second Man, in whom He delights.
+We do not speak of His Deity, of course, which is
+incommunicable. That blessed One stood in the
+believer's stead&mdash;bore his sins, died his death, paid
+his penalty, represented him in every respect; took
+all his guilt, all his liabilities, all that pertained to
+him as a man in nature, stood as his substitute, in
+all the verity and reality of that word, and having
+divinely met his case, and borne his judgment, He
+rose from the dead, and is now the Head, the Representative,
+and the only true definition of the believer
+before God.</p>
+
+<p>To this most glorious and enfranchising truth,
+Scripture bears the amplest testimony. The passage
+which we have just quoted from Galatians is
+a most vivid, powerful, and condensed statement of
+it. And if the reader will turn to Rom. vi. he will
+find further evidence. We shall quote some of the
+weighty sentences.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we say then? Shall we continue in
+sin, that grace may abound? Far be the thought.
+How shall <i>we that are dead</i> to sin, live any longer
+therein? Know ye not, that so many of us as were
+baptized to Jesus Christ were baptized to His death?
+Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism unto
+death; that <i>like as Christ</i> was raised up from the
+dead by the glory of the Father, <i>even so we also</i>
+should walk in newness of life. For if we have
+been planted together in the likeness of His death,
+we shall be also of resurrection. Knowing this that
+<i>our old man is crucified with Him</i>, that the body of
+sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should
+not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed from
+sin. Now if we <i>be dead with Christ</i>, we believe that
+we shall also live with Him. Knowing that Christ
+being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death
+hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He
+died, He died unto sin once; but in that He liveth
+He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also
+yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
+unto God, through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. vi. I-11).</p>
+
+<p>Reader, mark especially these words in the foregoing
+quotation&mdash;"We that <i>are dead</i>"&mdash;"We are
+buried with Him"&mdash;"<i>Like as Christ</i> was raised ...
+<i>even so</i> we also"&mdash;"Our old man is crucified with
+Him"&mdash;"Dead with Christ"&mdash;"Dead indeed unto
+sin." Do we really understand such utterances?
+Have we entered into their real force and meaning?
+Do we, in very deed, perceive their application to
+ourselves? These are searching questions for the
+heart, and needful. The real doctrine of Rom. vi.
+is but little apprehended. There are thousands
+who profess to believe in the atoning virtue of the
+death of Christ, but who do not see aught therein
+beyond the forgiveness of their <i>sins</i>. They do not
+see the crucifixion, death, and burial of the old man&mdash;the
+destruction of the body of sin&mdash;the condemnation
+of sin&mdash;the entire setting aside of the old
+system of things belonging to their first Adam condition&mdash;in
+a word their perfect identification with a
+dead and risen Christ. Hence it is that we press
+this grand and all-important line of truth upon the
+attention of the reader. It lies at the very base of
+all true Christianity, and forms an integral part of
+the truth of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>Let us hearken to further evidence on the point.
+Hear what the apostle said to the Colossians:
+"Wherefore, if ye be <i>dead with Christ</i> from the rudiments
+of the world, why, <i>as though living in the
+world</i>, are ye subject to ordinances, after the commandments
+and doctrines of men, [such as] touch
+not, taste not, handle not"?&mdash;thus it is that human
+ordinances speak to us, telling us not to touch this,
+not to taste that, not to handle the other, as if there
+could possibly be any divine principle involved in
+such things&mdash;"which all are to perish with the using;"
+and "which, have indeed a show of wisdom
+in will worship, and humility, and neglecting of the
+body&mdash;not in any honor&mdash;to the satisfying of the
+flesh. If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those
+things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the
+right hand of God. Set your mind on things that
+are above, not on things on the earth. For <i>ye have
+died</i> and your life is hid with Christ in God" (Col.
+ii., iii. 2).</p>
+
+<p>Here, again, let us inquire how far we enter into
+the true force, meaning, and application of such
+words as these&mdash;"Why as though <i>living in the
+world</i>," etc.? Are we living in the world or living
+in heaven&mdash;which? The true Christian is one who
+has died out of this present evil world. He has no
+more to do with it than Christ. "Like as Christ
+... even so we." He is dead to the law&mdash;dead to
+sin: alive in Christ&mdash;alive to God&mdash;alive in the
+new creation. He belongs to heaven. He is enrolled
+as a citizen of heaven. His religion, his
+politics, his morals are all heavenly. He is a heavenly
+man walking on the earth, and fulfilling all the
+duties which belong to the varied relationships in
+which the hand of God has placed him, and in
+which the word of God most fully recognizes him,
+and amply guides him, such as husband, father,
+master, child, servant, and such like. The Christian
+is not a monk, an ascetic, or a hermit. He is, we
+repeat, a heavenly, spiritual man, <i>in</i> the world, but
+not <i>of</i> it. He is like a foreigner, so far as his
+residence here is concerned. He is in the body, as
+to the fact of his condition; but not in the flesh as
+to the principle of his standing. He is <i>a man in
+Christ</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Ere closing this article, we should like to call the
+reader's attention to 2 Cor. xii. In it he will find,
+at once, the <i>positive standing</i> and the <i>possible state</i> of
+the believer. The standing is fixed and unalterable,
+as set forth in that one comprehensive sentence&mdash;"A
+man in Christ." The state may graduate
+between the two extremes presented in the
+opening and closing verses of this chapter. A
+Christian may be in the third heaven, amid the
+seraphic visions of that blessed and holy place; or
+he may, if not watchful, sink down into all the
+gross and evil things named in vers. 20, 21.</p>
+
+<p>It may be asked, "Is it possible that a true child
+of God could ever be found in such a low moral
+condition?" Alas! alas! reader, it is indeed possible.
+There is no depth of sin and folly into which
+a Christian is not capable of plunging, if not kept
+by the grace of God. Even the blessed apostle
+himself, when he came down from the third heaven,
+needed "a thorn in the flesh" to keep him from
+being "exalted above measure." We might suppose
+that a man who had been up in that bright and
+blessed region could never again feel the stirrings
+of pride. But the plain fact is that even the third
+heavens cannot cure the flesh. It is utterly incorrigible
+and must be judged and kept under, day by
+day, hour by hour, moment by moment, else it will
+cut out plenty of sorrowful work for us.</p>
+
+<p>Still, the believer's standing is in Christ, forever
+justified, accepted, perfect in Him. And, moreover,
+he must ever judge his state by his standing, never
+his standing by his state. To attempt to reach the
+standing by my state is <i>legalism</i>; to refuse to judge
+my state by the standing is <i>antinomianism</i>. Both&mdash;though
+so diverse one from the other&mdash;are alike
+false, alike opposed to the truth of God, alike offensive
+to the Holy Ghost, alike removed from the
+divine idea of "A man in Christ."</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>PART III.</h3>
+
+<p>Having considered the deeply interesting
+questions of "a man in nature" and "a man
+in Christ," it remains for us now to consider, in this
+third and last Part, the deeply practical subject of
+the title of this paper, namely,</p>
+
+<h3>THE MAN OF GOD.</h3>
+
+<p>It would be a great mistake to suppose that every
+Christian is a man of God. Even in Paul's day&mdash;in
+the days of Timothy, there were many who bore the
+Christian name who were very far indeed from acquitting
+themselves as men of God, that is, as those
+who were really God's men, in the midst of the
+failure and error which, even then, had begun to
+creep in.</p>
+
+<p>It is the perception of this fact that renders the
+second Epistle to Timothy so profoundly interesting.
+In it we have what we may call ample provision
+for the man of God, in the day in which he is
+called to live&mdash;a dark, evil, and perilous day, most
+surely, in which all who will live godly must keep
+the eye steadily fixed on Christ Himself&mdash;His name&mdash;His
+person&mdash;His Word, if they would make any
+headway against the tide.</p>
+
+<p>It is hardly possible to read second Timothy
+without being struck with its intensely individual
+character. The very opening address is strikingly
+characteristic. "I thank God, whom I serve from
+my forefathers with pure conscience, that without
+ceasing I have remembrance of thee in my prayers
+night and day."</p>
+
+<p>What glowing words are these! How affecting
+to harken thus to one man of God pouring the deep
+and tender feelings of his great, large, loving heart
+into the heart of another man of God! The dear
+apostle was beginning to feel the chilling influence
+that was fast creeping over the professing Church.
+He was tasting the bitterness of disappointed hopes.
+He found himself deserted by many who had once
+professed to be his friends and associates in that
+glorious work to which he had consecrated all the
+energies of his great soul. Many were becoming
+"ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, and of His
+prisoner." It was not that they altogether ceased
+to be Christians, or abandoned the Christian profession;
+but they turned their backs upon Paul,
+and left him alone in the day of trial.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is under such circumstances that the
+heart turns, with peculiar tenderness, to individual
+faithfulness and affection. If one is surrounded,
+on all hands, by <a name="true-hearted" id="true-hearted"></a>true-hearted confessors&mdash;by a
+great cloud of witnesses&mdash;a large army of good
+soldiers of Jesus Christ&mdash;if the tide of devotedness
+is flowing around one and bearing him on its bosom,
+he is not so dependent upon individual sympathy
+and fellowship.</p>
+
+<p>But, on the other hand, when the general condition
+of things is low, when the majority prove
+faithless, when old associates are dropping off, it
+is then that personal grace and true affection are
+specially valued. The dark background of general
+declension throws individual devotedness into
+beauteous relief.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is in this exquisite Epistle which now lies
+open before us. It does the heart good to harken
+to the breathings of the aged prisoner of Jesus
+Christ, who can speak of serving God from his
+forefathers with pure conscience, and of unceasing
+remembrance of his beloved son and true yoke-fellow.</p>
+
+<p>It is specially interesting to notice that, both in
+reference to his own history and that of his beloved
+friend, Paul goes back to facts of very early date&mdash;facts
+in their own individual paths, facts prior to
+their meeting one another, and prior to what we
+may call their church associations&mdash;important and
+interesting as these things surely are in their
+place. Paul had served God, from his forefathers,
+with pure conscience, before he had known
+a fellow-Christian. This he could continue to do
+though deserted by all his Christian companions.
+So also, in the case of his faithful friend, he says,
+"I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is
+in thee, which dwelt in thy grandmother Lois, and
+thy mother Eunice: and I am persuaded that is in
+thee also."</p>
+
+<p>This is very touching and very beautiful. We
+cannot but be struck with such references to the
+previous history of those beloved men of God. The
+"pure conscience" of the one, and "the unfeigned
+faith" of the other, indicate two grand moral qualities
+which all must possess if they would prove true
+men of God in a dark and evil day. The former
+has its immediate reference, in all things, to the one
+living and true God; the latter draws all its springs
+from Him. That, leads us to walk <i>before</i> God; this,
+enables us to walk <i>with</i> Him. Both together are
+indispensable in forming the character of the true
+man of God.</p>
+
+<p>It is utterly impossible to over-estimate the importance
+of keeping a pure conscience before God,
+in all our ways. It is positively invaluable. It
+leads us to refer everything to God. It keeps us
+from being tossed hither and thither by every wave
+and current of human opinion. It imparts stability
+and consistency to the entire course and character.</p>
+
+<p>We are all in imminent danger of falling under human
+influence&mdash;of shaping our way according to
+the thoughts of our fellow-man, adopting his cue,
+or mounting his hobby.</p>
+
+<p>All this is destructive of the character of the man
+of God. If you take your tone from your fellow, if
+you suffer yourself to be formed in a merely human
+mould, if your faith stands in the wisdom of man,
+if your object is to please men, then instead of being
+a man of God, you will become a member of a
+party or clique. You will lose that lovely freshness
+and originality so essential to the individual servant
+of Christ, and become marked by the peculiar and
+dominant features of a sect.</p>
+
+<p>Let us carefully guard against this. It has ruined
+many a valuable servant. Many who might have
+proved really useful workmen in the vineyard, have
+failed completely through not maintaining the integrity
+of their individual character and path. They
+began with God. They started on their course in
+the exercise of a pure conscience, and in the pursuit
+of that path which a divine hand had marked
+out for them. There was a bloom, a freshness, and
+a verdure about them, most refreshing to all who
+came in contact with them. They were taught of
+God. They drew near to the eternal fountain of
+Holy Scripture and drank for themselves. Perhaps
+they did not know much; but what they did know
+was real because they received it from God, and it
+turned to good account for "there is much food in
+the tillage of the poor."</p>
+
+<p>But, instead of going on with God, they allowed
+themselves to get under human influence; they got
+truth secondhand, and became the vendors of other
+men's thoughts; instead of drinking at the fountain
+head, they drank at the streams of human opinion;
+they lost originality, simplicity, freshness, and
+power, and became mere copyists, if not miserable
+caricatures. Instead of giving forth those "rivers of
+living water" which flow from the true believer in
+Jesus, they dropped into the barren technicalities
+and cut and dry common-places of mere systematized
+religion.</p>
+
+<p>Beloved Christian reader, all this must be sedulously
+guarded against. We must watch against it,
+pray against it, believe against it, and live against
+it. Let us seek to serve God, with a pure conscience.
+Let us live in His own immediate presence,
+in the light of His blessed countenance, in the
+holy intimacy of personal communion with Him,
+through the power of the Holy Ghost. This, we
+may rest assured, is the true secret of power for the
+man of God, at all times, and under all circumstances.
+We must walk with God, in the deep and
+cherished sense of our own personal responsibility
+to Him. This is what we understand by "a pure
+conscience."</p>
+
+<p>But will this tend, in the smallest degree, to lessen
+our sense of the value of true fellowship, of holy
+communion with all those who are true to Christ?
+By no means; indeed it is the very thing which
+will impart power, energy, and depth of tone to the
+fellowship. If every "man in Christ" were only
+acquitting himself thoroughly as "a man of God,"
+what blessed fellowship there would be! what heart
+work! what glow and unmistakable power! How
+different from the dull formalism of a merely nominal
+assent to certain accredited dogmas of a party,
+on the one hand, and from the mere <i>esprit de corps</i>
+of cliquism, on the other.</p>
+
+<p>There are few terms in such common use and so
+little understood as "fellowship." In numberless
+cases, it merely indicates the fact of a nominal
+membership in some religious denomination&mdash;a fact
+which furnishes no guarantee whatsoever of living
+communion with Christ, or personal devotedness to
+His cause. If all who are nominally "in fellow
+ship" were acquitting themselves thoroughly as
+men of God, what a very different condition of
+things we should be privileged to witness!</p>
+
+<p>But what is fellowship? It is, in its very highest
+expression, having one common object with God,
+and taking part in the same portion; and that object,
+that portion, is Christ&mdash;Christ known and enjoyed
+through the Holy Ghost. This is fellowship
+with God. What a privilege! What a dignity!
+What unspeakable blessedness! To be allowed to
+have a common object and a common portion with
+God Himself! To delight in the One in whom He
+delights! There can be nothing higher, nothing
+better, nothing more precious than this. Not even
+in heaven itself shall we know aught beyond this.
+Our own condition will, thank God, be vastly different</p>
+
+<p>We shall be done with a body of sin and
+death, and be clothed with a body of glory. We
+shall be done with a sinful, sorrowful, distracting
+world, where all is directly opposed to God and to
+us, and we shall breathe the pure, invigorating atmosphere
+of that bright and blessed world above.</p>
+
+<p>For, in so far as our fellowship is real, it is now
+as it shall be then, "with the Father and with His
+Son Jesus Christ"&mdash;"in the light," and by the
+power of the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>Thus much as to our fellowship with God. And,
+as regards our fellowship one with another, it is
+simply as we walk in the light; as we read, "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" (I John
+i. 7). We can only have fellowship one with another
+as we walk in the immediate presence of God.
+There may be a vast amount of mere intercourse
+without one particle of divine fellowship. Alas!
+alas! a great deal of what passes for Christian fellowship
+is nothing more than the merest religious
+gossip&mdash;the vapid, worthless, soul-withering chit-chat
+of the religious world, than which nothing can
+be more miserably unprofitable. True Christian
+fellowship can only be enjoyed in the light. It is
+when we are individually walking with God, in the
+power of personal communion, that we really have
+fellowship one with another, and this fellowship
+consists in real heart enjoyment of Christ as our
+one object, our common portion. It is not heartless
+traffic in certain favorite doctrines which we
+receive to hold in common. It is not morbid sympathy
+with those who think, and see, and feel with
+us in some favorite theory or dogma. It is something
+quite different from all this. It is delighting
+in Christ, in common with all those who are walking
+in the light. It is attachment to Him, to His
+person, His name, His Word, His cause, His people.
+It is joint consecration of heart and soul to
+that blessed One who loved us and washed us from
+our sins in His own blood, and brought us into the
+light of God's presence, there to walk with Him and
+with one another. This, and nothing less, is Christian
+fellowship; and where this is really understood
+it will lead us to pause and consider what we say
+when we declare, in any given case, "such an one
+is in fellowship."</p>
+
+<p>But we must proceed with our Epistle, and there
+see what full provision there is for the man of God,
+however dark the day may be in which his lot is cast.</p>
+
+<p>We have seen something of the importance&mdash;yea,
+rather, we should say the indispensable necessity of
+"a pure conscience," and "unfeigned faith," in the
+moral equipment of God's man. These qualities
+lie at the very base of the entire edifice of practical
+godliness which must ever characterize the genuine
+man of God.</p>
+
+<p>But there is more than this. The edifice must be
+erected as well as the foundation laid. The man of
+God has to work on amid all sorts of difficulties,
+trials, sorrows, disappointments, obstacles, questions
+and controversies. He has his niche to fill, his
+path to tread, his work to do. Come what may, he
+must serve. The enemy may oppose; the world
+may frown; the Church may be in ruins around
+him; false brethren may thwart, hinder, and desert;
+strife, controversy, and division may arise and
+darken the atmosphere; still the man of God must
+move on, regardless of all these things, working,
+serving, testifying, according to the sphere in which
+the hand of God has placed him, and according to
+the gift bestowed upon him. How is this to be
+done? Not only by keeping a pure conscience and
+the exercise of an unfeigned faith&mdash;priceless, indispensable
+qualities! but, further, he has to harken
+to the following weighty word of exhortation&mdash;"Wherefore
+I put thee in remembrance that thou
+stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the putting
+on of my hands."</p>
+
+<p>The gift must be stirred up, else it may become
+useless if allowed to lie dormant. There is great
+danger of letting the gift drop into disuse through
+the discouraging influence of surrounding circumstances.
+A gift unused will soon become useless;
+whereas, a gift stirred up and diligently used grows
+and expands. It is not enough to possess a gift,
+we must wait upon the gift, cultivate it, and exercise
+it. This is the way to improve it.</p>
+
+<p>And observe the special force of the expression,
+"the gift of God." In Eph. iv. we read of "the gift
+of Christ," and there, too, we find all the gifts, from
+the highest to the lowest range, flowing down from
+Christ the risen and glorified Head of His body, the
+Church. But in second Timothy, we have it defined
+as "the gift of God." True it is&mdash;blessed be His
+holy name!&mdash;our Lord Christ is God over all,
+blessed forever, so that the gift of Christ is the gift
+of God. But we may rest assured there is never
+any distinction in Scripture without a difference;
+and hence there is some good reason for the expression
+"gift of God." We doubt not it is in full
+harmony with the nature and object of the Epistle
+in which it occurs. It is "the gift of God" communicated
+to "the man of God" to be used by him
+notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the professing
+Church, and spite of all the difficulty, darkness, and
+discouragement of the day in which his lot is cast.</p>
+
+<p>The man of God must not allow himself to be
+hindered in the diligent cultivation and exercise of
+his gift, though everything seems to look dark and
+forbidding, for "God hath not given us the spirit
+of fear; but of power and of love, and of a sound
+mind." Here we have "God" again introduced to
+our thoughts, and that, too, in a most gracious
+manner, as furnishing His man with the very thing
+he needs to meet the special exigence of his day&mdash;"The
+spirit of power, and of love, and of a sound
+mind."</p>
+
+<p>Marvelous combination! Truly, an exquisite
+compound after the art of the apothecary! Power,
+love, and wisdom! How perfect! Not a single
+ingredient too much. Not one too little. If it were
+merely a spirit of power, it might lead one to carry
+things with a high hand. Were it merely a spirit
+of love, it might lead one to sacrifice truth for
+peace' sake; or indolently to tolerate error and evil
+rather than give offence. But the power is softened
+by the love; and the love is strengthened by the
+power; and, moreover, the spirit of wisdom comes
+in to adjust both the power and the love. In a
+word, it is a divinely perfect and beautiful provision
+for the man of God&mdash;the very thing he needs for
+"the last days" so perilous, so difficult, so full of
+all sorts of perplexing questions and apparent contradictions.
+If one were to be asked what he would
+consider most necessary for such days as these?
+surely he should, at once, say, "power, love, and
+soundness of mind." Well, blessed be God, these
+are the very things which He has graciously given
+to form the character, shape the way, and govern
+the conduct of the man of God, right on to the end.</p>
+
+<p>But there is further provision and further exhortation
+for the man of God. "Be not thou therefore
+ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me
+His prisoner; but be thou partaker of the afflictions
+of the gospel according to the power of God." In
+pentecostal days, when the rich and mighty tide of
+divine grace was flowing in, and bearing thousands
+of ransomed souls upon its bosom; when all were
+of one heart and one mind; when those outside
+were overawed by the extraordinary manifestations
+of divine power, it was rather a question of partaking
+of the <i>triumphs</i> of the gospel, than its afflictions.
+But in the days contemplated in second Timothy,
+all is changed. The beloved apostle is a lonely
+prisoner at Rome; all in Asia had forsaken him;
+Hymeneus and Philetus are denying the resurrection;
+all sorts of heresies, errors, and evils are
+creeping in; the landmarks are in danger of being
+swept away by the tide of apostasy and corruption.</p>
+
+<p>In the face of all this, the man of God has to
+brace himself up for the occasion. He has to endure
+hardness; to hold fast the form of sound
+words; he has to keep the good thing committed to
+him; to be strong in the grace that is in Christ
+Jesus; to keep himself <i>disentangled</i>&mdash;however he
+may be <i>engaged</i>; he must keep himself free as a
+soldier; he must cling to God's sure foundation;
+he must purge himself from the dishonorable vessels
+in the great house; he must <i>flee</i> youthful lusts,
+and <i>follow</i> righteousness, faith, love, peace, with
+them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart. He
+must avoid foolish and unlearned questions. He
+must turn away from formal and heartless professors.
+He must be thoroughly furnished for all
+good works, perfectly equipped through a knowledge
+of the Holy Scriptures. He must preach the
+Word; be instant in season and out of season. He
+must watch in all things; endure afflictions; and
+do the work of an evangelist.</p>
+
+<p>What a category for the man of God! Who is
+sufficient for these things? Where is the spiritual
+power to be had for such works? It is to be had at
+the mercy-seat. It is to be found in earnest, patient,
+believing, waiting upon the living God, and in no
+other way. All our springs are in Him. We have
+only to draw upon Him. He is sufficient for the
+darkest day. Difficulties are nothing to Him, and
+they are bread for faith. Yes, beloved reader, difficulties
+of the most formidable nature are simply
+bread for faith, and the man of faith will develop
+and grow strong thereby. Unbelief says, "There
+is a lion in the way;" but faith slays the lion that
+roars along the path of the nazarite of God. It is
+the privilege of the true believer to rise above all
+the hostile influences which surround him, no matter
+what they are, or from whence they spring; and,
+in the calmness and brightness of the divine presence,
+enjoy as high communion, and taste as rich
+and rare privileges as ever were known in the
+Church's brightest days.</p>
+
+<p>Let us remember this&mdash;every man of God needs
+to remember it: there is no comfort, no peace, no
+strength, no moral power, no true elevation to be
+derived from looking at the ruins. We must look
+up out of the ruins to the place where our Lord
+Christ has taken His seat, at the right hand of the
+Majesty in the heavens. Or rather, to speak more
+according to our true position, we should look down
+from our place in the heavens upon all the ruins of
+earth. To realize our place in Christ, and to be
+occupied in heart and soul with Him, is the true
+secret of power to carry ourselves as men of God.
+To have Christ ever before us&mdash;His work for the
+conscience, His person for the heart, His Word for
+the path, is the one grand, sovereign, divine remedy
+for a ruined self, a ruined world, a ruined Church.</p>
+
+<p>But we close. Very gladly would we linger, in
+company with the reader, over the contents of this
+most precious second Timothy. Truly refreshing
+would it be to dwell upon all its touching allusions,
+its earnest appeals, its weighty exhortations. But
+this would demand a volume, and hence we must
+leave the Christian reader to study the Epistle for
+himself, praying that the eternal Spirit who indited
+it may unfold and apply it in living power to his
+soul, so that he may be enabled to acquit himself
+as an earnest, faithful, whole-hearted man of God
+and servant of Christ, in the midst of a scene of
+hollow profession, and heartless worldly religiousness.</p>
+
+<p>May the good Lord stir us all up to a more
+thorough consecration of ourselves, in spirit, soul,
+and body&mdash;all we are and all we have&mdash;to His
+service! We think we can really say we long for
+this&mdash;long for it, in the deep sense of our lack of it&mdash;long
+for it, more intensely, as we grow increasingly
+sick of the unreal condition of things within
+and around us.</p>
+
+<p>O beloved Christian, let us earnestly, believingly,
+and perseveringly cry to our own ever gracious God
+to make us more real, more whole-hearted, more
+thoroughly devoted to our Lord Jesus Christ in all
+things.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i-4">IN THE FATHER'S HOUSE<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"The wanderer no more will roam,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The lost one to the fold hath come,<br /></span>
+<span>The prodigal is welcomed home,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, through Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Though clothed in rags, by sin defiled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"> The Father did embrace His child;<br /></span>
+<span>And I am pardoned, reconciled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, through Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"It is the Father's joy to bless;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His love has found for me a dress,<br /></span>
+<span>A robe of spotless righteousness,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, in Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"And now my famished soul is fed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A feast of love for me is spread,<br /></span>
+<span>I feed upon the children's bread,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, in Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Yea, in the fulness of His grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">God put me in the children's place,<br /></span>
+<span>Where I may gaze upon His face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, in Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Not half His Love can I express,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet, Lord, with joy my lips confess,<br /></span>
+<span>This blessed portion I possess,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, in Thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Thy precious name it is I bear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In Thee I am to God brought near,<br /></span>
+<span>And all the Father's love I share,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">O Lamb of God, in Thee!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="DECISION_FOR_CHRIST" id="DECISION_FOR_CHRIST"></a>DECISION FOR CHRIST</h2>
+
+
+<p>In approaching the subject of "Decision for
+Christ," there are two or three obstacles which
+lie in our way&mdash;two or three difficulties which hang
+around the question, which we would fain remove,
+if possible, in order that the reader may be able to
+view the matter on its own proper ground, and in
+its own proper bearings.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, we encounter a serious difficulty
+in the fact that very few of us, comparatively,
+are in a condition of soul to appreciate the subject,
+or to suffer a word of exhortation thereon. We are,
+for the most part, so occupied with the question of
+our soul's salvation,&mdash;so taken up with matters
+affecting ourselves, our peace, our liberty, our comfort,
+our deliverance from the wrath to come, our
+interest in Christ,&mdash;that we have but little heart for
+aught that purely concerns Christ Himself&mdash;His
+name, His person, His cause, His glory.</p>
+
+<p>There are, we may say, two things which lie at
+the foundation of all true decision for Christ,
+namely, a conscience purged by the blood of Jesus,
+and a heart that bows with reverent submission to
+the authority of His Word in all things. Now we
+do not mean to dwell upon these things in this paper;
+first, because we are anxious to get at once to
+our immediate theme; and secondly, because we
+have so often dwelt on the subject of establishing
+the conscience in the peace of the gospel, and on
+setting before the heart the paramount claims of the
+word of God. We merely refer to them here for
+the purpose of reminding the reader that they are
+absolutely essential materials in forming the basis
+of decision for Christ. If my conscience is ill at
+ease, if I am in doubt as to my salvation, if I am
+filled with "anxious thought" as to whether I am
+a child of God or not, decision for Christ is out of
+the question. I must know that Christ died for
+me before I can intelligently and happily live for
+Him.</p>
+
+<p>So, also, if there be any reserve in the heart as
+to my entire subjection to the authority of Christ
+as my Lord and Master; if I am keeping some
+chamber of my heart, be it ever so remote, ever so
+small, closed against the light of His Word, it must
+of necessity hinder my whole-hearted decision for
+Him in this world. In a word, I must know that
+<i>Christ is mine</i> and <i>I am His</i> ere my course down
+here can be one of unswerving, uncompromising
+decision for Him. If the reader hesitates as to
+this, if he is still in doubt and darkness, let him
+pause and turn directly to the cross of the Son
+of God and hearken to what the Holy Spirit declares
+as to all those who simply put their trust
+therein. Let him drink into his inmost soul these
+words: "Be it known unto you, therefore, that
+through this Man is preached unto you the forgiveness
+of sins; and by Him <i>all</i> that <i>believe are</i> justified
+from <i>all</i> things from which ye could not be justified
+by the law of Moses." Yes, reader, these are
+the glad tidings for you. "<i>All</i>, from <i>all</i>," by faith
+in a crucified and risen Lord.</p>
+
+<p>But we see another difficulty in the way of our
+subject. We greatly fear that while we speak of
+decision for Christ, some of our readers may suppose
+that we are contending for some notion or set
+of notions of our own; that we are pressing some
+peculiar views or principles to which we vainly and
+foolishly venture to apply the imposing title of
+"Decision for Christ." All this we do most solemnly
+disclaim. The words which stand at the
+head of this paper are the simple expression of our
+thesis. We do not contend for attachment to sect,
+party, or denomination; for adherence to the doctrines
+or commandments of men. We write in the
+immediate presence of Him who searcheth the
+hearts and trieth the reins of the children of men,
+and we distinctly avow that our one object is to
+urge upon the Christian reader the necessity of decision
+for Christ. We would not, if we know ourselves,
+pen a single line to swell the ranks of a
+party, or draw over adherents to any particular doctrinal
+creed or any special form of church polity.
+We are impressed with the conviction that where
+Christ has His right place in the heart, all will be
+right; and that where He has not, there will be
+nothing right. And further, we believe that nothing
+but plain decision for Christ can effectually preserve
+the soul from the fatal influences that are at
+work around us in the professing Church. Mere
+orthodoxy cannot preserve us. Attachment to religious
+forms will not avail in the present fearful
+struggle. It is, we feel persuaded, a simple question
+of Christ as our <i>life</i>, and Christ as our <i>object</i>.
+May the Spirit of God now enable us to ponder
+aright the subject of "Decision for Christ"!</p>
+
+<p>It is well to bear in mind that there are certain
+great truths&mdash;certain immutable principles&mdash;which
+underlie all the dispensations of God from age to
+age and which remain untouched by all the failure,
+the folly and the sin of man. It is on these great
+moral truths, these foundation principles, that faith
+lays hold, and in them finds its strength and sustenance.
+Dispensations change and pass away, men
+prove unfaithful in their varied positions of stewardship
+and responsibility, but the word of the Lord
+endureth forever. It never fails. "Forever, O Lord,
+Thy word is settled in heaven." And again,
+"Thou hast magnified Thy word above all Thy
+name."<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Nothing can touch the eternal truth of
+God, and therefore what we want at all times is to
+give that truth its proper place in our hearts; to let it
+act on our conscience, form our character, and shape
+our way. "Thy word have I hid in my heart, that
+I might not sin against Thee." "Man shall not live
+by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth
+out of the mouth of the Lord." This is true security.
+Here lies the real secret of decision for
+Christ. What God has spoken must govern us in
+the most absolute manner ere our path can be said
+to be one of plain decision. There may be tenacious
+adherence to our own notions, obstinate attachment
+to the prejudices of the age, a blind devotion
+to certain doctrines and practices resting on a
+traditionary foundation, certain opinions which we
+have received to hold without ever inquiring as to
+whether or not there be any authority whatever for
+such opinions in Holy Scripture. There may be all
+this and much more, and yet not one atom of genuine
+decision for Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Now we feel we cannot do better than furnish
+our readers with an example or two drawn from the
+page of inspired history, which will do more to illustrate
+and enforce our theme than aught that we
+could possibly advance. And first, then, let us turn
+to the book of Esther, and there contemplate for a
+few moments the instructive history of</p>
+
+<h3>"MORDECAI THE JEW."</h3>
+
+<p>This very remarkable man lived at a time in
+which the Jewish economy had failed through the unfaithfulness
+and disobedience of the Jewish people.
+The Gentile was in power. The relationship between
+Jehovah and Israel could no longer be publicly acknowledged.
+The faithful Jew had but to hang
+his harp on the willows and sigh over the faded
+light of other days. The chosen seed was in exile;
+the city and temple where their fathers worshiped
+were in ruins, and the vessels of the Lord's house
+were in a strange land. Such was the outward
+condition of things in the day in which Mordecai's
+lot was cast. But in addition to this there was a
+man very near the throne occupying only the second
+place in the empire, sitting beside the very
+fountain-head of authority, possessing princely
+wealth, and wielding almost boundless influence.
+To this great man, strange to say, the poor exiled
+Jew sternly refuses to bow. Nothing will induce
+him to yield a single mark of respect to the second
+man in the kingdom. He will save the life of Ahasuerus,
+but he will not bow to Haman.</p>
+
+<p>Reader, why was this? Was this blind obstinacy,
+or bold decision&mdash;which? In order to determine
+this we must inquire as to the real root or principle
+of Mordecai's acting. If, indeed, there was no authority
+for his conduct in the law of God, then must
+we at once pronounce it to have been blind obstinacy,
+foolish pride, or, it may have been, envy of a
+man in power. But if, on the other hand, there be
+within the covers of the five inspired books of Moses
+a plain authority for Mordecai's deportment in this
+matter, then must we, without hesitation, pronounce
+his conduct to have been the rare and exquisite
+fruit of attachment to the law of his God, and uncompromising
+decision for Him and His holy authority.</p>
+
+<p>This makes all the difference. If it be merely a
+matter of private opinion,&mdash;a question concerning
+which each one may lawfully adopt his own view,&mdash;then,
+verily, might such a line of conduct be justly
+termed the most narrow-minded bigotry. We hear
+a great deal now-a-days about narrow-mindedness on
+the one hand, and large-heartedness on the other.
+But as a Roman orator, over two thousand years
+ago, exclaimed in the senate-house of Rome, "Conscript
+fathers: long since, indeed, we have lost the
+true names of things," so may we, in the bosom of
+the professing Church, at the close of the nineteenth
+century, repeat, with far greater force, "Long since
+we have lost the true names of things." For what
+do men now call bigotry and narrow-mindedness?
+A faithful clinging to and carrying out of "Thus
+saith the Lord." And what do they designate
+large-heartedness? A readiness to sacrifice truth
+on the altar of politeness and civility.</p>
+
+<p>Reader, be thou fully assured that thus it is at
+this solemn moment. We do not want to be sour
+or cynical, morose or gloomy; but we must speak
+the truth if we are to speak at all. We desire that
+the tongue may be hushed in silence, and the pen
+may drop from the hand, if we could basely cushion
+the plain, bold, unvarnished truth through fear of
+scattering our readers, or to avoid the sneer of the
+infidel. We cannot shut our eyes to the solemn
+fact that God's truth is being trampled in the dust&mdash;that
+the name of Jesus is despised and rejected.
+We have only to pass from city to city, and from
+town to town, of highly-favored England, and read
+upon the walls the melancholy proofs of the truth
+of our assertions. Truth is flung aside, in cold
+contempt. The name of Jesus is little set by. On>
+the other hand, man is exalted, his reason deified,
+his will indulged. Where must all this end? "In
+the blackness of darkness forever."</p>
+
+<p>How refreshing, in the face of all this, to ponder
+the history of Mordecai the Jew! It is very plain
+that he knew little and cared less about the thoughts
+of men on the question of narrow-mindedness. He
+obeyed the word of the Lord; and this we must be
+allowed to call real breadth of mind, true largeness
+of heart. For what, after all, is a narrow mind?
+A narrow mind we hold to be a mind which refuses
+to open itself to admit the truth of God. And what,
+on the contrary, is a large and liberal heart? A
+heart expanded by the truth and grace of God. Let
+us not be scared away from decision in the path of
+obedience by the scornful epithets which men have
+bestowed upon that path. It is a path of peace and
+purity, a path where the light of an approving conscience
+is enjoyed, and upon which the beams of
+divine favor ever pour themselves in undimmed
+lustre.</p>
+
+<p>But why did Mordecai refuse to bow to Haman?
+Was there any great principle at stake? Was it
+merely a whim of his own? Had he a "Thus saith
+the Lord" for his warrant in refusing a single nod
+of the head to the proud Amalekite? Yes. Let us
+turn to the seventeenth chapter of the book of Exodus,
+and there we read, "And the Lord said unto
+Moses, Write this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse
+it in the ears of Joshua: for I will utterly
+put out the remembrance of Amalek from under
+heaven. And Moses built an altar, and called the
+name of it Jehovah-nissi; for he said, Because the
+Lord hath sworn that the Lord will have war with
+Amalek from generation to generation.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was Mordecai's authority for not
+bowing to Haman the Agagite. A faithful Jew
+could not do reverence to one with whom Jehovah
+was at war. The heart might plead a thousand excuses
+and urge a thousand reasons. It might seek
+an easy path for itself on the plea that the Jewish
+system was in ruins and the Amalekite in power,
+and that therefore it was worse than useless, yea, it
+was positively absurd, to maintain such lofty ground
+when the glory of Israel was gone and the Amalekite
+was in the place of authority. "Of what use,"
+it might be argued, "can it be to uphold the standard
+when all is gone to pieces? You are only making
+your degradation more remarkable by the pertinacious
+refusal to bow your head. Would it not
+be better to give just one nod? That will settle the
+matter. Haman will be satisfied, and you and your
+people will be safe. Do not be obstinate. Show a
+tendency to be courteous. Do not stand up in that
+dogged way for a thing so manifestly non-essential.
+Besides, you should remember that the command in
+Exodus xvii. was only to be rehearsed in the ears
+of Joshua, and only had its true application in his
+bright and palmy days. It was never meant for the
+ears of an exile, never intended to apply in the days
+of Israel's desolation."</p>
+
+<p>All this, and much beside, might have been urged
+on Mordecai; but ah, the answer was simple: "God
+hath spoken. This is enough for me. True, we
+are a scattered people; but the word of the Lord is
+not scattered. He has not reversed His word
+about Amalek, nor entered into a treaty of peace
+with him. Jehovah and Amalek are still at war,
+and Amalek stands before me in the person of this
+haughty Agagite. How can I bow to one with
+whom Jehovah is at war? How can I do homage
+to a man whom the faithful Samuel would hew in
+pieces before the Lord?" "Well, then," it might
+be further urged upon this devoted Jew, "you will
+all be destroyed. You must either bow or perish."
+The answer is still most simple: "I have nothing
+to do with consequences. They are in the hand of
+God. Obedience is my path, the results are with
+Him. It is better to die with a good conscience
+than live with a bad one. It is better to go to
+heaven with an uncondemning heart than remain
+upon earth with a heart that would make me a coward.
+God has spoken. I can do no otherwise.
+May the Lord help me! Amen."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how well we can understand the mode in
+which this faithful Jew would be assaulted by the
+enemy. Nothing but the grace of God can ever
+enable any one to maintain a deportment of unflinching
+decision at a moment in which everything
+within and around is against us. True it is, we
+know that it is better to suffer anything than deny
+our Lord or fly in the face of His commandments;
+but yet how little are some of us prepared to endure
+a single sneer, a single scornful look, a single contemptuous
+expression, for Christ's sake. And perhaps
+there are few things harder, for some of us at
+least, to bear than to be reproached on the ground
+of narrow-mindedness and bigotry. We naturally
+like to be thought large-hearted and liberal. We
+like to be accounted men of enlightened mind,
+sound judgment, and comprehensive grasp. But
+we must remember that we have no right to be liberal
+at our Master's expense. We have simply to
+obey.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was with Mordecai. He stood like a
+rock, and allowed the whole tide of difficulty and
+opposition to roll over him. He would not bow to
+the Amalekite, let the consequence be what it might.
+Obedience was his path. The results were with
+God. And look at the result! In one moment the
+tide was turned. The proud Amalekite fell from
+his lofty eminence, and the exiled Jew was lifted
+from his sackcloth and ashes and placed next the
+throne. Haman exchanged his wealth and dignities
+for a gallows; Mordecai exchanged his sackcloth
+for a royal robe.</p>
+
+<p>Now it may not always happen that the reward
+of simple obedience will be as speedy and as signal
+as in Mordecai's case. And moreover, we may say
+that we are not Mordecais, nor are we placed in his
+position. But the principle holds good, whoever
+and wherever we are. There is not one of us, however
+obscure or insignificant, that has not a sphere
+within which our influence is felt for good or for
+evil. And besides, independent altogether of our
+circumstances and the apparent results of our conduct,
+we are called upon to obey implicitly the
+word of the Lord&mdash;to have His word hidden in our
+hearts&mdash;to refuse with unswerving decision, to do
+or say aught that the word of the living God condemns.
+"How can I do this great wickedness, and
+sin against God?" This should be the language,
+whether it be the question of a child tempted to
+steal a lump of sugar, or the most momentous step
+in evil that one can be tempted to take. The
+strength and moral security of Mordecai's position
+lay in this fact, that he had the word of God for his
+authority. Had it not been so, his conduct would
+have been senseless in the extreme. To have refused
+the usual expression of respect to one in high
+authority, without some weighty reason, could only
+be regarded as the most unmeaning obstinacy. But
+the moment you introduce a "Thus saith the Lord,"
+the matter is entirely changed. The word of the
+Lord endureth forever. The divine testimonies do
+not fade away or change with the times and seasons.
+Heaven and earth shall pass away, but one
+jot or tittle of what our God hath spoken shall never
+pass away. Hence, what had been rehearsed in the
+ears of Joshua, as he rested in triumph under the
+banner of Jehovah, was designed to govern the conduct
+of Mordecai, though clothed in sackcloth as an
+exile, in the city of Shushan. Ages and generations
+had passed away; the days of the Judges and
+the days of the Kings had run their course; but the
+commandment of the Lord with respect to Amalek
+had lost&mdash;could lose&mdash;none of its force. "The
+Lord <i>hath sworn</i> that the Lord will have war with
+Amalek," not merely in the days of Joshua, nor in
+the days of the Judges, nor in the days of the Kings,
+but "from generation to generation." Such was
+the record&mdash;the imperishable and immutable record
+of God; and such was the plain, solid and unquestionable
+foundation of Mordecai's conduct.</p>
+
+<p>And here let us say a few words as to the immense
+importance of entire submission to the word
+of God. We live in a day which is plainly marked
+by strong self-will. Man's reason, man's will and
+man's interest are working together, with appalling
+success, to ignore the authority of Holy Scripture.
+So long as the statements of the word of God chime
+in with man's reason, so long as they do not run
+counter to his will, and are not subversive of his
+interests, so long will he tolerate them; or, it may
+be, he will quote them with a measure of respect, or
+at least with self-complacency; but the moment it
+becomes a question of Scripture <i>versus</i> reason, will
+or interest, the former is either silently ignored or
+contemptuously rejected. This is a very marked
+and solemn feature of the days that are now passing
+over our heads. It behooves Christians to be aware
+of it, and to be on their watch-tower. We fear that
+very few, comparatively, are truly alive to the real
+state of the moral atmosphere which enwraps the
+religious world. We do not refer here so much to
+the bold attacks of infidel writers. To these we
+have alluded elsewhere. What we have now before
+us is rather the cool indifference on the part of professing
+Christians as to Scripture; the little power
+which pure truth wields over the conscience; the
+way in which the edge of Scripture is blunted or
+turned aside. You quote passage after passage
+from the inspired volume, but it seems like the pattering
+of rain upon the window: the <i>reason</i> is at
+work, the <i>will</i> is dominant, <i>interest</i> is at stake, human
+opinions bear sway, God's truth is practically,
+if not in so many words, set aside.</p>
+
+<p>All this is deeply solemn. We know of few
+things more dangerous than intellectual familiarity
+with the letter of Scripture where the spirit of it
+does not govern the conscience, form the character,
+and shape the way. We want to tremble at the
+word of God, to bow down in reverential submission
+to its holy authority in all things. A single
+line of Scripture ought to be sufficient for our souls
+on any point, even though, in carrying it out, we
+should have to move athwart the opinions of the
+highest and best of men. May the Lord raise up
+many faithful and true-hearted witnesses in these
+last days,&mdash;men like the faithful Mordecai,&mdash;who
+would rather ascend a gallows than bow to an
+Amalekite!</p>
+
+<p>For the further illustration of our theme, we shall
+ask the reader to turn to the sixth chapter of the
+book of Daniel. There is a special charm and interest
+in the history of these living examples presented
+to us in the Holy Scriptures. They tell us
+how the truth of God was acted upon, in other days,
+by men of like passions with ourselves; they prove
+to us that in every age there have been men who so
+prized the truth, so reverenced the word of the living
+God, that they would rather face death, in its
+most appalling forms, than to depart one hair's
+breadth from the narrow line laid down by the authoritative
+voice of their Lord and Master. It is
+healthful to be brought into contact with such men&mdash;healthful
+at all times, but peculiarly so in days
+like the present, when there is so much laxity and
+easy-going profession&mdash;so much of mere theory&mdash;when
+every one is allowed to go his own way, and
+hold his own opinion, provided always that he does
+not interfere with the opinions of his neighbor&mdash;when
+the commandments of God seem to have so
+little weight, so little power over the heart and conscience.
+Tradition will get a hearing; public opinion
+will be respected; anything and everything, in
+short, but the plain and positive statements of the
+word of God, will get a place in the thoughts
+and opinions of men. At such a time, it is, we repeat,
+at once healthful and edifying to muse over
+the history of men like Mordecai the Jew, and Daniel
+the prophet, and scores of others, in whose estimation
+a single line of Holy Scripture rose far above
+all the thoughts of men, the decrees of governors,
+and the statutes of kings, and who declared plainly
+that they had nothing whatever to do with consequences
+where the word of the Lord was concerned.
+Absolute submission to the divine command is that
+which alone becomes the creature.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, be it observed and well remembered,
+that any man or any number of men have any right
+to demand subjection to their decisions or decrees.
+No man has any right to enforce his opinions upon
+his fellow. This is plain enough, and we have to
+bless God for the inestimable privilege of civil and
+religious liberty, as enjoyed under this government.
+But what we urge upon our readers, just now, is
+plain decision for Christ, and implicit subjection to
+His authority, irrespective of everything, and regardless
+of consequences. This is what we do most
+earnestly desire for ourselves and for all the people
+of God in these last days. We long for that condition
+of soul, that attitude of heart, that quality of
+conscience, which shall lead us to bow down in implicit
+subjection to the commandments of our Lord
+and Saviour Jesus Christ. No doubt there are difficulties,
+stumbling blocks, and hostile influences to
+be encountered. It may be said, for instance, that
+"It is very difficult for one, now-a-days, to know
+what is really true and right. There are so many
+opinions and so many ways, and good men differ
+so in judgment about the simplest and plainest
+matters, and yet they all profess to own the Bible
+as the only standard of appeal; and, moreover,
+all declare that their one desire is to do what is
+right, and to serve the Lord, in their day and generation.
+How, then, is one to know what is true or
+what is false, seeing that you will find the very best
+of men ranged on opposite sides of the same question?"</p>
+
+<p>The answer to all this is very simple. "If thine
+eye be single thy whole body shall be full of light."
+But, most assuredly, my eye is not single if I am
+looking at men, and reasoning on what I see in
+them. A single eye rests simply on the Lord and
+His Word. Men differ, no doubt&mdash;they have differed,
+and they ever will differ, but I am to harken
+to the voice of my Lord and do His will. His
+Word is to be my light and my authority, the girdle
+of my loins in action, the strength of my heart in
+service, my only warrant for moving hither and
+thither, the stable foundation of all my ways. If I
+were to attempt to shape my way according to the
+thoughts of men, where should I be? How uncertain
+and unsatisfactory would my course be! If I
+really want to be guided aright, my God will surely
+guide me; but if I am looking to men, if I am governed
+by mixed motives, if I am seeking my own
+ends and interests, if I am seeking to please my
+fellows, then, undoubtedly, my body shall be full of
+darkness, heavy clouds shall settle down upon my
+pathway, and uncertainty mark all my goings.</p>
+
+<p>Christian reader, think of these things. Think
+deeply of them. Depend upon it they have a just
+claim upon your attention. Do you earnestly desire
+to follow your Lord? Do you really aim at
+something beyond mere empty profession, cold orthodoxy,
+or mechanical religiousness? Do you sigh
+for reality, depth, energy, fervor, and whole-heartedness?
+Then make Christ your one object, His
+Word your rule, His glory your aim. May the
+blessed Spirit be pleased to use for the furtherance
+of these ends our meditation on the interesting
+narrative of</p>
+
+
+<h3>"DANIEL THE PROPHET."</h3>
+
+<p>"It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom a
+hundred and twenty princes, which should be over
+the whole kingdom; and over these, three presidents,
+of whom Daniel was first; that the princes
+might give accounts unto them, and the king should
+have no damage. Then this Daniel was preferred
+above the presidents and princes, because an excellent
+spirit was in him; and the king thought to set
+him over the whole realm. Then the presidents
+and princes sought to find occasion against Daniel
+concerning the kingdom; but they could find none
+occasion or fault; forasmuch as he was faithful,
+neither was there any error or fault found in him"
+(Dan. vi. I-4).</p>
+
+<p>What a testimony! How truly refreshing to the
+heart! "No error or fault!" Even his most bitter
+enemies could not put their finger upon a single
+blemish in his character, or a flaw in his practical
+career. Truly this was a rare and admirable character&mdash;a
+bright witness for the God of Israel, even
+in the dark days of the Babylonish captivity&mdash;an
+unanswerable proof of the fact that no matter where
+we are situated, or how we are circumstanced, no
+matter how unfavorable our position, or how dark
+the day in which our lot is cast, it is our happy
+privilege so to carry ourselves, in all the details of
+daily life, as to give no occasion to the enemy to
+speak reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>How sad when it is otherwise! How humiliating
+when those who make a high profession are found
+constantly breaking down in the most commonplace
+affairs of domestic and commercial life! There are
+few things which more tend to discourage the heart
+than that.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt worldly people are only too ready to
+find occasion against those who profess the name
+of Jesus; and, further, we have to remember that
+there are two sides to every question, and that, very
+frequently, a broad margin must be left for exaggeration,
+high coloring, and false impressions. But
+still, it is the Christian's plain duty so to walk in
+every position and relationship of life, as that "no
+error or fault" may be found in him. We should
+not make any excuses for ourselves. The duties of
+our situation, whatever it may happen to be, should
+be scrupulously performed. A careless manner, a
+slovenly habit, an unprincipled mode of acting, on
+the part of the Christian, is a serious damage to the
+cause of Christ, and a dishonor to His holy name.
+And, on the other hand, diligence, earnestness,
+punctuality, and fidelity, bring glory to that name.
+And this should ever be the Christian's object. He
+should not aim at his own interest, his own reputation,
+or his own advancement, in seeking to carry
+himself aright in his family and in his calling in life.
+True, it will promote his interest, establish his reputation,
+and further his progress, to be upright and
+diligent in all his ways; but none of these things
+should ever be his motive. He is to be ever and
+only governed by the one thing, namely, to please
+and honor his Lord and Master. The standard
+which the Holy Ghost has set before us, as to all
+these things, is furnished in the words of the apostle
+to the Philippians, "That ye may be blameless
+and harmless, the sons of God without rebuke in
+the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among
+whom ye shine as lights in the world." We should
+not be satisfied with anything less than this. "They
+could find none occasion nor fault, forasmuch as he
+was faithful, neither was there any error or fault
+found in him." Noble testimony! Would that it
+were more called forth, in this our day, by the deportment,
+the habits, the temper, and ways of all
+those who call themselves Christians.</p>
+
+<p>But there was one point in which Daniel's enemies
+felt they could lay hold of him. "Then said
+these men, We shall not find any occasion against
+this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning
+<i>the law of his God</i>." Here was a something in
+the which occasion might be found to ruin this beloved
+and honored servant of God. It appears that
+Daniel had been in the habit of praying three times
+a day with his windows open toward Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p>This fact was well known, and was speedily laid
+hold of, and turned to account. "Then these presidents
+and princes assembled together to the king,
+and said thus unto him, King Darius, live for ever.
+All the presidents of the kingdom, the governors,
+and the princes, the counsellors, and the captains,
+have consulted together to establish a royal statute,
+and to make a firm decree, that whosoever shall ask
+a petition of any god or man for thirty days, save of
+thee, O king, he shall be cast into the den of lions.
+Now, O king, establish the decree, and sign the
+writing, that it be not changed, according to the
+law of the Medes and Persians, which altereth not.
+Wherefore king Darius signed the writing and the
+decree."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was a deep plot, a subtle snare, laid
+for the blameless and harmless Daniel. How would
+he act in the face of all this? Would he not feel it
+right to lower the standard? Well, if the standard
+was something of his own, he might surely lower it,
+and perhaps he ought. But if it were something
+divine&mdash;if his conduct was based upon the truth of
+God, then clearly it was his place to hold it up as
+high as ever, regardless of statutes, decrees, and
+writings established, signed, and countersigned. The
+whole question hinged upon this. Just as in the case
+of Mordecai the Jew, the question hinged upon the
+one point of whether he had any divine warrant for
+refusing to bow to Haman; so, in the case of Daniel
+the prophet, the question was, had he any divine
+authority for praying toward Jerusalem. It certainly
+seemed strange and odd. Many might have
+felt disposed to say to him, "Why persist in this
+practice? What need is there for opening your
+windows and praying toward Jerusalem, in such a
+public manner? Can you not wait until night has
+drawn her sable curtain around you, and your
+closet door has shut you in, and then pour out your
+heart to your God? This would be prudent, judicious,
+and expedient. And, surely, your God does
+not exact this of you. He does not regard time,
+place, or attitude. All times and places are alike
+to Him. Are you wise&mdash;are you right, in persisting
+in such a line of action under such circumstances?
+It was all well enough before this decree was
+signed, when you could pray when and as you
+thought right; but now it does seem like the most
+culpable fatuity and blind obstinacy to persevere;
+it is as though you really courted martyrdom."</p>
+
+<p>All this, and much more, we may easily conceive,
+might be suggested to the mind of the faithful Jew;
+but still the grand question remained, "What saith
+the Scripture?" Was there any divine reason for
+Daniel's praying toward Jerusalem? Assuredly there
+was! In the first place, Jehovah had said to Solomon,
+in reference to the temple at Jerusalem, "Mine
+eyes and My heart shall be there perpetually."
+Jerusalem was God's earthly centre. It was, it is,
+and ever shall be. True, it was in ruins&mdash;the temple
+was in ruins; but God's word was not in ruins;
+and here is faith's simple but solid warrant. King
+Solomon had said, at the dedication of the temple,
+hundreds of years before Daniel's time, "If Thy people
+sin against Thee, (for there is no man that sinneth
+not,) and Thou be angry with them, and deliver
+them over before their enemies, and they carry
+them away captive unto a land far off or near. Yet
+if they bethink themselves in the land whither they
+are carried captive, and turn and pray unto Thee,
+in the land of their captivity, saying, We have sinned,
+we have done amiss, and have dealt wickedly;
+if they return to Thee with all their heart and with
+all their soul in the land of their captivity, whither
+they have carried them captive, and pray toward
+their land, which Thou gavest unto their fathers, and
+toward the city which Thou hast chosen, and toward
+the house which I have built for Thy name: then
+hear Thou from the heavens, even from Thy dwelling-place,
+their prayer and their supplications, and
+maintain their cause, and forgive Thy people which
+have sinned against Thee" (2 Chron. vi. 36-39).</p>
+
+<p>Now this was precisely what Daniel was doing&mdash;this
+was the ground he took. He was a captive exile,
+but his heart was at Jerusalem, and his eyes followed
+his heart. If he could not sing the songs of
+Zion, he could at least breathe his prayers toward
+Zion's hill. If his harp was on the willows at Babylon,
+his fond affections turned toward the city of
+God, now a heap of ruins, but ere long to be an
+eternal excellency, "the joy of the whole earth." It
+mattered not to him that a decree had been signed
+by earth's greatest monarch, forbidding him to pray
+toward the city of his fathers and to his father's
+God. It mattered not to him that the lion's den
+was yawning to receive him, and the lion's jaws
+ready to devour him. Like his brother Mordecai,
+he had nothing to do with consequences. Mordecai
+would rather mount the gallows than bow to Haman,
+and Daniel would rather descend to the lion's
+den than cease to pray to Jehovah. These, surely,
+were the worthies. They were men whose hearts
+and consciences were governed absolutely by the
+word of God. The world may dub them bigots
+and fools; but, oh! how the heart does long for
+such bigots and fools, in these days of false liberality
+and wisdom!</p>
+
+<p>It might have been said to Mordecai and Daniel
+that they were contending for mere trifles&mdash;for
+things wholly indifferent and non-essential. This
+is an argument often used; but, oh! it has no
+weight with an honest and devoted heart. Indeed,
+there is nothing more contemptible, in the judgment
+of every true lover of Jesus, than the principle
+that regulates the standard as to essentials and
+non-essentials. For, what is it? Simply this, "All
+that concerns my salvation is essential; all that
+merely affects the glory of Christ is non-essential."
+How terrible is this! Reader, dost thou not utterly
+abhor it? What! shall we accept salvation as the
+fruit of our Lord's death, and deem aught that concerns
+Him non-essential? God forbid. Yea; rather
+let us entirely reverse the matter, and regard
+all that concerns the honor and glory of the name
+of Jesus, the truth of His Word, and the integrity of
+His cause, as vital, essential, and fundamental; and
+all that merely concerns ourselves as non-essential
+and indifferent. May God grant us this mind!
+May nothing be deemed trivial by us which has for
+its foundation the word of the living God!</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was with those devoted men whose history
+we have been glancing at. Mordecai would
+not bow his head, and Daniel would not close
+his window. Blessed men! The Lord be praised
+for such, and for the inspired record of their actings.
+Mordecai would rather surrender life than
+diverge from the truth of God, and Daniel would
+rather do the same than turn away from God's centre.
+Jehovah had said that He would have war
+with Amalek from generation to generation, and
+therefore Mordecai would not bow. Jehovah had
+said of Jerusalem, "Mine eyes and My heart shall
+be there perpetually;" therefore Daniel would not
+cease to pray toward that blessed centre. The
+word of the Lord endureth forever, and faith takes
+its stand on that imperishable foundation. There
+is an eternal freshness about every word that has
+come forth from the Lord. His truth holds good
+throughout all generations; its bloom can never be
+brushed away, its light can never fade, its edge can
+never be blunted. All praise be to His holy name!</p>
+
+<p>But let us look for a moment at the result of
+Daniel's faithfulness. The king was plunged into
+the deepest grief when he discovered his mistake.
+"He was sore displeased with himself." So well
+he might. He had fallen into a snare; but Daniel
+was in good keeping. It was all right with him.
+"The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous
+runneth into it, and is safe." It matters not
+whether it be a lion's den at Babylon or a prison at
+Philippi; faith and a good conscience can make a
+man happy in either. We question if Daniel ever
+spent a happier night on this earth, than the night
+he spent in the lion's den. He was there for God,
+and God was there with him. He was there with
+an approving conscience and an uncondemning
+heart. He could look up from the very bottom of
+that den straight into heaven: yea, that den was
+heaven upon earth to his happy spirit. Who would
+not rather be Daniel in the den than Darius in the
+palace? The one happy in God; the other "sore
+displeased with himself." Darius would have every
+one pray to him; Daniel would pray to none but
+God. Darius was bound by his own rash decree;
+Daniel was bound only by the word of the living
+God. What a contrast!</p>
+
+<p>And then see in the end what signal honor was
+put upon Daniel. He stood publicly identified with
+the one living and true God. "O Daniel," cried
+the king, "servant of the living God." Truly he
+had earned this title for himself. He was, unquestionably,
+a faithful servant of God. He had seen
+his three brethren cast into a furnace because they
+would worship <i>only</i> the true God, and he had been
+cast into the lion's den because he would pray <i>only</i>
+to Him; but the Lord had appeared for them and
+him, and given them a glorious triumph. He had
+allowed them to realize that precious promise made
+of old to their fathers, that they should be the head
+and their enemies the tail; that they should be
+above and their enemies below. Nothing could be
+more marked&mdash;nothing could more forcibly illustrate
+the value which God puts upon plain decision
+and true-hearted devotedness, no matter where,
+when, or by whom exhibited.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! for an earnest heart in this day of lukewarmness!
+O Lord, revive Thy work!</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+
+<span>How gentle God's commands!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">How kind His precepts are!<br /></span>
+<span>We'll cast our burdens on the Lord,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And trust His constant care.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Beneath His watchful eye<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His saints securely dwell:<br /></span>
+<span>The hand that bears all nature up,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Will guard His children well.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Why should an anxious load<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Press down our weary mind?<br /></span>
+<span>We haste, O Father, to Thy throne,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And sweet refreshment find.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Thy goodness stands approved--<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Unchanged from day to day:<br /></span>
+<span>We drop our burdens at Thy feet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To bear a song away!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="rindent">
+&mdash;<i>Philip Doddrige.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PRAYER" id="PRAYER"></a>PRAYER,</h2>
+
+<h3>IN ITS PROPER PLACE</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is a strong tendency in the human mind
+to take a one-sided view of things. This
+should be carefully guarded against. It would ever
+be our wisdom to view things as God presents
+them to us, in His holy Word. We should put
+things where He puts them, and leave them there.
+Were this more faithfully attended to, the truth
+would be much more clearly understood, and souls
+much better instructed. There is a divinely appointed
+place for everything, and we should avoid
+putting right things in wrong places, just as carefully
+as we would avoid setting them aside altogether.
+The one may do as much damage as the
+other. Let any divine institution be taken out of its
+divinely-appointed place, and it must necessarily
+fail of its divinely-appointed end. This, I imagine,
+will hardly be questioned by any enlightened or
+<a name="well-regulated" id="well-regulated"></a>well-regulated mind. It will be admitted, on all hands,
+to be wrong to put things in any place but just
+where God intended them to be.</p>
+
+<p>And in proportion to the importance of a right
+thing is the importance of having it in its right
+place. This remark holds good, in a special manner,
+with respect to the hallowed and most precious
+exercise of prayer. It is hard to imagine how any
+one, with the word of God in his hand, could presume
+to detract from the value of prayer. It is
+one of the very highest functions, and most important
+privileges of the Christian life. No sooner has
+the new nature been communicated by the Holy
+Ghost, through faith in Christ, than it expresses
+itself in the sweet accents of prayer. Prayer is the
+earnest breathing of the new man, drawn forth by
+the operation of the Holy Ghost, who dwells in all
+true believers. Hence, to find any one praying is
+to find him manifesting divine life in one of its most
+touching and beauteous characteristics, namely,
+dependence. There may be a vast amount of ignorance
+displayed in the prayer, both in its character
+and object; but the <i>spirit</i> of prayer is, unquestionably,
+divine. A child may ask for a great many
+foolish things; but, clearly, he could not ask for any
+thing if he had not life. The ability and desire to
+ask are the infallible proofs of life. No sooner had
+Saul of Tarsus passed from death unto life, than the
+Lord says of him, "<i>Behold he prayeth</i>!" (Acts ix.)
+Doubtless he had, as "a Pharisee of the Pharisees,"
+said many "long prayers;" but not until he "saw
+that Just One, and heard the voice of His mouth,"
+could it be said of him, "behold, <i>he prayeth</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Saying prayers and praying, are two totally different
+things. A self-righteous Pharisee may excel
+in the former; none but a converted soul can enjoy
+the latter. The spirit of prayer is the spirit of the
+new man; the language of prayer is the distinct utterance
+of the new life. The moment a spiritual
+babe is born into the new creation, it sends up its
+cry of dependence and of trust toward the Source
+of its birth. Who would dare to hush or hinder that
+cry? Let the babe be gently satisfied and encouraged,
+not ignorantly hindered or rudely silenced.
+The very cry which ignorance would seek to stifle,
+falls like sweetest music on the parent's ear. It
+is the proof of life. It evidences the existence
+of a new object around which the affections of a
+parent's heart may entwine themselves.</p>
+
+<p>All this is plain enough. It commends itself to
+every renewed mind. The man who could think of
+hushing the accents of prayer must be wholly ignorant
+of the precious and beautiful mysteries of
+the new creation. The understanding of the praying
+one may need to be instructed; but oh! let not
+the spirit of prayer be quenched. Let the beams
+of divine revelation, in all their emancipating power,
+shine in upon the struggling conscience, but let
+not the breathings of the new life be interrupted.
+The newly-converted soul may be in great darkness.
+The chilling mists of legalism may enwrap his
+spirit. He may not, as yet, be able to rest fully in
+Christ and His accomplished work. His awakened
+conscience may not, as yet, have found its peace-giving
+answer in the precious blood of Jesus.
+Doubts and fears may sorely beset him. He may
+not know about the important doctrine of the two
+natures, and the continual conflict between them.
+He is bowed down beneath the humiliating sense
+of indwelling sin, and sees not, as yet, the ample
+provision which redeeming love has made for that
+very thing, in the sacrifice and priesthood&mdash;the
+blood and advocacy of the Lord Jesus Christ. The
+joyous emotions which attended upon the first moments
+of his conversion may have passed away.
+The beams of the Sun of Righteousness may be
+hidden by the heavy clouds which arise from within
+and around him. It is not with him as in days
+past. He marvels at the sad change which has
+come over him, and well nigh doubts if he were
+ever converted at all.</p>
+
+<p>Need we wonder that such an one should cry
+mightily to God? Yea, the wonder would be if he
+could do aught else. How, then, should we treat
+him? Should we teach him not to pray? God forbid.
+This would be to do the work of Satan, who,
+assuredly, hates prayer most cordially. To drop a
+syllable which could even be understood as making
+little of an exercise so entirely divine, would be to
+fly in the face of the entire book of God, to deny
+the very example of Christ, and hinder the utterance
+of the Holy Ghost in the new-born soul. The
+Old and New Testament Scriptures literally teem
+with exhortations and encouragements to pray. To
+quote the passages would fill a volume. The blessed
+Master Himself has left His people an example as to
+the unceasing exercise of a spirit of prayer. He
+both prayed Himself and taught His <a name="disciples" id="disciples"></a>disciples to
+pray. The same is true of the Holy Ghost in the
+apostles. (See the following passages; Luke iii. 21;
+vi. 12; ix. 28, 29; xi. I-13; xviii. I-8; Acts i. 14;
+iv. 31; Rom. xii. 12; xv. 30; Eph. vi. 18; Phil.
+iv. 6; Col. iv. 2-4; I Thess. v. 17; 2 Thess. iii. I, 2;
+I Tim. ii. I-3; Heb. xiii. 18; James v. 14, 15.)</p>
+
+<p>If my reader will look out and ponder the foregoing
+passages, he will have a just view of the place
+which prayer occupies in the Christian economy.
+He will see that disciples are exhorted to pray; and
+that it is only disciples who are so exhorted. He will
+see that prayer is a grand prominent exercise of the
+household of God, and that he must be of that
+household to engage in it. He will see that prayer
+is the undoubted utterance of the new life; and that
+the life therefore must be there to utter itself. He
+will see that prayer is an important part of the
+Christian's privilege; and that it enters in no wise
+in the foundation of the Christian's peace.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, he will be able to put prayer in its proper
+place; and how important it is that it should be so
+put! How important it is that the anxious inquirer
+should see that the deep and solid foundations of
+his present and everlasting peace were laid in the
+work of the Cross, nineteen centuries ago! How
+important that the blood of Jesus should stand out
+before the soul in clear and bold relief, in its solitary
+grandeur, as the alone foundation of the sinner's
+rest! A soul may be earnestly seeking and
+crying for salvation, and all the while be ignorant
+of the great fact that it is ready to his hand&mdash;that
+he is actually commanded to accept a free,
+full, present, personal, and eternal salvation&mdash;that
+Christ has done all&mdash;that a brimming cup of salvation
+is set before him, which faith has only to take
+and drink for its everlasting satisfaction. The gospel
+of God's free grace points to the rent vail&mdash;the
+empty tomb&mdash;the occupied throne above. (Matt.
+xxviii; Heb. i. and x.) What do these things declare?
+What do they utter in the anxious sinner's ear?
+Salvation! salvation! The rent vail, the empty
+tomb, the occupied throne, all cry out, salvation!</p>
+
+<p>Reader, do you really want salvation? Then why
+not take it, as God's free gift? Are you looking to
+your own heart or to Christ's finished work for salvation?
+Is it needful, think you, to wait that God
+should do something more for your salvation? If
+so, then Christ's work were not finished; the ransom
+were not paid. But Christ said "<i>It is finished</i>,"
+and God says, "I have found a ransom" (Job
+xxxiii. John xix.). And if <i>you</i> have to do, say, or
+think aught, to complete the work of salvation, then
+Christ would not be a whole, a perfect Saviour.
+And, further, it would be a plain denial of Rom. iv.
+5, which says, "To him that <i>worketh not</i>, but believeth
+on Him that <i>justifieth the ungodly</i>, his faith is
+counted for righteousness." Take heed that you are
+not mixing up your poor prayers with the glorious
+work of redemption, completed by the Lamb of
+God on the cross. Prayer is most precious; but,
+remember, "without faith it is impossible to please
+God" (Heb. xi. 6); and if you have faith, you
+have Christ; and having Christ, you have <span class="smcap">ALL</span>.
+If you say you are crying for mercy, the word of
+God points you to mercy's copious stream flowing
+from the finished sacrifice. You have all your anxious
+heart can want in Jesus, and He is God's free
+gift to you just as you are, where you are, <i>now</i>. If
+you had <i>to be</i> aught else but what you are, or <i>to go</i>
+anywhere else from where you are, then salvation
+would not be "by grace, through faith" (Eph. ii. 8).
+If you are anxious to get salvation, and God desires
+you should have it, why need you be another
+moment without it? It is all ready. Christ died
+and rose again. The Holy Ghost testifies. The
+word is plain. "<i>Only believe.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Oh, may the Spirit of God lead any anxious soul
+to find settled repose in Jesus. May He lead you
+to look away from all besides, straight to an all-sufficient
+atonement. May He give clearness of apprehension,
+and simplicity of faith to all; and may
+He especially endow all who stand up to teach and
+preach with the ability "rightly to divide the word
+of truth," so that they may not apply to the unregenerate
+sinner, or the anxious inquirer, such passages
+of Scripture as refer only to the established believer.
+Very serious damage is done both to the
+truth of God, and to the souls of men, by an unskilful
+division and application of the Word.
+There must be spiritual life, before there can be
+spiritual action; and the <i>only</i> way to get spiritual
+life is by <i>believing</i> on the name of the Son of God<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
+(John i. 12, 13; iii. 14-16, 36; v. 24; xx. 31). If,
+therefore, the precepts of God's word be applied to
+persons who have not the spiritual life to act in them,
+confusion must be the result. The precious privileges
+of the Christian are turned into a heavy yoke
+for the unconverted. A strange system of half-law
+half-gospel is propounded, whereby true Christianity
+is robbed of its characteristic glory, and the
+souls of men are plunged in mist and perplexity.
+There is urgent need for clearness in setting forth
+the true ground of a sinner's peace. When souls
+are convicted of sin, and have life, but not liberty,
+they want a full, clear, unclouded gospel. The
+claims of a divinely-awakened conscience can only
+be answered by the blood of the Cross. If anything,
+no matter what, be added to the finished
+work of Christ, the soul must be filled with doubt
+and darkness.</p>
+
+<p>May God grant us to know more fully the true
+place and value of simple faith in the Lord Jesus
+Christ, and of earnest prayer in the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right">C. H. M.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="GILGAL" id="GILGAL"></a>"GILGAL"</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Joshua v.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>"Whatsoever things were written aforetime
+were written for our learning, that we
+through patience and comfort of the Scriptures
+might have hope" (Rom. xv. 4). These few words
+furnish a title, distinct and unquestionable, for the
+Christian to range through the wide and magnificent
+field of Old Testament Scripture, and gather
+therein instruction and comfort, according to the
+measure of his capacity and the character or depth
+of his spiritual need. And were any further warrant
+needed, we have it with equal clearness in the
+words of another inspired epistle: "Now all these
+things happened unto them (Israel) for ensamples;
+and they are written for our admonition, upon
+whom the ends of the world are come" (I Cor.
+x. 11).</p>
+
+<p>No doubt, in reading the Old Testament, as in
+reading the New, there is constant need of watchfulness&mdash;need
+of self-emptiness, of dependence upon
+the direct teaching of the Holy Spirit, by whom all
+Scripture has been indited. The imagination must
+be checked, lest it lead us into crude notions and
+fanciful interpretations, which tend to no profit, but
+rather to the weakening of the power of Scripture
+over the soul, and hindering our growth in the divine
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Still, we must never lose sight of the divine charter
+made out for us in Rom. xv. 4&mdash;never forget for
+a single moment that "whatsoever things were written
+aforetime were written for our learning." It is
+in the strength of these words that we invite the
+reader to accompany us back to the opening of the
+book of Joshua, that we may together contemplate
+the striking and instructive scenes presented there,
+and seek to gather up some of the precious "learning"
+there unfolded. If we mistake not, we shall
+learn some fine lessons on the banks of the Jordan,
+and find the air of Gilgal most healthful and bracing
+for the spiritual constitution.</p>
+
+<p>We have all been accustomed to look at Jordan
+as the figure of death&mdash;the death of the believer&mdash;his
+leaving this world and going to heaven. Doubtless
+the believer has often read and heard these
+lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Could we but stand where Moses stood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And view the landscape o'er,<br /></span>
+<span>Not Jordan's stream nor death's cold flood<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Could fright us from the shore."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But all this line of thought, feeling and experience
+is very far below the mark of true Christianity.
+A moment's reflection in the true light which Scripture
+pours upon our souls would be sufficient to
+show how utterly deficient is the popular religious
+thought as to Jordan. For instance, when a be
+dies and goes to heaven, is he called to fight?
+Surely not. All is rest and peace up yonder&mdash;ineffable,
+eternal peace. Not a ripple on that ocean.
+No sound of alarm throughout that pure and holy
+region. No conflict there. No need of armor. We
+shall want no girdle, because our garments may
+flow loosely around us. We shall not need a breast-plate
+of righteousness, for divine righteousness
+has there its eternal abode. We shall have no
+need of sandals, for there will be no rough or
+thorny places in that fair and blissful region. No
+shield called for there, inasmuch as there will be no
+fiery darts flying. No helmet of salvation, for the
+divine and eternal results of God's salvation shall
+then be reached. No sword, inasmuch as there
+will be neither enemy nor evil occurrent throughout
+all that blissful, sunny region.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, therefore, Jordan cannot mean the death
+of the believer and his going to heaven, for the
+simplest of all reasons, that it was when Israel
+crossed the Jordan that their fighting, properly
+speaking, began. True they had fought with Amalek
+in the wilderness; but it was in Canaan that
+their real war commenced. The careful reader of
+the Scriptures will readily see this.</p>
+
+<p>But does not Jordan represent death? Most
+surely it does. And must not the believer cross it?
+Yes; but he finds it dry, because the Prince of Life
+has gone down into its deepest depths, and opened
+up a pathway for His people, by the which they
+pass over into their heavenly inheritance.</p>
+
+<p>Moses, from Pisgah's top, gazed upon the promised
+land. <i>Personally</i>, under the governmental
+dealings of God, he was prevented from going over
+Jordan. But looking at him <i>officially</i>, we know
+that the law could not possibly bring the people into
+Canaan; so Moses' course must end there, for he
+represents the law.</p>
+
+<p>But Christ, the true Joshua, has crossed the Jordan,
+and not only crossed it, but turned it into a
+pathway by which the ransomed host can pass over
+dry-shod into the heavenly Canaan. The Christian
+is not called to stand shivering on the brink of the
+river of death, as one in doubt as to how it may go
+with him. That river is dried up for faith. Its
+power is gone. Our adorable Lord "has abolished
+death, and brought life and incorruptibility to light
+by the gospel." Faith can now, therefore, sing triumphantly,
+<a name="sting" id="sting"></a>O death, where is thy sting? O grave,
+where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin;
+and the strength of sin is the law; but thanks be to
+God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord
+Jesus Christ" (I Cor. xv. 55-57).</p>
+
+<p>Glorious, enfranchising fact! Let us praise Him
+for it. Let all our ransomed powers adore Him.
+Let our whole moral being be stirred up to chant
+the praises of Him who has taken the sting from
+death, and destroyed him who had the power of
+death, that is, the devil, and conducted us into a
+sphere which is pervaded throughout with life, light,
+incorruptibility, and glory. May our entire practical
+career be to His glory!</p>
+
+<p>We shall now proceed to examine more particularly
+the teaching of Scripture on this great subject,
+and may the Holy Spirit Himself be our immediate
+instructor!</p>
+
+<p>"And Joshua rose early in the morning; and
+they removed from Shittim, and came to Jordan, he
+and all the children of Israel, and lodged there before
+they passed over. And it came to pass after
+three days, that the officers went through the host;
+and they commanded the people, saying, When ye
+see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God,
+and the priests, the Levites, bearing it, then ye shall
+remove from your place, and go after it. <i>Yet there
+shall be a space between you and it</i>, about two thousand
+cubits by measure: come not near unto it, <i>that
+ye may know the way by which ye must go: for ye
+have not passed this way heretofore</i>" (Josh. iii. I-4).</p>
+
+<p>There are three deeply important points in Israel's
+history which the reader would do well to ponder.
+There is, first, the blood-stained lintel, in the
+land of Egypt; secondly, the Red Sea; thirdly, the
+river Jordan.</p>
+
+<p>Now in each of these we have a type of the death
+of Christ, in some one or other of its grand aspects&mdash;for,
+as we know, that precious death has many
+and various aspects, and nothing can be more profitable
+for the Christian, and nothing, surely, ought to
+be more attractive, than the study of the profound
+mystery of the death of Christ. There are depths
+and heights in that mystery which eternity alone
+will unfold; and it should be our delight now, under
+the powerful ministry of the Holy Ghost, through
+the perfect light of Holy Scripture, to search into
+these things for the strength, comfort and refreshment
+of the inward man.</p>
+
+<p>Looking, then, at the death of Christ, as typified
+by the blood of the paschal lamb, we see in it that
+which screens us from the judgment of God. "I
+will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and
+will smite all the firstborn in the land of Egypt,
+both man and beast; and against all the gods of
+Egypt I will execute judgment; I am the Lord.
+And the blood shall be to you for a token upon the
+houses where ye are; and when I see the blood, I
+will pass over you, and the plague shall not be
+upon you to destroy you, when I smite the land of
+Egypt" (Ex. xii.).</p>
+
+<p>Now, we need hardly say, it is of the deepest moment
+for the exercised, consciously guilty soul, to
+know that God has provided a shelter from wrath
+and judgment to come. No right-minded person
+would think for a moment of undervaluing this aspect
+of the death of Christ. "When I see the
+blood, I will pass over you." Israel's safety rested
+upon God's estimate of the blood. He does not
+say, "When <i>you</i> see the blood." The Judge saw
+the blood, knew its value, and passed over the
+house. Israel was screened by the blood of the
+lamb&mdash;by God's estimate of that blood, not by their
+own. Precious fact!</p>
+
+<p>How prone we are to be occupied with our
+thoughts about the blood of Christ, instead of with
+God's thoughts! We feel we do not value that precious
+blood as we ought&mdash;who ever did, or ever
+could? and then we begin to question if we are
+safe, seeing we so sadly fail in our estimate of
+Christ's work and in our love to His person.</p>
+
+<p>Now if our <i>safety</i> depends in the smallest degree
+upon our estimate of Christ's work, or our love to
+His person, we are in more imminent danger than
+if it depended upon our keeping the law. True it
+is,&mdash;most true&mdash;who could think of denying it?&mdash;we
+ought to value Christ's work, and we ought to
+love Himself. But if all this be put upon the footing
+of a righteous claim, and if our safety rests
+upon our answering to that claim, then are we in
+greater danger and more justly condemned than if
+we stood on the ground of a broken law. For just
+in proportion as the claims of Christ are higher than
+the claims of Moses, and in proportion as Christianity
+is higher than the legal system, so are we
+worse off, in greater danger, farther from peace, if
+our safety depends upon our response to those
+higher claims.</p>
+
+<p>Mark, it is not that we ought not to answer to
+such claims; we most certainly ought. But who
+among us does? and hence, so far as we are concerned,
+our ruin and guilt are only made more manifest,
+and our condemnation more righteous, if we
+stand upon the claims of Christ, because we have
+not answered to them. If we are to be saved by
+our estimate of Christ, by our response to His
+claims, by our appreciation of His love, we are
+worse off by far than if we were placed under the
+claims of the law of Moses.</p>
+
+<p>But, blessed be God, it is not so. We are saved
+by grace,&mdash;free, sovereign, divine and eternal grace,&mdash;not
+by our sense of grace. We are sheltered by
+the blood, not by our estimate of the blood. Jehovah
+did not say, on that awful night, "When <i>you</i>
+see the blood, and estimate it as you ought, I will
+pass over you." Nothing of the kind. This is not
+the way of our God. He wanted to shelter His
+people, and to let them know that they were sheltered,&mdash;perfectly,
+because divinely sheltered,&mdash;and
+therefore He places the matter wholly upon a divine
+basis; He takes it entirely out of their
+hands, by assuring them that their safety rested
+simply and entirely upon the blood, and upon His
+estimate thereof. He gives them to understand
+that they had nothing whatever to do with providing
+the shelter. It was His to <i>provide</i>. It was theirs
+to <i>enjoy</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it stood between Jehovah and His Israel in
+that memorable night; and thus it stands between
+Him and the soul that simply trusts in Jesus now.
+We are not saved by <i>our</i> love, or <i>our</i> estimate, or
+<i>our</i> anything. We are saved by the blood behind
+which faith has fled for refuge, and by God's estimate
+of it, which faith apprehends. And just as
+Israel, within that blood-stained lintel screened
+from judgment,&mdash;safe from the sword of the destroyer,&mdash;could
+feed upon the roasted lamb, so may
+the believer, perfectly sheltered from the wrath to
+come,&mdash;sweetly secure from all danger, screened
+from judgment,&mdash;feed upon Christ in all the preciousness
+of what He is.</p>
+
+<p>But more of this by and by.</p>
+
+<p>We are specially anxious that the reader should
+weigh the point on which we have been dwelling, if
+he be one who has not yet found peace, even as to
+the question of safety from judgment to come,
+which, as we shall see (if God permit) ere we close
+this paper, is but a part, though an ineffably precious
+part, of what the death of Christ has procured
+for us.</p>
+
+<p>We have very little idea indeed of how much of
+the leaven of self-righteousness cleaves to us, even
+after our conversion, and how immensely it interferes
+with our peace, our enjoyment of grace, and
+our consequent progress in the divine life. It may
+be we fancy we have done with self-righteousness
+when we have given up all thought of being saved
+by our works; but alas, it is not so, for the evil
+takes new forms; and of all these, none is more
+subtle than the feeling that we do not value the
+blood as we ought, and the doubting our safety on
+that ground. All this is the fruit of self-righteousness.
+We have not done with <i>self</i>. True, we are
+not, it may be, making a saviour of our <i>doings</i>, but
+we are of our <i>feelings</i>. We are seeking, unknown
+to ourselves perhaps, to find some sort of title in
+our love to God or our appreciation of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Now all this must be given up. We must rest
+simply on the blood of Christ, and upon God's testimony
+to that blood. He sees the blood. He
+values it as it deserves. He is satisfied. This
+ought to satisfy us. He did not say to Israel,
+When I see how you behave yourselves; when I
+see the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs, the
+girded loins, the shod feet, I will pass over you.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt all these things had their proper place;
+but that proper place was not as the ground of
+safety, but as the secret of communion. They were
+called to behave themselves&mdash;called to keep the
+feast; but it was as <i>being</i>, not <i>in order to be</i>, a sheltered
+people. This made all the difference. It
+was because they were divinely screened from judgment
+that they could keep the feast. They had the
+authority of the word of God to assure them that
+there was no judgment for them; and if they believed
+that word, they could celebrate the feast in
+peace and safety. "Through faith he kept the
+passover, and the sprinkling of blood, lest He that
+destroyed the firstborn should touch them" (Heb.
+xi. 28).</p>
+
+<p>Here lies the deep and precious secret of the
+whole matter. It was by faith he kept the passover.
+God had said, "When I see the blood, I will pass
+over you," and He could not deny Himself. It
+would have been a denial of His very nature and
+character, and an ignoring of His own blessed remedy,
+had a single hair of an Israelite's head been
+touched on that deeply solemn night. It was not,
+we repeat, in anywise a question of Israel's state or
+Israel's deservings. It was simply and entirely a
+question of the value of the blood <i>in God's sight</i>,
+and of the truth and authority of His own word.</p>
+
+<p>What stability is here!&mdash;what peace and rest!
+What a solid ground of confidence! The blood of
+Christ! the word of God! True, divinely true&mdash;let
+it never be forgotten or lost sight of&mdash;it is only
+by the grace of the Holy Spirit that the word of
+God can be received, or the blood of Christ relied
+upon. Still, it is the word of God and the blood of
+Christ, and nothing else, which give peace to the
+heart as regards all question of coming judgment.
+There can be no judgment for the believer. And
+why? Because the blood is on the mercy-seat, as
+the perfect proof that judgment has been already
+executed.</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i-4">"He bore on the tree the sentence for me,<br /></span>
+<span>And now both the Surety and sinner are free."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Yet, all praise to His name, thus it stands as to
+every soul that simply takes God at His word, and
+rests in the precious blood of Christ. It is as impossible
+that such an one can come into judgment,
+as that Christ Himself can. All who are sheltered
+by the blood are as safe as the word of God is
+sure&mdash;as safe as Christ Himself. It seems perfectly
+wonderful for any poor sinful mortal to be able to
+pen such words; but the blessed fact is, it is either
+this or nothing. If there is any question as to the
+believer's safety, then the blood of Christ is not on
+the mercy-seat, or it is of no account in the judgment
+of God. If it be a question of the believer's
+state, of his worthiness, of his feelings, of his experience,
+of his walk, of his love, of his devotedness,
+of his appreciation of Christ, then would there be
+no force, no value, no truth in that glorious sentence,
+"When I see the blood, I will pass over;"
+for in that case the form of speech should be entirely
+changed, and a dark and chilling shade be
+cast over its heavenly lustre. It should then be,
+"When I see the blood, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But no, beloved, anxious reader, it is not, and it
+never can be, thus. Nothing must ever be added&mdash;not
+the weight of a feather, to that precious blood
+which has perfectly satisfied God as a Judge, and
+which perfectly shelters every soul that has fled for
+safety behind it. If the righteous Judge has declared
+Himself satisfied, surely the guilty culprit
+may well be satisfied also. God is satisfied with
+the blood of Jesus; and when the soul is satisfied
+likewise, all is settled, and there is peace as regards
+the question of judgment. "There is no condemnation
+to them that are in Christ Jesus." How can
+there be, seeing He has borne the condemnation in
+their stead? To doubt the believer's exemption
+from judgment is to make God a liar, and to make
+the blood of Christ of none effect.</p>
+
+<p>The reader will note that thus far we have been
+occupied only with the question of deliverance from
+judgment&mdash;a most weighty question surely. But,
+as we shall see in the course of this series of papers,
+there is far more secured for us by the death
+of Christ than freedom from judgment and wrath,
+blessed as that is. That peerless sacrifice does a
+great deal more for us than keep God out as a
+Judge.</p>
+
+<p>But for the present we pause, and shall close
+this paper with a solemn and earnest question to
+the reader, <i>Art thou sheltered by the blood of Jesus</i>?
+Do not rest, beloved, until you can answer with a
+clear and unhesitating "Yes." Remember, you are
+either sheltered by the blood, or exposed to the
+horrors of eternal judgment.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+<p>In our last paper we had before us Israel under
+the shelter of the blood. A grand reality, most
+surely: who could duly estimate it? What human
+language could suitably unfold the deep blessedness
+of being screened from the judgment of God by
+the blood of the Lamb&mdash;of being within that hallowed
+circle where wrath and judgment can never
+come? Who can speak aright of the privilege of
+feeding in perfect safety on the Lamb whose precious
+blood has forever averted from us the wrath
+of a sin-hating God?</p>
+
+<p>But blessed as all this is, there is much more than
+this. There is far more comprehended in the salvation
+of God than deliverance from judgment and
+wrath. We may have the fullest assurance that our
+sins are forgiven, that God will never enter into
+judgment with us on account of our sins, and yet
+be very far indeed from the enjoyment of the true
+Christian position. We may be filled with all manner
+of fears about ourselves&mdash;fears occasioned by
+the consciousness of indwelling sin, the power of
+Satan, the influence of the world. All these things
+may crop up before us, and fill us with the gravest
+apprehensions.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, for example, when we turn to Ex. xiv., we
+find Israel in the deepest distress, and almost overwhelmed
+with fear. It would seem as if they had
+for the moment lost sight of the fact that they had
+been under the cover of the blood.</p>
+
+<p>Let us look at the passage.</p>
+
+<p>"And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak
+unto the children of Israel, that they turn and encamp
+before Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and the
+sea, over against Baal-zephon: before it shall ye
+encamp by the sea. For Pharaoh will say of the
+children of Israel, They are entangled in the land,
+the wilderness hath shut them in. And I will harden
+Pharaoh's heart, that he shall follow after them:
+and I will be honored upon Pharaoh, and upon all
+his host; that the Egyptians may know that I am
+the Lord. And they did so. And it was told the
+king of Egypt that the people fled: and the heart
+of Pharaoh and of his servants was turned against
+the people, and they said, Why have we done this,
+<i>that we have let Israel go from serving us</i>?"&mdash;mark
+these words:&mdash;"And he made ready his chariot,
+and took his people with him. And he took six
+hundred chosen chariots, and all the chariots of
+Egypt, and captains over every one of them. And
+the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of
+Egypt, and he pursued after the children of Israel:
+and the children of Israel went out with a high
+hand. But the Egyptians pursued after them, all
+the horses and chariots of Pharaoh, and his horsemen,
+and his army, and overtook them, encamping
+by the sea, beside Pi-hahiroth, before Baal-zephon.
+And when Pharaoh drew nigh, the children of Israel
+lifted up their eyes, and, behold, the Egyptians
+marched after them; and they were <i>sore afraid</i>:
+and the children of Israel <i>cried out</i> unto the Lord."</p>
+
+<p>Now, we may feel disposed to ask, Are these
+the people whom we have seen so recently feeding,
+in perfect safety, under the cover of the blood?
+The very same. Whence, then, these fears, this
+intense alarm, this agonizing cry? Did they really
+think that Jehovah was going to judge and destroy
+them, after all? Not exactly. Of what, then, were
+they afraid? Of perishing in the wilderness after
+all. "And they said unto Moses, Because there
+were no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away
+to die in the wilderness? Wherefore hast thou
+dealt thus with us, to carry us forth out of Egypt?
+Is not this the word that we did tell thee in Egypt,
+saying, Let us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians!
+For it had been better for us to serve the
+Egyptians, than that we should die in the wilderness."</p>
+
+<p>All this was most gloomy and depressing. Their
+poor hearts seem to fluctuate between "graves in
+Egypt" and death in the wilderness. There is no
+sense of deliverance; no adequate knowledge either
+of God's purposes or of God's salvation. All seems
+utter darkness, almost bordering upon hopeless despair.
+They are thoroughly hemmed in and "shut
+up." They seem in a worse plight than ever. They
+heartily wish themselves back again amid the brick-kilns
+and stubble fields of Egypt. Deserts sands
+on either side of them; the sea in front; Pharaoh
+and all his terrific hosts behind!</p>
+
+<p>The case seemed perfectly hopeless; and hopeless
+it was, so far as they were concerned. They
+were utterly powerless, and they were being made
+to realize it, and this is a very painful process to
+go through; but very wholesome and valuable, yea,
+most necessary for all. We must all, in one way or
+another, learn the force, meaning, and depth of that
+phrase, "without strength." It is exactly in proportion
+as we find out what it is to be without
+strength, that we are prepared to appreciate God's
+"due time."</p>
+
+<p>But, we may here inquire, "Is there aught in the
+history of God's people now answering to Israel's
+experience at the Red Sea?" Doubtless there is;
+for we are told that the things which happened unto
+Israel are our ensamples, or types. And, most
+surely, the scene at the Red Sea is full of instruction
+for us. How often do we find the children of God
+plunged in the very depths of distress and darkness
+as to their state and prospects! It is not that they
+question the love of God, or the efficacy of the
+blood of Jesus, nor yet that God will reckon their
+sins to them, or enter into judgment with them.
+But still, they have no sense of full deliverance.
+They do not see the application of the death of
+Christ to their <i>evil nature</i>. They do not realize the
+glorious truth that by that death they are completely
+delivered from this present evil world, from the
+dominion of sin, and from the power of Satan.
+They see that the blood of Jesus screens them from
+the judgment of God; but they do not see that <i>they</i>
+are "dead to sin;" that their "old man is crucified
+with Christ;" that not only have their sins been
+put upon Christ at the cross, but <i>they themselves</i>, as
+sinful children of Adam, have been, by the act of
+God, identified with Christ in His death; that God
+pronounces them <i>dead and risen with Christ</i>. (See
+Col. iii. I-4 and the sixth chapter of Romans.)
+But if this precious truth is not apprehended,
+by faith, there is no bright, happy, emancipating
+sense of full and everlasting salvation. They are,
+to speak according to our type, at Egypt's side of
+the Red Sea, and in danger of falling into the
+hands of the prince of this world. They do not
+see "<i>all</i> their enemies dead on the sea-shore."
+They cannot sing the song of redemption. No one
+can sing it, until he stands by faith on the wilderness
+side of the Red Sea, or, in other words, until he
+sees his complete deliverance from sin, the world,
+and Satan&mdash;the great foes of every child of God.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in contemplating the facts of Israel's history,
+as recorded in the first fifteen chapters of
+Exodus, we observe that they did not raise a single
+note of praise until they had passed through the
+Red Sea. We hear the cry of sore distress under
+the cruel lash of Pharaoh's task-masters, and amid
+the grievous toil of Egypt's brick-kilns. And we
+hear the cry of terror when they stood "between
+Migdol and the sea." All this we hear; but not
+one note of praise, not a single accent of triumph,
+until the waters of the Red Sea rolled between them
+and the land of bondage and of death, and they saw
+all the power of the enemy broken and gone. "Thus
+the Lord saved Israel that day out of the hand of
+the Egyptians; and Israel saw the Egyptians dead
+upon the sea-shore. And <i>Israel saw that great work
+which the Lord did</i> upon the Egyptians: and the
+people feared the Lord and His servant Moses.
+<i>Then sang</i> Moses and the children of Israel."</p>
+
+<p>Now, what is the simple application of all this to
+us as Christians? What grand lesson are we to
+learn from the scenes on the shores of the Red Sea?
+In a word, of what is the Red Sea a type? And
+what is the difference between the blood-stained
+lintel and the divided sea?</p>
+
+<p>The Red Sea is the type of the death of Christ,
+in its application to all our spiritual enemies, sin,
+the world, and Satan. By the death of Christ the
+believer is completely and forever delivered from
+the <i>power</i> of sin. He is, alas! conscious of the
+<i>presence</i> of sin; but its power is gone. He has died
+to sin, in the death of Christ; and what power has
+sin over a dead man? It is the privilege of the
+Christian to reckon himself as much delivered from
+the dominion of sin as a man lying dead on the
+floor. What power has sin over such an one? None
+whatever. No more has it over the Christian. Sin
+<i>dwells</i> in the believer, and will do so to the end of
+the chapter; but its <i>rule</i> is gone. Christ has
+wrested the sceptre from the grasp of our old master,
+and shivered it to atoms. It is not merely that
+His blood has purged our <i>sins</i>; but His death has
+broken the power of <i>sin</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is one thing to know that our sins are forgiven,
+and another thing altogether to know that "the
+body of sin is destroyed"&mdash;its rule ended&mdash;its
+dominion gone. Many will tell you that they do
+not question the forgiveness of their past sins, but
+they do not know what to say as to indwelling sin.
+They fear lest, after all, that may come against
+them, and bring them into judgment. Such persons
+are, to use the figure, "between Migdol and the
+sea." They have not learnt the doctrine of Rom.
+vi. They have not as yet, in their spiritual intelligence
+and apprehension, reached the resurrection
+side of the Red Sea. They do not know what it is
+to be dead unto sin, and alive unto God through
+Jesus Christ our Lord.</p>
+
+<p>And let the reader particularly note the force of
+the apostle's word, "<i>reckon</i>." How very different
+it is, in every way, from our word, "<i>realize</i>!" This
+latter word may do very well where natural or human
+things are concerned. We can realize physical
+or material facts; but where a spiritual truth is involved,
+it is not a question of realizing, but of reckoning.
+How can I realize that I am dead to sin?
+All my own experience, my own feelings, my inward
+self-consciousness seems to offer a flat contradiction
+to the truth. I cannot realize that I am dead;
+but God tells me I am. He assures me that He
+counts me to have died to sin when Christ died. I
+believe it; not because I feel it, but because God
+says it. I reckon myself to be what God tells me I
+am. If I were sinless, if I had no sin in me, I
+should never be told to reckon myself dead to sin;
+neither should I ever be called to listen to such
+words as, "Let not sin, therefore, <i>reign</i> in your mortal
+body." But it is just because I have sin dwelling
+in me, and in order to give me full practical deliverance
+from its reigning power, that I am taught the
+grand enfranchising truth, that the dominion of sin
+is broken by the death of Christ in which I also
+died.</p>
+
+<p>How do I know this? Is it because I feel it?
+Certainly not. How could I feel it? How could
+I realize it? How could I ever have the self-consciousness
+of it, while in the body? Impossible.
+But God tells me I have died in the death of Christ.
+I believe it. I do not reason about it. I do not
+stagger at it because I cannot find any evidence of
+its truth in myself. I take God at His word. I
+reckon myself to be what He tells me I am. I do
+not endeavor to struggle, and strive, and work myself
+into a sinless state which is impossible. Neither
+do I imagine myself to be in it, which were a deceit
+and a delusion; but by a simple, childlike faith, I
+take the blessed ground which faith assigns me, in
+association with a dead Christ. I look at Christ
+there, and see in Him, according to God's word, the
+true expression of where I am, in the Divine Presence.
+I do not reason from myself upwards, but I
+reason from God downwards. This makes all the
+difference. It is just the difference between unbelief
+and faith,&mdash;between law and grace&mdash;between
+human religion and divine Christianity. If I reason
+from self, how can I have any right thought of
+what is in the heart of God?&mdash;all my conclusions
+must be utterly false. But if, on the other hand, I
+listen to God and believe His Word, my conclusions
+are divinely sound. Abraham did not look
+at himself and the improbability, nay, the impossibility
+of having a son in his old age; but he believed
+God and gave glory to Him. And it was
+counted to Him for righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>It is an unspeakable mercy to get done with self,
+in all its phases and in all its workings, and to be
+brought to rest, in all simplicity, on the written
+Word, and on the Christ which that written Word
+presents to our souls. Self-occupation is a deathblow
+to fellowship, and a great barrier to the soul's
+rest and progress. It is impossible for any one to
+enjoy settled peace so long as he is occupied with
+himself. He must cease from self, and harken to
+God's Word, and rest, without a single question, on
+its pure, precious, and everlasting record. God's
+Word never changes. I change; my frames, my
+feelings, my experience, my circumstances, change
+continually; but God's Word is the same yesterday,
+and to-day, and forever.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, it is a grand and essential point
+for the soul to apprehend that Christ is the only
+definition of the believer's place before God. This
+gives immense power, liberty, and blessing. "As
+He is, so are we, in this world" (I John iv. 17).
+This is something perfectly wonderful! Let us
+ponder it: let us think of a poor, wretched, guilty
+slave of sin, a bondslave of Satan, a votary of the
+world, exposed to an eternal hell&mdash;such an one taken
+up by sovereign grace, delivered completely from
+the grasp of Satan, the dominion of sin, the power
+of this present evil world&mdash;pardoned, washed, justified,
+brought nigh to God, accepted in Christ, and
+perfectly and forever identified with Him, so that
+the Holy Ghost can say, as Christ is, so is he in
+this world!</p>
+
+<p>All this seems too good to be true; and, most
+assuredly, it is too good for us to get; but, blessed
+be the God of all grace, and blessed be the Christ
+of God! it is not too good for Him to give. God
+gives like Himself. He will be God, spite of our
+unworthiness and Satan's opposition. He will act
+in a way worthy of Himself, and worthy of the Son
+of His love. Were it a question of our deservings,
+we could only think of the deepest and darkest pit
+of hell. But seeing it is a question of what is
+worthy of God to give, and that He gives according
+to His estimate of the worthiness of Christ,
+then, verily, we can think of the very highest place
+in heaven. The glory of God, and the worthiness of
+His Son, are involved in His dealings with us; and
+hence everything that could possibly stand in the
+way of our eternal blessedness, has been disposed
+of in such a manner as to secure the divine glory,
+and furnish a triumphant answer to every plea of
+the enemy. Is it a question of trespass? "He has
+forgiven us all trespasses." Is it a question of sin?
+He has condemned sin at the cross, and thus put it
+away. Is it a question of guilt? It is canceled by
+the blood of the cross. Is it a question of death?
+He has taken away its sting, and actually made it
+part of our property. Is it a question of Satan?
+He has destroyed him, by annulling all his power.
+Is it a question of the world? He has delivered us
+from it, and snapped every link which connected
+us with it.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, beloved Christian reader, it stands with us
+if we are to be taught by Scripture, if we are to take
+God at His word, if we are to believe what He says.
+And we may add, if it be not thus, we are in our
+sins; under the power of sin; in the grasp of Satan;
+obnoxious to death; part and parcel of an evil,
+Christless, Godless world, and exposed to the unmitigated
+wrath of God&mdash;the vengeance of eternal
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>Oh that the blessed Spirit may open the eyes of
+God's people, and give them to see their proper
+place, their full and eternal deliverance in association
+with Christ who died for them, and <i>in whom
+they have died</i>, and <i>thus</i> passed out of the power of
+all their enemies!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>PART III.</h3>
+
+<p>Having glanced at two of the leading points
+in our subject, namely, Israel freed from
+guilt under the shelter of the blood, and Israel freed
+from all their enemies in the passage of the Red
+Sea, we have now to contemplate for a few moments
+Israel crossing the Jordan, and celebrating the paschal
+feast at Gilgal, in which they represent the
+risen position of Christians now.</p>
+
+<p>The Christian is one who is not only sheltered
+from judgment by the blood of the Lamb, not only
+delivered from the power of all his enemies by the
+death of Christ, but is also associated with Him
+where He now is, at the right hand of God; he is,
+with Christ, passed out of death, in resurrection,
+and is blessed with all spiritual blessings, in the
+heavenlies, in Christ. He is thus a heavenly man,
+and, as such, is called to walk in this world in all
+the varied relationships and responsibilities in
+which the good hand of God has placed him. He
+is not a monk, or an ascetic, or a man living in the
+clouds, fit neither for earth or heaven. He is not
+one who lives in a dreamy, misty, unpractical region;
+but, on the contrary, one whose happy privilege
+it is, from day to day, to reflect, amid the
+scenes and circumstances of earth, the graces and
+virtues of Christ, with whom, through infinite grace,
+and on the solid ground of accomplished redemption,
+he is linked in the power of the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the Christian, according to the teaching
+of the New Testament. Let the reader see that he
+understands it. It is very real, very definite, very
+positive, very practical. A child may know it, and
+realize it, and exhibit it. A Christian is one whose
+sins are forgiven, who possesses eternal life, and
+knows it; in whom the Holy Ghost dwells; he is
+accepted in and associated with a risen and glorified
+Christ; he has broken with the world, is dead
+to sin and the law, and finds his object and his delight,
+and his spiritual sustenance, in the Christ
+who loved him and gave Himself for him, and for
+whose coming he waits every day of his life.</p>
+
+<p>This, we repeat, is the New Testament description
+of a Christian. How immensely it differs from
+the ordinary type of Christian profession around us
+we need not say. But let the reader measure himself
+by the divine standard, and see wherein he
+comes short; for of this he may rest assured, that
+there is no reason whatsoever, so far as the love of
+God, or the work of Christ, or the testimony of the
+Holy Ghost, is concerned, why he should not be in
+the full enjoyment of all the rich and rare spiritual
+blessings which appertain to the true Christian position.
+Dark unbelief, fed by legality, bad teaching,
+and spurious religiousness, rob many of God's
+dear children of their proper place and portion.
+And not only so, but, from want of a thorough break
+with the world, many are sadly hindered from the
+clear perception and full realization of their position
+and privileges as heavenly men.</p>
+
+<p>But we are rather anticipating the instruction unfolded
+to us in the typical history of Israel, in Josh.
+iii.-v., to which we shall now turn. "And Joshua
+rose early in the morning; and they removed from
+Shittim, and came to Jordan, he and all the children
+of Israel, and lodged there before they passed over.
+And it came to pass, after three days, that the officers
+went through the host. And they commanded
+the people, saying, When ye see the ark of the covenant
+of the Lord your God, and the priests the Levites
+bearing it, then ye shall remove from your
+place, and go after it. <i>Yet there shall be a space
+between you and it</i>, about two thousand cubits by
+measure: <i>come not near unto it, that ye may know the
+way by which ye must go; for ye have not passed this
+way heretofore</i>" (Josh. iii. I-4).</p>
+
+<p>It is most desirable that the reader should, with
+all simplicity and clearness, seize the true spiritual
+import of the river Jordan. It typifies the death of
+Christ in one of its grand aspects, just as the Red
+Sea typifies it in another. When the children of
+Israel stood on the wilderness side of the Red Sea,
+they sang the song of redemption. They were a
+delivered people&mdash;delivered from Egypt and the
+power of Pharaoh. They saw all their enemies
+dead on the sea-shore. They could even anticipate,
+in glowing accents, their triumphal entrance into
+the promised land. "Thou in Thy mercy hast led
+forth the people which Thou hast redeemed; Thou
+hast guided them in Thy strength unto Thy holy
+habitation. The people shall hear, and be afraid:
+sorrow shall take hold on the inhabitants of Palestina.
+Then the dukes of Edom shall be amazed;
+the mighty men of Moab, trembling shall take hold
+upon them: all the inhabitants of Canaan shall melt
+away. Fear and dread shall fall upon them: by the
+greatness of Thine arm they shall be still as a
+stone; till Thy people pass over, O Lord, till the
+people pass over which Thou hast purchased.
+Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the
+mountain of Thine inheritance, in the place, O
+Lord, which Thou hast made for Thee to dwell in;
+in the sanctuary, O Lord, which Thy hands have
+established. The Lord shall reign for ever and
+ever."</p>
+
+<p>All this was perfectly magnificent, and divinely
+true. But they were not yet in Canaan. Jordan&mdash;of
+which, most surely, there is no mention in their
+glorious song of victory&mdash;lay between them and the
+promised land. True, in the purpose of God and
+in the judgment of faith, the land was theirs; but
+they had to traverse the wilderness, cross the Jordan,
+and take possession.</p>
+
+<p>How constantly we see all this exemplified in the
+history of souls! When first converted, there is
+nothing but joy and victory and praise. They know
+their sins forgiven; they are filled with wonder,
+love, and praise. Being justified by faith, they
+have peace with God, and they can rejoice in hope
+of His glory, yea, and joy in Himself through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. They are in Rom. v. I-11; and,
+in one sense, there can be nothing higher. Even
+in heaven itself we shall have nothing higher or better
+than "joy in God." Persons sometimes speak
+of Rom. viii. being higher than Rom. v.: but what
+can be higher than "joy in God"? If we are
+brought to God, we have reached the most exalted
+point to which any soul can come. To know Him
+as our portion, our rest, our stay, our object, our
+all; to have all our springs in Him, and know Him
+as a perfect covering for our eyes, at all times, and
+in all places, and under all circumstances&mdash;this is
+heaven itself to the believer.</p>
+
+<p>But there is this difference between Rom. v. and
+viii., that vi. and vii. lie between; and when the
+soul has traveled practically through these latter,
+and learns how to apply their profound and precious
+teaching to the great questions of indwelling
+sin and the law, then it is in a better state, though,
+most assuredly, not in a higher standing.</p>
+
+<p>We repeat, and with emphasis, the words "<i>traveled
+practically</i>." For it must be even so, if we
+would really enter into these holy mysteries according
+to God. It is easy to talk about being "dead
+to sin" and "dead to the law"&mdash;easy to see these
+things written in Rom. vi. and vii.&mdash;easy to grasp, in
+the intellect, the mere theory of these things. But the
+question is, have we made them our own&mdash;have
+they been applied practically to our souls by the
+power of the Holy Ghost? Are they livingly exhibited
+in our ways to the glory of Him who, at
+such a cost to Himself, has brought us into such a
+marvelous place of blessing and privilege?</p>
+
+<p>It is much to be feared that there is a vast
+amount of merely intellectual traffic in these deep
+and precious mysteries of our most holy faith,
+which, if only laid hold of in spiritual power, would
+produce wonderful results in practice.</p>
+
+<p>But we must return to our theme; and in doing
+so, we would ask the reader if he really understands
+the true spiritual import of the river Jordan? What
+does it really mean? We have said that it typifies
+the death of Christ. But in what aspect? for that
+precious death, as we are now considering, has
+many and various aspects. We believe the Jordan
+sets forth the death of our Lord Jesus Christ as
+that by which we are introduced into the inheritance
+He has obtained for us. The Red Sea <i>delivered Israel
+from</i> Egypt and the power of Pharaoh. Jordan
+<i>brought them into</i> the land of Canaan.</p>
+
+<p>We find both in the death of Christ. He, blessed
+be His name, has, by His death on the cross&mdash;His
+death for us&mdash;delivered us from our sins, from their
+guilt and condemnation, from Satan's power, and
+from this present evil world.</p>
+
+<p>But more than this: He has, by the same infinitely
+precious work, brought us <i>now</i> into an entirely
+new position, in resurrection and in living
+union and association with Himself, where He is at
+God's right hand. Such is the distinct teaching of
+Eph. ii. "But God, who is rich in mercy, for His
+great love wherewith He loved us, even when we
+were dead in sins, <i>hath quickened us together with
+Christ</i>, (by grace ye are saved;) and <i>hath raised us
+up together</i>, and made us <i>sit together in the heavenlies</i>
+in Christ Jesus" (vers. 4-6).</p>
+
+<p>Note the little word "<i>hath</i>." He is not speaking
+of what God <i>will</i> do, but of what He <i>hath</i> done&mdash;done
+for us, and with us, in Christ Jesus. The believer
+has not to wait till he passes out of this life
+to enjoy his inheritance in heaven. In the person
+of his living and glorified Head, through faith, by
+the Spirit, he belongs there now, and is free to all
+that God has given to all His own.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+<p>Is all this real and true? Yes! As real and true as
+that Christ hung on the cross and lay in the grave;
+as real and true as that we were dead in trespasses
+and sins; as real and true as the truth of God can
+make it; as real and true as the indwelling of the
+Holy Spirit in the body of every true believer.</p>
+
+<p>Mark, reader, we are not now speaking of the
+practical working-out of all this glorious truth in the
+life of Christians from day to day. This is another
+thing altogether. Alas, alas! if our only idea of
+true Christian position were to be drawn from the
+practical career of professing Christians, we might
+give up Christianity as a myth or a sham.</p>
+
+<p>But, thank God, it is not so. We must learn what
+true Christianity is from the pages of the New Testament,
+and, having learnt it there, judge ourselves,
+our ways, our surroundings, by its heavenly light.
+In this way, while we shall ever have to confess and
+mourn our shortcomings, our hearts shall ever, more
+and more, be filled with praise to Him whose infinite
+grace has brought us into such a glorious position,
+in union and fellowship with His own Son&mdash;a
+position, blessed be God, in nowise dependent upon
+our personal state, but which, if really apprehended,
+must exert a powerful influence upon our entire
+course, conduct, and character.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h3>PART IV.</h3>
+
+<p>The more deeply we ponder the typical instruction
+presented in the river Jordan, the more
+clearly we must see that the whole Christian position
+is involved in the standpoint from which we
+view it. Jordan means death, but, for the believer, a
+death that is <i>past</i>&mdash;the death we have gone through
+as identified with Christ, and which, through resurrection,
+has brought us on the other side&mdash;the
+Canaan side&mdash;where He is now. He, typified by
+the ark, has passed over before us into Jordan, to
+stem its torrent for us, and make it a dry path for
+our feet, so that we might pass clean over into our
+heavenly inheritance. The Prince of life has destroyed,
+on our behalf, him that had the power of
+death. He has taken the sting from death; yea,
+He has made death itself the very means by which
+we reach, even now, in spirit and by faith, the true
+heavenly Canaan.</p>
+
+<p>Let us see how all this is unfolded in our type.
+Mark particularly the commandment given by the
+officers of the host. "When ye see the ark of the
+covenant of the Lord your God, and the priests the
+Levites bearing it, then ye shall remove from your
+place, and go after it." The ark must go first.
+They dared not to move one inch along that mysterious
+way, until the symbol of the divine Presence
+had gone before.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there shall be a space between you and it,
+about two thousand cubits by measure: <i>come not
+near unto it that ye may know the way by which ye
+must go</i>; for ye have <i>not passed this way heretofore</i>."
+It was an awful flood ahead of them. No mortal
+could tread it with impunity. Death and destruction
+are linked together. "It is appointed unto
+men once to die; but after this the judgment"
+(Heb. ix.) Who can stand before the king of terrors?
+Who can face that grim and terrible foe?
+Who can encounter the swellings of Jordan? Who,
+except the Ark go first, can face death and judgment?
+Poor Peter thought he could; but he was
+sadly mistaken. He said unto Jesus, "Lord,
+whither goest thou? Jesus answered him, Whither
+I go, <i>thou canst not follow Me now</i>; but thou shalt
+follow Me afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>How fully these words explain the import of that
+mystic "space" between Israel and the ark. Peter
+did not understand that space. He had not studied
+aright Josh. iii. 4. He knew nothing of that terrible
+pathway which his blessed Master was about to
+enter upon. "Peter said unto Him, Lord, why
+cannot I follow Thee now? I will lay down my
+life for Thy sake."</p>
+
+<p>Poor dear Peter! How little he knew of himself,
+or of that which he was&mdash;sincerely, no doubt,
+though ignorantly&mdash;undertaking to do! How little
+did he imagine that the very sound of death's dark
+river, heard even in the distance, would be sufficient
+so to terrify him, as to make him curse and swear
+that he did not know his Master! "Jesus answered
+him, Wilt thou lay down thy life for My sake?
+Verily, verily, I say unto thee, the cock shall not
+crow till thou hast denied Me thrice."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there shall be a space between you and it."
+How needful! How absolutely essential! Truly
+there was a space between Peter and his Lord.
+Jesus had to go before. He had to meet death in
+its most terrific form. He had to tread that rough
+path in profound solitude&mdash;for who could accompany
+Him? "There shall be a space between you
+and it: come not near to it, that ye may know the
+way by which ye must go; for ye have not passed
+this way heretofore."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou canst not follow Me <i>now</i>: but thou shalt
+follow me <i>afterwards</i>." Blessed Master! He would
+not suffer His poor feeble servant to enter upon
+that terrible path, until He Himself had gone before,
+and so entirely changed its character, that the
+pathway of death should be lighted up with the
+beams of life and the light of God's face. Our
+Jesus has "abolished death, and brought life and
+incorruptibility to light by the gospel."</p>
+
+<p>Thus death is no longer death to the believer. It
+was death to Jesus, in all its intensity, in all its
+horrors, in all its reality. He met it as the power
+which Satan wields over the soul of man. He met
+it as the penalty due to sin. He met it as the just
+judgment of God against sin&mdash;against us. There
+was not a single feature, not a single ingredient, not
+a single circumstance, which could possibly render
+death formidable which did not enter into the death
+of Christ. He met all; and, blessed be God, <i>we are
+accounted as having gone through all in and by Him</i>.
+We died in Him, so that death has no further claim
+upon us, or power over us. Its claims are disposed
+of, its power broken and gone for all believers.
+The whole scene is cleared completely of death, and
+filled with life and incorruptibility.</p>
+
+<p>And hence, in Peter's case, we find our Lord, in
+the last chapter of John, most graciously meeting
+the desire of His servant's heart&mdash;a desire in which
+he was perfectly sincere&mdash;the desire to follow his
+beloved Lord. "Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
+When thou wast young, thou girdest thyself, and
+walkedst whither thou wouldest; but when thou
+shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and
+another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou
+wouldest not. This spake He signifying by what
+death he should glorify God." Thus death, instead
+of being the judgment of God to overwhelm Peter,
+was turned into a means by which Peter could glorify
+God.</p>
+
+<p>What a glorious change! What a stupendous
+mystery! How it magnifies the cross, or rather the
+One who hung thereon! What a mighty revolution,
+when a poor sinful man can, by death, glorify God!
+So completely has death been robbed of its sting,
+so thoroughly has its character been changed that,
+instead of shrinking from it with terror, we can meet
+it, if it does come, and go through it with song of
+victory; and instead of its being to us the wages
+of sin, it is a means by which we can glorify God.
+All praise to Him who has so wrought for us! to
+Him who has gone down into Jordan's deepest
+depths for us, and made there a highway by which
+His ransomed people can pass over into their heavenly
+inheritance! May our hearts adore Him!
+May all our powers be stirred up to magnify His
+holy name! May our whole life be devoted to His
+praise! May we appreciate the grace and lay hold
+of the inheritance.</p>
+
+<p>But we must proceed with our type.</p>
+
+<p>"And Joshua spake unto the priests, saying,
+Take up the ark of the covenant, and pass over before
+the people. And they took up the ark of the
+covenant, and went before the people. And the
+Lord said unto Joshua, This day will I begin to
+magnify thee in the sight of all Israel, that they may
+know that as I was with Moses, so I will be with
+thee." Joshua stands before us as a type of the
+risen Christ, leading His people, in the power of
+the Holy Ghost, into their heavenly inheritance.
+The priests bearing the ark into the midst of Jordan
+typify Christ going down into death for us, and destroying
+completely its power. "He passed through
+death's dark raging flood, to make our rest secure;"
+and not only to make it secure, but to lead us into
+it, in association with Himself, now, in spirit and
+by faith; by-and-by, in actual fact.</p>
+
+<p>"And Joshua said unto the children of Israel,
+Come hither, and hear the words of the Lord your
+God. And Joshua said, Hereby ye shall know that
+the <i>living</i> God is among you, and that He will without
+fail drive out from before you the Canaanites....
+Behold, the ark of the covenant of the Lord of
+all the earth passeth over before you into Jordan."</p>
+
+<p>The passage of the ark into Jordan proved two
+things, namely, the presence of the living God in
+the midst of His people; and that He would most
+surely drive out all their enemies from before them.
+The death of Christ is the basis and the guarantee
+of everything to faith. Grant us but this, that
+Christ has gone down into death for us, and we
+argue, with all possible confidence, that, in this one
+great fact, all is secured. God is with us, and God
+is for us. "He that spared not His own Son, but
+delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with
+Him also freely give us all things?" The difficulty
+of unbelief is, "How shall He?" The difficulty of
+faith is, "How shall He <i>not</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Israel might wonder how all the hosts of Canaan
+could ever be expelled from before them: let them
+gaze on the ark in the midst of Jordan, and cease
+to wonder, cease to doubt. The less is included in
+the greater. And hence we can say, What may we
+not expect, seeing that Christ has died for us?
+There is nothing too good, nothing too great, nothing
+too glorious, for God to do for us, and in us,
+and with us, seeing He has not spared His only-begotten
+Son, but delivered Him up for us all.
+Everything is secured for us by the precious death
+of Christ. It has opened up the everlasting flood-gates
+of the love of God, so that the rich streams
+thereof might flow down into the very depths of
+our souls. It fills us with the sweetest assurance
+that the One who could bruise His only-begotten
+Son, on the cursed tree, for us, will meet our every
+need, carry us through all our difficulties, and lead
+us into the full possession and enjoyment of all that
+His eternal purpose of grace has in store for us.
+Having given us such a proof of His love, even
+when we were yet sinners, what may we not expect
+at His hands now that He views us in association
+with that blessed One who glorified Him in death&mdash;the
+death that He died for us? When Israel saw
+the ark in the midst of Jordan, they were entitled
+to consider that all was secured. As our Lord also
+said to His disciples before leaving them, "Be of
+good cheer, I have overcome the world;" and, in
+view of His cross, He could say, "Now is the
+prince of this world cast out." True, Israel had,
+as we know, to take possession: they had to plant
+their feet upon the inheritance; but the power that
+could stem death's dark waters, could also drive
+out every foe from before them, and put them in
+peaceful possession of all that God had promised.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART V.</h3>
+
+<p>In closing this series of brief papers on Gilgal,
+we must turn our thoughts to the practical application
+of that which has been engaging our attention.
+If it be true&mdash;and it is true&mdash;that Jesus
+died for us, it is equally true that we have died in
+Him; as one of our own poets has sweetly put it:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>"For me, Lord Jesus, Thou hast died<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And I have died in Thee:<br /></span>
+<span>Thou'rt risen--my bands are all untied,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And now Thou livest in me.<br /></span>
+<span>The Father's face of radiant grace<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Shines now in light on me."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Now this is a great practical truth&mdash;none more
+so. It lies at the very foundation of all true Christianity.
+If Christ has died for us, then, in very
+deed, He has taken us completely out of our old
+condition, with all that appertained to it, and placed
+us upon an entirely new footing. We can look
+back from resurrection-ground on which we now
+stand, into the dark river of death, and see there,
+in its deepest depths, the memorial of the victory
+gained for us by the Prince of Life. We do not
+look forward to death; we look back at it. We can
+truly say, "The bitterness of death is past."</p>
+
+<p>Jesus met death for us in its most terrible form.
+Just as the river of Jordan was divided when it
+presented its most formidable appearance&mdash;"for
+Jordan overfloweth all its banks all the time of
+harvest"&mdash;so our Jesus encountered our last great
+enemy, vanquished him in his most fearful form,
+and left behind, in the very centre of death's dark
+domain, the imperishable record of His glorious
+victory. All praise, homage, and adoration to His
+peerless name! It is our privilege, by faith and in
+spirit, to stand on Canaan's side of Jordan, and
+erect our memorial of what the Saviour, the true
+Joshua, has done for us.</p>
+
+<p>"And it came to pass, when all the people were
+clean passed over Jordan, that the Lord spake unto
+Joshua, saying, Take you twelve men out of the
+people, <i>out of every tribe a man</i>. And command ye
+them, saying, Take you hence out of the midst of
+Jordan, <i>out of the place where the priests' feet stood
+firm</i>, twelve stones; and ye shall carry them over
+with you, and leave them in the lodging-place
+where ye shall lodge this night. Then Joshua
+called the twelve men whom he had prepared of
+the children of Israel, <i>out of every tribe a man</i>. And
+Joshua said unto them, Pass over before the ark of
+the Lord your God, into the midst of Jordan, and
+take you up <i>every man of you</i> a stone upon his
+shoulder, according unto the number of the tribes
+of the children of Israel: that this may be a sign
+among you, that when your children ask their fathers
+in time to come, saying, What mean ye by
+these stones? then ye shall answer them, That the
+waters of Jordan were cut off before the ark of the
+covenant of the Lord; when it passed over Jordan,
+the waters of Jordan were cut off: and these stones
+shall be <i>for a memorial</i> unto the children of Israel
+for ever" (Josh. iv: I-7).</p>
+
+<p>The great fact was to be seized, and practically
+carried out by the whole assembly, "of every tribe
+a man"&mdash;"every man of you a stone upon his
+shoulder," a stone taken from the very spot where
+the priests' feet stood firm. All were to be brought
+into living personal contact with the great mysterious
+fact that the waters of Jordan were cut off. All
+were to engage in erecting such a memorial of this
+fact as should elicit inquiry from their children as
+to what it meant. It was never to be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>What a lesson is here for us! Are we erecting
+our memorial? Are we giving evidence&mdash;such evidence
+as may strike even the mind of a child&mdash;of
+the fact that our Jesus has vanquished the power
+of death for us? Are we affording any practical
+proof in daily life that Christ has died for us, and
+that we have died in Him? Is there aught in our
+actual history, from day to day, answering to the
+figure set forth in the passage just quoted&mdash;"every
+man of you a stone upon his shoulder"? Are we
+declaring plainly that we have passed clean over
+Jordan&mdash;that we belong to heaven&mdash;that we are not
+in the flesh, but in the Spirit? Do our children see
+aught in our habits and ways, in our spirit and deportment,
+in our whole character and manner of
+life, leading them to inquire, "What mean ye by
+these things?" Are we living as those who are
+dead with Christ&mdash;dead to sin&mdash;dead to the world?</p>
+
+<p>Are we practically freed from the world&mdash;letting
+go our hold of present things, in the power of communion
+with a risen Christ?</p>
+
+<p>These are searching questions for the soul, beloved
+Christian reader. Let us seek to meet them
+honestly, as in the divine presence. We profess
+these things, we hold them in theory. We say we
+believe that Jesus died for us, and that we died in
+Him. Where is the proof&mdash;where the abiding memorial&mdash;where
+the stone on the shoulder? Let us
+judge ourselves honestly before God. Let us no
+longer rest satisfied with anything short of the thorough,
+practical, habitual carrying out of the great
+truth that "we are dead, and our life is hid with
+Christ in God." Mere profession is worthless. We
+want the living power&mdash;the true result&mdash;the proper
+fruit.</p>
+
+<p>"And the people came up out of Jordan on the
+tenth day of the first month, and encamped in Gilgal,
+in the east border of Jericho. And <i>those twelve
+stones which they took out of Jordan</i>"&mdash;stones of peculiar
+import&mdash;no other stones could tell such a
+tale, teach such a lesson, or symbolize such a stupendous
+fact&mdash;no other stones like them&mdash;"those
+twelve stones did Joshua pitch in Gilgal. And he
+spake unto the children of Israel, saying, When
+your children shall ask their fathers in time to come,
+saying, What mean these stones? then ye shall let
+your children know, saying, <i>Israel came over this
+Jordan on dry land</i>. For the Lord your God dried up
+the waters of Jordan from before you, until ye were
+passed over, as the Lord your God did to the Red
+Sea, which He dried up from before us, until we
+were gone over: that all the people of the earth
+might know the hand of the Lord, that it is
+mighty: that ye might fear the Lord your God forever."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we see Israel at Gilgal. "Everything
+was finished that the Lord commanded Joshua to
+speak unto the people, according to all that Moses
+commanded Joshua." Every member of the host
+had passed clean over Jordan&mdash;not one had been
+suffered to feel the slightest touch of the river of
+death. Grace had brought them all safely over into
+the inheritance promised to their fathers. They
+were not only separated from Egypt by the Red
+Sea, but actually brought into Canaan across the
+dry bed of the Jordan, and encamped in Gilgal, in
+the plains of Jericho.</p>
+
+<p>And now mark what follows. "And it came to
+pass, when all the kings of the Amorites which were
+on the side of Jordan westward, and all the kings
+of the Canaanites which were by the sea, heard that
+the Lord had dried up the waters of Jordan from
+before the children of Israel, until we were passed
+over, that their heart melted, neither was there spirit
+in them any more, because of the children of Israel.
+<i>At that time</i>"&mdash;note the words!&mdash;when all the nations
+were paralyzed with terror at the very thought
+of this people&mdash;"at that time the Lord said unto
+Joshua, Make thee <i>sharp knives</i>, and circumcise
+again the children of Israel the second time."</p>
+
+<p>How deeply significant is this: How suggestive
+are these "sharp knives"! How needful! If Israel
+are about to bring the sword upon the Canaanites,
+Israel must have the sharp knife applied to
+themselves. They had never been circumcised in
+the wilderness. The reproach of Egypt had never
+been rolled away from them. And ere they could
+celebrate the passover, and eat of the old corn of
+the land of Canaan, they must have the sentence of
+death written upon them. No doubt this was aught
+but agreeable to nature; but it must be done. How
+could they take possession of Canaan with the reproach
+of Egypt resting upon them? How could
+uncircumcised people dispossess the Canaanites?
+Impossible! The sharp knives had to do their
+work throughout the camp of Israel ere they could
+eat of Canaan's food or prosecute the warfare
+which of necessity belongs to it.</p>
+
+<p>"And Joshua made him sharp knives, and circumcised
+the children of Israel at the hill of the
+foreskins. And this is the cause why Joshua did
+circumcise. All the people that came out of Egypt
+that were males, even all the men of war, died in
+the wilderness by the way, after they came out of
+Egypt.... And their children, whom he raised up
+in their stead, them Joshua circumcised: for they
+were uncircumcised, because they had not circumcised
+them by the way.... And the Lord said
+unto Joshua, This day have I rolled away the reproach
+of Egypt from off you. Wherefore the
+name of the place is called Gilgal ("rolling") unto
+this day. And the children of Israel encamped in
+Gilgal, and kept the passover on the fourteenth day
+of the month, at even, in the plains of Jericho.
+And they did eat of the old corn of the land on the
+morrow after the passover, unleavened cakes and
+parched corn, in the self-same day. And the manna
+ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the
+old corn of the land; neither had the children of
+Israel manna any more; but they did eat of the
+fruit of the land of Canaan that year."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have a type of the full Christian
+position. The Christian is a heavenly man, dead
+to the world, crucified with Christ, associated with
+Him where He now is, and, while waiting for His
+appearing, occupied in heart with Him, feeding by
+faith upon Him as the proper nourishment of the
+new man.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the Christian's position&mdash;such his portion.
+But in order to enter fully into the enjoyment
+thereof, there must be the application of the "sharp
+knife" to all that belongs to mere nature. There
+must be the sentence of death written upon that
+which Scripture designates as "the old man."</p>
+
+<p>All this must be really and practically entered
+into if we would maintain our position or enjoy our
+proper portion as heavenly men. If we are indulging
+nature; if we are living in a low, worldly atmosphere;
+if we are going in for this world's pursuits,
+its pleasures, its politics, its riches, its honors, its
+fashions, and its distinctions&mdash;then, verily, it is impossible
+that we can be enjoying fellowship with
+our risen Head and Lord.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Christ is in heaven,
+and to enjoy Him we must be living, in spirit and
+by faith, where He is. He is not of this world;
+and if we are of it, we cannot be enjoying fellowship
+with Him. "If we say that we have fellowship
+with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not
+the truth" (I John i. 6).</p>
+
+<p>This is most solemn. If I am living in and of
+the world, I am walking in darkness, and I can
+have no fellowship with a heavenly Christ. "Wherefore,"
+says the blessed apostle, "if ye be dead with
+Christ from the rudiments of the world, why, <i>as
+though living in the world</i>, are ye subject to ordinances?"
+Do we really understand these words?
+Have we weighed the full force of the expression,
+"living in the world"? Is the Christian not to be
+as one living in the world? Clearly not. He is to
+live, in spirit, where Christ is. As to fact, he is
+obviously on this earth, moving up and down, and
+in and out, in the varied relations of life, and in the
+varied spheres of action in which the hand of God
+has set him. But his home is in heaven. His life
+is there. His object, his rest, his proper <i>all</i>, is in
+heaven. He does not belong to earth. His citizenship
+is in heaven; and in order to make this
+good in practice from day to day, there must be the
+denial of self, the mortification of our members.</p>
+
+<p>All this comes vividly out in Col. iii. Indeed, it
+would be impossible to give a more striking exposition
+of the entire subject of "Gilgal" than that presented
+in the following lines: "If ye then be risen
+with Christ, seek those things which are above,
+where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set
+your affections on things above, not on things on
+the earth. For ye have died, and your life is hid
+with Christ in God. When Christ our life shall appear,
+then shall ye also appear with Him in glory."
+And now comes the true spiritual import and application
+of "Gilgal" and its "sharp knives"&mdash;"Mortify,
+therefore, your members which are upon
+the earth."</p>
+
+<p>May the Holy Spirit lead us into a deeper and
+fuller understanding of our place, portion and practice
+as Christians. Would to God that we better
+knew what it is to feed upon the old corn of the
+land, at the true spiritual Gilgal, that thus we might
+be better fitted for the conflict and service to which
+we are called!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THO" id="THO"></a>THOUGHTS</h2>
+
+<h3>ON</h3>
+
+<h2>THE CONFIRMATION VOWS</h2>
+
+
+<p>"All that the Lord hath spoken we will do."
+Such were the memorable words with which
+the people of Israel virtually abandoned the ground
+on which the blessed God had just been setting
+them, and on which, too, He had dealt with them
+in bringing them up out of the land of Egypt. "Ye
+have seen," said He, "what I did unto the Egyptians,
+and how I bare you on eagles' wings, and
+brought you unto Myself." All this was grace&mdash;pure,
+perfect, divine grace. He heard the groans
+and beheld the sorrows of the people amid the
+darkness and degradation of Egyptian bondage,
+and in His unmingled mercy He came down to deliver
+them. He sought not their aid, He looked
+not for aught from them. "His own arm brought
+salvation." He acted <i>for</i> them, <i>with</i> them, and <i>in</i>
+them; and that, too, in the solitariness and sovereignty
+of His own unfailing grace. He said to
+Moses at the opening of the book of Exodus, "<i>I
+am come down to deliver them</i>." This was absolute
+and unqualified grace. There was no "if," no
+"but," no condition, no vow, no resolve. It was
+<span class="smcap">FREE GRACE</span>, founded upon God's eternal counsels,
+and righteously displayed in immediate connection
+with "the blood of the Lamb." Hence, from first
+to last, the word to Israel was, "<i>stand still, and see
+the salvation of Jehovah</i>." They were not called to
+"resolve," or to "vow," or to "do." God was acting
+for them&mdash;He was doing <span class="smcap">ALL</span>: He placed Himself
+between them and every enemy, and every evil.
+He spread forth the shield of His salvation that
+they might hide themselves behind its impenetrable
+defences, and abide there in peace.</p>
+
+<p>But, alas, Israel made a vow&mdash;a strange, a singular
+vow indeed. Not satisfied with God's doings,
+they would fain talk of their own. They would be
+doing, as if God's salvation were incomplete; and
+in lamentable ignorance of their own weakness and
+nothingness, they said, "All that the Lord hath spoken
+we will do." This was taking a bold stand, a
+high ground. For a poor worm to make such a vow
+proved how little grace was really understood, or
+nature's true condition apprehended.</p>
+
+<p>However, Israel having undertaken to "<i>do</i>," they
+were put to the test, and the most cursory view of
+Ex. xix. will be sufficient to show what a marked
+change took place the moment they had uttered the
+words "we will do." The Lord had just reminded
+them of how He "bare them on eagles' wings, and
+brought them unto Himself;" but now He says,
+"Set bounds unto the people round about, saying,
+Take heed to yourselves, that ye go not up into the
+mount, or touch the border of it: whosoever toucheth
+the mount shall be surely put to death." This
+was a very different aspect of things. And let my
+reader remember, it was the simple result of man's
+having said, "I will do." There is far more involved
+in those words than many might imagine.
+If we take our eyes off from God's actings, and fix
+them on our own, the consequences must be disastrous
+in the extreme. But we shall see this more
+fully ere we close this paper. Let us now inquire
+how the house of Israel fulfilled their singular vow.
+We shall see that it ended like human vows in every
+age.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+<p>Did they do "<i>all</i>" that the Lord commanded?
+Did they "continue in all things which are written
+in the book of the law, to do them?" Alas, no.
+On the contrary, we find that ere the tables of testimony
+were given, they had broken the very first
+commandment in the <a name="Decalogue" id="Decalogue"></a>Decalogue, by making a golden
+calf, and bowing down thereto. This was the earliest
+fruit of their broken vow; and then, onward
+they went, from stage to stage, dishonoring the
+name of the Lord&mdash;breaking His laws, despising His
+judgments, trampling under foot His sacred institutions.
+Then followed the stoning of His messengers
+whom, in patient grace and long-suffering, He
+sent unto them. Finally, when the only-begotten
+Son came forth from the bosom of the Father, they
+with wicked hearts rejected and with wicked hands
+crucified Him. Thus we pass from Sinai to Calvary:
+at the former we hear man undertaking to do
+all the Lord's commandments, and at the latter see
+him crucifying the Lord Himself. So much for man's
+vows, so much for man's "<i>I will do</i>." The fragments
+of the tables of testimony scattered beneath
+the fiery mount told the first melancholy tale of the
+failure of man's audacious resolution: nor was there
+any real break in the narrative, which has its closing
+scene around the cross of Calvary. All was
+failure&mdash;gross, unmitigated failure. Thus it must
+ever be when man presumes to vow or resolve in
+the presence of God.</p>
+
+<p>Now there is a very striking resemblance between
+Israel's vow at the foot of mount Sinai and the
+Confirmation Vow of the Establishment. We have
+rapidly glanced at the former; let us now refer to
+the latter.</p>
+
+<p>In "the ministration of public baptism of infants,"
+after various prayers and the reading of the
+Gospel, the minister addresses the godfathers and
+godmothers on this wise: "Dearly beloved, ye have
+brought this child here to be baptized; ye have
+prayed that our Lord Jesus Christ would vouchsafe
+to receive him, to release him of his sins, to sanctify
+him with the Holy Ghost, to give him the kingdom
+of heaven and everlasting life. Ye have heard also
+that our Lord Jesus Christ hath promised in His
+gospel to grant all these things that ye have prayed
+for: which promise He, for His part, will most
+surely keep and perform. Wherefore, after this
+promise made by Christ, this infant must also faithfully,
+for his part, promise by you that are his sureties
+(until he come of age to take it upon himself),
+that <i>he will renounce</i> the devil and all his works, and
+constantly believe God's holy word and <i>obediently
+keep His commandments</i>. I demand, therefore, Dost
+thou, in the name of this child, renounce the devil
+and all his works, the vain pomp and glory of the
+world, with all covetous desires of the same, and the
+carnal desires of the flesh, so that thou wilt not follow
+nor be led by them? <i>Answer</i>: <span class="smcap">I renounce
+them all</span>." Again: "Wilt thou obediently keep
+God's holy will and commandments, and walk in
+the same all the days of thy life? <i>Answer</i>: <span class="smcap">I
+will</span></p>
+
+<p>Both the above vows the children, when come to
+years of discretion, deliberately and solemnly take
+upon themselves, as may be seen by reference to
+"The Order of Confirmation." Thus we have, in
+the first place, people vowing and resolving, on behalf
+of unconscious infants, to "renounce the world,
+the flesh, and the devil," and to keep all God's
+commandments, all the days of their life; and, in
+the second place, we find those children, in due
+time, placing themselves under the weight of those
+awful vows; and all this, moreover, as a necessary
+condition to the fulfilment of Christ's promise.
+That is to say, if they allow aught of the world, the
+flesh or the devil to adhere to them; or if they fail
+in the faithful keeping of <i>all</i> God's commandments,
+then they cannot be saved, but must, so far as they
+are concerned, inevitably be condemned. In short,
+salvation is here made to depend on a covenant to
+which man makes himself a party. Christ is represented
+as willing to do His part, provided always
+that man accomplishes his; but not otherwise. In
+other words, there is an "<i>if</i>" in the matter, and, as
+a consequence, there never is, and never can be,
+the certainty of salvation; yea, there can only be
+the constant terror of eternal condemnation hanging
+over the soul; that is, if there is any thought
+about the matter at all.</p>
+
+<p>If the heart is not perfectly assured of the fact
+that Christ has in very deed done all; that He has
+put away our sin; that He has forever canceled
+our debt; that He has settled, by His perfect sacrifice,
+every question that could possibly arise,
+whether it be the charges of conscience, the accusings
+of Satan, or the claims of divine justice; that
+He has not left a cloud on the prospect; that all
+is perfectly done&mdash;in a word, that we stand before
+God in the power of divine righteousness, and in
+the same favor with His own Son; if, I say,
+there be any doubt in the soul as to the eternal
+truth of all these things&mdash;then there cannot be settled
+peace. And that there is not this settled peace
+in the case of those who have taken on themselves
+the above tremendous vows is but too evident from
+the clouds and darkness which hang around their
+spirits as they tread the next stage of their ecclesiastical
+journey.</p>
+
+<p>We could hardly expect that persons who boldly
+vow to renounce all evil, and perfectly to fulfil all
+good, could approach the Lord's table with any
+other acknowledgment than the following, namely:
+"The burden of our sins is intolerable." It would
+need an obtuse conscience to be able to shake off
+the conviction that those vows have been unfulfilled;
+and then, assuredly, the burden must be intolerable.
+If I have taken vows upon me, they will,
+without doubt, prove in the sequel to be dishonored
+vows; and thus the whole matter of my salvation
+comes to the ground, and I find myself, according
+to the terms of my own self-chosen covenant, righteously
+exposed to the curses of a broken law. I
+have undertaken to do everything; and yet I have
+in reality done nothing. Hence I am "cursed;
+for the word is, "Cursed is every one that continueth
+not in all things which are written in the book
+of the law, to do them."</p>
+
+<p>Nor will it at all alter the matter to say that those
+extraordinary vows are entered into in dependence
+upon divine grace; for there cannot be such a thing
+as dependence upon <i>grace</i> when people are placing
+themselves directly under the <i>law</i>. No two things
+can be more opposite than law and grace. They
+are put in direct contrast in Paul's epistles to the
+Romans and Galatians. "Whosoever of you are
+justified by the law ([Greek: en nomô]),<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> ye are fallen from
+grace" (Gal. v. 4). Hence, to think of depending
+upon grace when putting myself under law is precisely
+the same as if I were to look to God for grace
+to enable me to subvert the entire gospel of His Son
+Jesus Christ. "As many as are of works of law
+([Greek: ergôn nomou])<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> are under the curse." Could I depend
+upon God's grace to enable me to abide under
+the curse? The thought is preposterous in the extreme.
+And be it observed that the apostle, in the
+last-quoted passage, does not merely say, "As many
+as fail to keep the law are under the curse." This
+he distinctly teaches, no doubt; but the special
+point is, that as many as attempt to stand before
+God on the ground of "works of law," are of necessity
+under the curse, for the simplest of all reasons,
+that they are not able to satisfy His claims. In
+order for man to satisfy God's claims, he must be
+what in himself he cannot be; that is, without sin.
+The law demands, as its right, perfect obedience; and
+those who take upon them the Confirmation Vows
+promise perfect obedience. They promise to renounce
+all evil, and to fulfil all good, in the most
+absolute manner; and moreover, they make their
+salvation to depend upon their fulfilment of those
+vows; else why make them at all?</p>
+
+<p>This, when looked at in the light of the apostolic
+teaching in Romans and Galatians, is the most
+complete denial of all the fundamental truths of the
+gospel. In the first place, it is a denial of man's
+total ruin, of his condition as one "dead in trespasses
+and sins," "alienated from the life of God,"
+"without strength," "ungodly," "enmity against
+God." If I can undertake to renounce all evil, and
+to do all God's commandments, then, assuredly, I
+do not know myself to be a lost, ruined, helpless
+creature; and, as a consequence, I do not need a
+Saviour. If I can boldly undertake to "<i>renounce</i>"
+and to "<i>do</i>," to "keep" and to "walk," I am manifestly
+not lost, and hence I do not want salvation;
+I am not dead, and hence I do not want life; I am
+not "without strength," and hence I do not want
+the energy of that new, that divine life which is imparted
+by the Holy Ghost to all who, by His grace,
+believe in the Son of God. If I am capable of
+doing for myself, I do not want another, even the
+Lord Jesus Christ, to do all for me.</p>
+
+<p>Again, as flowing out of what has already been
+stated, those vows do entirely set aside the essential
+glories, divine dignities and sacred virtues of the
+cross of Christ. If I can get a godfather and godmother
+to take vows on them on my behalf until I
+am capable of taking them on myself, then it is evident
+I cannot possibly know the deep blessedness of
+having all my vows, all my responsibilities and liabilities
+as a lost sinner, all my sins and shortcomings,&mdash;everything,
+in short,&mdash;fully and eternally answered
+in the Cross. If there is anything in my case which
+has not been perfectly settled in the Cross, then I
+must inevitably perish. I may make vows and resolutions,
+but they are as the morning cloud that
+passeth away. I may get a sponsor to renounce
+the devil on my behalf, and I may in due time talk
+of renouncing him for myself; but what if the devil
+all the while has fast hold of both my sponsor and
+myself? He will not renounce me, unless the chain
+by which he binds me has been snapped asunder
+by the Cross.</p>
+
+<p>Again, I may get a sponsor to undertake to keep
+all God's commandments for me, and, in due time,
+I may undertake to keep them for myself; but what
+if neither my sponsor nor I really understand the
+true nature or spirituality, the majesty or stringency,
+of that law? Yea, more. What if both he and I
+are, by our very vows, made debtors to do the whole
+law, and thus shut up under its terrible curse? What
+then becomes of all our vows and resolutions? Is
+it not plain that I am throwing overboard the cross?
+Truly so. That cross must either be
+everything or nothing to me. If it is anything it
+must be everything; and if it is not everything it is
+nothing. Thus it stands, my beloved reader. The
+gospel of the grace of God sets forth Christ as the
+great Sponsor and Surety of His people. The
+Confirmation Service sets one sinner to stand sponsor
+for another, or for himself. The gospel sets
+forth One, who is possessed of "unsearchable
+riches," as the security for His people; the Confirmation
+Service sets one bankrupt to stand security
+for another or for himself. What avails such
+security? Who would accept of it? It is perfectly
+valueless to God and man. If I am a bankrupt, I
+cannot promise to pay anything, and if I could
+promise, no one would accept of it&mdash;yea, it would
+be justly regarded in the light of an empty formality.
+The promissory note of a bankrupt is little
+worth; and truly the vows and resolutions of a poor
+ruined sinner are not merely an empty formality,
+but a solemn mockery, in the presence of Almighty
+God. No one who knows himself would presume
+to vow, or resolve, to keep all God's commandments&mdash;such
+an one would have the full conviction
+that he could never do anything of the kind.</p>
+
+<p>But, as a further reply to the statement that those
+Confirmation Vows are made in entire dependence
+upon the grace of God, I would observe that grace
+can only be known or trusted by those who are His.
+"They that know Thy name will put their trust in
+Thee," and none else. Now, the word of God connects
+eternal life with the knowledge of Him. "This
+is life eternal, that they might know Thee, the only
+true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent"
+(John xvii. 3). If, therefore, I have eternal life, I
+need not make vows to get it. If I am eternally
+saved, I need not make vows to get salvation. If
+my sins are all canceled by the precious blood of
+the Lamb, I need not make vows to get them
+canceled. Neither baptismal vows, confirmation
+vows, sacramental vows, nor any other vows are
+necessary for one who has found life, righteousness,
+wisdom, sanctification, redemption&mdash;yea, all
+things in Christ.</p>
+
+<p>The comfort and peace of the feeblest believer
+are based upon the fact that Christ took all his
+vows, all his liabilities, all his sins, all his iniquities
+entirely upon Himself, and, by His death upon the
+cross, gloriously discharged them all. This sets
+him entirely free. Hence, it follows that if I am
+not a child of God, I cannot keep vows; and if I
+am, I need not make them. In either case, I deny
+man's fallen condition, and set aside the true glories
+of the Cross. It may be in ignorance&mdash;it may
+be with the most sincere intention&mdash;no doubt; but
+the most profound ignorance and the purest sincerity
+cannot alter the real principle which lies at the
+root of all manner of vows, promises, and resolutions.
+There is, beyond all question, involved
+therein a plain denial of the great foundation-truths
+of the Christian religion. A vow assumes the <a name="competency" id="competency"></a>competency
+to fulfil. Well, then, if I vow to keep all
+God's commandments perfectly, all the days of my
+life, I am not lost or without strength. I must have
+strength, else I could not undertake such a ponderous
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>And, my reader, remark further the strange anomaly
+involved in this system of vows; that while
+it denies my lost estate, it robs me of everything
+approaching to a certainty of ever being saved. If
+I resolve to keep God's commandments as a necessary
+condition of my salvation, I never can be sure
+of being saved until I have fulfilled the condition;
+but inasmuch as I never can fulfil it, I, therefore,
+never can be sure of my salvation; and thus I
+travel on, from stage to stage, from baptism to confirmation,
+from confirmation to communion, and
+from communion to the death-bed, in a state of
+miserable doubt and torturing uncertainty. This is
+not the gospel. It is "a different gospel which is
+not another." The immediate effect of the work of
+Christ, when laid hold of by faith, is to give settled
+peace to the conscience; the effect of the system of
+vows, is to keep the heart in constant doubt and
+heaviness. How many have approached the ordinance
+of confirmation with trembling hearts, at the
+thought of having to take upon their own shoulders
+the solemn vows which, from the period of their
+baptism, had rested on their godfathers and godmothers.
+How could it be otherwise with an honest
+mind? If I am really sincere, the thought of having
+to take on myself those solemn baptismal vows,
+must fill me with horror. Some, alas! go through
+these things with thoughtless hearts and frivolous
+minds; but it is evident the confirmation service
+was never framed for such. It was designed for
+thoughtful, serious, earnest spirits; and all such
+must, assuredly, retire from the ceremony, with
+troubled hearts and burdened consciences.</p>
+
+<p>With what different feelings we gaze upon the
+cross of the Son of God! There, in good truth,
+Satan was renounced, and his works destroyed.
+There the law of God was magnified and made
+honorable, vindicated, and established. There the
+justice of God was fully answered. There Satan
+was vanquished; there conscience gets its full answer;
+there the cup of God's unmingled wrath
+against sin was drained to the dregs by His blessed
+Son. Where is the proof of all this? Not in the
+unaccomplished, dishonored vows of poor frail mortals;
+but in a risen, ascended, glorified Christ, seated
+at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens.</p>
+
+<p>Who that knows aught of the pure and most excellent
+grace of God, or that has tasted aught of
+the true blessedness of divinely-accomplished redemption,
+could tolerate such language as, "<span class="smcap">Christ
+for His part</span>" and "<span class="smcap">THIS INFANT FOR HIS PART</span>?"
+Who that has listened, by faith, to those words, "It
+is finished," issuing, as they do, from amid the solemn
+scenes of Calvary, could endure a sinful mortal's
+"<i>I do</i>," or "<i>I will</i>?" What a total setting
+aside of grace! What a tarnishing of the brightness
+of God's salvation! What an insult to the
+righteousness of God, which is by faith, and without
+works! What a manifest return to a religion of
+ordinances and the poor works of man! Christ
+and an infant, or the infant's sureties, are placed on
+the same platform to work out salvation. Is it not
+so? If not, what mean the words, "Christ for His
+part, and this infant for his part?" Is it not plain
+that salvation is made to depend upon something
+or some one besides Christ? Unquestionably. The
+vows must be fulfilled, or there is no salvation!
+Miserable condition! Christ's accomplished work
+abandoned for a sinner's unaccomplishable vows
+and resolutions! Man's "I do" substituted for
+Christ's "I have finished!"</p>
+
+<p>My reader, can you own such a fearful surrender
+of the truth of God? Are you content with such a
+sandy foundation? Whither, think you, will such a
+system lead you? To heaven, or to Rome? Which?
+Be honest. Take the New Testament, search it
+from cover to cover, and see if you can find such a
+thing as infants making vows by proxy, to renounce
+the world, the flesh, and the devil, and to keep all
+God's commandments, in order to salvation. There
+is not so much as a shadow of a foundation for
+such an idea. "By works of law shall no flesh living
+be justified." "But now the righteousness of
+God, without law, is manifested, being witnessed
+by the law and the prophets." "To him that
+worketh not, but believeth on Him that justified the
+ungodly, his faith is counted to him for righteousness."
+"For by grace are ye saved, through faith;
+and that not of yourselves it is the gift of God: not
+of works, lest any man should boast." "Not by
+works of righteousness which we have done, but according
+to His mercy He saved us." (See Rom. iii.
+20-28; iv. 4, 5; Eph. ii. 8, 9; Titus iii. 5-7.)</p>
+
+<p>These are but a very few of the numerous passages
+which might be adduced in proof of the fact
+that the Confirmation Vows are diametrically opposed
+to the truth of God&mdash;totally subversive of the
+grace of God. If my vows mean anything I must
+be miserable, because I am in imminent danger of
+being lost forever, inasmuch as I have <i>not</i> kept
+them, and never could keep them.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! what sweet relief for the wearied heart and
+sin-burdened conscience in the atoning blood of
+Jesus! What full deliverance from my worthless
+and worse than worthless vows! <i>Christ has done
+all.</i> He has put away sin&mdash;made peace&mdash;brought
+in everlasting righteousness&mdash;brought life and immortality
+to light. In Him may you, my beloved
+reader, find abiding peace, unfading joy, and everlasting
+glory. To Him and His perfect work I now
+most affectionately commend you, body, soul, and
+spirit, fully assuring you my object in this paper is
+not to attack the prejudices, or wound the feelings
+of any, but simply to take occasion to show how
+the perfect work of the Lord Jesus Christ is thrown
+into full and blessed relief by being looked at in
+contrast with the "Confirmation Vows."</p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<h1><a name="SUPPER" id="SUPPER"></a>THOUGHTS</h1><br />
+<br />
+<b>ON</b><br />
+<br />
+<h1>THE LORD'S SUPPER</h1><br />
+DESIGNED FOR THE HELP OF CHRISTIANS IN THIS<br />
+DAY OF DIFFICULTY.<br />
+<br />
+<i>NEW EDITION, REVISED.</i><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>PREFACE</h3>
+
+<p>The institution of the Lord's Supper must be
+regarded, by every spiritual mind, as a peculiarly
+touching proof of the Lord's gracious care
+and considerate love for His Church. From the
+time of its appointment until the present hour, it
+has been a steady, though silent, witness to a truth
+which the enemy, by every means in his power, has
+sought to corrupt and set aside, namely, that redemption
+is an accomplished fact to be enjoyed by
+the weakest believer in Jesus. Eighteen centuries
+have rolled away since the Lord Jesus appointed
+"the bread and the cup" in the <a name="Eucharist" id="Eucharist"></a>Eucharist as the
+significant symbols of His broken body and His
+blood shed for us; and notwithstanding all the heresy,
+all the schism, all the controversy and strife,
+the war of principles and prejudices which the blotted
+page of ecclesiastical history records, this most
+expressive institution has been observed by the
+saints of God in every age. True, the enemy has
+succeeded, throughout a vast section of the professing
+Church, in wrapping it up in a shroud of dark
+superstition; in presenting it in such a way as actually
+to hide from the view of the communicant the
+grand and eternal reality of which it is the memorial;
+in displacing Christ and His accomplished
+sacrifice by a powerless ordinance&mdash;an ordinance,
+moreover, which by the very mode of its administration
+proves its utter worthlessness and opposition
+to the truth. (See note to page 29.) Yet, notwithstanding
+Rome's deadly error in reference to the ordinance
+of the Lord's Supper, it still speaks to every circumcised
+ear and every spiritual mind the same deep
+and precious truth&mdash;it "shows the Lord's death till
+He come." The body has been broken, the blood
+has been shed ONCE, no more to be repeated; and
+the breaking of bread is but the memorial of this
+emancipating truth.</p>
+
+<p>With what profound interest and thankfulness,
+therefore, should the believer contemplate "the
+bread and the cup"! Without a word spoken,
+there is the setting forth of truths at once the most
+precious and glorious: grace reigning&mdash;redemption
+finished&mdash;sin put away&mdash;everlasting righteousness
+brought in&mdash;the sting of death gone&mdash;eternal glory
+secured&mdash;"grace and glory" revealed as the free
+gift of God and the Lamb&mdash;the unity of the "one
+body," as baptized by "one Spirit." What a feast!
+It carries the soul back, in the twinkling of an eye,
+over a lapse of eighteen hundred years, and shows
+us the Master Himself, "in the same night in which
+He was betrayed," sitting at the supper table, and
+there instituting a feast which, from that solemn moment,
+that memorable night, until the dawn of the
+morning, should lead every believing heart at once
+backward to the cross and forward to the glory.</p>
+
+<p>This feast has ever since, by the very simplicity
+of its character, and yet the deep significance of its
+elements, rebuked the superstition that would deify
+and worship it, the profanity that would desecrate
+it, and the infidelity that would set it aside altogether:
+and furthermore, while it has rebuked all
+these, it has strengthened, comforted and refreshed
+the hearts of millions of God's beloved saints. It
+is sweet to think of this&mdash;sweet to bear in mind, as
+we assemble on the first day of the week round the
+supper of the Lord, that apostles, martyrs and saints
+have gathered round that feast, and found therein,
+according to their measure, refreshment and blessing.
+Schools of theology have arisen, flourished,
+and disappeared; doctors and fathers have accumulated
+ponderous tomes of divinity; deadly heresies
+have darkened the atmosphere, and rent the
+professing Church from one end to the other; superstition
+and fanaticism have put forth their baseless
+theories and extravagant notions; professing
+Christians have split into sects innumerable&mdash;all
+these things have taken place; but the Lord's Supper
+has continued, amid the darkness and confusion,
+to tell out its simple yet comprehensive tale.
+"As oft as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup,
+ye do show<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> the Lord's death till He come" (I Cor.
+xi. 26). Precious feast! Thank God for the great
+privilege of celebrating it! And yet is it but a
+sign, the elements of which must, in nature's view,
+be mean and contemptible. Bread broken, wine
+poured out&mdash;how simple! Faith alone can read, in
+the sign, the thing signified; and therefore it needs
+not the adventitious circumstances which false religion
+has introduced in order to add dignity, solemnity
+and awe to that which derives all its value, its
+power and its impressiveness from its being a memorial
+of an eternal fact which false religion denies.</p>
+
+<p>May you and I, beloved reader, enter with more
+freshness and intelligence into the meaning of the
+Lord's Supper, and with deeper experience into the
+blessedness of breaking that bread which is "the
+communion of the body of Christ," and drinking of
+that cup which is "the communion of the blood of
+Christ."</p>
+
+<p>In closing these few prefatory lines, I commend
+this treatise to the Lord's gracious care, praying
+Him to make it useful to the souls of His people.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right">C. H. M.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>THOUGHTS</h3>
+
+<h4>ON</h4>
+
+<h2>THE LORD'S SUPPER</h2>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<blockquote><p>"For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered
+unto you, That the Lord Jesus, the same night in which
+He was betrayed, took bread: and when He had given
+thanks, He brake it, and said, Take, eat; this is My body,
+which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of Me.
+After the same manner also He took the cup, when He had
+supped, saying, This cup is the new testament in My blood:
+this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of Me. For
+as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show
+the Lord's death till He come."&mdash;I Cor. xi. 23-26.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>I desire to offer a few brief remarks on the
+subject of the Lord's Supper, for the purpose
+of stirring up the minds of all who love the name
+and institutions of Christ to a more fervent and
+affectionate interest in this most important and refreshing
+ordinance.</p>
+
+<p>We should bless the Lord for His gracious consideration
+of our need in having established such a
+memorial of His dying love, and also in having
+spread a table at which <i>all</i> His members might present
+themselves without any other condition than
+the indispensable one of personal connection with
+and obedience to Him. The blessed Master knew
+well the tendency of our hearts to slip away from
+Him, and from each other, and to meet this tendency
+was <i>one</i>, at least, of His objects in the institution
+of the Supper. He would gather His people
+around His own blessed person; He would spread
+a table for them where, in view of His broken body
+and shed blood, they might remember Him, and
+the intensity of His love for them, and from whence,
+also, they might look forward into the future, and
+contemplate the glory of which the Cross is the
+everlasting foundation. There, if anywhere, they
+would learn to forget their differences, and to love
+one another; there they might see around them
+those whom <span class="smcap">the love of God</span> had invited to the
+feast, and whom <span class="smcap">the blood of Christ</span> had made
+fit to be there.</p>
+
+<p>However, in order that I may the more easily
+and briefly convey to the mind of my reader what I
+have to say on this subject, I shall confine myself
+to the four following points, viz.:</p>
+
+<p>1st. The nature of the ordinance of the Lord's
+Supper.</p>
+
+<p>2d. The circumstances under which it was instituted.</p>
+
+<p>3d. The persons for whom it was designed.</p>
+
+<p>4th. The time and manner of its observance.</p>
+
+
+<p>I. And first, as to the nature of the ordinance of
+the Lord's Supper. This is a cardinal point. If
+we understand not the nature of the ordinance, we
+shall be astray in all our thoughts about it. The
+Supper, then, is purely and distinctly a feast of
+thanksgiving&mdash;thanksgiving for grace already received.</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Himself, at the institution of it,
+marks its character by giving thanks. "He took
+bread: ... when He had given thanks," etc. Praise,
+and not prayer, is the suited utterance of those who
+sit at the table of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>True, we have much to pray for, much to confess,
+much to mourn over; but the table is not the place
+for mourners: its language is, "Give strong drink
+unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto
+those that be of heavy hearts. Let him drink and
+forget his poverty, and remember his misery no
+more." Ours is "a cup of blessing," a cup of
+thanksgiving, the divinely appointed symbol of that
+precious blood which has procured our ransom.
+"The bread which we break, is it not the communion
+of the body of Christ?" How, then, could
+we break it with sad hearts or sorrowful countenances?
+Could a family circle, after the toils of
+the day, sit down to supper with sighs and gloomy
+looks? Surely not. The supper was the great
+family meal, the only one that was sure to bring <i>all
+the family together</i>. Faces that might not have been
+seen during the day were sure to be seen at the
+supper table, and no doubt they would be happy
+there. Just so it should be at the Lord's Supper:
+the family should assemble there; and when assembled,
+they should be happy, unfeignedly happy, in
+the love that brings them together. True, each
+heart may have its own peculiar history&mdash;its secret
+sorrows, trials, failures, and temptations, unknown
+to all around; but these are not the objects to be
+contemplated at the supper: to bring them into
+view is to dishonor the Lord of the feast, and make
+the cup of blessing a cup of sorrow. The Lord has
+invited us to the feast, and commanded us, notwithstanding
+all our shortcomings, to place the fulness
+of His love and the cleansing efficacy of His blood
+between our souls and everything; and when the
+eye of faith is filled with Christ, there is no room
+for aught beside. If my sin be the object which
+fills my eye and engages my thoughts, of course I
+must be miserable, because I am looking right away
+from what God commands me to contemplate; I am
+remembering my misery and poverty, the very things
+which God commands me to forget. Hence the
+true character of the ordinance is lost, and, instead
+of being a feast of joy and gladness, it becomes a
+season of gloom and spiritual depression; and the
+preparation for it, and the thoughts which are entertained
+about it are more what might be expected
+in reference to mount Sinai than to a happy family
+feast.</p>
+
+<p>If ever a feeling of sadness could have prevailed
+at the celebration of this ordinance, surely it would
+have been on the occasion of its first institution,
+when, as we shall see when we come to consider
+the second point in our subject, there was everything
+that could possibly produce deep sadness and
+desolation of spirit; yet the Lord Jesus could "give
+thanks;" the tide of joy that flowed through His
+soul was far too deep to be ruffled by surrounding
+circumstances; He had a joy even in the breaking
+and bruising of His body and in the pouring forth
+of His blood which lay far beyond the reach of human
+thought and feeling. And if He could rejoice
+in spirit, and give thanks in breaking that bread
+which was to be to all future generations of the
+faithful the memorial of His broken body, should
+not we rejoice therein, we who stand in the blessed
+results of all His toil and passion? Yes; it becomes
+us to rejoice.</p>
+
+<p>But it may be asked, Is there no preparation necessary?
+are we to sit down at the table of the Lord
+with as much indifference as if we were sitting down
+to an ordinary supper table? Surely not&mdash;we need
+to be right in our souls, and the first step toward
+this is peace with God&mdash;that sweet assurance of
+our eternal salvation which most certainly is
+not the result of human sighs or penitential tears,
+but the simple result of the finished work of the
+Lamb of God, attested by the Spirit of God. Apprehending
+this by faith, we apprehend that which
+makes us perfectly fit for God. Many imagine that
+they are putting honor upon the Lord's table when
+they approach it with their souls bowed down into
+the very dust, under a sense of the intolerable burden
+of their sins. This thought can only flow from
+the legalism of the human heart, that ever-fruitful
+source of thoughts at once dishonoring to God, dishonoring
+to the Cross of Christ, grievous to the
+Holy Ghost, and completely subversive of our own
+peace. We may feel quite satisfied that the honor
+and purity of the Lord's table are more fully maintained
+when <span class="smcap">the blood of Christ</span> is made the
+only title than if human sorrow and human penitence
+were superadded.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+<p>However, the question of preparedness will come
+more fully before us as we proceed with our subject;
+I shall therefore state another principle connected
+with the nature of the Lord's Supper, viz.,
+that there is involved in it an intelligent recognition
+of the oneness of the body of Christ. "The bread
+which we break, is it not the communion of the
+body of Christ? For we, being many, are one
+bread, and one body; for we are all partakers of
+that one bread." Now there was sad failure and
+sad confusion in reference to this point at Corinth:
+indeed, the great principle of the Church's oneness
+would seem to have been totally lost sight of there.
+Hence the apostle observes that "when ye come
+together into one place, this is not to eat the Lord's
+Supper, for every one taketh before other <i>his own</i>
+supper" (I Cor. xi. 20, 21). Here, it was isolation,
+and not unity; an individual, and not a corporate
+question: "<i>his own supper</i>" is strikingly contrasted
+with "<i>the Lord's Supper</i>." The <i>Lord's</i> Supper demands
+that the body be fully recognized: if the
+one body be not recognized, it is but sectarianism:
+the Lord Himself has lost His place. If the table
+be spread upon any narrower principle than that
+which would embrace the whole body of Christ, it is
+become a sectarian table, and has lost its claim upon
+the hearts of the faithful. On the contrary, where
+a table is spread upon this divine principle, which
+embraces <i>all</i> the members of the body <i>simply as
+such</i>, every one who refuses to present himself at it
+is chargeable with schism, and that, too, upon the
+plain principles of I Cor. xi. "There must," says
+the apostle, "be heresies among you, that they
+which are approved may be made manifest among
+you."</p>
+
+<p>When the great Church principle is lost sight of
+by any portion of the body, there must be heresies,
+in order that the approved ones may be made manifest!
+and under such circumstances it becomes the
+business of each one to approve himself, and so
+to eat. The "approved" ones stand in contrast
+with the heretics, or those who were doing their
+own will.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+<p>But it may be asked, Do not the numerous denominations
+at present existing in the professing
+Church altogether preclude the idea of ever being
+able to gather the whole body together? and, under
+such circumstances, is it not better for each denomination
+to have their own table? If there be any
+force in this question, it merely goes to prove that
+the people of God are no longer able to act upon
+God's principles, but that they are left to the miserable
+alternative of acting on human expediency.
+Thank God, such is not the case. The truth of the
+Lord endureth forever, and what the Holy Ghost
+teaches in I Cor. xi. is binding upon every member
+of the Church of God. There were divisions, and
+heresies, and unholiness, existing in the assembly at
+Corinth, just as there are divisions, and heresies,
+and unholiness, existing in the professing Church
+now; but the apostle did not tell them to set up
+separate tables on the one hand, nor yet to cease
+from breaking bread on the other. No; he presses
+upon them the principles and the holiness connected
+with "the Church of God," and tells those who
+could approve themselves accordingly to eat. The
+expression is, "<i>So let him eat</i>." We are to eat,
+therefore: our care must be to eat "<i>so</i>," as the Holy
+Ghost teaches us; and that is in the true recognition
+of the holiness and oneness of the Church of
+God.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> When the Church is despised, the Spirit
+be grieved and dishonored, and the certain
+end will be spiritual barrenness and freezing formalism:
+and although men may substitute intellectual
+for spiritual power, and human talents and attainments
+for the gifts of the Holy Ghost, yet will the
+end be "like the heath in the desert." The true
+way to make progress in the divine life is to live
+for the Church, and not for ourselves. The man
+who lives for the Church is in full harmony with
+the mind of the Spirit, and must necessarily grow.
+On the contrary, the man who is living for himself,
+having his thoughts revolving round, and his energies
+concentrated upon, himself, must soon become
+cramped and formal, and, in all probability, openly
+worldly. Yes; he will become worldly, in some
+sense of that extensive term; for the world and the
+Church stand in direct opposition, the one to the
+other; nor is there any aspect of the world in which
+this opposition is more fully seen than in its religious
+aspect. What is commonly called the <i>religious
+world</i> will be found, when examined in the light of
+the presence of God, to be more thoroughly hostile
+to the true interests of the Church of God than almost
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>But I must hasten on to other branches of our
+subject, only stating another simple principle connected
+with the Lord's Supper, to which I desire to
+call the special attention of the Christian reader; it
+is this: the celebration of the ordinance of the
+Lord's Supper should be the distinct expression of
+the unity of <span class="smcap">ALL</span> believers, and not merely of the
+unity of a certain number gathered on certain
+principles, which distinguish them from others. If
+there be any term of communion proposed, save
+the all-important one of faith in the atonement of
+Christ, and a walk consistent with that faith, the
+table becomes the table of a sect, and possesses
+no claims upon the hearts of the faithful.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, if by sitting at the table I must
+identify myself with any one thing, whether it be
+principle or practice, not enjoined in Scripture, as a
+term of communion, there also the table becomes
+the table of a sect. It is not a question of whether
+there may be Christians there or not; it would be
+hard indeed to find a table amongst the reformed
+communities of which some Christians are not partakers.
+The apostle did not say, "there must be
+heresies among you, that they which are <i>Christians</i>
+may be made manifest among you." No; but
+"that they which are <i>approved</i>." Nor did he say,
+"Let a man prove himself a Christian, and so let
+him eat." No; but "let a man approve himself,"
+i. e., let him shew himself to be one of those who
+are not only upright in their consciences as to their
+individual act in the matter, but who are also confessing
+the oneness of the body of Christ. When
+men set up terms of communion of their own, there
+you find the principle of heresy; there, too, there
+must be schism. On the contrary, where a table
+is spread in such a manner and upon such principles
+as that a Christian, subject to God, can take
+his place at it, then it becomes schism not to be
+there; for, by being there, and by walking consistently
+with our position and profession there, we,
+so far as in us lies, confess the oneness of the
+Church of God&mdash;that grand object for which the
+Holy Ghost was sent from heaven to earth. The
+Lord Jesus, having been raised from the dead, and
+having taken His seat at the right hand of God,
+sent down the Holy Ghost to earth for the purpose
+of forming one body. Mark, to form <i>one body</i>&mdash;not
+many bodies. He has no sympathy with the
+many bodies, as such; though He has blessed sympathy
+with many members in those bodies, because
+they, though being members of sects or schisms,
+are nevertheless, members of the one body; but He
+does not form the many bodies, but the one body,
+for "by one Spirit are we all baptized into one
+body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we
+be bond or free; and have all been made to drink
+into one Spirit" (I Cor. xii. 13).</p>
+
+<p>I desire that there may be no misunderstanding
+on this point. I say the Holy Ghost cannot approve
+the schisms in the professing Church, for He
+Himself has said of such, "I praise you not." He
+is grieved by them&mdash;He would counteract them;
+He baptizes all believers into the unity of the one
+body, so that it cannot be thought, by any intelligent
+mind, that the Holy Ghost could sustain schisms,
+which are a grief and a dishonor to Him.</p>
+
+<p>We must however, distinguish between the Spirit's
+dwelling in the Church, and His dwelling in individuals.
+He dwells in the body of Christ, which is
+the Church (see I Cor. iii. 17; Eph. ii. 22); He
+dwells also in the body of the believer, as we read,
+"your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which
+is in you, which ye have of God" (I Cor. vi. 19).
+The only body or community, therefore, in which
+the Spirit can dwell, is <i>the whole Church of God</i>; and
+the only person in which He can dwell is the believer.
+But, as has already been observed, the table
+of the Lord, in any given locality, should be the
+exhibition of the unity of the whole Church. This
+leads us to another principle connected with the nature
+of the Lord's Supper, viz., this,
+It is an act whereby we not only shew the death
+of the Lord until He come, but whereby we also
+give expression to a fundamental truth, which cannot
+be too strongly or too frequently pressed upon
+the minds of Christians, at the present day, viz.,
+that<i> all believers are</i> "<i>one loaf&mdash;one body</i>." It is a
+very common error to view this ordinance merely
+as a channel through which grace flows to the soul
+of the individual, and not as an act bearing upon
+the whole body, and bearing also upon the glory of
+the Head of the Church. That it is a channel
+through which grace flows to the soul of the individual
+communicant there can be no doubt, for
+there is blessing in every act of obedience. But
+that individual blessing is but a very small part of
+it, can be seen by the attentive reader of I Cor. xi.
+It is the Lord's death and the Lord's coming, that
+are brought prominently before our souls in the
+Lord's Supper; and where any one of these elements
+is excluded there must be something wrong.
+If there be anything to hinder the complete showing
+forth of the Lord's death, or the exhibition of
+the unity of the body, or the clear perception of the
+Lord's coming, then there must be something radically
+wrong in the principle on which the table is
+spread, and we only need a single eye, and a mind
+entirely subject to the Word and Spirit of Christ, in
+order to detect the wrong.</p>
+
+<p>Let the Christian reader, now, prayerfully examine
+the table at which he periodically takes his
+place and see if it will bear the threefold test of I
+Cor. xi., and if not, let him, in the name of the Lord,
+and for the sake of the Church, abandon it. There
+are heresies, and schisms flowing from heresies, in
+the professing Church, but "let a man approve himself,
+and so let him eat" the Lord's Supper; and if,
+once for all, it be asked, What means the term "approved?"
+it may be answered, It is in the first place,
+to be personally true to the Lord in the act of
+breaking bread; and in the next place, to shake off
+all schism, and take our stand, firmly and decidedly,
+upon the broad principle which will embrace all the
+members of the flock of Christ. We are not only
+to be careful that we ourselves are walking in purity
+of heart and life before the Lord; but also, that the
+table of which we partake has nothing connected
+with it that could at all act as a barrier to the unity
+of the Church. It is not merely a personal question.
+Nothing more fully proves the low ebb of
+Christianity at the present day, or the fearful extent
+to which the Holy Ghost is grieved, than the
+miserable selfishness which tinges, yea, pollutes,
+the thoughts of professing Christians. Everything
+is made to hinge upon the mere question of self. It
+is <i>my</i> forgiveness&mdash;<i>my</i> safety&mdash;<i>my</i> peace&mdash;<i>my</i> happy
+frames and feelings, and not the glory of Christ, or
+the welfare of His beloved Church. Well, therefore,
+may the words of the prophet be applied to us,
+"Thus saith the Lord, Consider your ways. Go up
+to the mountain and bring wood, and <span class="smcap">BUILD THE23" </span>
+<span class="smcap">HOUSE</span>; and I will take pleasure in <i>it</i> and I <span class="smcap">WILL BE
+GLORIFIED</span>. Ye looked for much, and lo, it came
+to little; and when ye brought it home, I did blow
+upon it. Why? saith the Lord of hosts. Because
+of <i>My house</i> that is waste, and ye run every man to
+<i>his own</i> house" (Hag. i. 7-9). Here is the root of
+the matter. Self stands in contrast with the house
+of God; and, if self be made the object, no marvel
+that there should be a sad lack of spiritual joy,
+energy, and power. To have these, we must be in
+fellowship with the Spirit's thoughts. He thinks
+of the body of Christ; and, if we are thinking of
+self, we must be at issue with Him; and the consequences
+are but too apparent.</p>
+
+
+<p>II. Having now treated of what I conceive to be
+by far the most important point in our subject, I
+shall proceed to consider, in the second place, the
+circumstances under which the Lord's Supper was
+instituted. These were particularly solemn and
+touching. The Lord was about to enter into dreadful
+conflict with all the powers of darkness&mdash;to meet
+all the deadly enmity of man; and to drain to the
+dregs the cup of Jehovah's righteous wrath against
+sin. He had a terrible morrow before Him&mdash;the
+most terrible that had ever been encountered by
+man or angel; yet, notwithstanding all this, we
+read that "on <i>the same night</i> in which He was betrayed,
+He took bread." What unselfish love is
+here! "The same night"&mdash;the night of profound
+sorrow&mdash;the night of His agony and bloody sweat
+&mdash;the night of His betrayal by one, and His denial
+by another, and His desertion by all of His disciples&mdash;on
+that very night, the loving heart of Jesus
+was full of thoughts about His Church&mdash;on that
+very night He instituted the ordinance of the
+Lord's Supper. He appointed the bread to be the
+emblem of His body broken, and the wine to be
+the emblem of His blood shed; and such they are
+to us now, as often as we partake of them, for the
+Word assures us that "as often as ye eat <i>this bread</i>
+and drink <i>this cup</i>, ye do show <i>the Lord's death</i>, till
+He come."</p>
+
+<p>Now, all this, we may say, attaches peculiar importance
+and sacred solemnity to the Supper of the
+Lord; and, moreover, gives us some idea of the
+consequences of eating and drinking unworthily.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+<p>The voice which the ordinance utters in the circumcised
+ear is ever the same. The bread and the
+wine are deeply significant symbols; the bruised
+corn and the pressed grape being both combined to
+minister strength and gladness to the heart: and
+not only are they significant in themselves, but
+they are also to be used in the Lord's Supper, as
+being the very emblems which the blessed Master
+Himself ordained on the night previous to His
+crucifixion; so that faith can behold the Lord Jesus
+presiding at <i>His own table</i>&mdash;can see Him take the
+bread and the wine, and hear Him say, "Take, eat;
+this is My body;" and again, of the cup, "Drink
+ye <i>all</i> of it. For this is My blood of the New Testament
+which is shed for many for the remission of
+sins." In a word, the ordinance leads the soul
+back to the eventful night already referred to&mdash;brings
+before us all the reality of the cross and
+passion of the Lamb of God, in which our whole
+souls can rest and rejoice; it reminds us, in the
+most impressive manner, of the unselfish love and
+pure devotedness of Him, who, when Calvary was
+casting its dark shadow across His path, and the
+cup of Jehovah's righteous wrath against sin, of
+which He was about to be the bearer, was being
+filled for Him, could, nevertheless, busy Himself about
+us, and institute a feast which was to be both the
+expression of our connection with Him, and with
+all the members of His body.</p>
+
+<p>And may we not infer, that the Holy Ghost made
+use of the expression "<i>the same night</i>," for the purpose
+of remedying the disorders that had arisen in
+the church at Corinth? Was there not a severe rebuke
+administered to the selfishness of those who
+were taking "<i>their own supper</i>," in the Spirit's reference
+to the same night in which the Lord of the
+feast was betrayed? Doubtless there was. Can
+selfishness live in the view of the cross? Can
+thoughts about our own interests, or our own gratification,
+be indulged in the presence of Him who
+sacrificed Himself for us? Surely not. Could we
+heartlessly and wilfully despise the Church of God&mdash;could
+we offend or exclude beloved members of
+the flock of Christ, while gazing on that cross on
+which the Shepherd of the flock, and the Head of
+the body, was crucified?<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> Ah, no; let believers
+only keep near the cross&mdash;let them remember "the
+same night"&mdash;let them keep in mind the broken
+body and shed blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
+there will soon be an end to heresy, schism, and
+selfishness. If we could only bear in mind that the
+Lord Himself presides at the table, to dispense the
+bread and wine; if we could hear Him say, "Take
+this, and divide it among yourselves," we should be
+better able to meet <i>all</i> our brethren on the <i>only</i>
+Christian ground of fellowship which God can own.
+In a word, the person of Christ is God's centre of
+union. "I," said Christ, "if I be lifted up from
+the earth, will draw all men unto <i>Me</i>." Each believer
+can hear his blessed Master speaking from
+the cross, and saying of his fellow believers, "<i>Behold
+thy brethren</i>;" and, truly, if we could distinctly
+hear this, we should act, in a measure, as the beloved
+disciple acted towards the mother of Jesus;
+our hearts and our homes would be open to all who
+have been thus commended to our care. The word
+is, "<i>Receive ye one another, as Christ also received us
+to the glory of God</i>."</p>
+
+<p>There is another point worthy of notice, in connection
+with the circumstances under which the
+Lord's Supper was instituted, namely, its connection
+with the Jewish Passover. "Then came the day of
+unleavened bread, when the Passover must be killed.
+And He sent Peter and John, saying, Go and prepare
+us the Passover, that we may eat.... And <i>when
+the hour was come</i>, He sat down, and the twelve
+apostles with Him. And He said unto them, With
+desire I have desired to eat this Passover with you
+before I suffer; for I say unto you, I will not any
+more eat thereof, until it be fulfilled in the Kingdom
+of God. And He took the cup [i. e., the cup
+of the Passover], and gave thanks, and said, Take
+this and divide it among yourselves; for I say unto
+you, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine until
+the Kingdom of God shall come" (Luke xxii. 7-18).
+The Passover was, as we know, the great
+feast of Israel, first observed on the memorable
+night of their happy deliverance from the thralldom
+of Egypt. As to its connection with the Lord's
+Supper, it consists in its being the marked <i>type</i> of
+that of which the Supper is the <i>memorial</i>. The
+Passover pointed <i>forward</i> to the cross; the Supper
+points <i>back</i> to it. But Israel was no longer in a fit
+moral condition to keep the Passover, according to
+the divine thoughts about it; and the Lord Jesus,
+on the occasion above referred to, was leading His
+apostles away altogether from the Jewish element
+to a new order of things. It was no longer to be a
+lamb sacrificed, but bread broken and wine drunk
+in commemoration of a sacrifice <span class="smcap">ONCE</span> offered, the
+efficacy of which was to be eternal. Those whose
+minds are bowed down to Jewish ordinances, may
+still look, in some way or another, for the periodical
+repetition, either of a sacrifice, or of something
+which is to bring them into a place of greater nearness
+to God.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
+<p>Some there are who think that in the Lord's Supper
+the soul makes, or renews, a covenant with God,
+not knowing that if we were to enter into covenant
+with God, we should inevitably be ruined; as the
+only possible issue of a covenant between God and
+man is the failure of one of the parties (i. e., man),
+and consequent judgment. Thank God, there is no
+such thing as a covenant with us. The bread and
+wine, in the Supper, speak a deep and wondrous
+truth; they tell of the broken body and shed blood
+of the Lamb of God&mdash;the Lamb of God's own providing.
+Here the soul can rest with perfect complacency;
+it is <span class="smcap">the new testament in the blood
+of Christ</span>, and not a covenant between God and
+man. Man's covenant had signally failed, and the
+Lord Jesus had to allow the cup of the fruit of the
+vine (the emblem of joy in the earth) to pass Him
+by. Earth had no joy for Him&mdash;Israel had become
+"the degenerate plant of a strange vine;" wherefore,
+He had only to say, "I will not drink of the
+fruit of the vine, until the Kingdom of God shall
+come." A long and dreary season was to pass
+over Israel, ere her King could take any joy in her
+moral condition: but, during that time, "the Church
+of God" was to "keep the feast" of unleavened
+bread, in all its moral power and significance, by
+putting away the "old leaven of malice and wickedness,"
+as the fruit of fellowship with Him whose
+blood cleanseth from all sin.</p>
+
+<p>However, the fact of the Lord's Supper having
+been instituted immediately after the Passover,
+teaches us a very valuable principle of truth, viz.,
+this: the destinies of the Church and of Israel are
+inseparably linked with the cross of the Lord Jesus
+Christ. True, the Church has a higher place, even
+identification with her risen and glorified Head;
+yet all rests upon the Cross. Yes; it was on the
+cross that the pure sheaf of corn was bruised and
+the juices of the living vine pressed forth by the
+hand of Jehovah Himself, to yield strength and
+gladness to the hearts of His heavenly and earthly
+people forever. The Prince of Life took from
+Jehovah's righteous hand the cup of wrath, the
+cup of trembling, and drained it to the dregs
+in order that He might put into the hands of His
+people the cup of salvation, the cup of God's ineffable
+love, that they might drink and forget their
+poverty, and remember their misery no more. The
+Lord's Supper expresses all this. There the Lord
+presides; there the redeemed should meet in holy
+fellowship and brotherly love, to eat and drink before
+the Lord; and while they do so, they can look
+back at their Master's <i>night</i> of deep sorrow, and forward
+to His day of glory&mdash;that "morning without
+clouds," when "He shall come to be glorified in
+His saints, and to be admired in all them that believe."</p>
+
+
+<p>III. We shall now consider, in the third place,
+the persons for whom, and for whom <i>alone</i>, the
+Lord's Supper was instituted.</p>
+
+<p>The Lord's Supper, then, was instituted for the
+Church of God&mdash;the family of the redeemed. All
+the members of that family should be there; for
+none can be absent without incurring the guilt of
+disobedience to the plain command of Christ and
+His inspired apostle; and the consequence of this
+disobedience will be positive spiritual decline and a
+complete failure in testimony for Christ. Such consequences,
+however, are the result only of wilful absence
+from the Lord's table. There are circumstances
+which, in certain cases, may present an insurmountable
+barrier, though there might be the
+most earnest desire to be present at the celebration
+of the ordinance, as there ever will be where the
+mind is spiritual; but we may lay it down as a fixed
+principle of truth that no one can make progress in
+the divine life who wilfully absents himself from the
+Lord's table. "<span class="smcap">All</span> the congregation of Israel"
+were commanded to keep the passover (Ex. xii.).</p>
+
+<p>No member of the congregation could with impunity
+be absent. "The man that is clean, and is not
+in a journey, and forbeareth to keep the passover,
+even the same soul shall be cut off from among his
+people: because he brought not the offering of the
+Lord in his appointed season, that man shall bear
+his sin" (Num. ix. 13).</p>
+
+<p>I feel that it would be rendering really valuable
+service to the cause of truth, and a furtherance of
+the interests of the Church of God, if an interest
+could be awakened on this important subject. There
+is too much lightness and indifference in the minds
+of Christians as to the matter of their attendance at
+the table of the Lord; and where there is not this
+indifference, there is an unwillingness arising from
+imperfect views of justification. Now both these
+hindrances, though so different in their character,
+spring from one and the same source, viz., selfishness.
+He who is indifferent about the matter will
+selfishly allow trifling circumstances to interfere
+with his attendance: he will be hindered by family
+arrangements, love of personal ease, unfavorable
+weather, trifling or, as it frequently happens, imaginary
+bodily ailments&mdash;things which are lost sight
+of or counted as nothing when some worldly object
+is to be gained. How often does it happen that
+men who have not spiritual energy to leave their
+houses on the Lord's day have abundant natural
+energy to carry them some miles to gain some
+worldly object on Monday. Alas that it should be
+so! How sad to think that worldly gain could exert
+a more powerful influence on the heart of the
+Christian than the glory of Christ and the furtherance
+of the Church's benefit! for this is the way
+in which we must view the question of the Lord's
+Supper. What would be our feelings, amid the
+glory of the coming kingdom, if we could remember
+that, while on earth, a fair or a market, or some
+such worldly object, had commanded our time and
+energies, while the assembly of the Lord's people
+around His table was neglected?</p>
+
+<p>Beloved Christian reader, if you are in the habit
+of absenting yourself from the assembly of Christians,
+I pray you to ponder the matter before the
+Lord ere you absent yourself again. Reflect upon
+the pernicious effect of your absence in every way.
+You are failing in your testimony for Christ; you
+are injuring the souls of your brethren, and you are
+hindering the progress of your own soul in grace
+and knowledge. Do not suppose that your actings
+are without their influence on the whole Church of
+God: you are at this moment either helping or hindering
+every member of that body on earth. "If
+<i>one</i> member suffer, all the members suffer with it."
+This principle has not ceased to be true, though
+professing Christians have split into so many different
+divisions. Nay, it is so divinely true, that there
+is not a single believer on earth who is not acting
+either as a helper to, or a drain upon, the whole body
+of Christ; and if there be any truth in the principle
+already laid down (viz., that the assembly of Christians
+and the breaking of bread in any given locality
+is, or ought to be, the expression of the unity of
+the whole body), you cannot fail to see that if you
+absent yourself from that assembly, or refuse to join
+in giving expression to that unity, you are doing
+serious damage to all your brethren as well as to
+your own soul. I would lay these considerations
+on your heart and conscience, in the name of the
+Lord, looking to Him to make them influential.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<p>But not only does this culpable and pernicious
+indifference of spirit act as a hindrance to many, in
+presenting themselves at the Lord's table; imperfect
+views of justification produce the same unhappy result.
+If the conscience be not perfectly purged, if
+there be not perfect rest in God's testimony about
+the finished work of Christ, there will either be a
+shrinking from the Supper of the Lord, or an unintelligent
+celebration of it. Those only can show
+the Lord's death who know, through the teaching
+of the Holy Spirit, the value of the Lord's death.
+If I regard the ordinance as a means whereby I am
+to be brought into a place of greater nearness to
+God, or whereby I am to obtain a clearer sense of
+my acceptance, it is impossible that I can rightly
+observe it. I must believe, as the gospel commands
+me to believe, that <span class="smcap">ALL</span> my sins are <span class="smcap">FOREVER</span> put
+away ere I can take my place with any measure of
+spiritual intelligence at the Lord's table. If the
+matter be not viewed in this light, the Lord's Supper
+can only be regarded as a kind of step to the
+altar of God, and we are told in the law that we are
+not to go up by steps to God's altar, lest our nakedness
+be discovered (Ex. xx. 26). The meaning of
+which is, that all human efforts to approach God
+must issue in the discovery of human nakedness.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we see that if it be indifference that prevents
+the Christian from being at the breaking of
+bread, it is most culpable in the sight of God, and
+most injurious to his brethren and himself; and if
+it be an imperfect sense of justification that prevents,
+it is not only unwarrantable, but most dishonoring
+to the love of the Father, the work of the
+Son, and the clear and unequivocal testimony of
+the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not unfrequently said, and that, too, by
+those who profess spirituality and intelligence, "I
+derive no spiritual benefit by going to the assembly:
+I am as happy in my own room, reading my
+Bible." I would affectionately ask such, Are we to
+have no higher object before us in our actings than
+our own happiness? Is not obedience to the command
+of our blessed Master&mdash;a command delivered
+on "the same night in which He was betrayed"&mdash;a
+far higher and nobler object to set before us than
+anything connected with self? If He desires that
+His people should assemble in His name, for the
+express object of showing forth His death till He
+come, shall we refuse because we feel happier in
+our own rooms? He tells us to be there: we reply,
+"We feel happier at home." Our happiness, therefore,
+must be based on disobedience; and, as such,
+it is an unholy happiness. It is much better, if
+it should be so, to be unhappy in the path of obedience
+than happy in the path of disobedience. But
+I verily believe, the thought of being happier at
+home is a mere delusion, and the end of those
+deluded by it will prove it such. Thomas might
+have deemed it indifferent whether he was present
+with the other disciples, but he had to do without
+the Lord's presence, and to wait for eight days, until
+the disciples came together on the first day of
+the week; for there and then the Lord was pleased
+to reveal Himself to his soul. And just so will it
+be with those who say, "We feel happier at home
+than in the assembly of believers." They will surely
+be behindhand in knowledge and experience; yea,
+it will be well if they come not under the terrible
+woe denounced by the prophet: "Woe to the idol
+shepherd that <i>leaveth the flock</i>! the sword shall be
+upon his arm, and upon his right eye; his arm shall
+be clean dried up, and his right eye shall be utterly
+darkened" (Zech. xi. 17). And again, "Not forsaking
+the assembling of ourselves together, <i>as the
+manner of some is</i>; but exhorting one another, and
+so much the more as ye see the day approaching.
+For if we sin wilfully, after that we have received
+the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more
+sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of
+judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour
+the adversaries" (Heb. x. 25-27).</p>
+
+<p>As to the objection upon the grounds of the barrenness
+and unprofitableness of Christian assemblies,
+it will generally be remarked that the greatest
+spiritual barrenness will always be found in connection
+with a captious and complaining spirit; and I
+doubt not that if those who complain of the unprofitableness
+of meetings, and draw from thence an
+argument in favor of their remaining at home, were
+to spend more time in secret waiting on the Lord
+for His blessing on the meetings, they would have
+a very different experience.</p>
+
+<p>And now, having shown from Scripture who
+ought to be at the breaking of bread, we shall proceed
+to consider who ought <i>not</i>. On this point
+Scripture is equally explicit: in a word, then, none
+should be there who are not members of the true
+Church of God. The same law which commanded
+<i>all</i> the congregation of Israel to eat the passover,
+commanded all uncircumcised strangers <i>not</i> to eat;
+and now that Christ our Passover has been sacrificed
+for us, none can keep the feast, (which is to extend
+throughout this entire dispensation,) nor break
+the bread nor drink the wine in true remembrance
+of Him, save those who know the cleansing and
+healing virtues of His precious blood. To eat and
+drink without this knowledge, is to eat and drink
+unworthily&mdash;to eat and drink judgment; like the
+woman in Num. v. who drank the water of jealousy,
+to make the condemnation more manifest and awfully
+solemn.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is in this that Christendom's guilt is specially
+manifest. In taking the Lord's Supper, the
+professing Church has, like Judas, put her hand on
+the table with Christ and betrayed Him; she has
+eaten with Him, and at the same time lifted up her
+heel against Him. What will be her end? Just
+like the end of Judas. "He, then, having received
+the sop, <i>went immediately out</i>: and"&mdash;the Holy
+Ghost adds, in awful solemnity&mdash;"<span class="smcap">IT WAS NIGHT</span>."
+Terrible night! The strongest expression of divine
+love only elicited the strongest expression of human
+hatred. So will it be with the false professing
+Church collectively, and each false professor individually;
+and all those who, though baptized in the
+name of Christ, and sitting down at the table of
+Christ, have nevertheless been His betrayers, will
+find themselves at last thrust out into outer darkness&mdash;involved
+in a night which shall never see the
+beams of the morning&mdash;plunged in a gulf of endless
+and ineffable woe; and though they may be able to
+say to the Lord, "We have eaten and drunk in Thy
+presence, and Thou hast taught in our streets," yet
+His solemn, heartrending reply will be, while He
+shuts the door against them, "Depart from Me! I
+never knew you." O reader, think of this, I pray
+you; and if you be yet in your sins, defile not the
+Lord's table by your presence; but instead of going
+thither as a hypocrite, repair to Calvary as a poor
+ruined and guilty sinner, and there receive pardon
+and cleansing from Him who died to save just such
+as you are.</p>
+
+
+<p>IV. Having now considered, through the Lord's
+mercy, the nature of the Lord's Supper; the circumstances
+under which it was instituted; and the persons
+for whom it was designed; I would only add a
+word as to what Scripture teaches us about the time
+and manner of its celebration.</p>
+
+<p>Although the Lord's Supper was not <i>first</i> instituted
+on the first day of the week, yet the twenty-fourth
+of Luke and the twentieth of Acts are quite
+sufficient to prove, to a mind subject to the Word,
+that that is the day on which the ordinance should
+specially be observed. The Lord broke bread with
+His disciples on "the first day of the week" (Luke
+xxiv. 30); and "on the first day of the week the disciples
+came together to break bread" (Acts xx. 7).
+These scriptures are quite sufficient to prove that it
+is not once a month, nor once in three months, nor
+once in six months, that disciples should come together
+to break bread, but once a week at least, and
+that upon the first day of the week. Nor can we
+have any difficulty in seeing that there is a moral
+fitness in the first day of the week for the celebration
+of the Lord's Supper: it is the resurrection
+day&mdash;the Church's day, in contrast with the seventh,
+which was Israel's day; and as, in the institution
+of the ordinance, the Lord led His disciples
+away from Jewish things altogether, (by refusing to
+drink of the fruit of the vine&mdash;the passover cup,&mdash;and
+then instituting another ordinance) so, in the
+day on which that ordinance was to be celebrated,
+we observe the same contrast between heavenly
+and earthly things. It is in the power of resurrection
+that we can rightly show the Lord's death.
+When the conflict was over, Melchizedek brought
+forth bread and wine, and blessed Abram, in the
+name of the Lord. Thus, too, our Melchizedek,
+when all the conflict was over and the victory
+gained, came forth in resurrection with bread and
+wine, to strengthen and cheer the hearts of His
+people, and to breathe upon them that peace which
+He had so dearly purchased.</p>
+
+<p>If, then, the first day of the week be the day on
+which Scripture teaches the disciples to break bread,
+it is clear that man has no authority to alter the period
+to once a month, or once in six months. And
+I doubt not, when the affections are lively and fervent
+toward the person of the Lord Himself, the
+Christian will desire to show the Lord's death as
+frequently as possible: indeed, it would seem, from
+the opening of Acts, that the disciples broke bread
+daily. This we may infer from the expression
+"breaking bread from house to house" (or "at
+home"). However, we are not left to depend
+upon mere inference as to the question of the first
+day of the week being the day on which the disciples
+came together to break bread: we are distinctly
+taught this, and we see its moral fitness and
+beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Thus much as to the <i>time</i>. And now one word
+about the <i>manner</i>. It should be the special aim of
+Christians to show that the breaking of bread is
+their grand and primary object in coming together
+on the first day of the week. They should show
+that it is not for preaching or teaching that they
+assemble, though teaching may be a happy adjunct,
+but that the breaking of bread is the leading object
+before their minds. It is the work of Christ which
+we show forth in the Supper, wherefore it should
+have the first place; and when it has been duly set
+forth, there should be a full and unqualified opening
+left for the work of the Holy Ghost in ministry.
+The office of the Spirit is to set forth and exalt the
+name, the person and the work of Christ; and if
+He be allowed to order and govern the assembly of
+Christians, as He undoubtedly should, He will ever
+give the work of Christ the primary place.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot close this paper without expressing my
+deep sense of the feebleness and shallowness of all
+that I have advanced, on a subject of really commanding
+interest. I do feel before the Lord, in
+whose presence I desire to write and speak, that I
+have so failed to bring out the full truth about this
+matter, that I almost shrink from letting these pages
+see the light. It is not that I have a shadow of
+doubt as to the truth of what I have endeavored to
+state; no: but I feel that, in writing upon such a
+subject as the breaking of bread, at the time when
+there is such sad confusion among professing
+Christians, there is a demand for pointed, clear,
+and lucid statements, to which I am little able to
+respond.</p>
+
+<p>We have but little conception of how entirely the
+question of the breaking of bread is connected with
+the Church's position and testimony on earth; and
+we have as little conception of how thoroughly the
+question has been misunderstood by the professing
+Church. The breaking of <a name="bread" id="bread"></a>bread ought to be the
+distinct enunciation of the fact that all believers
+are <i>one body</i>; but the professing Church, by splitting
+into sects, and by setting up a table for each sect,
+has practically denied that fact.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, the breaking of bread has been cast into
+the background. The table, at which the Lord
+should preside, is almost lost sight of, by being
+placed in the shade of the pulpit, in which man
+presides: the pulpit, which, alas! is too often the
+instrument of creating and perpetuating disunion,
+is, to many minds, the commanding object; while
+the table, which if properly understood would perpetuate
+love and unity, is made quite a secondary
+thing. And even in the most laudable effort to recover
+from such a lamentable condition of things,
+what complete failure have we seen. What has the
+Evangelical Alliance effected? It has effected this,
+at least, it has developed a need existing among
+professing Christians, which they are confessedly
+unable to meet. They want union, and are unable
+to attain it. Why? Because they will not give up
+everything which has been <i>added</i> to the truth to
+meet together according to the truth, to break bread
+as disciples. I say, <i>as disciples</i>, and not as Church-men,
+Independents, Baptists, etc. It is not that all
+such may not have much valuable truth, I mean
+those of them who love our Lord Jesus Christ: they
+certainly may; but they have no <i>truth</i> that should
+prevent them from meeting <i>together</i> to break bread.
+How could truth ever hinder Christians from giving
+expression to the unity of the Church? Impossible!
+A sectarian spirit in those who hold truth may do
+this, but truth never can. But how is it now in the
+professing Church? Christians, of various communities,
+can meet for the purpose of reading, praying,
+and singing together during the week, but when
+the first day of the week arrives, they have not the
+least idea of giving the only real and effectual expression
+of their unity, which the Holy Ghost can
+recognize, which is the breaking of bread. "We
+being many are one bread and one body; for we
+are <i>all</i> partakers of that <i>one</i> bread."</p>
+
+<p>The sin at Corinth was their not tarrying one for
+another. This appears from the exhortation with
+which the apostle sums up the whole question
+(I Cor. xi.), "Wherefore, my brethren, when ye
+come together to eat, tarry one for another." Why
+were they to tarry one for another? Surely, in
+order that they might the more clearly express their
+unity. But what would the apostle have said, if,
+instead of coming together, into one place, they had
+gone to different places, according to their different
+views of truth? He might then say with, if possible,
+greater force, "Ye cannot eat the Lord's
+Supper." (See <i>margin</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>It may, however, be asked, "How could all the
+believers in London meet in one place?" I reply, if
+they could not meet in one place, they could, at
+least, meet on one principle. But how did the believers
+at Jerusalem meet together? The answer is,
+they were "<i>of one accord</i>." This being so, they had
+little difficulty about the question of a meeting-room.
+"Solomon's porch," or anywhere else, would suit
+their purpose. They gave expression to their unity,
+and that, too, in a way not to be mistaken. Neither
+various localities, nor various measures of knowledge
+and attainment, could, in the least, interfere
+with their unity. There was "one body and one
+Spirit."</p>
+
+<p>Finally, I would say, the Lord will assuredly
+honor those who have faith to believe and confess
+the unity of the Church on earth; and the greater
+the difficulty in the way of doing so, the greater
+will be the honor. The Lord grant to all His people
+a single eye, and a humble and honest spirit.</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>Thy broken body, gracious Lord,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Is shadowed by this broken bread;<br /></span>
+<span>The wine which in this cup is poured<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Points to the blood which Thou hast shed.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>And while we meet together thus,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We show that we are one in Thee;<br /></span>
+<span>Thy precious blood was shed for us--<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Thy death, O Lord, has set us free.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Brethren in Thee, in union sweet--<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Forever be Thy grace adored--<br /></span>
+<span>'Tis in Thy name, that now we meet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And know Thou'rt with us, gracious Lord.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>We have one hope--that Thou wilt come;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Thee in the air we wait to see,<br /></span>
+<span>When Thou wilt take Thy people home,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And we shall ever reign with Thee.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_ASSEMBLY_OF_GOD" id="THE_ASSEMBLY_OF_GOD"></a>THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD</h2>
+
+<h4>OR, THE</h4>
+
+<h3>ALL-SUFFICIENCY OF THE NAME OF JESUS</h3>
+
+
+<p>In a day like the present, when almost every new
+idea becomes the centre or gathering-point of
+some new association, we cannot but feel the value
+of having divinely formed convictions as to what
+the assembly of God really is. We live in a time
+of unusual mental activity, and hence there is the
+more urgent need of calm and prayerful study of
+the word of God. That Word, blessed be its Author,
+is like a rock amid the ocean of human
+thought. There it stands unmoved, notwithstanding
+the raging of the storm and the ceaseless lashing
+of the waves. And not only does it thus stand
+unmoved itself, but it imparts its own stability to
+all who simply take their stand upon it. What a
+mercy to make one's escape from the heavings and
+tossings of the stormy ocean, and find a calm resting
+place on that everlasting Rock.</p>
+
+<p>This, truly, is a mercy. Were it not that we have
+"the law and the testimony," where should we be?
+Whither should we go? What should we do? What
+darkness! What confusion! What perplexity!</p>
+
+<p>A thousand jarring voices fall, at times, upon the
+ear, and each voice seems to speak with such authority,
+that if one is not well taught and grounded
+in the Word, there is great danger of being drawn
+away, or, at least, sadly unhinged. One man will
+tell you that <i>this</i> is right; another will tell you <i>that</i>
+is right; a third will tell you that <i>everything</i> is right;
+and a fourth will tell you that <i>nothing</i> is right.
+With reference to the question of church position,
+you will meet with some who go <i>here</i>; some who go
+<i>there</i>; some who go <i>everywhere</i>; and some who go
+<i>nowhere</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Now, under such circumstances, what is one to
+do? All cannot possibly be right. And yet, surely,
+there is something right. It cannot be that we are
+<i>compelled</i> to live in error, in darkness, or uncertainty.
+"<i>There is a path</i>," blessed be God, though "no
+fowl knoweth it, and the vulture's eye hath not seen
+it. The lion's whelps have not trodden it, nor the
+fierce lion passed by it." Where is this safe and
+blessed path? Hear the divine reply: "Behold,
+<i>the fear of the Lord</i>, that is wisdom: and <i>to depart
+from evil</i> is understanding" (Job xxviii.).</p>
+
+<p>Let us, therefore, in the fear of the Lord, in the
+light of His infallible truth, and in humble dependence
+upon the teaching of the Holy Spirit, proceed
+to the examination of the subject which stands at
+the head of this paper; and may we have grace to
+abandon all confidence in our own thoughts, and
+the thoughts of others, so that we may heartily and
+honestly yield ourselves up to be taught only of God.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in order to get fairly into the grand and all-important
+subject of the assembly of God, we have
+first to state <i>a fact</i>; and, secondly, to ask <i>a question</i>.
+The fact is this, <i>There is an assembly of God on
+the earth</i>. The question is, <i>What is that assembly</i>?</p>
+
+<p>I. And, first then, as to our <i>fact</i>. There is such
+a thing as the assembly of God on the earth. This
+is a most important fact, surely. God has an assembly
+on the earth. I do not refer to any merely
+human organization, such as the Greek Church;
+the Church of Rome; the Church of England; the
+Church of Scotland; or to any of the various systems
+which have sprung from these, framed and
+fashioned by man's hand, and carried on by man's
+resources. I refer simply to that assembly which
+is gathered by God the Holy Ghost, round the person
+of God the Son, to worship and hold fellowship
+with God the Father.</p>
+
+<p>If we set forth upon our search for the assembly
+of God, or for any expression thereof, with our
+minds full of prejudice, preconceived thoughts, and
+personal predilections; or if, in our searchings, we
+seek the aid of the flickering light of the dogmas,
+opinions, and traditions of men, nothing is more
+certain than that we shall fail to reach the truth.
+To recognize God's assembly, we must be exclusively
+taught by God's Word, and led by God's
+Spirit; for, of God's assembly, as well as of the
+sons of God, it may be said, "the world knoweth
+it not."</p>
+
+<p>Hence, then, if we are, in any wise, governed by
+the spirit of the world; if we desire to exalt man;
+if we seek to commend ourselves to the thoughts of
+men; if our object be to gain the attractive ends of
+a plausible and soul-ensnaring expediency, we may
+as well, forthwith, abandon our search for any true
+expression of the assembly of God, and take refuge
+in that form of human organization which most
+fully commends itself to our thinkings or our conscientious
+convictions.</p>
+
+<p>Further, if our object be to find a religious community
+in which the word of God is read, or in
+which the people of God are found, we may speedily
+satisfy ourselves, for it would be hard indeed to
+find a section of the professing Christian body in
+which one or both of these objects might not be
+realized.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, if we merely aim at doing all the good
+we can, without any question as to how we do it;
+if <i>Per fas aut nefas</i>, "right or wrong," be our motto
+in whatever we undertake; if we are prepared to
+reverse those weighty words of Samuel, and say
+that, "To sacrifice is better than to obey, and the
+fat of rams better than to harken," then is it
+worse than vain for us to pursue our search for
+the assembly of God, inasmuch as that assembly
+can only be discovered and approved by one who
+has been taught to flee from the thousand flowery
+pathways of human expediency, and to submit his
+conscience, his heart, his understanding, his whole
+moral being to the supreme authority of "Thus
+saith the Lord."</p>
+
+<p>In one word, then, the obedient disciple knows
+that there is such a thing as God's assembly: and
+he it is, too, that will be enabled, through grace, to
+understand what is a true expression of it. The
+sincere student of Scripture knows, full well, the
+difference between that which is founded, formed,
+and governed by the wisdom and the will of man,
+and that which is gathered round, and governed
+by Christ the Lord. How vast is the difference!
+It is just the difference between God and man.</p>
+
+<p>But we may here be asked for the Scripture proofs
+of our fact that there is such a thing on the earth
+as <i>the</i> assembly of God, and we shall, at once, proceed
+to furnish these; for we may be permitted to
+say that, without the authority of the Word, all
+statements are utterly valueless. What, therefore,
+saith the Scripture?</p>
+
+<p>Our first proof shall be that famous passage,
+in Matthew xvi., "When Jesus came into the coast
+of Cćsarea Philippi, He asked His disciples, saying
+Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am?
+And they said, Some say that Thou art John the
+Baptist; some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or one
+of the prophets. He saith unto them, But whom
+say ye that I am? And Simon Peter answered and
+said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
+God. And Jesus answered and said unto him,
+Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and
+blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father
+which is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, that
+thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build My
+assembly<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> ([Greek: ekklęsian]); and the gates of hell shall
+not prevail against it" (vers. 13-18).</p>
+
+<p>Here our blessed Lord intimates His purpose to
+build an assembly, and sets forth the true foundation
+of that assembly, namely, "Christ, the Son of
+the living God." This is an all-important point in
+our subject. The building is founded on the Rock,
+and that Rock is not the poor failing, stumbling,
+erring Peter, but <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, the eternal Son of the
+living God; and every stone in that building partakes
+of the Rock-life which, as being victorious
+over all the power of the enemy, is indestructible.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+<p>Again, passing over a section of Matthew's Gospel,
+we come to an equally familiar passage: "Moreover,
+if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go
+and tell him his fault between thee and him alone:
+if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother.
+But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee
+one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three
+witnesses every word may be established. And if
+he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the assembly,
+but if he neglect to hear the assembly, let him
+be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican.
+Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on
+earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever
+ye shall loose on earth, shall be loosed in heaven.
+Again, I say unto you, that if two of you shall
+agree on earth as touching anything that they shall
+ask, it shall be done for them of My Father which
+is in heaven. For where two or three are <i>gathered</i>
+together <i>in My name</i>, there am I in the midst of
+them" (chap. xviii. 15-20).</p>
+
+<p>We shall have occasion to refer to this passage
+again, under the second division of our subject. It
+is here introduced merely as a link in the chain of
+Scripture evidence of the fact that there is such a
+thing as the assembly of God on the earth. This
+assembly is not a name, a form, a pretence, an assumption.
+It is a divine reality&mdash;an institution of
+God, possessing His seal and sanction. It is a something
+to be appealed to in all cases of personal trespass
+and dispute which cannot be settled by the parties
+involved. This assembly may consist of only
+"two or three" in any particular place&mdash;the smallest
+plurality, if you please; but there it is, owned of
+God, and its decisions ratified in heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we are not to be scared away from the
+truth on this subject, by the fact that the church
+of Rome has attempted to base her monstrous pretensions
+on the two passages which we have just
+quoted. That church is not God's assembly, built8
+on the Rock Christ, and gathered in the name of
+Jesus; but a human apostasy, founded on a failing
+mortal, and governed by the traditions and doctrines
+of men. We must not, therefore, suffer ourselves
+to be deprived of God's reality by reason of
+Satan's counterfeit. God has His assembly on the
+earth, and we are responsible to confess the truth
+of it, and to be a practical expression of it. This
+may be difficult, in a day of confusion like the present.
+It will demand a single eye&mdash;a subject will&mdash;a
+mortified mind. But let the reader be assured of
+this, that it is his privilege to possess as divine certainty
+as to what is a true expression of the assembly
+of God, as surely as the truth concerning his
+own salvation through the blood of the Lamb; nor
+should he be satisfied without this. I should not
+be content to go on for an hour without the assurance
+that I am, in spirit and principle, associated
+with those whose ground of gathering is purely
+their common membership in the assembly of God&mdash;that
+assembly which includes all saints. I say,
+in spirit and principle, because I may happen to
+be in a place where there is no such local expression
+of the assembly; in which case I must be satisfied
+to hold fellowship, in spirit, with all those who
+are thus gathered.</p>
+
+<p>This simplifies the matter amazingly. If I cannot
+have a true expression of God's assembly, I
+shall have nothing. It will not do to point me to a
+religious community, with some Christians therein,
+the gospel preached, and the ordinances administered.</p>
+
+<p>I must be convinced that in very truth, they
+are gathered on that ground which, in my heart and
+conscience, frees them from the charge of sectarianism.
+I can own the children of God individually
+anywhere; but sectarianism I cannot own or sanction.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt this will give offence. It will be called
+bigotry, narrow-mindedness, intolerance, and the
+like. But this need not discourage us. All we
+have to do is to ascertain the truth as to God's assembly,
+and cleave to it, heartily and energetically,
+at all cost. If God has an assembly&mdash;and Scripture
+says He has&mdash;then let me be with those who
+maintain its principles, and nowhere else. It must
+be in this as in all other matters, truth or nothing.
+If there be a local expression of that assembly,
+well; be there in person. If not, be content to
+hold spiritual communion with all who humbly and
+faithfully own and occupy that holy ground. It
+may sound and seem like liberality to be ready to
+sanction and go with everything and everybody. It
+may appear very easy and very pleasant to be in a
+place "where everybody's will is indulged, and nobody's
+conscience is exercised"&mdash;where we may
+hold what we like, and say what we like, and do
+what we like, and go where we like. All this may
+seem very delightful&mdash;very plausible&mdash;very popular&mdash;very
+attractive; but oh! it will be barrenness
+and bitterness in the end; and, in the day of the
+Lord, it will assuredly be burnt up as so much
+wood, hay, and stubble, that cannot stand the action
+of His judgment.</p>
+
+<p>But let us proceed with our Scripture proofs. In
+the Acts of the Apostles, or rather, the Acts of the
+Holy Ghost, we find the assembly formally set up.
+A passage or two will suffice: "And they, continuing
+daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking
+bread from house to house, did eat their meat
+with gladness and singleness of heart, praising God,
+and having favor with all the people. And the
+Lord added to the assembly, daily, such as should
+be saved" (Acts ii. 46, 47). Such was the original,
+simple apostolic order. When a person was converted,
+he thereby belonged to the assembly and
+took his place in it: there was no difficulty in the
+matter, there were no sects or parties, each claiming
+to be considered <i>a</i> church, a cause, or an interest.
+There was just the one thing, and that was
+the assembly of God, where He dwelt, acted, and
+ruled. It was not a system formed according to
+the will, the judgment, or even the conscience of
+man. Man had not, as yet, entered upon the business
+of church-making. This was God's work. It
+was just as exclusively God's province and prerogative
+to baptize the saved into one body by one
+Spirit, as to save the scattered.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+<p>Why, we may justly inquire, should it be different
+now? Why should the regenerated seek to belong
+to something else than that to which they already
+belong&mdash;the assembly of God? Is not that sufficient?
+Assuredly. Should they seek aught else?
+Assuredly not. We repeat, with emphasis, "<i>Either
+that or nothing</i>."</p>
+
+<p>True it is, alas! that failure, and ruin, and apostasy
+have come in. Man's wisdom, and his will;
+or, if you please, his reason, his judgment, and his
+misguided conscience have wrought, in matters ecclesiastical,
+and the result appears before us in the
+almost numberless and nameless sects and parties
+of the present moment. Still, we are bold to say,
+that the ground of assembling as at the beginning,
+simply as being members of the assembly of
+God, remains the same, spite of all the failure, the
+error, and the confusion, which have come in. The
+difficulty in reaching it practically may be great,
+but its reality, when reached, is unaltered, and unalterable.
+In apostolic times the assembly stood
+out, in bold relief, from the dark background of
+Judaism on the one hand, and Paganism on the
+other. It was impossible to mistake it; there it
+stood, a grand reality! a company of living men,
+gathered, indwelt, ruled and regulated by God the
+Holy Ghost, so that the unlearned or unbelieving
+coming in, were convinced of all, and constrained
+to acknowledge that God was there. (See carefully,
+I Cor. xii., xiv. throughout.)</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in this Gospel, our blessed Lord intimates
+His purpose of building an assembly. This assembly
+is historically presented to us in the Acts of the
+Apostles. Then, when we turn to the Epistles of
+Paul, we find him addressing the assembly in seven
+distinct places, namely, Rome, Corinth, Galatia,
+Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, and Thessalonica; and
+finally, in the opening of the book of Revelation,
+we have addresses to seven distinct assemblies.
+Now, in all these places, the assembly of God was a
+plain, palpable, real thing, established and maintained
+by God Himself. It was not a human organization,
+but a divine institution&mdash;a testimony&mdash;a
+light bearer for God, in each place.</p>
+
+<p>Thus much as to our Scripture proofs of the fact
+that God has an assembly on the earth, gathered,
+indwelt, and governed by the Holy Ghost who is
+the true and only Vicar of Christ upon earth. The
+Gospel prophetically intimates the assembly; the
+Acts historically presents the assembly; and the
+Epistles formally address the assembly. All this is
+plain. And if it be broken into fragments now, it
+is for us to be gathered on the ground of the <i>one</i>
+assembly of God, and to be a true expression of it.</p>
+
+<p>And let it be carefully noted that we will listen to
+nothing on this subject but the voice of Holy Scripture.
+Let not reason speak, for we own it not.
+Let not tradition lift her voice, for we wholly disregard
+her. Let not expediency thrust itself upon us,
+for we shall give it no place whatever. We believe
+in the all-sufficiency of Holy Scripture&mdash;that
+it is sufficient to furnish the man of God thoroughly&mdash;to
+equip him perfectly for all good works (2 Tim.
+iii. 16, 17). The word of God is either sufficient
+or it is not. We believe it to be amply sufficient
+for every exigency of God's assembly. It could not
+be otherwise if God be its author. We must either
+deny the divinity or admit the sufficiency of the
+Bible. There is not a single hair's breadth of
+middle ground. It is impossible that God could
+have written an imperfect, an insufficient book.</p>
+
+<p>This is a very grave principle in connection with
+our subject. Many of our protestant writers have,
+in assailing popery, maintained the sufficiency and
+authority of the Bible; but it does seem very plain
+to us that they are always at fault when their
+opponents turn sharp round upon them and demand
+proof from Scripture for many things sanctioned
+and adopted by protestant communities.</p>
+
+<p>There are many things adopted and practised in the
+National Establishment and other protestant communities,
+which have no sanction in the Word; and
+when the shrewd and intelligent defenders of popery
+have called attention to these things, and demanded
+authority for them, the weakness of mere protestantism
+has been strikingly apparent. If we admit,
+for a moment, that, in some things, we must have
+recourse to tradition and expediency, then who
+will undertake to fix the boundary line? If it be
+allowable to depart from Scripture at all, how far
+are we to go? If the authority of tradition be
+admitted at all, who is to fix its domain? If we
+leave the narrow and well-defined pathway of divine
+revelation, and enter upon the wide and bewildering
+field of human tradition, has not one man as
+much right as another to make a choice? The
+gates of hell shall assuredly prevail against every
+human system&mdash;against all those corporations and
+associations which men have set on foot. And in
+no case has that triumph been, even already, made
+more awfully manifest than in that of the church
+of Rome itself, although it has arrogantly laid claim
+to this very declaration of our Lord as the bulwark
+of its strength. Nothing can withstand the power
+of the gates of hell but the assembly of the living
+God, for that is built upon "the living Stone."
+Now the local expression of that assembly may be
+but "two or three gathered in the name of Jesus,"
+a poor, feeble, despised handful.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to be clear and decided as to this.</p>
+
+<p>Christ's promise can never fail. He has, blessed be
+His name, come down to the lowest possible point
+by which the assembly can be represented, even
+"<i>two</i>." How gracious! How tender! How
+considerate! How like Himself! He attaches all
+the dignity&mdash;all the value&mdash;all the efficacy of His
+own divine and deathless name to an obscure handful
+gathered round Himself. It must be very evident
+to the spiritual mind that the Lord Jesus, in
+speaking of the "two or three" thought not of those
+vast systems which have sprung up in ancient, medićval,
+and modern times, throughout the eastern
+and western world, numbering their adherents and
+votaries, not by "twos or threes," but by kingdoms,
+provinces, and parishes. It is very plain that a
+baptized kingdom, and "two or three" living souls
+gathered in the name of Jesus, do not and cannot
+mean the same thing. Baptized Christendom is
+one thing, and the assembly of God is another.
+What this latter is, we have yet to unfold; we are
+here asserting that they are not, and cannot be, the
+same thing. They are constantly confounded,
+though no two things can be more distinct.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p>If we would know under what figure Christ presents
+the baptized world, we have only to look at
+the "leaven" and the "mustard tree" of Matt. xiii.</p>
+<p>The former gives us the internal, and the latter the
+external character of "the kingdom of heaven"&mdash;of
+that which was originally set up in truth and simplicity&mdash;a
+real thing, though small, but which,
+through Satan's crafty working, has become inwardly
+a corrupt mass, though outwardly a far-spreading,
+showy, popular thing in the earth,
+gathering all sorts beneath the shadow of its patronage.
+Such is the lesson&mdash;the simple but deeply
+solemn lesson to be learnt by the spiritual mind
+from the "leaven" and the "mustard-tree" of Matt.
+xiii. And we may add, one result of learning this
+lesson would be an ability to distinguish between
+"the kingdom of heaven" and "the assembly of
+God." The former may be compared to a wide
+morass, the latter to a running stream passing
+through it, and in constant danger of losing its
+distinctive character, as well as its proper direction,
+by intermingling with the surrounding waters. To
+confound the two things is to deal a deathblow to
+all godly discipline and consequent purity in the
+assembly of God. If the kingdom and the assembly
+mean one and the same thing, then how should
+we act in the case of "that wicked person" in
+I Cor. v.? The apostle tells us "to put him away."
+Where are we to put him? Our Lord Himself tells
+us distinctly that "the field is <i>the world</i>;" and
+again, in John xvii., He says that His people are
+not of the world. This makes all plain enough.
+But men tell us, in the very face of our Lord's
+statement, that the field is the assembly, and the
+tares and wheat, ungodly and godly, are to grow together,
+that they are on no account to be separated.
+Thus the plain and positive teaching of the Holy
+Ghost in I Cor. v. is set in open opposition to the
+equally plain and positive teaching of our Lord in
+Matt. xiii.; and all this flows from the effort to confound
+two distinct things, namely, "the kingdom of
+heaven" and "the assembly of God."</p>
+
+<p>It would not by any means comport with the object
+of this paper to enter further upon the interesting
+subject of "the kingdom." Enough has been
+said, if the reader has thereby been convinced of
+the immense importance of duly distinguishing that
+kingdom from the assembly. What this latter is we
+shall now proceed to inquire; and may God the
+Holy Ghost be our teacher!</p>
+
+<p>II. In handling our question as to the assembly
+of God, it will give clearness and precision to our
+thoughts to consider the four following points,
+namely:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>First, what is the <i>material</i> of which the assembly
+is composed?</p>
+
+<p>Secondly, what is the <i>centre</i> round which the assembly
+is gathered?</p>
+
+<p>Thirdly, what is the <i>power</i> by which the assembly
+is gathered?</p>
+
+<p>Fourthly, what is the <i>authority</i> on which the
+assembly is gathered?</p>
+
+<p>I. And, first, then, as to the material of which
+God's assembly is composed; it is, in one word,
+those possessing salvation, or eternal life. We do
+not enter the assembly in order to be saved, but as
+those who are saved. The word is, "<i>On</i> this rock
+I will build My Church." He does not say, "On
+My Church I will build the salvation of souls."
+One of Rome's boasted dogmas is this&mdash;"There is
+no salvation out of the true Church." Yes, but we
+can go deeper still, and say, "Off the true Rock
+there is no Church." Take away the Rock, and
+you have nothing but a baseless fabric of error and
+corruption. What a miserable delusion, to think of
+being saved by that! Thank God, it is not so. We
+do not get to Christ through the Church, but to the
+Church through Christ. To reverse this order is to
+displace Christ altogether, and thus have neither
+Rock, nor Church, nor salvation. We meet Christ
+as a life-giving Saviour, before we have anything to
+say to the assembly at all; and hence we could
+possess eternal life, and enjoy full salvation, though
+there were no such thing as the assembly of God
+on the earth.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+<p>We cannot be too simple in grasping this truth,
+at a time like the present, when ecclesiastical pretention
+is rising to such a height. The church,
+falsely so called, is opening her bosom with delusive
+tenderness, and inviting poor sin-burdened, world-sick,
+and heavy-laden souls to take refuge therein.
+She, with crafty liberality, throws open her treasury
+door, and places her resources at the disposal of
+needy, craving, yearning souls. And truly those
+resources have powerful attractions for those who
+are not on "The Rock." There is an ordained
+priesthood, professing to stand in an unbroken line
+with the apostles.&mdash;Alas! how different the two
+ends of the line!&mdash;There is a continual sacrifice.
+Alas! a bloodless one, and therefore a worthless one.
+(Heb. ix. 22.)&mdash;There is a splendid ritual. Alas!
+it seeks its origin amid the shadows of a by-gone
+age&mdash;shadows which have been for ever displaced
+by the Person, the work, and the offices of the
+eternal Son of God. For ever be His peerless
+name adored!</p>
+
+<p>The believer has a very conclusive answer to all
+the pretensions and promises of the Romish system.
+He can say he has found his <i>all</i> in a crucified
+and risen Saviour. What does he want with
+the sacrifice of the mass? He is washed in the
+blood of Christ. What does he want with a poor,
+sinful, dying priest, who cannot save himself?
+He has the Son of God as his priest. What does
+he want with a pompous ritual, with all its imposing
+adjuncts? He worships in spirit and in truth,
+within the holiest of all, whither he enters with
+boldness, through the blood of Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is it merely with Roman Catholicism we have
+to do in the establishment of our first point. We
+fear there are thousands besides Roman Catholics
+who, in heart, look to the church, if not for salvation,
+at least to be a stepping-stone thereto. Hence
+the importance of seeing clearly that the materials
+of which God's assembly is composed are those
+possessing salvation, in whom is eternal life; so
+that whatever be the object of that assembly, it
+most certainly is not to provide salvation for its
+members, seeing that all its members are saved ere
+they enter it at all. God's assembly is a houseful of
+saved ones from one end to the other. Blessed fact!
+It is not an institution set on foot for the purpose
+of providing salvation for sinners, nor yet for providing
+for their religious wants. It is a saved, living
+body, formed and gathered by the Holy Ghost,
+to make known to "Principalities and powers in the
+heavenlies, the manifold wisdom of God," and to
+declare to the whole universe the all-sufficiency of
+the name of Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the great enemy of Christ and the Church
+is well aware of what a powerful testimony the assembly
+of God is called and designed to yield on
+the earth; and therefore he has put forth all his
+hellish energy to quash that testimony in every
+possible way. He hates the name of Jesus, and
+everything tending to glorify that name. Hence
+his intense opposition to the assembly as a whole,
+and to each local expression thereof, wherever it
+may happen to exist. He has no objection to a
+mere religious establishment set on foot for the
+purpose of providing for man's religious wants,
+whether maintained by government or by voluntary
+effort. You may set up what you please. You
+may join what you please. You may be what you
+please; anything and everything for Satan but the
+assembly of God, and the practical expression of it
+in any given place. That he hates most cordially,
+and will seek to blacken and blast by every means
+in his power. But those consolatory accents of the
+Lord Christ fall with divine power on the ear of
+faith: "On this rock I will build My assembly, and
+the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."</p>
+
+<p>2. This conducts us naturally to our second point,
+namely, What is the centre round which God's
+assembly is gathered? The centre is Christ&mdash;the
+living Stone, as we read in the Epistle of Peter,
+"To whom coming as unto a living stone, disallowed
+indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious,
+ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual
+house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual
+sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ"
+(chap. ii. 4, 5).</p>
+
+<p>It is around the person of a living Christ then,
+that God's assembly is gathered. It is not round a
+doctrine, however true; nor round an ordinance,
+however important; but round a living, divine Person.
+This is a great cardinal and vital point which
+must be distinctly seized, tenaciously held, and
+faithfully and constantly avowed and carried out.
+"To whom coming." It is not said "<i>To which</i>
+coming." We do not come to a thing, but to a
+Person. "Let us go forth therefore unto <i>Him</i>"
+(Heb. xiii.). The Holy Ghost leads us <i>only</i> to
+Jesus. Nothing short of this will avail. We may
+speak of joining <i>a</i> church, becoming a member of
+a congregation, attaching ourselves to a party, a
+cause, or an interest. All these expressions tend
+to darken and confuse the mind, and hide from our
+view the divine idea of the assembly of God. It is
+not our business to join anything. When God converted
+us, He joined us by His Spirit to Christ
+and to all the members of Christ, and that should
+be enough for us. Christ is the only centre of
+God's assembly.</p>
+
+<p>And, we may ask, is not He sufficient? Is it not
+quite enough for us to be "joined to the Lord?"
+Why add aught thereto? "Where two or three are
+gathered together <i>in My name</i>, there am I in the
+midst of them" (Matt. xviii. 20). What more can
+we need? If Jesus is in our midst, why should
+we think of setting up a human president? Why
+not unanimously and heartily allow Him to take
+the president's seat, and bow to Him in all things?
+Why set up human authority, in any shape or
+form, in the house of God? But this is done, and
+it is well to speak plainly about it. Man is set up
+in that which professes to be an assembly of God.
+We see human authority exercised in that sphere
+in which divine authority alone should be acknowledged.
+It matters not, so far as the foundation
+principle is concerned, whether it be pope, parson,
+priest, or president. It is man set up in Christ's
+place. It may be the pope appointing a cardinal,
+a legate, or a bishop to his sphere of work; or it
+may be a president appointing a man to exhort or
+to pray for ten minutes. The principle is one and
+the same. It is human authority acting in that
+sphere where only God's authority should be
+owned. If Christ be in our midst, we can count
+on Him for everything.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in saying this, we anticipate a very probable
+objection. It may be said by the advocates
+of human authority, "How could an assembly ever
+get on without some human presidency? Would
+it not lead to all sorts of confusion? Would it not
+open the door for everyone to intrude himself upon
+the assembly, quite irrespective of gift or qualification?</p>
+
+<p>Our answer is a very simple one. Jesus is all-sufficient.
+We can trust Him to keep order in His
+house. We feel ourselves far safer in His gracious
+and powerful hand than in the hands of the most
+attractive human president. We have all spiritual
+gifts treasured up in Jesus. He is the fountain-head
+of all ministerial authority. "He hath the
+seven stars." Let us only confide in Him, and the
+order of our assembly will be as perfectly provided
+for as the salvation of our souls. This is just the
+reason of our connecting, in the title of this pamphlet,
+"The all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus"
+with the "Assembly of God." We believe that the
+name of Jesus is, in very truth, all-sufficient, not
+only for personal salvation, but for all the exigencies
+of the assembly&mdash;for worship, communion,
+ministry, discipline, government, everything. Having
+Him, we have all and abound.</p>
+
+<p>This is the real marrow and substance of our
+subject. Our one aim and object is to exalt the
+name of Jesus; and we believe He has been dishonored
+in that which calls itself His house. He
+has been dethroned, and man's authority has been
+set up. In vain does He bestow a ministerial gift;
+the possessor of that gift is not free to exercise it
+without the seal, the sanction, and the authority of
+man. And not only is this so, but if man thinks
+proper to give his seal, his sanction and authority,
+to one possessing not a particle of spiritual gift&mdash;yea,
+it may be, not a particle of spiritual life&mdash;he is
+nevertheless a recognized minister. In short,
+man's authority without Christ's gift makes a man
+a minister; whereas Christ's gift without man's
+authority does not. If this be not a dishonor
+done to the Lord Christ, what is?</p>
+
+<p>Christian reader, pause here, and deeply ponder
+this principle of human authority. We confess we
+are anxious you should get to the root of it, and
+judge it thoroughly, in the light of Holy Scripture,
+and the presence of God. It is, be assured of it,
+the grand point of distinction between the principles
+of the assembly of God and every human system
+of religion under the sun. If you look at all
+those systems, from Romanism down to the most
+refined form of religious association, you will find
+man's authority recognized and demanded. With
+that you may minister; without it you must not. On
+the contrary, in the assembly of God, Christ's gift
+<i>alone</i> makes man a minister, apart from all human
+authority. "Not of men, neither by man, but by
+Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised Him
+from the dead." (Gal. i. I). This is the grand principle
+of ministry in the assembly of God.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in classing Romanism with all the other religious
+systems of the day, let it, once for all, be distinctly
+understood that it is <i>only</i> in reference to the
+principle of ministerial authority. God forbid that
+we should think of comparing a system which shuts
+out the word of God, and teaches idolatry, the worship
+of saints and angels, and a whole mass of
+gross, abominable error and superstition, with those
+systems where the word of God is held up, and more
+or less of scriptural truth promulgated. Nothing
+can be further from our thoughts. We believe
+popery to be Satan's master-piece, in the way of a
+religious system, although many of the people of
+God have been, and may yet be, involved therein.</p>
+
+<p>Further, let us at this stage plainly aver that we
+believe the saints of God are to be found in every
+Protestant community, both as ministers and members;
+and that the Lord uses them in many ways&mdash;blesses
+their work, service, and personal testimony.</p>
+
+<p>And, finally, we feel it right to declare that we
+would not move a finger to touch any one of those
+systems. It is not with the systems we have to do;
+the Lord will deal with them. Our business is
+with the saints in those systems, to seek by every
+spiritual and scriptural agency to get them to own
+and act upon the divine principles of the assembly
+of God.</p>
+
+<p>Having said thus much, in order to prevent misunderstanding,
+we return with increased power to
+our point, namely, that the thread of human authority
+runs through every religious system in
+Christendom, and that, in good truth, there is not
+a hair's breadth of consistent standing ground between
+the church of Rome and a true expression of
+the assembly of God. We believe that an honest
+seeker after truth, setting out from amid the dark
+shadows of popery, cannot possibly halt until he
+finds himself in the clear and blessed light of that
+which is a true expression of God's assembly. He
+may take years to travel over the intervening space.
+His steps may be slow and measured; but if
+only he follows the light, in simplicity and godly
+sincerity, he will find no rest between those two
+extremes. The ground of the assembly of God is
+the true position for all the children of God. Alas!
+they are not all there; but this is only their loss
+and their Lord's dishonor. They should be there
+because not only is God there, but He is allowed to
+act and <i>rule</i> there.</p>
+
+<p>This latter is of all-importance, inasmuch as it
+may be truly said, Is not God everywhere? And
+does He not act in various places? True, He is
+everywhere, and He works in the midst of palpable
+error and evil. But He is not allowed to <i>rule</i> in
+the systems of men, seeing that man's authority is
+really supreme, as we have already shown. And
+in addition to this, if the fact of God's converting
+and blessing souls in a system be a reason why we
+should be there, then we ought to be in the church
+of Rome, for how many have been converted and
+blessed in that awful system? Even in the recent
+revival we have heard of persons being stricken in
+Roman Catholic chapels. What proves too much
+proves nothing at all, and hence no argument can
+be based on the fact of God's working in a place.
+He is sovereign, and may work where He pleases.
+We are to be subject to His authority, and work
+where we are commanded, My Master may go
+where He pleases, but I must go where I am told.</p>
+
+<p>But some may ask, "Is there no danger of
+incompetent men intruding their ministry upon an
+assembly of God? And in the event of this, where
+is the difference between that assembly and the
+systems of men?" We reply, assuredly there is
+very great danger. But then such a thing would
+be <i>despite</i>, not in virtue of, the principle. This
+makes all the difference. Yes, indeed, we have seen
+mistakes and failures which are most humiliating.</p>
+
+<p>Let no one imagine that, while we contend for
+the truth concerning the assembly of God, we are
+at all ignorant or forgetful of the dangers and
+trials to which any carrying out its principles are
+exposed. Far from it. No one could be for
+twenty-eight years on that ground without being
+painfully conscious of the difficulty of maintaining
+it. But then the very trials, dangers, and difficulties
+only prove to be so many proofs&mdash;painful if
+you please, but proofs of the truth of the position;
+and were there no remedy but an appeal to human
+authority&mdash;a setting up of man in Christ's place&mdash;a
+return to worldly systems, we should without hesitation
+pronounce the remedy to be far worse than
+the disease. For were we to adopt the remedy, we
+should have the very worst symptoms of the disease,
+not to be mourned over as disease, but
+gloried in as the fruits of so-called order.</p>
+
+<p>But blessed be God, there is a remedy. What is
+it? "<i>There am I</i> in the midst." This is enough.
+It is not, "There is a pope, a priest, a parson, or a
+president in their midst, at their head, in the chair,
+or in the pulpit." No thought of such a thing,
+from cover to cover of the New Testament. Even
+in the assembly of God at Corinth, where there was
+most grievous confusion and disorder, the inspired
+apostle never hints at such a thing as a human
+president, under any name whatsoever. "<i>God is
+the author</i> of peace in all the assemblies of the
+saints" (I Cor. xiv. 33). God was there to keep
+order. They were to look to Him, not to a man,
+under any name. To set up man to keep order in
+God's assembly is sheer unbelief, and an open insult
+to the Divine Presence.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we have been often asked to adduce Scripture
+in proof of the idea of divine presidency in an
+assembly. We at once reply, "There am I;" and
+"God is the Author." On these two pillars, even
+had we no more, we can triumphantly build the
+glorious truth of divine presidency&mdash;a truth which
+<i>must</i> deliver all, who receive and hold it from God,
+from every system of man, call it by what name you
+please. It is, in our judgment, impossible to recognize
+Christ as the centre and sovereign ruler in
+the assembly, and continue to sanction the setting
+up of man. When once we have tasted the sweetness
+of being under Christ, we can never again
+submit to the servile bondage of being under man.
+This is not insubordination or impatience of control.
+It is only the utter refusal to bow to a false
+authority&mdash;to sanction a sinful usurpation. The
+moment we see man usurping authority in that
+which calls itself the church, we simply ask, "Who
+are you?" and retire to a sphere where God alone
+is acknowledged.</p>
+
+<p>"But, then, there are errors, evils, and abuses
+even in this very sphere." Doubtless; but if there
+are, we have the word of God to correct them. And
+hence, if an assembly should be troubled by the
+intrusion of ignorant and foolish men&mdash;men who
+have never yet measured themselves in the presence
+of God&mdash;men who boldly overleap the wide domain
+over which common sense, good taste, and moral
+propriety preside, and then vainly talk of being led
+by the Holy Spirit&mdash;restless men, who <i>will</i> be at
+something, and who keep the assembly in a continual
+state of nervous apprehension, not knowing
+what is to come next&mdash;should any assembly be thus
+grievously afflicted, what should they do? Abandon
+the ground in impatience, chagrin, and disappointment?
+give all up as a myth, a fable, an idle
+chimera? go back to that from which they once
+came out? Alas! this is what some have done,
+thus proving that they never understood what they
+had been doing; or if they had understood it, that
+they had not faith to pursue it. May the Lord
+have mercy upon such, and open their eyes that
+they may see from whence they have fallen, and
+get a true view of the assembly of God, in contrast
+with the most attractive of the systems of men.</p>
+
+<p>But what is an assembly to do when abuses creep
+in? Correct them by the word of God. This is
+God's authoritative voice.</p>
+
+<p>We are fully aware of the difficulties and trials
+connected with any expression of the assembly of
+God. We believe its difficulties and trials are perfectly
+characteristic. There is nothing under the
+canopy of heaven that the devil hates as he hates
+that. He will leave no stone unturned to oppose
+it. We have seen this exemplified again and again.
+An evangelist may go to a place and preach the all-sufficiency
+of the name of Jesus for the salvation of
+the soul, and he will have thousands hanging on
+his lips. Let the same man return, and, while he
+preaches the same gospel, take another step and
+proclaim the all-sufficiency of that same Jesus for
+all the exigencies of an assembly of believers, and
+he will find himself opposed on all hands. Why is
+this? Because the devil hates the very feeblest expression
+of the assembly of God. You may see a
+town left for ages and generations to its dark and
+dull routine of religious formalism&mdash;a dead people
+gathering once a week to hear a dead man go
+through a dead service, and all the rest of the week
+living in sin and folly. There is not a breath of
+life, not a leaf stirring. The devil likes it well.
+But let some one come and unfurl the standard of
+the name of Jesus&mdash;Jesus for the soul and Jesus for
+the assembly&mdash;and you will soon see a mighty
+change. The rage of hell is excited, and the dark
+and dreadful tide of opposition rises.</p>
+
+<p>This, we most fully believe, is the true secret of
+many of the bitter attacks that have been recently
+made on those who maintain the principles of the
+assembly of God. No doubt we have to mourn
+over many mistakes, errors, and failures. We have
+given much occasion to the adversary in various
+ways. We have been a poor blotted epistle, a faint
+and feeble witness, a flickering light. For all this
+we have to be deeply humbled before our God.
+Nothing could be more unbecoming in us than pretention
+or assumption, or the putting forth of high-sounding
+ecclesiastical claims. The dust is our
+place. Yes, beloved brethren, the place of confession
+and self-judgment becomes us, in the presence
+of our God.</p>
+
+<p>Still, we are not to let slip the glorious principles
+of the assembly of God because we have so shamefully
+failed in carrying them out: we are not to
+judge the truth by our exhibition of it, but to judge
+our exhibition by the truth. It is one thing to occupy
+divine ground, and another thing to carry
+ourselves properly thereon; and while it is perfectly
+right to judge our practice by our principles, yet
+truth is truth for all that, and we may rest assured
+that the devil hates the truth which characterizes
+the assembly. A mere handful of poor people,
+gathered in the name of Jesus, as members of His
+body, to break bread in remembrance of Him, is a
+thorn in the side of the devil. True it is that such
+an assembly evokes the wrath of men, inasmuch as
+it throws their office and authority overboard, and
+they cannot bear that. Yet we believe the root of
+the whole matter will be found in Satan's hatred of
+the special testimony which such an assembly bears
+to the all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus for every
+possible need of the saints of God.</p>
+
+<p>This is a truly noble testimony, and we earnestly
+long to see it more faithfully carried out. We may
+fully count upon intense opposition. It will be with
+us as it was with the returned captives in the days
+of Ezra and Nehemiah. We may expect to encounter
+many a Rehum and many a Sanballat.
+Nehemiah might have gone and built any other
+wall in the whole world but the wall of Jerusalem,
+and Sanballat would never have molested him.
+But to build the wall of Jerusalem was an unpardonable
+offence. And why? Just because Jerusalem
+was God's earthly centre, round which He will
+yet gather the restored tribes of Israel. This was
+the secret of the enemy's opposition. And mark
+the affected contempt. "If a fox go up, he shall
+even break down their stone wall." And yet Sanballat
+and his allies were not able to break it down.
+They might cause it to cease because of the Jews'
+lack of faith and energy; but they could not break
+it down when God would have it up. How like is
+this to the present moment! Surely there is nothing
+new under the sun. There is affected contempt,
+but real alarm. And, oh! if those who are
+gathered in the name of Jesus were only more true
+in heart to their blessed Centre, what testimony
+there would be! What power! What victory!
+How it would tell on all around. "Where two or
+three are gathered together in My name, there am
+I." There is nothing like this under the sun, be it
+ever so feeble and contemptible. The Lord be
+praised for raising up such a witness for Himself
+in these last days. May He greatly increase its
+effectiveness, by the power of the Holy Ghost!</p>
+
+<p>3. We must now very briefly glance at our third
+point, namely, what is the power by which the assembly
+is gathered. Here again man and his
+doings are set aside. It is not man's will choosing;
+nor man's reason discovering; nor man's judgment
+dictating; nor man's conscience demanding; it is
+the Holy Ghost gathering souls to Jesus. As Jesus
+is the only centre, so the Holy Ghost is the only
+gathering power. The one is as independent of
+man as the other. It is "where two or three are
+<i>gathered</i>." It does not say "where two or three are
+<i>met</i>." Persons may meet together round any centre,
+on any ground, by any influence, and merely
+form a society, an association, a community. But
+the Holy Ghost gathers saved souls only to Christ.</p>
+
+<p>An assembly may not embrace all the saints of
+God in a locality. In such a case they cannot be
+called the assembly of God in that place. But if
+they are assembled as members of the body of
+Christ, they occupy the ground of the assembly of
+God.</p>
+
+<p>This is a very simple truth. A soul led by the
+Holy Ghost will gather only to the name of the
+Lord; and if we gather to aught else, be it a point
+of truth, or some ordinance or another, we are not
+in that matter led by the Holy Ghost. It is not a
+question of life or salvation. Thousands are saved
+by Christ that do not own Him as their centre.
+They are gathered to some form of church government,
+some favorite doctrine, some special ordinance,
+some gifted man. The Holy Ghost will
+never gather to any one of these. He gathers only
+to a risen Christ. This is true of the whole Church
+of God upon earth; and each local assembly, wherever
+convened, is the expression of the whole.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the <i>power</i> in an assembly will very much
+depend upon the measure in which each member
+thereof is gathered in integrity of heart to the name
+of Jesus. If I am gathered to a party holding peculiar
+opinions&mdash;if I am attracted by the people, or
+by the teaching&mdash;if, in a word, it be not the power
+of the Holy Ghost, leading me to the true Centre of
+God's assembly, I shall only prove a hindrance, <a name="a" id="a"></a>a
+weight, a cause of weakness. I shall be to an assembly
+what a waster is to a candle; and instead of
+adding to the general light and usefulness, I shall
+do the very reverse.</p>
+
+<p>All this is deeply practical. It should lead to
+much exercise of heart and self-judgment as to what
+has drawn me to an assembly, and as to my ways
+therein. We are fully persuaded that the tone and
+testimony of an assembly have been greatly weakened
+by the presence of persons not understanding
+their position. Some present themselves there because
+they get teaching and blessing there which
+they cannot get anywhere else. Some come because
+they like the simplicity of the worship. Others
+come looking for love. None of these things are
+up to the mark. We should be in an assembly
+simply because the name of Jesus is the only
+standard set up there, and the Holy Spirit has
+"gathered" us thereto.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt ministry is most precious, and we shall
+have it, in more or less power, where all is ordered
+aright. So also as to simplicity of worship: we are
+sure to be simple, and real, and true, when the
+divine presence is realized, and the sovereignty of
+the Holy Ghost fully owned and submitted to. And
+as to love, if we go <i>looking for it</i> we shall surely be
+thoroughly disappointed: but if we are enabled to
+<i>cultivate</i> and <i>manifest it</i>, we shall be sure to get a
+great deal more than we expect or deserve. It will
+generally be found that those persons who are perpetually
+complaining of want of love in others are
+utterly failing in love themselves; and, on the other
+hand, those who are really walking in love will tell
+you that they receive a thousand times more than
+they deserve. Let us remember that the best way to
+get water out of a dry pump is to pour a little water
+in. You may work at the handle until you are tired,
+and then go away in fretfulness and impatience,
+complaining of that horrible pump; whereas, if
+you would just pour in a little water, you would get
+in return a gushing stream to satisfy your utmost
+desire.</p>
+
+<p>We have but little conception of what an assembly
+would be were each one distinctly led by the
+Holy Ghost, and gathered <i>only</i> to Jesus. We should
+not then have to complain of dull, heavy, unprofitable,
+trying meetings. We should have no fear of
+an unhallowed intrusion of mere nature and its
+restless doings&mdash;no <i>making</i> of prayer&mdash;no talking
+for talking's sake&mdash;no hymn-book seized to fill a
+gap. Each one would know his place in the Lord's
+immediate presence&mdash;each gifted vessel would be
+filled, fitted, and used by the Master's hand&mdash;each
+eye would be directed to Jesus&mdash;each heart occupied
+with Him. If a chapter were read, it would be the
+very voice of God. If a word were spoken, it
+would tell with power upon the heart. If prayer
+were offered, it would lead the soul into the very
+presence of God. If a hymn were sung, it would
+lift the spirit up to God, and be like sweeping the
+strings of the heavenly harp. We should have no
+ready-made sermons&mdash;no teaching or preaching
+prayers, as though we would explain doctrines to
+God, or tell Him a whole host of things about ourselves&mdash;no
+praying <i>at</i> our neighbors, or asking for
+all manner of graces for them, in which we ourselves
+are lamentably deficient&mdash;no singing for music's
+sake, or being disturbed if harmony be interfered
+with. All these evils should be avoided. We
+should feel ourselves in the very sanctuary of God,
+and enjoy a foretaste of that time when we shall
+worship in the courts above, and go no more out.</p>
+
+<p>We may be asked, "Where will you find all this
+down here?" Ah! this is the question. It is one
+thing to present a <i>beau ideal</i> on paper, and another
+thing to realize it in the midst of error, failure, and
+infirmity. Through mercy, some of us have tasted,
+at times, a little of this blessedness. We have occasionally
+enjoyed moments of heaven upon earth.
+Oh, for more of it! May the Lord, in His great
+mercy, raise the tone of the assemblies everywhere!
+May He greatly enlarge our capacity for more profound
+communion and spiritual worship! May He
+enable us so to walk, in private life, from day to
+day so as to judge ourselves and our ways in His
+holy presence, that at least we may not prove a
+lump of lead or a waster to any of God's assemblies.</p>
+
+<p>And then, even though we may not be able to
+reach in experience the true expression of the assembly,
+yet let us never be satisfied with anything
+less. Let us honestly aim at the loftiest standard,
+and earnestly pray to be lifted up thereto. As to
+the <i>ground</i> of God's assembly, we should hold it
+with jealous tenacity, and never consent for an hour
+to occupy any other. As to the tone and character
+of an assembly, they may and will vary immensely,
+and will depend upon the faith and spirituality of
+those gathered. Where the tone of things is felt to
+be low,&mdash;when meetings are felt to be unprofitable&mdash;where
+things are said and done repeatedly which
+are felt by the spiritual to be wholly out of place,
+let all who feel it wait on God&mdash;wait continually&mdash;wait
+believingly&mdash;and He will assuredly hear and
+answer. In this way the very trials and exercises
+which are peculiar to an assembly will have the
+happy effect of casting us more immediately upon
+Him, and thus the eater will yield meat, and the
+strong sweetness. We must count upon trials and
+difficulties in any expression of the assembly, just
+because it is <i>the</i> right and divine way for God's people
+on earth. The devil will put forth every effort to
+drive us from that true and holy ground. He will
+try the patience, try the temper, hurt the feelings,
+cause offence in nameless and numberless ways&mdash;anything
+and everything to make us forsake the
+true ground of the assembly.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to remember this. We can only hold
+the divine ground by faith. This marks the assembly
+of God, and distinguishes it from every human
+system. You cannot get on there save by faith.
+And, further, if you want to be somebody, if you
+are seeking a place, if you want to exalt <i>self</i>, you
+need not think of any true expression of the assembly.
+You will soon find your level there, if it be in
+any measure what it should be. Fleshly or worldly
+greatness, in any shape, will be of no account in
+such an assembly. The Divine Presence withers
+up everything of that kind, and levels all human
+pretension. Finally, you cannot get on in the assembly
+if you are living in secret sin. The Divine
+Presence will not suit you. Have we not often experienced
+in the assembly a feeling of uneasiness,
+caused by the recollection of many things which
+had escaped our notice during the week? Wrong
+thoughts&mdash;foolish words&mdash;unspiritual ways&mdash;all
+these things crowd in upon the mind, and exercise
+the conscience, in the assembly! How is this?
+Because the atmosphere of the assembly is more
+searching than that which we have been breathing
+during the week. We have not been in the presence
+of God in our private walk. We have not been
+judging ourselves; and hence, when we take our
+place in a spiritual assembly, our hearts are detected&mdash;our
+ways are exposed in the light; and that exercise
+which ought to have gone on in private&mdash;even
+the needed exercise of self-judgment, must go
+on at the table of the Lord. This is poor, miserable
+work for us, but it proves the power of the presence
+of God in the assembly. Things must be in a
+miserably low state in any assembly when hearts are
+not thus detected and exposed. It is a fine evidence
+of the power of the Holy Spirit in an assembly
+when careless, carnal, worldly, self-exalting, money-loving,
+unprincipled persons are compelled to judge
+themselves in God's presence, or, failing this, are
+driven away by the spirituality of the atmosphere.
+Such an assembly is no place for these. They can
+breathe more freely outside.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we cannot but judge that numbers that
+have departed from the ground of the assembly
+have done so because their practical ways did not
+comport with the purity of the place. No doubt it
+is easy, in all such cases, to find an excuse in the
+conduct of those who are left behind. But if the
+<i>roots</i> of things were in every case laid bare, we
+should find that many leave an assembly because
+of inability or reluctance to bear its searching light.
+"Thy testimonies are very sure; holiness becometh
+Thy house, O Lord, forever." Evil <i>must</i> be judged,
+for God cannot sanction it. If an assembly does not
+it is not practically God's assembly at all, though
+composed of Christians, as we say. To pretend to
+be an assembly of God, and not judge false doctrine
+and evil ways, would involve the blasphemy of saying
+that God and wickedness can dwell together.
+The assembly of God must keep itself pure, because
+it is His dwelling-place. Men may sanction evil,
+and call it liberality and large-heartedness so to do;
+but the house of God must keep itself pure. Let
+this great practical truth sink down into our hearts,
+and produce its sanctifying influence upon our
+course and character.</p>
+
+<p>4. A very few words will suffice to set forth, in
+the last place, "the <i>authority</i>" on which the assembly
+is gathered. It is the word of God alone. The
+charter of the assembly is the eternal Word of the
+living and true God. It is not the traditions, the
+doctrines, nor the commandments of men. A passage
+of Scripture, to which we have more than once
+referred in the progress of this paper, contains at
+once the standard round which the assembly is
+gathered, the power by which it is gathered, and
+the authority by which it is gathered&mdash;"the name
+of Jesus"&mdash;"the Holy Ghost"&mdash;"the word of
+God."</p>
+
+<p>Now these are the same all over the world.
+Whether I go to New Zealand, to Australia, to
+Canada, to London, to Paris, to Edinburg, or
+Dublin, the Centre, the gathering Power, and the
+authority are one and the same. We can own no
+other centre but Christ; no gathering energy but
+the Holy Ghost; no authority but the word of God;
+no characteristic but holiness of life and soundness
+in doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>Such is a true expression of the assembly of God,
+and we cannot acknowledge aught else. Saints of
+God we can acknowledge, love, and honor as such,
+wherever we find them; but human systems we
+look upon as dishonoring to Christ, and hostile to
+the true interest of the saints of God. We long to
+see all Christians on the true ground of the assembly.
+We believe it to be the place of real blessing
+and effective testimony. We believe there is a
+character of testimony yielded by carrying out the
+principles of the assembly which cannot be yielded
+otherwise, even were each member a Whitefield in
+evangelistic power. We say this not to lower evangelistic
+work. God forbid. We would that all were
+Whitefields. But then we cannot shut our eyes to
+the fact that many affect to despise the assembly,
+under the plea of going out as evangelists; and
+when we trace their path, and examine the results
+of their work, we find that they have no provision
+for the souls that have been converted by their
+means. They seem not to know what to do with
+them. They quarry the stones, but do not build
+them together. The consequence is that souls are
+scattered hither and thither, some persuing a desultory
+course, others living in isolation, all at fault
+as to true Church ground.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we believe that all these should be gathered
+on the ground of the assembly of God, to have
+"fellowship in the breaking of bread and in prayer."
+They should "come together on the first day of the
+week, to break bread," looking to the Lord Christ
+to edify them by the mouth of whom He will. This
+is the simple path&mdash;the normal, the divine idea,
+needing, it may be, more faith to realize it, because
+of the clashing and conflicting elements of the
+present day, but none the less simple and true on
+that account.</p>
+
+<p>We are aware, of course, that all this will be pronounced
+proselytizing, and party spirit, by those
+who seem to regard it as the very <i>beau ideal</i> of
+Christian liberality and large-heartedness to be able
+to say, "I belong to nothing." Strange, anomalous
+position! It just resolves itself in this: it is <i>somebody</i>
+professing <i>nothingism</i> in order to get rid of all
+responsibility, and go with all and everything. This
+is a very easy path for nature, and amiable nature,
+but we shall see what will come of it in the day of
+the Lord. Even now we regard it as positive unfaithfulness
+to Christ, from which may the good
+Lord deliver His people.</p>
+
+<p>But let none imagine that we want to place the
+evangelist and the assembly in opposition. Nothing
+is further from our thoughts. The evangelist
+should go forth from the bosom of the assembly, in
+full fellowship therewith; he should work not only
+to gather souls to Christ, but also bring them to an
+assembly, where divinely-gifted pastors might watch
+over them, and divinely-gifted teachers instruct
+them. We do not want to clip the evangelist's
+wings, but only to guide his movements. We are
+unwilling to see real spiritual energy expended in
+desultory service. No doubt it is a grand result to
+bring souls to Christ. Every soul linked to Jesus
+is a work done forever. But ought not the lambs
+and sheep to be gathered and cared for? Would anyone
+be satisfied to purchase sheep, and then leave
+them to wander whithersoever they list? Surely
+not. But whither should Christ's sheep be gathered?
+Is it into the folds of man's erection, or into an assembly
+gathered on divine ground? Into the latter
+unquestionably; for that, we may rest assured,
+however feeble, however despised, however blackened
+and maligned, is the place for all the lambs
+and sheep of the flock of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Here, however, there will be responsibility, care,
+anxiety, labor, a constant demand for watchfulness
+and prayer; all of which flesh and blood would like
+to avoid, if possible. There is much that is agreeable
+and attractive in the idea of going through the
+world as an evangelist, having thousands hanging
+on one's lips, and hundreds of souls as the seals of
+one's ministry: but what is to be done with these
+souls? By all means show them their true place
+with those gathered on the ground of the assembly
+of God, where, notwithstanding the ruin and apostasy
+of the professing body, they can enjoy spiritual
+communion, worship, and ministry. This will involve
+much trial and painful excise. It was so in
+apostolic times. Those who really cared for the
+flock of Christ had to shed many a tear, send up
+many an agonizing prayer, spend many a sleepless
+night. But, then, in all these things, they tasted
+the sweetness of fellowship with the chief Shepherd;
+and when He appears, their tears, their prayers,
+their sleepless nights will be remembered and rewarded;
+while those who are building up human
+systems will find them all come to an end, to be
+heard of no more forever; and the false shepherds,
+who ruthlessly seize the pastoral staff only to use
+it as an instrument of filthy gain to themselves,
+shall have their faces covered with everlasting
+confusion.</p>
+
+<p>But, we may be asked, "Is it not worse than useless
+to seek to carry out the principles of the assembly
+of God, seeing that the professing Church
+is in such complete ruin?" We reply by asking,
+"Are we to be disobedient because the Church is in
+ruin? Are we to continue in error because the
+dispensation has failed?" Surely not. We own
+the ruin, mourn over it, confess it, take our share
+in it, and in its sad consequences, seek to walk
+softly and humbly in the midst of it, confessing
+ourselves to be most unfaithful and unworthy. But
+though we have failed, Christ has not failed. He
+abideth faithful; He cannot deny Himself. He has
+promised to be with His people to the end of the
+age. Matt. xviii. 20 holds as good to-day as it did
+1800 years ago. "Let God be true and every man
+a liar." We utterly repudiate the idea of men setting
+about church-making, or pretending to ordain
+ministers. We look upon it as a pure assumption,
+without a single shadow of Scripture authority. It
+is God's work to gather His Church and raise up
+ministers. We have no business to form ourselves
+into a church, or to ordain office-bearers. No
+doubt the Lord is very gracious, tender, and pitiful.
+He bears with our weakness, and overrules our
+mistakes, and where the heart is true to Him, even
+though in ignorance, He will assuredly lead on into
+higher light.</p>
+
+<p>But we must not use God's grace as a plea for
+unscriptural acting, any more than we should use
+the Church's ruin as a plea for sanctioning error.
+We have to confess the ruin, count on the grace,
+and act in simple obedience to the word of the
+Lord. Such is the path of blessing at all times.
+The remnant, in the days of Ezra, did not pretend
+to the power and splendor of Solomon's days, but
+they obeyed the word of Solomon's Lord, and they
+were abundantly blessed in their deed. They did
+not say, "Things are in ruin, and therefore we had
+better remain in Babylon, and do nothing." No;
+they simply confessed their own and their people's
+sin, and counted on God. This is precisely what
+we are to do. We are to own the ruin, and count
+on God.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, if we be asked, "Where is the true expression
+of this assembly of God now?" We reply,
+"Where Christ is truly the Centre of gathering; the
+one body the ground; the Holy Spirit the Leader;
+the Holy Scriptures the sole authority; and holiness
+the practice."</p>
+
+<p>Reader, are you assembled on this divine ground?
+If so, cling to it with your whole soul. Are you in
+this path? If so, press on with all the energies of
+your moral being. Never be content with anything
+short of His dwelling in you, and your conscious
+nearness to Him. Let not Satan rob you of your
+proper portion by leading you to rest in a mere
+name. Let him not tempt you to mistake your
+ostensible <i>position</i> for your real <i>condition</i>. Cultivate
+secret communion&mdash;secret prayer&mdash;constant self-judgment.
+Be especially on your guard against
+every form of spiritual pride. Cultivate lowliness,
+meekness, and brokenness of spirit, tenderness of
+conscience, in your own private walk. Seek to
+combine the sweetest grace towards others with the
+boldness of a lion where truth is concerned. Then
+will you be a blessing in the assembly of God, and
+an effective witness of the all-sufficiency of the
+name of Jesus.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>The veil is rent:--our souls draw near<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Unto a throne of grace;<br /></span>
+<span>The merits of the Lord appear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They fill the holy place.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>His precious blood has spoken there,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Before and on the throne:<br /></span>
+<span>And His own wounds in heaven declare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Th' atoning work is done.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His work can never fail:<br /></span>
+<span>By Him, our Sacrifice and Priest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">We pass within the veil.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Within the holiest of all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Cleansed by His precious blood,<br /></span>
+<span>Before the throne we prostrate fall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And worship Thee, O God!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Boldly the heart and voice we raise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His blood, His name, our plea:<br /></span>
+<span>Assured our prayers and songs of praise<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Ascend, by Christ, to Thee.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_CHRISTIAN" id="THE_CHRISTIAN"></a>THE CHRISTIAN</h2>
+
+<h3>HIS POSITION AND HIS WORK.</h3>
+
+
+<h3>PART I.</h3>
+
+<p>What is the true position of a Christian? and
+what has he got to do? are questions of the
+very deepest practical importance. It is assumed,
+of course, that he has eternal life: without this, one
+cannot be a Christian at all. "He that believeth
+on the Son of God hath everlasting life." This is
+the common portion of all believers. It is not a
+matter of attainment, a matter of progress, a thing
+which some Christians have and others have not.
+It belongs to the very feeblest babe in the family of
+God, as well as to the most matured and experienced
+servant of Christ. All are possessed of eternal
+life, and can never by any possibility lose it.</p>
+
+<p>But our present theme is not life, but position
+and work; and in considering it, we shall ask the
+reader to turn for a moment to a passage in Heb.
+xiii. Perhaps we cannot do better than quote it for
+him. There is nothing like the plain and solid
+word of Holy Scripture.</p>
+
+<p>"Be not carried about with divers and strange
+doctrines; for it is a good thing that the heart be
+established with grace; not with meats, which have
+not profited them that have been occupied therein.
+We have an altar, whereof they have no right to
+eat which serve the tabernacle. For the bodies of
+those beasts, whose blood is brought into the sanctuary
+by the high priest for sin are burned without
+the camp. Wherefore Jesus also, that He might
+sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered
+without the gate. Let us go forth therefore unto
+Him without the camp, bearing His reproach. For
+here have we no continuing city, but we seek one
+to come" (vers. 9-14).</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have one grand aspect of the
+Christian's position. It is defined by the position
+of his Lord. This makes it divinely simple; and,
+we may add, divinely settled. The Christian is
+identified with Christ. Amazing fact! "As He is
+so <i>are</i> we in this world." It is not said, "As He is,
+so <i>shall</i> we be in the world to come." No; this
+would not come up to the divine idea. It is, "so
+are we <i>in this world</i>." The position of Christ defines
+the position of the Christian.</p>
+
+<p>But this glorious fact tells in a double way; it
+tells upon the Christian's place before God; and it
+tells on his place as regards this present world. It
+is upon the latter that Heb. xiii. instructs us so
+blessedly, and it is that which is now more especially
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>Jesus suffered without the gate. This fact is the
+basis on which the apostle grounds his exhortation
+to the Hebrew believers to go forth without the
+camp. The cross of Christ closed his connection
+with the camp of Judaism; and all who desire to
+follow Him must go outside to where He is. The
+final breach with Israel is presented, morally, in
+the death of Christ; doctrinally, in the Epistle to
+the Hebrews; historically, in the destruction of Jerusalem.
+In the judgment of faith, Jerusalem was
+as thoroughly rejected when the Messiah was nailed
+to the cross, as it was when the army of Titus left
+it a smouldering ruin. The instincts of the divine
+nature, and the inspired teachings of Scripture, go
+before the actual facts of history.</p>
+
+<p>"Jesus suffered without the gate." For what
+end? "That He might sanctify (or set apart to
+God) the people with His own blood." What follows?
+What is the necessary practical result?
+"Let us go forth therefore unto Him without the
+camp, bearing His reproach."</p>
+
+<p>But what is "the camp?" Primarily, Judaism;
+but, most unquestionably, it has a moral application
+to every organized system of religion under
+the sun. If that system of ordinances and ceremonies
+which God Himself had set up&mdash;if Judaism,
+with its imposing ritual, its splendid temple, its
+priesthood and its sacrifices, has been found fault
+with, condemned, and set aside, what shall be said
+of any or all of those organizations which have rebuilt
+it? If our Lord Christ is outside of that, how
+much more out of these!</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Christian reader, we may rest assured that
+the outside place, the place of rejection and reproach
+is that to which we are called, if we would
+know aught of true fellowship with our Lord Jesus
+Christ. Mark the words! "Let us go forth." Will
+any Christian say, "No; I cannot go forth. My
+place is inside the camp. I must work there?" If
+so, then, there must be moral distance between you
+and Jesus, for He is as surely outside the camp as
+He is on the throne of God. If your sphere of work
+lies inside the camp, when your Master tells you to
+go forth, what shall we say for your work? Can it
+be "gold, silver, precious stones?" Can it have
+your Lord's approving smile? It may exhibit His
+overruling hand, and illustrate His sovereign goodness;
+but can it possibly have His unqualified approval
+while carried on in a sphere from which He
+commands you to go forth?</p>
+
+<p>The all-important thing for every true servant is
+to be found exactly where his Master would have
+him. The question is not, "Am I doing a great
+deal of work? but am I pleasing my Master? I
+may seem to be doing wonders in the way of work;
+my name may be heralded to the ends of the earth
+as a most laborious, devoted, and successful workman;
+and, all the while, I may be in an utterly
+false position, indulging my own unbroken will,
+pleasing myself, and seeking some personal end or
+object."</p>
+
+<p>All this is very solemn indeed, and demands the
+consideration of all who really desire to be found
+in the current of God's thoughts. We live in a
+day of much wilfulness. The commandments of
+Christ do not govern all. We think for ourselves,
+in place of submitting ourselves absolutely to the
+authority of the Word. When our Lord tells us to
+go forth without the camp, we, instead of yielding
+a ready obedience, begin to reason as to the results
+which we can reach by remaining within. Scripture
+seems to have little or no power over our souls.
+We do not aim at simply pleasing Christ. Provided
+we can make great show of work, we think all is
+right. We are more occupied with results which,
+after all, may only tend to magnify ourselves, than
+with the earnest purpose to do what is agreeable to
+the mind of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But are we to be idle? Is there nothing for us
+to do in the outside place to which we are called?
+Is Christian life to be made up of a series of negations?
+Is there nothing positive? Let Heb. xiii.
+furnish the clear and forcible answer to all these
+inquiries. We shall find it quite as distinct in reference
+to our <i>work</i> as it is in reference to our
+<i>position</i>.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, have we got to do? Two things;
+and these two in their comprehensive range take in
+the whole of a Christian's life in its two grand aspects.
+They give us the inner and the outer life of
+the true believer. In the first place, we read, "By
+Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to
+God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips, giving
+thanks to His name.</p>
+
+<p>Is not this something? Have we not here a very
+elevated character of work? Yes, verily, the most
+elevated that can possibly engage the energies of
+our renewed being. It is our privilege to be occupied,
+morning, noon, eventide, and midnight, in
+presenting the sacrifice of praise to God&mdash;a sacrifice
+which, He assures us, is ever most acceptable
+to Him. "Whoso offereth praise," He says, "glorifieth
+Me."</p>
+
+<p>Let us carefully note this. Praise is to be the
+primary and continual occupation of the believer.
+We, in our fancied wisdom, would put work in the
+first place. We are disposed to attach chief importance
+to bustling activity. We have such an
+overweening sense of the value of <i>doing</i>, that we
+lose sight of the place which worship occupies in
+the thoughts of God.</p>
+
+<p>Again, there are some who vainly imagine that
+they can please God by punishing their bodies.
+They think that He delights in their vigils, fastings,
+floggings, and flagellations. Miserable, soul-destroying,
+God-dishonoring delusion! Will not those who
+harbor it and act upon it bend their ears and their
+hearts to those gracious words which we have just
+penned, "Whoso offereth praise glorifieth Me?"
+True, it is, that those words are immediately followed
+by that grand practical statement, "And to
+him that ordereth his conversation aright, will I
+show the salvation of God." But still, here, as
+everywhere, the highest place is assigned to praise,
+not to work. And, most assuredly, no man can be
+said to be ordering his conversation aright who
+abuses his body and renders it unfit to be the vessel
+or instrument by which he can serve God.</p>
+
+<p>No, reader, if we really desire to please God, to
+gratify His heart and to glorify His name, we shall
+give our heart's attention to Heb. xiii. 15, and seek
+to offer the sacrifice of praise <i>continually</i>. Yes,
+"continually." Not merely now and then, when
+all goes on smoothly and pleasantly. Come what
+may, it is our high and holy privilege to offer the
+sacrifice of praise to God. It does so glorify God
+when His people live in an atmosphere of praise.
+It imparts a heavenly tone to their character, and
+speaks more powerfully to the hearts of those
+around them than if they were preaching to them
+from morning till night. A Christian should "rejoice
+in the Lord alway," always reflecting back
+upon this dark world the blessed beams of his
+Father's countenance.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it should ever be. Nothing is so unworthy
+of a Christian as a fretful spirit, a gloomy temper,
+a sour, morose-looking face. And not only is it unworthy
+of a Christian, but it is dishonoring to God,
+and it causes the enemies of truth to speak reproachfully.
+No doubt, tempers and dispositions
+vary; and allowance must be made in cases of
+weak bodily health, and of circumstances of sorrow.
+It is not easy to look pleasant when the body is in
+suffering; and, further, we should be very far indeed
+from the commending anything like levity or
+the everlasting smile of mere unsubdued nature.</p>
+
+<p>But Scripture is clear and explicit. It tells us to
+"offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually,
+that is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to His
+name." How simple! "<i>The fruit of our lips.</i>" This
+is what our God delights in. It is His joy to be
+surrounded with the praises of hearts filled to overflowing
+with His abounding goodness. Thus it
+will be throughout eternity, in that bright home of
+love and glory to which we are so rapidly hastening.</p>
+
+<p>And let the reader specially note the words, "<i>By
+Him</i>." We are to offer our sacrifice of praise by
+the hand of our Great High Priest, who is ever in
+the presence of God for us. This is most consolatory
+and assuring to our hearts. Jesus presents
+our sacrifice of praise to God. It must therefore
+be ever acceptable, coming thus by the priestly
+hand of the Great Minister of the sanctuary. It
+goes up to God, not as it proceeds from us, but as
+it is presented by Him. Divested of all the imperfection
+and failure attaching to us, it ascends to
+God in all the fragrance and acceptancy belonging
+to Him. The feeblest note of praise, the simple
+"Thank God!" is perfumed with the incense of
+Christ's infinite preciousness. This is unspeakably
+precious: and it should greatly encourage us to
+cultivate a spirit of praise. We should be "continually"
+praising and blessing God. A murmuring or
+fretful word should never cross the lips of one who
+has Christ for his portion, and who stands identified
+with that blessed One in His position and His
+destiny.</p>
+
+<p>But we must draw this paper to a close by a
+rapid glance at the other side of the Christian's
+work. If it is our privilege to be continually praising
+and blessing God, it is also our privilege to be
+doing good to man. "But to do good and to communicate
+forget not; for with such sacrifices God
+is well pleased." We are passing through a world
+of misery, of sin and death and sorrow. We are
+surrounded by broken hearts and crushed spirits,
+if we would only look them out.</p>
+
+<p>Yes; this is the point; <i>if we would only look them
+out</i>. It is easy for us to close our eyes to such
+things, to turn away from them, to forget that there
+are such things always within reach of us. We
+can sit in our easy chair, and speculate about truth,
+doctrines, and the letter of Scripture; we can discuss
+the theories of Christianity, and split hairs
+about prophecy and dispensational truth, and, all
+the while, be shamefully failing in the discharge of
+our grand responsibility as Christians. We are in
+imminent danger of forgetting that Christianity is a
+living reality. It is not a set of dogmas, a number
+of principles strung together on a thread of systematized
+divinity, which unconverted people can have
+at their fingers' ends. Neither is it a set of ordinances
+to be gone through, in dreary formality, by
+lifeless, heartless professors. No; it is life&mdash;life
+eternal&mdash;life implanted by the Holy Ghost, and expressing
+itself in those two lovely forms on which
+we have been dwelling, namely, praise to God and
+doing good to man. Such was the life of Jesus
+when He trod this earth of ours. He lived in the
+atmosphere of praise; and He went about doing
+good.</p>
+
+<p>And He is our life, and He is our model on
+which the life is to be formed. The Christian
+should be the living expression of Christ, by the
+power of the Holy Ghost. It is not a mere question
+of leading what is called a religious life, which
+very often resolves itself into a tiresome round of
+duties which neither yield "praise" to God nor one
+atom of "good" to man. There must be <i>life</i>, or it
+is all perfectly worthless. "The kingdom of God is
+not meat or drink; but righteousness and peace and
+joy in the Holy Ghost. For he that in these things
+serveth Christ is acceptable to God, and approved
+of men" (Rom. xiv. 17, 18).</p>
+
+<p>Beloved Christian reader, let us earnestly apply
+our hearts to the consideration of these great practical
+truths. Let us seek to be Christians not
+merely in name but in reality. Let us not be distinguished
+as the mere vendors of peculiar "<i>views</i>."
+Oh! how worthless are views! How utterly profitless
+is discussion! How wearisome are theological
+hair-splittings! Let us have life, light, and
+love. These are heavenly, eternal, divine. All else
+is vanity. How we do long for reality in this
+world of sham&mdash;for deep thinkers and earnest
+workers in this day of shallow talkers!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;The reader will find it profitable to compare
+Heb. xiii. 13-16 with I Peter ii. 4-9. "Let
+us go forth therefore unto Him," says Paul. "To
+whom coming," says Peter. Then we have "The
+holy priesthood" offering up spiritual sacrifices of
+praise. And "the royal priesthood" doing good
+and communicating&mdash;"showing forth the virtues of
+Him who hath called us out of darkness into His
+marvelous light." The two scriptures give us a
+magnificent view of fundamental, devotional and
+practical Christianity.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+<p>We must ask the reader to open his Bible and
+read Heb. x. 7-24. In it he will find a very
+deep and marvelous view of the Christian's position
+and his work. The inspired writer gives us, as it
+were, three solid pillars on which the grand edifice
+of Christianity rests. These are, first, <i>the will of
+God</i>; secondly, <i>the work of Christ;</i> and, thirdly, <i>the
+witness of the Holy Ghost</i>, in Scripture. If these
+grand realities be laid hold of in simple faith, the
+soul <i>must</i> have settled peace. We may assert, with
+all possible confidence, that no power of earth or
+hell, men or devils, can ever disturb the peace
+which is founded upon Heb. x. 7-17.</p>
+
+<p>Let us then, in the first place, dwell, for a few
+moments, on the manner in which the apostle unfolds,
+in this magnificent passage,</p>
+
+<h3>THE WILL OF GOD.</h3>
+
+<p>In the opening of the chapter, we are instructed
+as to the utter inadequacy of the sacrifices under
+the law. They could never make the conscience
+perfect&mdash;they could never accomplish the will of
+God&mdash;never fulfil the gracious desire and purpose
+of His heart. "The law, having a shadow of good
+things to come, and not the very image of the
+things, can never with those sacrifices which they
+offered year by year continually make the comers
+thereunto perfect. For then would they not have
+ceased to be offered? because <i>the worshipers once
+purged</i> should have had <i>no more conscience of sins</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Let the reader carefully note this. "The worshipers
+once purged should have had no more conscience
+of sins." He does not say&mdash;"No more
+<i>consciousness of sins</i>." There is an immense difference
+between these two things; and yet, it is to be
+feared, they are often confounded. The Christian
+has, alas, the consciousness of <i>sin in him</i>, but he
+ought to have no conscience of <i>sins on him</i>, inasmuch
+as he is purged once and forever, by the
+precious blood of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Lord's people have a habit of speaking
+of their continual need of applying to the blood
+of Christ, which, to say the least of it, is by no
+means intelligent, or in accordance with the accurate
+teaching of Holy Scripture. It seems like
+humility; but, we may rest assured, true humility
+can only be found in connection with the full, clear,
+settled apprehension of the truth of God, and as to
+His gracious will concerning us. If it be His will
+that we should have "no more conscience of sins,"
+it cannot be true humility, on our part, to go on
+from day to day, and year to year, with the burden
+of sins upon us. And, further, if it be true that
+Christ has borne our sins and put them away forever&mdash;if
+He has offered one perfect sacrifice for
+sins, ought we not assuredly to know that we are
+perfectly pardoned and perfectly purged? Is it&mdash;can
+it be, true humility to reduce the blood of
+Christ to the level of the blood of bulls and of
+goats? But this is what is virtually done, though,
+no doubt, unwittingly, by all who speak of applying
+continually to the blood of Christ. One reason why
+God found fault with the sacrifices under the law
+was, as the apostle tells us, "In those sacrifices
+there is a remembrance again made of sins every
+year." This, blessed be His name, was not according
+to His mind. He desired that every trace
+of guilt and every remembrance of it should be
+blotted out, once and forever; and hence it cannot
+be His will that His people should be continually
+bowed down under the terrible burden of unforgiven
+sin. It is <i>contrary</i> to His will; it is subversive
+of their peace, and derogatory to the glory
+of Christ and the efficacy of His one sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>One grand point of the inspired argument, in
+Hebrews x., is to show that the continual remembrance
+of sins and the continual repetition of the
+sacrifice go together; and therefore, if Christians
+now are to have the burden of sins constantly on
+the heart and conscience, it follows that Christ
+should be offered again and again&mdash;which were
+a blasphemy. His work is done, and hence our
+burden is gone&mdash;gone forever. "It is not possible
+that the blood of bulls and goats should take away
+sin. Wherefore, when He cometh into the world,
+He saith, Sacrifice and offering Thou wouldest
+not, but a body hast Thou prepared Me. In burnt-offerings
+and sacrifices for sin Thou hast had no
+pleasure. Then said I, Lo, I come (in the volume
+of the book it is written of Me) to do Thy will, O</p>
+
+<p>God. Above, when He said, Sacrifice and offering
+and burnt-offerings and offerings for sin Thou
+wouldest not, neither hadst pleasure therein (which
+are offered by the law) then said He, Lo, I come
+to do Thy will, O God. He taketh away the first
+that He may establish the second. By the which
+will we are sanctified (or set apart) by the offering
+of the body of Jesus Christ <i>once</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Here we are conducted, in the most distinct and
+forcible manner, to the eternal source of the whole
+matter, namely, the will of God&mdash;the purpose and
+counsel formed in the divine mind, before the foundation
+of the world, before any creature was formed,
+before sin or Satan existed. It was the will of God,
+from all eternity, that the Son should, in due time,
+come forth and do a work which was to be the foundation
+of the divine glory and of all the counsels
+and purposes of the Trinity.</p>
+
+<p>It would be a very grave error indeed to suppose
+that redemption was an afterthought with God.
+He had not, blessed be His holy name, to sit down
+and plan what He would do, when sin entered. It
+was all settled beforehand. The enemy, no doubt,
+imagined that he was gaining a wonderful victory
+when he meddled with man in the garden of Eden.
+In point of fact, he was only giving occasion for the
+display of God's eternal counsels in connection with
+the work of the Son. There was no basis for those
+counsels, no sphere for their display in the fields of
+creation. It was the meddling of Satan&mdash;the entrance
+of sin&mdash;the ruin of man, that opened a platform
+on which a Saviour-God might display the
+riches of His grace, the glories of His salvation,
+the attributes of His nature, to all created intelligences.</p>
+
+<p>There is great depth and power in those words of
+the eternal Son, "In the volume of the book it is
+written of Me." To what "volume" does He here
+refer? Is it to Old Testament scripture merely?
+Surely not; the apostle quotes from the Old Testament,
+but it is nothing less than the roll of God's
+eternal counsels in which the "vast plan" was laid,
+according to which, in the appointed time, the eternal
+Son was to come forth and appear on the scene,
+in order to accomplish the divine will, vindicate the
+divine glory, confound the enemy utterly, put away
+sin, and save ruined man in a manner which yields
+a richer harvest of glory to God than ever He
+could have reaped in the fields of an unfallen creation.</p>
+
+<p>All this gives immense stability to the soul of the
+believer. Indeed it is utterly impossible for human
+language to set forth the preciousness and blessedness
+of this line of truth. It is such rich consolation
+to every pious soul to know that One has
+appeared in this world to do the will of God&mdash;whatever
+that will might be. "Lo, I come to do Thy will
+O God." Such was the one undivided purpose and
+object of that perfect human heart. He never did
+His own will in anything. He says, "I came down
+from heaven, not to do Mine own will, but the will
+of Him that sent Me." It mattered not to Him
+what that will might involve to Himself personally.
+The decree was written down in the eternal volume
+that He should come and do the divine will; and,
+all homage to His peerless name! He came and did
+it perfectly. He could say, "A body hast Thou
+prepared Me." "Mine ears hast Thou opened." "I
+clothe the heavens with blackness, and I make
+sackcloth their covering. The Lord God hath given
+Me the tongue of the learned, that I should know
+how to speak a word in season to him that is weary:
+He wakeneth morning by morning, He wakeneth
+Mine ear to hear as the learned. The Lord God
+hath opened Mine ear, and I was not rebellious,
+neither turned away back. I gave My back to the
+smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off
+the hair: I hid not My face from shame and spitting"
+(Isa. l. 3-6).</p>
+
+<p>But this leads us, in the second place, to contemplate</p>
+
+<h3>THE WORK OF CHRIST.</h3>
+
+<p>It was ever the delight of the heart of Jesus to do
+His Father's will and finish His work. From the
+manger at Bethlehem to the cross of Calvary, the
+one grand object that swayed His devoted heart
+was the accomplishment of the will of God. He
+perfectly glorified God, in all things. This, blessed
+be God, perfectly secures our full and everlasting
+salvation, as the apostle in this passage, so distinctly
+states. "By the which will we are sanctified,
+through the offering of the body of Jesus
+Christ once."</p>
+
+<p>Here our souls may rest, beloved reader, in
+sweetest peace and unclouded certainty. It was
+the will of God that we should be set apart to Himself,
+according to all the love of His heart, and all
+the claims of His throne; and our Lord Christ, in
+due time, in pursuance of the everlasting purpose as
+set forth "in the volume of the book," came forth
+from the glory which He had with the Father, before
+all worlds, to do the work which forms the imperishable
+basis of all the divine counsels and of
+our eternal salvation.</p>
+
+<p>And&mdash;forever be His name adored!&mdash;He has finished
+His work. He has perfectly glorified God in
+the midst of the scene in which He has been so
+dishonored. At all cost He has vindicated Him
+and made good His every claim. He magnified
+the law and made it honorable. He vanquished
+every foe, removed every obstacle, swept away
+every barrier, bore the judgment and wrath of a
+sin-hating God; destroyed death and him that had
+the power of it, extracted its sting, and spoiled the
+grave of its victory. In a word, He gloriously accomplished
+all that was written in the volume of
+the book concerning Him; and now we see Him
+crowned with glory and honor, at the right hand of
+the Majesty in the heavens. He travelled from the
+throne to the dust of death, in order to accomplish
+the will of God, and having done so, He has gone
+back to the throne, in a new character and on a
+new footing. His pathway from the throne to the
+cross was marked by the footprints of divine and
+everlasting love; and His pathway from the cross
+back to the throne is sprinkled by His atoning
+blood. He came from heaven to earth to do the
+will of God, and, having done it, He returned to
+heaven again, thus opening up for us "a new and
+living way" by which we draw nigh to God, in holy
+boldness and liberty, as purged worshipers.</p>
+
+<p>All is done. Every question is settled. Every
+barrier is removed. The vail is rent. That mysterious
+curtain which, for ages and generations, had
+shut God in from man, and shut man out from God,
+was rent in twain, from top to bottom, by the precious
+death of Christ; and now we can look right up
+into the opened heavens and see on the throne the
+Man who bore our sins in His own body on the
+tree. A seated Christ tells out, in the ear of faith,
+the sweet emancipating tale that all that had to be
+done is done&mdash;done forever&mdash;done for God&mdash;done
+for us. Yes; all is settled now, and God can, in
+perfect righteousness, indulge the love of His heart,
+in blotting out all our sins and bringing us nigh unto
+Himself in all the acceptance of the One who
+sits beside Him on the throne.</p>
+
+<p>And let the reader carefully note the striking and
+beautiful way in which the apostle contrasts <i>a
+seated Christ in heaven with the standing priest on
+earth</i>. "Every priest standeth daily ministering,
+and offering oftentimes the same sacrifices, which
+can never take away sins. But this Man, after He
+had offered one sacrifice for sins, forever ([Greek: eis to
+dięnekes]&mdash;in perpetuity) sat down on the right
+hand of God; from henceforth expecting till His
+enemies be made His footstool. For by one offering
+He hath perfected forever (in perpetuity) them
+that are sanctified."</p>
+
+<p>This is exceedingly blessed. The priest, under
+the Levitical economy, could never sit down, for the
+obvious reason that his work was never done.
+There was no seat provided in the temple or in the
+tabernacle. There is remarkable force and significance
+in the manner in which the inspired writer
+puts this. "<i>Every priest</i>"&mdash;"standeth <i>daily</i>"&mdash;"offering
+<i>oftentimes</i>"&mdash;"<i>the same sacrifices</i>"&mdash;"which
+can <i>never take away sins</i>." No human language
+could possibly set forth, more graphically, the utter
+inefficacy of the Levitical ceremonial. How strange
+that, in the face of such a passage of Holy Scripture,
+Christendom should have set up a human priesthood,
+with its daily sacrifice!&mdash;a priesthood moreover,
+not belonging to the tribe of Levi, not springing
+from the house of Aaron, and therefore having
+no sort of divine title or sanction. And, then as to
+the sacrifice, it is, according to their own admission,
+a sacrifice without blood, and therefore a sacrifice
+without remission, for, "Without the shedding of
+blood there is no remission" (Heb. ix. 22).</p>
+
+<p>Hence, this self-made priesthood is a daring
+usurpation, and her sacrifices a worthless vanity&mdash;a
+positive lie&mdash;a mischievous delusion. The priests
+of whom the apostle speaks in Heb. x. were priests
+of the tribe of Levi and of the house of Aaron&mdash;the
+only house, the only tribe ever recognised of
+God as having any title to assume the office and
+the work of an earthly priest. And, further, the
+sacrifices which the Aaronic priests offered were
+appointed by God, for the time being, to serve as
+<i>figures</i> of Him that was to come; but they never
+gave Him any pleasure, inasmuch as they could
+never take away sins; and the true Priest having
+come, the true sacrifice having been offered, the
+figures have been forever abolished.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in view of all this, what shall we say of
+Christendom's priests and Christendom's sacrifices?
+What will a righteous Judge say to them? We
+cannot attempt to dwell upon such an awful theme.
+We can merely say, alas! alas! for the poor souls
+that are deluded and ruined by such antichristian
+absurdities. May God in His mercy deliver them
+and lead them to rest in the one offering of Jesus
+Christ&mdash;that precious blood that cleanses from all
+sin. May many be led to see that a repeated sacrifice
+and a seated Christ are in positive antagonism.
+If the sacrifice must be repeated, Christ has no
+right to His seat and to His crown&mdash;God pardon
+the very penning of the words! If Christ has a
+divine right to His seat and to His crown, then to
+repeat a sacrifice is simply a blasphemy against
+His cross, His name, His glory. To repeat in any
+way, or under any form whatsoever, the sacrifice, is
+to deny the efficacy of Christ's one offering, and to
+rob the soul of anything like an approach to the
+knowledge of remission of sins. A repeated sacrifice
+and perfect remission are an absolute contradiction
+in terms.</p>
+
+<p>But we must turn, for a moment, to the third
+grand point in our subject, namely,</p>
+
+<h3>THE WITNESS OF THE HOLY GHOST.</h3>
+
+<p>This is of the deepest possible moment for the
+reader to understand. It gives great completeness
+to the subject. How are we to know that Christ
+has, by His work on the cross, absolutely and divinely
+accomplished the will of God? Simply by
+the witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture. This
+is the third pillar on which the Christian's position
+rests, and it is as thoroughly divine and, therefore,
+as thoroughly independent of man as the other two.
+It is very evident that man had nothing to do with
+the eternal counsels of the Trinity&mdash;nothing to do
+with the glorious work accomplished on the cross.
+All this is clear; and it is equally clear that man
+has nothing to do with the authority on which our
+souls receive the joyful news as to the <i>will of God</i>,
+and <i>the work of Christ</i>, inasmuch as it is nothing
+less than <i>the witness of the Holy Ghost</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot be too simple as to this. It is not, by
+any means, a question of our feelings, our frames,
+our evidences, or our experiences&mdash;things interesting
+in their right place. We must receive the truth
+solely and simply on the authority of that august
+Witness who speaks to us in Holy Scripture. Thus
+we read, "Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness
+to us; for after that He had said before, This
+is the covenant that I will make with them after
+those days, saith the Lord; I will put My laws into
+their hearts, and in their minds will I write them;
+and their sins and iniquities will I remember no
+more."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have fully before us the solid
+foundation of the Christian's position and the
+Christian's peace. It is all of God, from first to
+last. The <i>will</i>, the <i>work</i>, and the <i>witness</i> are all
+divine. The Lord be praised for this glorious fact!
+What should we do, what would become of us, were
+it otherwise? In this day of confusion, when souls
+are tossed about by every wind of doctrine&mdash;when
+the beloved sheep of Christ are driven hither and
+thither, in bewilderment and perplexity&mdash;when ritualism
+with its ignorant absurdities, and rationalism
+with its impudent blasphemies, and spiritualism
+with its horrible traffic with demons, are threatening
+the very foundations of our faith, how important it
+is for Christians to know what those foundations
+really are, and that they should be consciously
+resting thereon!</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART III.</h3>
+
+<p>We would recall for a moment to the reader's
+attention the third point in our subject,
+namely, "The witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture."
+We feel it to be of too much importance to
+be dismissed with such a cursory glance as we were
+able to give it at the close of our last paper.</p>
+
+<p>It is absolutely essential to the enjoyment of settled
+peace that the heart should rest <i>solely</i> on the
+authority of Holy Scripture. Nothing else will
+stand. Inward evidences, spiritual experiences,
+comfortable frames, happy feelings, are all very
+good, very valuable, and very desirable; indeed we
+cannot prize them too highly in their right place.
+But, most assuredly, their right place is not at the
+foundation of the Christian position. If we look to
+such things as the ground of our peace, we shall
+very soon become clouded, uncertain, and miserable.</p>
+
+<p>The reader cannot be too simple in his apprehension
+of this point. He must rest like a little
+child upon the testimony of the Holy Ghost in the
+Word. It is blessedly true that "He that believeth
+hath the witness in himself." And again, "The
+Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we
+are the children of God." All this is essential to
+Christianity; but it must, in no wise, be confounded
+with the witness of the Holy Ghost, as given to us
+in Holy Scripture. The Spirit of God never leads
+any one to build upon His work as the ground of
+peace, but only upon the finished work of Christ,
+and the unchangeable word of God; and we may
+rest assured that the more simply we rest on these
+the more settled our peace will be, and the clearer
+our evidences, the brighter our frames, the happier
+our feelings, the richer our experiences. In short,
+the more we look away from self and all its belongings,
+and rest in Christ, on the clear authority of
+Scripture, the more spiritually minded we shall be;
+and the inspired apostle tells us that "to be spiritually
+minded (or, the minding of the Spirit) is life
+and peace." The best evidence of a spiritual mind
+is childlike repose in Christ and His Word. The
+clearest proof of an unspiritual mind is self-occupation.
+It is a poor affair to be trafficking in <i>our</i>
+evidences, or <i>our</i> anything. It looks like piety, but
+it leads away from Christ&mdash;away from Scripture&mdash;away
+from God; and this is not piety, or faith, or
+Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>We are intensely anxious that the reader should
+seize, with great distinctness, the importance of
+committing his whole moral being to the divine authority
+of the word of God. It will never fail him.
+All else may go, but "the word of our God shall
+stand forever." Heart and flesh may fail. Internal
+evidences may become clouded; frames, feelings,
+and experiences may all prove unsatisfactory; but
+the word of the Lord, the testimony of the Holy
+Ghost, the clear voice of Holy Scripture, must ever
+remain unshaken. "And this is the Word which
+by the gospel is preached unto us."</p>
+
+<p>Thus much, then, as to the divine and everlasting
+basis of the Christian's position, as set forth in the
+tenth chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews. Let
+us, now, see what this same scripture tells us of the
+Christian's work, and of the sphere in which that
+work is to be carried on.</p>
+
+<p>The Christian is brought into the immediate
+presence of God, inside the veil, into the holiest of
+all. This is his proper place, if indeed we are to
+listen to the voice of Scripture. "Having therefore,
+brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by
+the blood of Jesus, by a <i>new</i> and <i>living</i> way which
+He hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that
+is to say, His flesh; and having a high-priest over
+the house of God; <i>let us draw near</i> with a true
+heart, in full assurance of faith, having our hearts
+sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies
+washed with pure water."</p>
+
+<p>Our God, blessed be His holy name, would have
+us near unto Himself. He has made out for us a
+title clear and indisputable in "<i>the blood of Jesus</i>."
+Nothing more is needed. That precious blood
+stands out before the eye of faith in all its infinite
+value. In it alone we read our title. It is not the
+blood <i>and</i> something else&mdash;be that something what
+it may. The blood constitutes our exclusive title.
+We come before God in all the perfect efficacy of
+that blood which rent the veil, glorified God as to
+the question of sin, canceled our guilt according to
+all the demands of infinite holiness, silenced, forever,
+every accuser, every foe. We enter by a new
+and living way&mdash;a way which can never become old
+or dead. We enter by the direct invitation, yea, by
+the distinct command of God. It is positive disobedience
+not to come. We enter to receive the
+loving welcome of our Father's heart, it is an insult
+to that love not to come. He tells us to "come
+boldly"&mdash;to "draw near" with full, unclouded confidence&mdash;a
+boldness and confidence commensurate
+with the love that invites us; the word that commands
+us, and the blood that fits and entitles us.
+It is offering dishonor to the eternal Trinity not
+to draw near.</p>
+
+<p>Reader, is all this, think you, understood and
+taught in Christendom? Say, do Christendom's
+creeds, confessions, and liturgical services harmonize
+with apostolic teaching in Heb. x.? Alas!
+alas! they do not. Nay, they are in direct antagonism;
+and the state of souls, accordingly, is the
+very reverse of what it ought to be. In place of
+"draw near" it is keep off. In place of liberty
+and boldness, it is legality and bondage. In place
+of a heart sprinkled from an evil conscience,
+it is a heart bowed down beneath the intolerable
+burden of unforgiven sin. In place of a great High
+Priest seated on the throne of God, in virtue of accomplished
+redemption, we have poor mortal&mdash;not
+to say sinful&mdash;priests standing from week to week,
+all the year round in wearisome routine, actually
+contradicting, in their barren formularies, the very
+foundation truths of Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>How truly deplorable is all this! And then the
+sad condition of the Lord's dear people, the lambs
+and sheep of that precious flock for which He died!
+It is this that so deeply affects us. It is of little
+use attacking Christendom. We quite admit this;
+but we yearn over the souls of God's people. We
+long to see them fully delivered from false teaching,
+from Judaism, legalism, and every other <i>ism</i> that
+robs them of a full salvation and a precious Saviour.
+We long to reach them with the clear and
+soul-satisfying teachings of Holy Scripture, so that
+they may know and enjoy the things that are freely
+given to them of God. We can truly say there is
+nothing which gives us such painful concern as the
+state of the Lord's dear people, scattered upon the
+dark mountains and desolate moors: and one special
+object for which we desire to live is to be the
+instrument of leading them into those green pastures
+and beside those still waters where the true
+Shepherd and Bishop of their souls longs to feed
+them, according to all the deep and tender love of
+His heart. He would have them near Himself, reposing
+in the light of His blessed countenance. It
+is not according to His mind or His loving heart
+that His people should be kept at a dim cold distance
+from His presence, in doubt and darkness.
+Ah, no; reader, His word tells us to draw near&mdash;to
+come boldly&mdash;to appropriate freely&mdash;to make our
+very own all the precious privileges to which a
+Father's love invites us, and a Saviour's blood entitles
+us.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Let us draw near.</i>" This is the voice of God
+to us. Christ has opened up the way. The veil is
+rent, our place is in the holiest of all, the conscience
+sprinkled, the body washed, the soul entering
+intelligently into the atoning value of the
+blood, and the cleansing, sanctifying power of the
+Word&mdash;its action upon our habits, our ways, our
+associations, our entire course and character.</p>
+
+<p>All this is of the very utmost practical value to every
+true lover of holiness&mdash;and every true Christian
+is a lover of holiness. "The body washed with pure
+water" is a perfectly delightful thought. It sets
+forth the purifying action of the word of God on the
+Christian's entire course and character. We must
+not be content with having the heart sprinkled by
+the blood; we must also have the body washed with
+pure water.</p>
+
+<p>And what then? "<i>Let us hold fast</i> the profession
+of our hope ([Greek: elpidos]) without wavering (for
+He is faithful that promised)." Blessed parenthesis!
+We may well hold fast, seeing He is faithful.
+Our hope can never make ashamed. It rests, in
+holy calmness, upon the infallible faithfulness of
+Him who cannot lie, whose word is settled for ever
+in heaven, far above all the changes and chances
+of this mortal life, above the din of controversy,
+the strife of tongues, the impudent assaults of infidelity,
+the ignorant ravings of superstition&mdash;far
+away above all these things, eternally settled in
+heaven is that Word which forms the ground of
+our "hope."</p>
+
+<p>It well becomes us, therefore, to hold fast. We
+should not have a single wavering thought&mdash;a single
+question&mdash;a single misgiving. For a Christian
+to doubt is to cast dishonor upon the word of a
+faithful God. Let sceptics, and rationalists, and
+infidels doubt, for they have nothing to believe,
+nothing to rest upon, no certainty. But for a child
+of God to doubt, is to call in question the faithfulness
+of the divine Promiser. We owe it to His
+glory, to say nothing of our own peace, to "hold
+fast the confession of our hope without wavering."
+Thus may it be with every beloved member of the
+household of faith, until that longed-for moment
+"when faith and hope shall cease, and love abide
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>But there is one more interesting branch of Christian
+work at which we must glance ere closing this
+paper. "<i>Let us consider one another</i>, to provoke
+unto love and to good works."</p>
+
+<p>This is in lovely moral keeping with all that has
+gone before. The grace of God has so richly met
+all our personal need&mdash;setting before us such an
+array of precious privileges&mdash;an opened heaven&mdash;a
+rent veil&mdash;a crowned and seated Saviour&mdash;a great
+High Priest&mdash;a perfectly purged conscience&mdash;boldness
+to enter&mdash;a hearty welcome&mdash;a faithful
+Promiser&mdash;a sure and certain hope: having all
+these marvelous blessings in full possession, what
+have we got to do? To consider ourselves? Nay
+verily; this were superfluous and sinfully selfish.
+We could not possibly do so well for ourselves as
+God has done for us. He has left nothing unsaid,
+nothing undone, nothing to be desired. Our cup
+is full and running over. What remains? Simply
+to "consider one another;" to go out in the activities
+of holy love, and serve our brethren in every
+possible way; to be on the lookout for opportunities
+of doing good; to be ready for every good
+work; to seek in a thousand little ways to make
+hearts glad; to seek to shed a ray of light on the
+moral gloom around us; to be a stream of refreshing
+in this sterile and thirsty wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>These are some of the things that make up a
+Christian's work. May we attend to them! May
+we be found provoking one another, not to envy
+and jealousy, but to love and good works; exhorting
+one another daily; diligently availing ourselves
+of the public assembly, and so much the more, as
+we see the day approaching.</p>
+
+<p>May the Holy Spirit engrave upon the heart of
+both writer and reader these most precious exhortations
+so thoroughly characteristic of our glorious
+Christianity&mdash;"<i>Let us draw near</i>"&mdash;"<i>Let us hold
+fast</i>"&mdash;"<i>Let us consider one another!</i>"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>The veil is rent:--our souls draw near<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Unto a throne of grace;<br /></span>
+<span>The merits of the Lord appear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They fill the holy place.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>His precious blood has spoken there.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Before and on the throne:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>And His own wounds in heaven declare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The atoning work is done.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His work can never fail:<br /></span>
+<span>By Him, our Sacrifice and Priest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">We pass within the veil.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Within the holiest of all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Cleansed by His precious blood,<br /></span>
+<span>Before the throne we prostrate fall<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And worship Thee, O God!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_CHRISTIAN_PRIESTHOOD" id="THE_CHRISTIAN_PRIESTHOOD"></a>THE CHRISTIAN PRIESTHOOD</h2>
+
+
+<p>We want the reader to open his Bible and read
+I Pet. ii. I-9. In this lovely scripture he
+will find three words on which we will ask him to
+dwell with us for a little. They are words of
+weight and power&mdash;words which indicate three
+great branches of practical Christian truth&mdash;words
+conveying to our hearts a fact which we cannot too
+deeply ponder, namely, that Christianity is a living
+and divine reality. It is not a set of doctrines,
+however true; a system of ordinances, however imposing;
+a number of rules and regulations, however
+important. Christianity is far more than any or all
+of these things. It is a living, breathing, speaking,
+active, powerful reality&mdash;something to be seen in
+the every day life&mdash;something to be felt in the
+scenes of personal, domestic history, from hour to
+hour&mdash;something formative and influential&mdash;a divine
+and heavenly power introduced into the scenes
+and circumstances through which we have to move,
+as men, women, and children, from Sunday morning
+to Saturday night. It does not consist in holding
+certain views, opinions, and principles, or in
+going to this place of worship or that.</p>
+
+<p>Christianity is the life of Christ communicated to
+the believer&mdash;dwelling <i>in</i> him&mdash;and flowing out2
+<i>from</i> him, in the ten thousand little details which
+go to make up our daily practical life. It has nothing
+ascetic, or sanctimonious about it. It is genial,
+pure, elevated, holy, divine. Such is Christianity.
+It is Christ dwelling in the believer, and reproduced,
+by the power of the Holy Ghost, in the believer's
+daily practical career.</p>
+
+<p>But let us turn to our three words; and may the
+Eternal Spirit expound their deep and holy meaning
+to our souls!</p>
+
+<p>And first, then, we have the word "living." "To
+whom coming, as unto a living Stone, disallowed indeed
+of men, but chosen of God, and precious, ye
+also, as living stones, are built up."</p>
+
+<p>Here we have what we may call the foundation
+of Christian priesthood. There is evidently an
+allusion here to that profoundly interesting scene in
+Matt. xvi. to which we must ask the reader to turn
+for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"When Jesus was come into the coasts of Cćsarea
+Philippi, He asked His disciples, saying, Whom
+do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> And
+they said, Some say Thou art John the Baptist;
+some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or one of the
+prophets."</p>
+
+<p>There was endless speculation, simply because
+there was no real heart-work respecting the blessed
+One. Some said this, some said that; and, in result,
+no one cared who or what He was; and hence
+He turns away from all this heartless speculation,
+and puts the pointed question to His own, "But
+whom say ye that I am?" He desired to know
+what they thought about Him&mdash;what estimate their
+hearts had formed of Him. "And Simon Peter
+answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of
+the <i>living</i> God."</p>
+
+<p>Here we have the true confession. Here lies the
+solid foundation of the whole edifice of the Church
+of God and all true practical Christianity&mdash;"Christ
+the Son of the <i>living</i> God." No more dim shadows&mdash;no
+more powerless forms&mdash;no more lifeless ordinances&mdash;all
+must be permeated by this new, this divine,
+this heavenly life which has come into this
+world, and is communicated to all who believe in
+the name of the Son of God.</p>
+
+<p>"And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed
+art thou, Simon Bar-jona; for flesh and blood hath
+not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is
+in heaven. And I say also unto thee, That thou
+art Peter; and upon this rock I <i>will build</i> My
+Church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
+against it."</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is evidently to this magnificent passage
+that the apostle Peter refers in the second chapter
+of his first epistle, when he says, "To whom coming,
+as unto a <i>living</i> stone, disallowed indeed of
+men, but chosen of God, and precious, ye also, as
+<i>living</i> stones (the same words), are built up," etc.
+All who believe in Jesus are partakers of His risen,
+victorious, <i>rock</i> life. The life of Christ, the Son of
+the living God, flows through all His members, and
+through each in particular. Thus we have the <i>living</i>
+God, the <i>living</i> Stone, the <i>living</i> stones. It is
+all life together&mdash;life flowing down from a living
+source, through a living channel, and imparting itself
+to all believers, thus making them living stones.</p>
+
+<p>Now, this life having been tried and tested, in
+every possible way, and having come forth victorious,
+can never again be called to pass through any
+process of trial, testing, or judgment whatsoever.
+It has passed through death and judgment. It has
+gone down under all the waves and billows of divine
+wrath, and come forth at the other side in
+resurrection, in divine glory and power&mdash;a life victorious,
+heavenly, and divine, beyond the reach of
+all the powers of darkness. There is no power of
+earth or hell, men or devils, that can possibly touch
+the life which is possessed by the very smallest and
+most insignificant stone in Christ's assembly. All
+believers are built upon the living Stone, Christ;
+and are thus constituted living stones. He makes
+them like Himself in every respect, save of course,
+in His incommunicable deity. Is He a living
+Stone? They are living stones. Is He a precious
+Stone? They are precious stones. Is He a rejected
+Stone? They are rejected stones&mdash;rejected, disallowed
+of men. They are, in every respect, identified
+with Him. Ineffable privilege!</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we repeat, is the solid foundation of
+the Christian priesthood&mdash;the priesthood of all believers.
+Before any one can offer up a spiritual
+sacrifice, he must come to Christ, in simple faith,
+and be built on Him as the foundation of the
+whole spiritual building. "Wherefore also it is
+contained in the Scripture (Isa. xxviii. 16), Behold,
+I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone, elect, precious;
+and he that believeth in Him shall not be confounded."</p>
+
+<p>How precious are these words! God Himself
+has laid the foundation, and that foundation is
+Christ; and all who simply believe in Christ&mdash;all
+who give Him the confidence of their hearts&mdash;all
+who rest satisfied with Him, are made partakers of
+His resurrection-life, and thus made living stones.</p>
+
+<p>How blessedly simple is this! We are not asked
+to assist in laying the foundation. We are not
+called upon to add the weight of a feather to it.
+God has laid the foundation, and all we have to
+do is to believe and rest thereon; and He pledges
+His faithful word that we shall never be confounded.
+The very feeblest believer in Jesus has God's own
+gracious assurance that he shall never be confounded
+&mdash;never be ashamed&mdash;never come into
+judgment. He is as free from all charge of guilt
+and every breath of condemnation as that living
+Rock on whom he is built.</p>
+
+<p>Beloved reader, are you on this foundation?
+Are you built on Christ? Have you come to Him
+as God's living Stone, and given Him the full confidence
+of your heart? Are you thoroughly satisfied
+with God's foundation? or are you seeking to
+add something of your own&mdash;your own works, your
+prayers, your ordinances, your vows and resolutions,
+your religious duties? If so, if you are seeking to
+add the smallest jot to God's foundation, you
+may rest assured, you will be confounded. God
+will not suffer such dishonor to be offered to His
+tried, elect, precious, chief corner Stone. Think
+you that He could allow aught, no matter what, to
+be placed beside His beloved Son, in order to
+form, with Him, the foundation of His spiritual
+edifice? The bare thought were an impious blasphemy.
+No; it must be Christ alone. He is
+enough for God, and He may well be enough for
+us; and nothing is more certain than that all who
+reject, or neglect, turn away from, or add to, God's
+foundation, shall be covered with everlasting confusion.</p>
+
+<p>But, having glanced at the foundation, let us
+look at the superstructure. This will lead us to the
+second of our three weighty words. "To whom
+coming as unto a <i>living</i> Stone ... ye also, as living
+stones, are built up a spiritual house, a <i>holy</i>
+priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable
+to God by Jesus Christ."</p>
+
+<p>All true believers are holy priests. They are
+made this by spiritual birth, just as Aaron's sons
+were priests in virtue of their natural birth. The
+apostle does not say, Ye <i>ought to be</i> living stones,
+and, Ye ought to be holy priests. He says ye <i>are</i>
+such. No doubt, being such, we are called upon
+to act accordingly; but we must be in a position
+before we can discharge the duties belonging to it.
+We must be in a relationship before we can know
+the affections which flow out of it. We do not become
+priests by offering priestly sacrifices. But being,
+through grace, made priests, we are called
+upon to present the sacrifice. If we were to live a
+thousand years twice told, and spend all that time
+working, we could not work ourselves into the position
+of holy priests; but the moment we believe in
+Jesus&mdash;the moment we come to Him in simple faith&mdash;the
+moment we give Him the full confidence of
+our hearts, we are born anew into the position of
+holy priests, and are then privileged to draw nigh
+and offer the priestly sacrifice. How could any
+one, of old, have constituted himself a son of Aaron?
+Impossible. But being born of Aaron, he
+was thereby made a member of the priestly house.
+We speak not now of capacity, but simply of the
+position. This latter was reached not by effort,
+but by birth.</p>
+
+<p>And now, let us enquire as to the nature of the
+sacrifice which, as holy priests, we are privileged to
+offer. We are "to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable
+to God by Jesus Christ." So also in
+Heb. xiii. 15, we read, "By Him therefore let us
+offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that
+is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to His name."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have the true nature and character
+of that sacrifice which, as holy priests, we are
+to offer. It is praise&mdash;"praise to God continually."
+Blessed occupation! Hallowed exercise! Heavenly
+employment! And this is not to be an occasional
+thing. It is not merely at some peculiarly
+favored moment, when all looks bright and smiling
+around us. It is not to be merely amid the glow
+and fervor of some specially powerful public meeting,
+when the current of worship flows deep, wide,
+and rapid. No; the word is, "praise <i>continually</i>."
+There is no room, no time for complaining or murmuring,
+fretfulness and discontent, impatience and
+irritability, lamenting about our surroundings, whatever
+these may be, complaining about the weather,
+finding fault with those who are associated with us,
+whether in public or in private, whether in the congregation,
+in the business, or in the family circle.</p>
+
+<p>Holy priests should have no time for any of these
+things. They are brought nigh to God, in holy
+liberty, peace, and blessing. They breathe the atmosphere
+and walk in the sunlight of the divine
+presence, in the new creation, where there are no
+materials for a sour and discontented mind to feed
+upon. We may set it down as a fixed principle&mdash;an
+axiom&mdash;that whenever we hear anyone pouring
+out a string of complaints about circumstances,
+his neighbors etc., such an one is not realizing
+the place of holy priesthood, and, as a consequence,
+not exhibiting its practical fruits. A holy priest
+should "rejoice in the Lord always"&mdash;ever ready
+to praise God. True, he may be tried in a thousand
+ways; but he brings his trials to God in communion,
+not to his fellow-man in complaining.
+"Hallelujah" is the proper utterance of the very
+feeblest member of the Christian priesthood.</p>
+
+<p>But we must now look, for a moment, at the third
+and last branch of our present theme. This is presented
+in that highly expressive word "royal." The
+apostle goes on to say, "But ye are a chosen generation,
+a <i>royal</i> priesthood ... that ye should show
+forth the virtues (see margin) of Him who hath
+called you out of darkness into His marvelous
+light."</p>
+
+<p>This completes the lovely picture of the Christian
+priesthood.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> As <i>holy</i> priests, we draw nigh to
+God, and present the sacrifice of praise. As royal
+priests we go forth among our fellow-men, in all the
+details of practical daily life, to show forth the virtues&mdash;the
+graces&mdash;the lovely moral features of
+Christ. Every movement of a royal priest should
+emit the fragrance of the grace of Christ.</p>
+<p>Mark again, the apostle does not say, <i>Ye ought
+to be</i> royal priests. He says ye <i>are</i>; and as such
+we are to show forth the virtues of Christ. Nothing
+else becomes a member of the royal priesthood. To
+be occupied with myself, to be taking counsel for
+my own ease, my own interest, my own enjoyment,
+to be seeking my own ends, and caring about my
+own things, is not the act of a royal priest at all.
+Christ never did so; and I am told to show forth
+His virtues. He, blessed be His name, grants to
+His people, in this the time of His absence, to anticipate
+the day when He shall come forth as a
+Royal Priest, and sit upon His throne, and send
+forth the benign influence of His dominion to the
+ends of the earth. We are called to be the present
+expression of the kingdom of Christ&mdash;the expression
+of Himself.</p>
+
+<p>And let none suppose that the actings of a royal
+priest are to be confined to the matter of <i>giving</i>.
+This would be a grave mistake. No doubt, a royal
+priest will give, and give liberally if he has it; but
+to limit him to the mere matter of communicating
+would be to rob him of some of the most precious
+functions of his position. The very man who
+penned the words on which we are dwelling said
+on one occasion&mdash;and said it without shame, "Silver
+and gold have I none;" and yet at that very
+moment, he was acting as a royal priest, by bringing
+the precious virtue of the name of Jesus to
+bear on the impotent man (Acts. iii.). The blessed
+Master Himself, we know, possessed no money;
+but He went about doing good; and so should we:
+nor do we need money to do it. Indeed it very often
+happens that we do mischief instead of good
+with our silver and gold. We may take people off
+the ground on which God has placed them, namely,
+the ground of honest industry, and make them dependent
+upon human alms. Moreover, we may
+often make hypocrites and sycophants of people
+by our injudicious use of money.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, therefore, let no one imagine that he cannot
+act as a royal priest without earthly riches.
+What riches are required to speak a kindly word&mdash;to
+drop the tear of sympathy&mdash;to give the soothing,
+genial look? None whatever save the riches of
+God's grace&mdash;the unsearchable riches of Christ, all
+of which are laid open to the most obscure member
+of the Christian priesthood. I may be poorly clad,
+without a penny in the world, and yet carry myself
+truly as a royal priest, by diffusing around me the
+fragrance of the grace of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But, perhaps, we cannot more suitably close these
+few remarks on the Christian priesthood, than by
+giving a very vivid illustration drawn from the inspired
+page&mdash;the narrative of two beloved servants
+of Christ who were enabled, under the most distressing
+circumstances, to acquit themselves as holy and
+royal priests.</p>
+
+<p>Turn to Acts xvi. 19-34. Here we have Paul
+and Silas thrust into the innermost part of the
+prison at Philippi, their backs covered with stripes,
+and their feet fast in the stocks, in the darkness
+of the midnight hour. What were they doing?
+murmuring and complaining? Ah, no! They
+had something better and brighter to do. Here
+were two really "living stones," and nothing that
+earth or hell could do could hinder the life that was
+in them expressing itself in its proper accents.</p>
+
+<p>But what, we repeat, were these living stones
+doing? these partakers of the rock-life&mdash;the victorious,
+resurrection-life of Christ&mdash;how did they
+employ themselves? Well, then, in the first place,
+as <i>holy</i> priests they offered the sacrifice of praise to
+God. Yes, "at midnight, Paul and Silas prayed
+and sang praises to God." How precious is
+this! How morally glorious! How truly refreshing!
+What are stripes, or stocks, or prison walls,
+or gloomy nights, to living stones and holy priests?
+Nothing more than a dark background to throw
+out into bright and beauteous relief the living grace
+that is in them. Talk of circumstances! Ah, it is
+little any of us know of trying circumstances.
+Poor things that we are, the petty annoyances of
+daily life are often more than enough to cause us
+to lose our mental balance. Paul and Silas were
+really in trying circumstances; but they were there
+as living stones and holy priests.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, reader, and they were there as royal priests,
+likewise. How does this appear? Certainly not
+by scattering silver and gold. It is not likely the
+dear men had much of these to scatter. But oh,
+they had what was better, even "the virtues of Him
+who had called them out of darkness into His marvelous
+light." And where do these virtues shine
+out? In those touching words addressed to the
+jailer, "<i>Do thyself no harm</i>." These were the accents
+of a <i>royal</i> priest, just as the song of praise
+was the voice of a <i>holy</i> priest. Thank God for both!
+The voices of the holy priests went directly up to
+the throne of God and did their work there; and
+the words of the royal priests went directly to the
+jailer's hard heart and did their work there. God
+was glorified and the jailer saved by two men
+rightly discharging the functions of "<i>the Christian
+priesthood</i>."</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<a name="Sovereign" id="Sovereign"></a>
+<span>FATHER! Thy sovereign love has sought<br /></span>
+<span>Captives to sin, gone far from Thee:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The work that Thine own Son hath wrought,<br /></span>
+<span>Has brought us back, in peace, and free!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>And now, as sons before Thy Face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With joyful steps the path we tread,<br /></span>
+<span>Which leads us on to that blest place<br /></span>
+<span>Prepared for us, by Christ our Head.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Thou gav'st us, in eternal love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To Him, to bring us home to Thee;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Suited to Thine own thoughts above<br /></span>
+<span>As sons, like Him, with Him to be.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Oh, boundless grace! What fills with joy<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unmingled all that enter there;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">God's Nature, Love without alloy,<br /></span>
+<span>Our hearts are given e'en now to share!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>Oh, keep us, Love Divine, near Thee!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That we our nothingness may know;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And ever to Thy glory be,<br /></span>
+<span>Walking in faith while here below.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="rindent">
+J. N. D.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PAPERS_ON_EVANGELIZATION" id="PAPERS_ON_EVANGELIZATION"></a>PAPERS ON EVANGELIZATION</h2>
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>A WORD TO THE EVANGELIST.</h3>
+
+
+<p>We trust it may not be deemed out of place if
+we venture to offer a word of counsel and
+encouragement to all who have been and are engaged
+in the blessed work of preaching <i>the gospel of
+the grace of God</i>. We are, in some measure, aware
+of the difficulties and discouragements which attend
+upon the path of every evangelist, whatever may be
+his sphere of labor or measure of gift; and it is our
+heart's desire to hold up the hands and cheer
+the hearts of all who may be in danger of falling
+under the depressing power of these things. We
+increasingly feel the immense importance of an
+earnest, fervent gospel testimony everywhere; and
+we dread exceedingly any falling off therein. We
+are imperatively called to "do the work of an evangelist,"
+and not to be moved from that work by any
+arguments or considerations whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>Let none imagine that, in writing thus, we mean
+to detract, in the smallest degree, from the value of
+teaching, lecturing, or exhortation. Nothing is
+further from our thoughts. "These things ought
+ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone."
+We mean not to compare the work of the
+evangelist with that of the teacher, or to exalt the
+former at the expense of the latter. Each has its
+own proper place, its own distinctive interest and
+importance.</p>
+
+<p>But is there not a danger, on the other hand, of
+the evangelist abandoning his own precious work in
+order to give himself to the work of teaching and
+lecturing? Is there not a danger of the evangelist
+becoming merged in the teacher? We fear there
+is; and it is under the influence of this very fear
+that we pen these few lines. We observe, with deep
+concern, some who were once known amongst us as
+earnest and eminently successful evangelists, now
+almost wholly abandoning their work and becoming
+teachers and lecturers.</p>
+
+<p>This is most deplorable. <i>We really want evangelists.</i>
+A true evangelist is almost as great a rarity
+as a true pastor. Alas! alas! how rare are both!
+The two are closely connected. The evangelist
+gathers the sheep; the pastor feeds and cares for
+them. The work of each lies very near the heart of
+Christ&mdash;the Divine Evangelist and Pastor; but it
+is with the former we have now more immediately
+to do&mdash;to encourage him in his work, and to warn
+him against the temptation to turn aside from it.
+We cannot afford to lose a single ambassador just
+now, or to have a single preacher silent. We are
+perfectly aware of the fact that there is in some
+quarters a strong tendency to throw cold water upon
+the work of evangelization. There is a sad lack of
+sympathy with the preacher of the gospel; and, as
+a necessary consequence, of active co-operation
+with him in his work. Further, there is a mode of
+speaking of gospel preaching which argues but little
+sympathy with the heart of Him who wept over impenitent
+sinners, and who could say, at the very
+opening of His blessed ministry, "The Spirit of the
+Lord is upon Me, because He hath anointed Me <i>to
+preach the gospel to the poor</i>" (Isa. lxi.; Luke iv.).
+And again, "Let us go into the next towns, that I
+may preach there also: for therefore came I forth"
+(Mark i. 38).</p>
+
+<p>Our blessed Lord was an indefatigable preacher
+of the gospel, and all who are filled with His mind
+and spirit will take a lively interest in the work of
+all those who are seeking in their feeble measure to
+do the same. This interest will be evinced, not only
+by earnest prayer for the divine blessing upon the
+work, but also by diligent and persevering efforts to
+get immortal souls under the sound of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>This is the way to help the evangelist, and this
+way lies open to every member of the Church of
+God&mdash;man, woman, or child. All can thus help
+forward the glorious work of evangelization. If
+each member of the assembly were to work diligently
+and prayerfully in this way, how different
+would it be with the Lord's dear servants who are
+seeking to make known the unsearchable riches of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But, alas! how often is it otherwise. How often
+do we hear even those who are of some repute for
+intelligence and spirituality, when referring to meetings
+for gospel testimony, say, "Oh, I am not going
+there; it is <i>only</i> the gospel." Think of that!
+"<i>Only the gospel.</i>" If they would put the idea into
+other words, they might say, "It is <i>only</i> the heart of
+God&mdash;<i>only</i> the precious blood of Christ&mdash;<i>only</i> the
+glorious record of the Holy Ghost."</p>
+
+<p>This would be putting the thing plainly. Nothing
+is more sad than to hear professing Christians
+speak in this way. It proves too clearly that their
+souls are very far away from the heart of Jesus.
+We have invariably found that those who think and
+speak slightingly of the work of the evangelist are
+persons of very little spirituality; and on the other
+hand, the most devoted, the most true hearted, the
+best taught saints of God, are always sure to take a
+profound interest in that work. How could it be
+otherwise? Does not the voice of Holy Scripture
+bear the clearest testimony to the fact of the interest
+of the Trinity in the work of the gospel? Most
+assuredly it does. Who first preached the gospel?
+Who was the first herald of salvation? Who first
+announced the good news of the bruised Seed of
+the woman? The Lord God Himself, in the garden
+of Eden. This is a telling fact in connection with
+our theme. And further, let us ask, who was the
+most earnest, laborious, and faithful preacher that
+ever trod this earth? The Son of God. And who
+has been preaching the gospel for the last eighteen
+centuries? The Holy Ghost sent down from heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Thus then we have the Father, the Son, and the
+Holy Ghost all actually engaged in the work of
+evangelization; and if this be so, who are we to
+dare to speak slightingly of such a work? Nay,
+rather may our whole moral being be stirred by the
+power of the Spirit of God so that we may be able
+to add our fervent and deep Amen to those precious
+words of inspiration, "How beautiful are the feet
+of them that preach the gospel of peace, and bring
+glad tidings of good things!" (Isa. lii. 7; Rom. x. 15.)</p>
+
+<p>But it may be that these lines shall be scanned
+by some one who has been engaged in the work of
+preaching the gospel, and is beginning to feel rather
+discouraged. It may be that he has been called to
+preach in the same place for years, and he feels
+burdened by the thought of having to address the
+same audience, on the same subject, week after
+week, month after month, year after year. He may
+feel at a loss for something new, something fresh,
+some variety. He may sigh for some new sphere,
+where the subjects which are familiar to him will be
+new to the people. Or, if this cannot be, he may
+feel led to substitute lectures and expositions for
+the fervid, pointed, earnest preaching of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>If we have in any measure set forth the reader's
+feelings on this subject, we think it will greatly help
+him in his work to bear in mind that the one grand
+theme of the true evangelist is Christ. The power
+to handle that theme is the Holy Ghost. The one
+to whom that theme is to be unfolded is the poor
+lost sinner. Now, Christ is ever new; the power of
+the Holy Ghost is ever fresh; the soul's condition
+and destiny ever intensely interesting. Furthermore,
+it is well for the evangelist to bear in mind,
+on every fresh occasion of rising to preach, that his
+unconverted hearers are totally ignorant of the gospel,
+and hence he should preach as though it were
+the first time they had ever heard the message, and
+the first time he had ever delivered it. For, be it
+remembered, the preaching of the gospel, in the
+divine acceptation of the phrase, is not a mere barren
+statement of evangelical doctrine&mdash;a certain
+form of words enunciated over and over again in
+wearisome routine. Far, very far from it. The
+gospel is really the large loving heart of God welling
+up and flowing forth toward the poor lost sinner
+in streams of life and salvation. It is the presentation
+of the atoning death and glorious resurrection
+of the Son of God; and all this in the
+present energy, glow, and freshness of the Holy
+Ghost, from the exhaustless mine of Holy Scripture.
+Moreover, <i>the</i> one absorbing object of the preacher
+is to win souls for Christ, to the glory of God. For
+this he labors and pleads; for this he prays, weeps,
+and agonizes; for this he thunders, appeals, and
+grapples with the heart and conscience of his hearer.
+His object is not to teach doctrines, though doctrines
+may be taught; his object is not to expound
+Scripture, though Scripture may be expounded.
+These things lie within the range of the teacher or
+lecturer; but let it never be forgotten, the preacher's
+object is to bring the Saviour and the sinner together&mdash;to
+win souls to Christ. May God by His
+Spirit keep these things ever before our hearts, so
+that we may have a deeper interest in the glorious
+work of evangelization!</p>
+
+<p>We would, in conclusion, merely add a word of
+exhortation in reference to the Lord's Day evening.
+We would, in all affection, say to our beloved and
+honored fellow-laborers, Seek to give that one hour
+to the great business of the soul's salvation. There
+are 168 hours in the week, and, surely, it is the least
+we may devote <i>one</i> of these to this momentous
+work. It so happens that during that interesting
+hour we can get the ear of our fellow-sinner. Oh,
+let us use it to pour in the sweet story of God's free
+love and of Christ's full salvation.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>A MOTTO FOR THE EVANGELIST.</h3>
+
+<p class="center1">(2 Cor. x. 16.)</p>
+
+
+<p>"To <i>preach the gospel in the regions beyond you</i>."
+These words, while they set forth the large-heartedness
+of the self-denying and devoted apostle,
+do also furnish a fine model for the evangelist, in
+every age. The gospel is a traveler; and the
+preacher of the gospel must be a traveler likewise.
+The divinely-qualified and divinely-sent evangelist
+will fix his eye upon "<i>the world</i>." He will embrace,
+in his benevolent design, the human family. From
+house to house; from street to street; from city to
+city; from province to province; from kingdom to
+kingdom; from continent to continent; from pole
+to pole. Such is the range of the "good news" and
+the publisher thereof. "The regions beyond" must
+ever be the grand gospel motto. No sooner has the
+gospel lamp cast its cheering beams over a district,
+than the bearer of that lamp must think of the regions
+beyond. Thus the work goes on. Thus the
+mighty tide of grace rolls, in enlightening and saving
+power, over a dark world which lies in "the
+region of the shadow of death."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>"Waft, waft, ye winds, the story,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And you, ye waters, roll,<br /></span>
+<span>Till, like the sea of glory,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">It spreads from pole to pole."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Christian reader, are you thinking of "the regions
+beyond you?" This expression may, in your case,
+mean the next house, the next street, the next village,
+the next city, the next kingdom, or the next
+continent. The application is for your own heart to
+ponder: but say, are you thinking of "the regions
+beyond you?" I do not want you to abandon your
+present post at all; or, at least, not until you are
+fully persuaded that your work, at the post, is done.
+But, remember, the gospel plough should never
+stand still. "<i>Onward</i>" is the motto of every true
+evangelist. Let the shepherds abide by the flocks;
+but let the evangelists betake themselves hither and
+thither, to gather the sheep. Let them sound the
+gospel trump, far and wide, o'er the dark mountains
+of this world, to gather together the elect of God.
+This is the design of the gospel. This should be
+the object of the evangelist, as he sighs after "the
+regions beyond." When Cćsar beheld, from the
+coast of Gaul, the white cliffs of Britain, he earnestly
+longed to carry his arms thither. The evangelist,
+on the other hand, whose heart beats in unison
+with the heart of Jesus, as he casts his eye over the
+map of the world, longs to carry the gospel of peace
+into regions which have heretofore been wrapped
+in midnight gloom, covered with the dark mantle of
+superstition, or blasted beneath the withering influences
+of "a form of godliness without the power."</p>
+
+<p>It would, I believe, be a profitable question for
+many of us to put to ourselves, how far are we discharging
+our holy responsibilities to "the regions
+beyond." I believe the Christian who is not cultivating
+and manifesting an evangelistic spirit, is in
+a truly deplorable condition. I believe, too, that
+the assembly which is not cultivating and manifesting
+an evangelistic spirit is in a dead state. One
+of the truest marks of spiritual growth and prosperity,
+whether in an individual or in an assembly,
+is earnest anxiety after the conversion of souls.
+This anxiety will swell the bosom with most generous
+emotions; yea, it will break forth in copious
+streams of benevolent exertion, ever flowing toward
+"the regions beyond." It is hard to believe that
+"the word of Christ" is "dwelling richly" in any
+one who is not making some effort to impart that
+word to his fellow-sinners. It matters not what
+may be the amount of the effort; it may be to drop
+a few words in the ear of a friend, to give a tract,
+to pen a note, to breathe a prayer. But one thing
+is certain, namely, that a healthy, vigorous Christian
+will be an evangelistic Christian&mdash;a teller of
+good news&mdash;one whose sympathies, desires, and
+energies, are ever going forth toward "the regions
+beyond." "I must preach the gospel to other
+cities also, for therefore am I sent." Such was the
+language of the true Evangelist.</p>
+
+<p>It is very doubtful whether many of the servants
+of Christ have not erred in allowing themselves,
+through one influence or another, to become too
+much localized&mdash;too much tied in one place. They
+have dropped into routine work&mdash;into a round of
+stated preaching in the same place, and, in many
+cases, have <a name="paralyzed" id="paralyzed"></a>paralyzed themselves and paralyzed
+their hearers also. I speak not, now, of the labors
+of the pastor, the elder, or the teacher, which must,
+of course, be carried on in the midst of those who
+are the proper subjects of such labors. I refer
+more particularly to the evangelist. Such an one
+should never suffer himself to be localized. The
+world is his sphere&mdash;"the regions beyond," his
+motto&mdash;to gather out God's elect, his object&mdash;the
+current of the Spirit, his line of direction. If the
+reader should be one whom God has called and fitted
+to be an evangelist, let him remember these four
+things&mdash;the sphere, the motto, the object, and the
+line of direction, which all must adopt if they would
+prove fruitful laborers in the gospel field.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, whether the reader be an evangelist or
+not, I would earnestly intreat him to examine how
+far he is seeking to further the gospel of Christ.
+We must not stand idle. Time is short! Eternity
+is rapidly posting on! The Master is most worthy!
+Souls are most precious! The season for work
+will soon close! Let us, then, in the name of the
+Lord, be up and doing. And when we have done
+what we can, in the regions around, let us carry
+the precious seed into "<span class="smcap">THE REGIONS BEYOND</span>."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WORK OF AN EVANGELIST.</h3>
+
+<p class="center1">(Acts xvi. 8-31.)</p>
+
+
+<p>We ventured to offer a word to the evangelist,
+which we now follow up with a paper on
+the evangelist's work; and we cannot do better than
+select, as the basis of our remarks, a page from the
+missionary record of one of the greatest evangelists
+that ever lived. The passage of Scripture that
+stands at the head of this article furnishes specimens
+of three distinct classes of hearers, and also
+the method in which they were met by the great
+apostle of the Gentiles, guided, most surely, by the
+Holy Ghost. We have, first, <i>the earnest seeker</i>; secondly,
+<i>the false professor</i>; and thirdly, <i>the hardened
+sinner</i>. These three classes are to be met everywhere,
+and at all times, by the Lord's workman; and
+hence we may be thankful for an inspired account
+of the right mode of dealing with such. It is most
+desirable that those who go forth with the gospel
+should have skill in dealing with the various conditions
+of soul that come before them, from day to
+day; and there can be no more effectual way of attaining
+this skill than the careful study of the models
+given us by God the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>Let us then, in the first place, look at the narrative
+of</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE EARNEST SEEKER.</h3>
+
+<p>The laborious apostle, in the course of his
+missionary journeyings, came to Troas, and there a
+vision appeared to him in the night, "There stood
+a man of Macedonia, and prayed him, saying,
+Come over into Macedonia and help us. And after
+he had seen the vision, immediately we endeavored
+to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the
+Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto
+them. Therefore loosing from Troas, we came
+with a straight course to Samothracia, and the next
+day to Neapolis; and from thence to Philippi, which
+is the chief city of that part of Macedonia, and a
+colony: and we were in that city abiding certain
+days. And on the Sabbath we went out of the city
+by a river side, where prayer was wont to be made;
+and we sat down, and spake unto the women which
+resorted thither. And a certain woman named
+Lydia, a seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira,
+which worshiped God, heard us; whose heart the
+Lord opened, that she attended unto the things
+that were spoken of Paul. And when she was
+baptized, and her household, she besought us, saying,
+If ye have judged me to be faithful to the
+Lord, come into my house and abide there. And
+she constrained us" (Acts xvi. 8-15).</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have a touching picture&mdash;something
+well worth gazing at and pondering. It is a
+picture of one who, having through grace gotten a
+measure of light, was living up to it, and was earnestly
+seeking for more. Lydia, the seller of purple,
+belonged to the same interesting generation
+as the eunuch of Ethiopia, and the centurion of</p>
+
+<p>Cćsarea. All three appear on the page of inspiration
+as quickened souls not emancipated&mdash;not at rest&mdash;not
+satisfied. The eunuch had gone from Ethiopia
+to Jerusalem in search of something on which to
+rest his anxious soul. He had left that city still
+unsatisfied, and was devoutly and earnestly hanging
+over the precious page of inspiration. The eye
+of God was upon him, and He sent His servant
+Philip with the very message that was needed to
+solve his difficulties, answer his questions, and set
+his soul at rest. God knows how to bring the Philips
+and the eunuchs together. He knows how to
+prepare the heart for the message and the message
+for the heart. The eunuch was a worshiper of
+God; but Philip is sent to teach him how to see
+God in the face of Jesus Christ. This was precisely
+what he wanted. It was a flood of fresh
+light breaking in upon his earnest spirit, setting
+his heart and conscience at rest, and sending him
+on his way rejoicing. He had honestly followed
+the light as it broke in upon his soul, and God sent
+him more.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is ever. "To him that hath shall more
+be given." There never was a soul who sincerely
+acted up to his light that did not get more light.
+This is most consolatory and encouraging to all
+anxious enquirers. If the reader belongs to this
+class, let him take courage. If he is one of those
+with whom God has begun to work, then let him
+rest assured of this, that He who hath begun a
+good work will perform the same until the day of
+Jesus Christ. He will, most surely, perfect that
+which concerneth His people.</p>
+
+<p>But let no one fold his arms, settle upon his oars,
+and coolly say, "I must wait God's time for more
+light. I can do nothing&mdash;my efforts are useless.
+When God's time comes I shall be all right; till
+then, I must remain as I am." These were not the
+thoughts or feelings of the Ethiopian eunuch. He
+was one of the earnest seekers; and all earnest
+seekers are sure to be happy finders. It must be
+so, for "God is a rewarder of them that diligently
+seek Him" (Heb. xi. 6).</p>
+
+<p>So also with the centurion of Cćsarea. He was
+a man of the same stamp. He lived up to his
+light. He fasted, he prayed, and gave alms. We
+are not told whether he had read the sermon on the
+mount: but it is remarkable that he exercised himself
+in the three grand branches of practical righteousness
+set forth by our Lord in the sixth chapter
+of Matthew.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> He was moulding his conduct and
+shaping his way according to the standard which
+God had set before him. His righteousness exceeded
+the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees,
+and therefore he entered the kingdom. He
+was, through grace, a real man, earnestly following
+the light as it streamed in upon his soul, and he
+was led into the full blaze of the gospel of the
+grace of God. God sent a Peter to Cornelius, as he
+had sent a Philip to the eunuch. The prayers and
+alms had gone up as a memorial before God, and
+Peter was sent with a message of full salvation
+through a crucified and risen Saviour.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is quite possible that there are persons who,
+having been rocked in the cradle of easy-going evangelical
+profession, and trained up in the flippant
+formalism of a self-indulgent, heaven-made-easy religion,
+are ready to condemn the pious conduct of
+Cornelius, and pronounce it the fruit of ignorance
+and legality. Such persons have never known what
+it was to deny themselves a single meal, or to spend
+an hour in real, earnest prayer, or to open their
+hand, in true benevolence, to meet the wants of the
+poor. They have heard and learnt, perchance, that
+salvation is not to be gained by such means&mdash;that
+we are justified by faith without works&mdash;that it is
+to him that worketh not, but believeth on Him that
+justifieth the ungodly.</p>
+
+<p>All this is most true; but what right have we to
+imagine that Cornelius was praying, fasting, and
+giving alms in order to earn salvation? None
+whatever&mdash;at least if we are to be governed by the
+inspired narrative, and we have no other means of
+knowing aught about this truly excellent and interesting
+character. He was informed by the angel
+that his prayers and his alms had gone up as a
+memorial before God. Is not this a clear proof
+that these prayers and alms were not the trappings
+of self-righteousness, but the fruits of a righteousness
+based on the knowledge which he had of God?
+Surely the fruits of self-righteousness and legality
+could never have ascended as a memorial to the
+throne of God; nor could Peter ever have said concerning
+a mere legalist that he was one who feared
+God and worked righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, no, reader; Cornelius was a man thoroughly
+in earnest. He lived up to what he knew, and he
+would have been quite wrong to go further. To
+him the salvation of his immortal soul, the service
+of God, and eternity, were grand and all-absorbing
+realities. He was none of your easy-going professors,
+full of flippant, vapid, worthless talk, but <i>doing</i>
+nothing. He belonged to another generation altogether.
+He belonged to the <i>working</i>, not the <i>talking</i>
+class. He was one on whom the eye of God
+rested with complacency, and in whom the mind of
+heaven was profoundly interested.</p>
+
+<p>And so was our friend of Thyatira, Lydia, the
+seller of purple. She belonged to the same school&mdash;she
+occupied the same platform as the centurion
+and the eunuch. It is truly delightful to contemplate
+these three precious souls&mdash;to think of one in
+Ethiopia; another at Cćsarea; and a third at Thyatira
+or Philippi. It is particularly refreshing to
+contrast such downright thorough-going, earnest
+souls, with many in this our day of boasted light
+and knowledge, who have got the plan of salvation,
+as it is termed, in their heads, the doctrines of
+grace on the tongue, but the world in the heart;
+whose absorbing object is self, self, self,&mdash;miserable
+object!</p>
+
+<p>We shall have occasion to refer more fully to
+these latter under our second head; but, for the
+present, we shall think of the earnest Lydia; and
+we must confess it is a far more grateful exercise.
+It is very plain that Lydia, like Cornelius and the
+eunuch, was a quickened soul; she was a worshiper
+of God; she was one who was right glad to lay
+aside her purple-selling, and betake herself to a
+prayer-meeting, or to any such like place where
+spiritual profit was to be had, and where there were
+good things going. "Birds of a feather flock together,"
+and so Lydia soon found out where a few
+pious souls, a few kindred spirits, were in the habit
+of meeting to wait on God in prayer.</p>
+
+<p>All this is lovely. It does the heart good to be
+brought in contact with this deep-toned earnestness.
+Surely the Holy Ghost has penned this narrative,
+like all Holy Scripture, for our learning. It is a
+specimen case, and we do well to ponder it. Lydia
+was found diligently availing herself of any and
+every opportunity; indeed she exhibited the real
+fruits of divine life, the genuine instincts of the new
+nature. She found out where saints met for prayer,
+and took her place among them. She did not fold
+her arms and settle down on her lees, to wait, in
+antinomian indolence and culpable idleness, for
+some extraordinary undefinable thing to come upon
+her, or some mysterious change to come over her.
+No; she went to a prayer-meeting&mdash;the place of
+expressed need&mdash;the place of expected blessing:
+and there God met her, as He is sure to meet all
+who frequent such scenes in Lydia's spirit. God
+never fails an expectant heart. He has said,
+"They shall not be ashamed that wait for Me;"
+and, like a bright and blessed sunbeam on the
+page of inspiration, shines that pregnant, weighty,
+soul-stirring sentence, "God is a rewarder of them
+that <span class="smcap">DILIGENTLY</span> seek Him." He sent a Philip to
+the eunuch in the desert of Gaza. He sent a Peter
+to the centurion, in the town of Cćsarea. He sent
+a Paul to a seller of purple, in the suburbs of Philippi;
+and He will send a message to the reader of
+these lines, if he be a really earnest seeker after
+God's salvation.</p>
+
+<p>It is ever a moment of deepest interest when a
+prepared soul is brought in contact with the full
+gospel of the grace of God. It may be that that
+soul has been under deep and painful exercise for
+many a long day, seeking rest but finding none.
+The Lord has been working by His Spirit, and preparing
+the ground for the good seed. He has been
+making deep the furrows so that the precious seed
+of His Word may take permanent root, and bring
+forth fruit to His praise. The Holy Ghost is never
+in haste. His work is deep, sure and solid. His
+plants are not like Jonah's gourd, springing up in
+a night and perishing in a night. All that He does
+will stand, blessed be His name. "I know that
+whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever." When
+He convicts, converts, and liberates a soul, the
+stamp of His own eternal hand is upon the work,
+in all its stages.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it must have been a moment of intense
+interest when one in Lydia's state of soul was
+brought in contact with that most glorious gospel
+which Paul carried (Acts xvi. 14). She was thoroughly
+prepared for his message; and surely his
+message was thoroughly prepared for her. He
+carried with him truth which she had never heard
+and never thought of. As we have already remarked,
+she had been living up to her light; she
+was a worshiper of God; but we are bold to assert
+that she had no idea of the glorious truth which
+was lodged in the heart of that stranger who sat
+beside her at the prayer-meeting. She had come
+thither&mdash;devout and earnest woman that she was&mdash;to
+pray and to worship, to get some little refreshment
+for her spirit, after the toils of the week.
+How little did she imagine that at that meeting she
+should hear the greatest preacher that ever lived,
+save One, and that she should hear the very highest
+order of truth that had ever fallen upon mortal
+ears.</p>
+
+<p>Yet thus it was. And, oh, how important it was
+for Lydia to have been at that memorable prayer
+meeting! How well it was she had not acted as so
+many, now-a-days, act, who after a week of toil in
+the shop, the warehouse, the factory, or the field,
+take the opportunity of lying in bed on Sunday!</p>
+
+<p>How many there are whom you will see at their
+post from Monday morning till Saturday night,
+working away with all diligence at their calling,
+but for whom you will look in vain at the meeting
+on the Lord's day. How is this? They will tell
+you, perhaps, that they are so worn out on Saturday
+night that they have no energy to rise on Sunday,
+and therefore they spend this day in sloth,
+lounging, and self-indulgence. They have no care
+for their souls, no care for eternity, no care for
+Christ. They care for themselves, for their families,
+for the world, for money-making; and hence you
+will find them up with the dawn of Monday and off
+to their work.</p>
+
+<p>Lydia did not belong to this class at all. No
+doubt she attended to her business, as every right-minded
+person will. We dare say&mdash;indeed, we are
+sure&mdash;she kept very excellent purple, and was a
+fair, honest trader, in every sense of the word. But
+she did not spend her Sabbath in bed, or lounging
+about her house, or nursing herself up, and making
+a great fuss about all she had to do during the
+week. Neither do we believe that Lydia was one
+of those self-occupied folk whom a shower of rain
+is sufficient to keep away from a meeting. No;
+Lydia was of a different stamp altogether. She
+was an earnest woman, who felt she had a soul to
+save, and an eternity before her, and a living God
+to serve and worship.</p>
+
+<p>Would to God we had more Lydias in this our
+day! It would give a charm, and an interest, and
+a freshness to the work of an evangelist, for which
+many of the Lord's workmen have to sigh in vain.
+We seem to live in a day of terrible unreality as to
+divine and eternal things. Men, women, and children
+are real enough at their money-making, their
+pursuits, and their pleasures; but oh, when the
+things of God, the things of the soul, the things of
+eternity, are in question, the aspect of people is
+that of a yawning indifference. But the moment is
+rapidly approaching&mdash;every beat of the pulse, every
+tick of the watch, brings us nearer to it&mdash;when the
+yawning indifference shall be exchanged for "weeping,
+wailing, and gnashing of teeth." If this were
+more deeply felt, we should have many more Lydias,
+prepared to lend an attentive ear to Paul's gospel.</p>
+
+<p>What force and beauty in those words, "Whose
+heart the Lord opened, that <i>she attended</i> unto the
+things that were spoken of Paul." Lydia was not
+one of those who go to meetings to think of anything
+and everything but the things that are spoken
+by the Lord's messengers. She was not thinking
+of her purple, or of the prices, or the probable gains
+or losses. How many of those who fill our preaching
+rooms and lecture halls follow the example of
+Lydia? Alas! we fear but very few indeed. The
+business, the state of the markets, the state of the
+funds, money, pleasure, dress, folly&mdash;a thousand
+and one things are thought of, and dwelt upon, and
+attended to, so that the poor vagrant, volatile heart
+is at the ends of the earth instead of "<i>attending</i>" to
+the things that are spoken.</p>
+
+<p>All this is very solemn, and very awful. It really
+ought to be looked into and thought of. People
+seem to forget the responsibility involved in hearing
+the gospel preached. They do not seem to be
+in the smallest degree impressed with the weighty
+fact that the gospel never leaves any unconverted
+person where it finds him. He is either saved by
+receiving, or rendered more guilty by rejecting it.
+Hence it becomes a serious matter to hear the gospel.
+People may attend gospel meetings as a
+matter of custom, as a religious service, or because
+they have nothing else to do, and the time would
+hang heavy upon their hands; or they may go because
+they think that the mere act of going has a
+sort of merit attached to it. Thus thousands attend
+preachings at which Christ's servants, though not
+Pauls in gift, power, or intelligence, unfold the
+precious grace of God in sending His only begotten
+Son into the world to save us from everlasting
+torment and misery. The virtue and efficacy of
+the atoning death of the divine Saviour&mdash;the Lamb
+of God&mdash;the dread realities of eternity&mdash;the awful
+horrors of hell, and the unspeakable joys of heaven&mdash;all
+these weighty matters are handled, according
+to the measure of grace bestowed upon the Lord's
+messengers, and yet how little impression is produced!
+They "reason of righteousness, temperance,
+and judgment to come," and yet how few are
+made even to "tremble!"</p>
+
+<p>And why? Will anyone presume to excuse himself
+for rejecting the gospel message on the ground
+of his inability to believe it? Will he appeal to
+the very case before us, and say, "The Lord opened
+her heart; and if He would only do the same for
+me, I, too, should attend; but until He does, I can
+do nothing"? We reply, and with deep seriousness,
+Such an argument will not avail thee in the
+day of judgment. Indeed we are most thoroughly
+convinced that thou wilt not dare to use it then.
+Thou art making a false use of Lydia's charming
+history. True it is, blessedly true, the Lord opened
+her heart; and He is ready to open thine also, if
+there were in thee but the hundredth part of Lydia's
+earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>And dost thou not know full well, reader, that
+there are two sides to this great question, as there
+are to every question? It is all very well, and
+sounds very forcibly, for thee to say, "I can do
+nothing." But who told thee this? Where hast
+thou learnt it? We solemnly challenge thee, in the
+presence of God, Canst thou look up to Him and
+say, "I can do nothing&mdash;I am not responsible?"
+Say, is the salvation of thy never-dying soul just
+<i>the</i> one thing in which thou canst do nothing?
+Thou canst do a lot of things in the service of the
+world, of self, and of Satan; but when it becomes
+a question of God, the soul, and eternity, you coolly
+say, "I can do nothing&mdash;I am not responsible."</p>
+
+<p>Ah! it will never do. All this style of argument
+is the fruit of a one-sided theology. It is the result
+of the most pernicious reasoning of the human
+mind upon certain truths in Scripture which are
+turned the wrong way and sadly misapplied. But
+it will not stand. This is what we urge upon the
+reader. It is of no possible use arguing in this
+way. The sinner is responsible; and all the theology,
+and all the reasoning, and all the fallacious
+though plausible objections that can be scraped together,
+can never do away with this weighty and
+most serious fact.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, therefore, we call upon the reader to be,
+like Lydia, in earnest about his soul's salvation&mdash;to
+let every other question, every other point, every
+other subject, sink into utter insignificance in comparison
+with this one momentous question&mdash;the
+salvation of his precious soul. Then, he may depend
+upon it, the One who sent Philip to the eunuch,
+and sent Peter to the centurion, and sent
+Paul to Lydia, will send some messenger and some
+message to him, and will also open his heart to attend.
+Of this there cannot possibly be a doubt,
+inasmuch as Scripture declares that "God is not
+willing that any should perish, but that all should
+come to repentance." All who perish, after having
+heard the message of salvation&mdash;the sweet
+story of God's free love, of a Saviour's death and
+resurrection&mdash;shall perish without a shadow of an
+excuse, shall descend into hell with their blood
+upon their guilty heads. Their eyes shall then be
+open to see through all the flimsy arguments by
+which they have sought to prop themselves up in
+a false position, and lull themselves to sleep in sin
+and worldliness.</p>
+
+<p>But let us dwell for a moment on "the things
+that were spoken of Paul." The Spirit of God hath
+not thought proper to give us even a brief outline
+of Paul's address at the prayer-meeting. We are
+therefore left to other passages of Holy Scripture to
+form an idea of what Lydia heard from his lips on
+that interesting occasion. Let us take, for example,
+that famous passage in which he reminds the Corinthians
+of the gospel which he had preached to them.
+"Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel
+which I preached unto you, which also ye have received,
+and wherein ye stand; by which also ye
+are saved if ye keep in memory what I preached
+unto you, unless ye have believed in vain. For I
+delivered unto you first of all that which I also received,
+how that Christ died for our sins according
+to the Scriptures; and that He was buried, and that
+He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures"
+(I Cor. xv. I-4).</p>
+
+<p>Now we may safely conclude that the foregoing
+passage of Scripture contains a compendium of the
+things that were spoken of Paul at the prayer-meeting
+at Philippi. The grand theme of Paul's
+preaching was Christ&mdash;Christ for the sinner&mdash;Christ
+for the saint&mdash;Christ for the conscience&mdash;Christ
+for the heart. He never allowed himself to wander
+from this great centre, but made all his preachings
+and all his teachings circulate round it with admirable
+consistency. If he called on men, both Jews
+and Gentiles, to repent, the lever with which he
+worked was Christ. If he urged them to believe,
+the object which he held up for faith was Christ, on
+the authority of Holy Scripture. If he reasoned of
+righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come,
+the One that gave cogency and moral power to his
+reasoning was Christ. In short, Christ was the
+very gist and marrow, the sum and substance, the
+foundation and top stone of Paul's preaching and
+teaching.</p>
+
+<p>But, for our present purpose, there are three
+grand subjects, found in Paul's preaching, to which
+we desire to call the reader's attention. These are,
+first, the grace of God; secondly, the Person and
+work of Christ; and thirdly, the testimony of the
+Holy Ghost as given in the Holy Scriptures.</p>
+
+<p>We do not attempt to go into these vast subjects
+here; we merely name them, and entreat the reader
+to ponder them, to muse over them, and seek to
+make them his own.</p>
+
+<p>(I) The grace of God&mdash;His free, sovereign favor&mdash;is
+the source from whence salvation flows&mdash;salvation
+in all the length, breadth, height, and depth of
+that most precious word&mdash;salvation which stretches,
+like a golden chain, from the bosom of God, down
+to the very deepest depths of the sinner's guilty and
+ruined condition, and back again to the throne of
+God&mdash;meets all the sinner's necessities, overlaps
+the whole of the saint's history, and glorifies God
+in the highest possible manner.</p>
+
+<p>(2) Then, in the second place, the Person of
+Christ and His finished work are the <i>only</i> channel
+through which salvation can possibly flow to the
+lost and guilty sinner. It is not the Church and her
+sacraments, religion and its rites and ceremonies&mdash;man
+or his doings in any shape or form. It is the
+death and resurrection of Christ. "He died for our
+sins, was buried, and rose again the third day."
+This was the gospel which Paul preached, by which
+the Corinthians were saved, and the apostle declares,
+with solemn emphasis, "If any man preach
+any other gospel, let him be accursed." Tremendous
+words for this our day!</p>
+
+<p>(3) But, thirdly, the authority on which we receive
+the salvation is the testimony of the Holy
+Ghost in Scripture. It is "according to the Scriptures."
+This is a most solid and comforting truth.
+It is not a question of feelings, or experiences, or
+evidences; it is a simple question of faith in God's
+word wrought in the heart by God's Spirit.</p>
+
+<p>It is a serious reflection for the evangelist, that
+wherever God's Spirit is at work, there Satan is
+sure to be busy. We must remember and ever be
+prepared for this. The enemy of Christ and the
+enemy of souls is always on the watch, always hovering
+about to see what he can do, either to hinder
+or corrupt the work of the gospel. This need not
+terrify or even discourage the workman; but it is
+well to bear it in mind and be watchful. Satan will
+leave no stone unturned to mar or hinder the
+blessed work of God's Spirit. He has proved himself
+the ceaseless, vigilant enemy of that work, from
+the days of Eden down to the present moment.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in tracing the history of Satan, we find him
+acting in two characters, namely, as a serpent, or
+as a lion&mdash;using craft or violence. He will try to
+deceive; and, if he cannot succeed, then he will use
+violence. Thus it is in this sixteenth chapter of the
+Acts. The apostle's heart had been cheered and
+refreshed by what we moderns should pronounce,
+"a beautiful case of conversion." Lydia's was a
+very real and decided case, in every respect. It
+was direct, positive, and unmistakable. She received
+Christ into her heart, and forthwith took
+Christian ground by submitting to the deeply significant
+ordinance of baptism. Nor was this all. She
+immediately opened her house to the Lord's messengers.
+Hers was no mere lip profession. It was
+not merely <i>saying</i> she believed. She proved her
+faith in Christ, not only by going down under the
+water of baptism, but also by identifying herself
+and her household with the name and cause of that
+blessed One whom she had received into her heart
+by faith.</p>
+
+<p>All this was clear and satisfactory. But we must
+now look at something quite different. The serpent
+appears upon the scene in the person of</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE DECEIVER.</h3>
+
+<p>"It came to pass, as we went to prayer, a certain
+damsel possessed with a spirit of divination met us,
+which brought her masters much gain by soothsaying.
+The same followed Paul and us, and cried,
+saying, These men are the servants of the most high
+God, which show unto us the way of salvation.</p>
+
+<p>And this did she many days. But Paul, being
+grieved, turned and said to the spirit, I command
+thee in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.
+And he came out the same hour" (vers. 16-18).</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was a case eminently calculated to
+test the spirituality and integrity of the evangelist.
+Most men would have hailed such words from the
+lips of this damsel as an encouraging testimony to
+the work. Why then was Paul grieved? Why did
+he not allow her to continue to bear witness to the
+object of his mission? Was she not saying the
+truth? Were they not the servants of the most
+high God? And were they not showing the way of
+salvation? Why be grieved with&mdash;why silence such
+a witness? Because it was of Satan; and, most assuredly,
+the apostle was not going to receive testimony
+from him. He could not allow Satan to help
+him in his work. True, he might have walked
+about the streets of Philippi owned and honored as
+a servant of God, if only he had consented to let
+the devil have a hand in the work. But Paul could
+never consent to this. He could never suffer the
+enemy to mix himself up with the work of the
+Lord. Had he done so, it would have given the
+deathblow to the testimony at Philippi. To have
+permitted Satan to put his hand to the work, would
+have involved the total shipwreck of the mission to
+Macedonia.</p>
+
+<p>It is deeply important for the Lord's workman to
+weigh this matter. We may rest assured that this
+narrative of the damsel has been written for our instruction.</p>
+
+<p>It is not only a statement of what has
+occurred, but a sample of what may and indeed
+what does occur every day.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
+
+<p>Besides Christendom is full of false profession.
+There are multitudes of false professors at this moment,
+throughout the wide domain of Christian
+profession. It is sad to have to say it, but so it is,
+and we must press the fact upon the attention of
+the reader. We are surrounded, on all sides, by
+those who give a merely nominal assent to the
+truths of the Christian religion. They go on, from
+week to week, and from year to year, professing to
+believe certain things which they do not in reality
+believe at all. There are thousands who, every
+Lord's Day, profess to believe in the forgiveness of
+sins, and yet, were such persons to be examined, it
+would be found that they either do not think about
+the matter at all, or, if they do think, they deem it
+the very height of presumption for any one to be
+sure that his sins are forgiven.</p>
+
+<p>This is very serious. Only think of a person
+standing up in the presence of God and saying, "I
+believe in the forgiveness of sins," and all the while
+he does not believe any such thing! Can anything
+be more hardening to the heart, or more deadening
+to the conscience than this? It is our firm persuasion
+that the forms and the formularies of professing
+Christianity are doing more to ruin precious
+souls than all the forms of moral pravity put together.
+It is perfectly appalling to contemplate the
+countless multitudes that are at this moment rushing
+along the well-trodden highway of religious profession,
+down to the eternal flames of hell. We feel
+bound to raise a warning note. We want the reader
+most solemnly to take heed as to this matter.</p>
+
+<p>We have only instanced one special formulary,
+because it refers to a subject of very general interest
+and importance. How few, comparatively, are clear
+and settled as to the question of forgiveness of sins!
+How few are able, calmly, decidedly, and intelligently,
+to say, "<i>I know</i> that my sins are forgiven!"
+How few are in the real enjoyment of full forgiveness
+of sins, through faith in that precious blood
+that cleanseth from all sin! How solemn, therefore,
+to hear people giving utterance to such words as
+these, "I believe in the forgiveness of sins," while,
+in fact, they do not believe their own very utterance!
+Is the reader in the habit of using such a
+form of words? Does he believe it? Say, dear
+friend, are thy sins forgiven? Art thou washed in
+the precious atoning blood of Christ? If not, why
+not? The way is open. There is no hindrance.
+Thou art perfectly welcome, this moment, to the
+free benefits of the atoning work of Christ. Though
+thy sins be as scarlet; though they be black as
+midnight, black as hell; though they rise like a
+dreadful mountain before the vision of thy troubled
+soul, and threaten to sink thee into eternal perdition;
+yet do these words shine with divine and
+heavenly lustre on the page of inspiration, "<i>The
+blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, cleanseth us from</i>
+<span class="smcap">ALL</span> <i>sin</i>" (I John i. 7).</p>
+
+<p>But mark, friend, do not go on, week after week,
+mocking God, hardening thine own heart, and carrying
+out the schemes of the great enemy of Christ,
+by a false profession. This marks the damsel possessed
+by a spirit of divination, and here her history
+links itself with the present awful condition of
+Christendom. What was the burden of her song,
+during those "many days" in the which the apostle
+narrowly considered her case? "These men are
+the servants of the most high God, which <i>show unto
+us</i> the way of salvation." But she was not saved&mdash;she
+was not delivered&mdash;she was, all the while, under
+Satan's power herself.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is with Christendom&mdash;thus it is with each
+false professor throughout the length and breadth
+of the professing Church. We know of nothing,
+even in the deepest depths of moral evil, or in the
+darkest shades of heathenism, more truly awful
+than the state of careless, hardened, self-satisfied,
+fallow-ground professors, who on each successive
+Lord's Day give utterance, either in their prayers
+or their singing, to words which, so far as they are
+concerned, are wholly false.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of this is, at times, almost over-whelming.
+We cannot dwell upon it. It is really
+too sorrowful. We shall therefore pass on, having
+once more solemnly warned the reader against
+every shade and degree of false profession. Let
+him not say or sing aught that he does not heartily
+believe. The devil is at the bottom of all false profession,
+and by means thereof he seeks to bring
+discredit on the work of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>But how truly refreshing to contemplate the actings
+of the faithful apostle in the case of the damsel.
+Had he been seeking his own ends, or had he been
+merely a minister of religion, he might have welcomed
+her words as a tributary stream to swell the
+tide of his popularity, or promote the interest of
+his cause. But Paul was not a mere minister of
+religion; he was a minister of Christ&mdash;a totally
+different thing. And we may notice that the damsel
+does not say a word about Christ. She breathes
+not the precious, peerless name of Jesus. There
+is total silence as to Him. This stamps the whole
+thing as of Satan. "No man can call Jesus Lord
+but by the Holy Ghost." People may speak of
+God, and of religion; but Christ has no place in
+their hearts. The Pharisees, in the ninth of John,
+could say to the poor man, "Give God the praise;"
+but in speaking of Jesus, they could say, "This man
+is a sinner."</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is ever in the case of corrupt religion, or
+false profession. Thus it was with the damsel in
+Acts xvi. There was not a syllable about Christ.</p>
+
+<p>There was no truth, no life, no reality. It was hollow
+and false. It was of Satan; and hence Paul
+would not and could not own it; he was grieved
+with it and utterly rejected it.</p>
+
+<p>Would that all were like him! Would that there
+were the singleness of eye to detect, and the integrity
+of heart to reject the work of Satan in much
+that is going on around us! Such an eye Paul,
+through grace, possessed. He was not to be deceived.
+He saw that the whole affair was an effort
+of Satan to mix himself up with the work, that thus
+he might spoil it altogether. "But Paul, being
+grieved, turned and said to the spirit, I command
+thee, in the name of Jesus Christ, to come out of
+her. And he came out the same hour."</p>
+
+<p>This was true spiritual action. Paul was not in
+any haste to come into collision with the evil one,
+or even to pronounce upon the case at all; he waited
+many days; but the very moment that the enemy
+was detected he is resisted and repulsed with uncompromising
+decision. A less spiritual workman
+might have allowed the thing to pass, under the
+idea that it might turn to account and help forward
+the work. Paul thought differently; and he was
+right. He would take no help from Satan. He
+was not going to work by such an agency; and
+hence, in the name of Jesus Christ&mdash;that name
+which the enemy so sedulously excluded&mdash;he puts
+Satan to flight.</p>
+
+<p>But no sooner was Satan repulsed as the serpent,
+than he assumed the character of a lion. Craft
+having failed, he tried violence. "And when her
+masters saw that the hope of their gains was gone,
+they caught Paul and Silas and drew them into the
+market-place unto the rulers, and brought them to
+the magistrates, saying, These men, being Jews, do
+exceedingly trouble our city, and teach customs
+which are not lawful for us to receive, neither to
+observe, being Romans. And the multitude rose
+up together against them; and the magistrates rent
+off their clothes, and commanded to beat them.
+And when they had laid many stripes upon them,
+they cast them into prison, charging the jailor to
+keep them safely" (vers. 19-23).</p>
+
+<p>Thus the enemy seemed to triumph; but be it remembered
+that Christ's warriors gain their most
+splendid victories by apparent defeat. The devil
+made a great mistake when he cast the apostle into
+prison. Indeed it is consolatory to reflect that he
+has never done anything else but make mistakes,
+from the moment that he left his first estate down
+to the present moment. His entire history, from
+beginning to end, is one tissue of errors.</p>
+
+<p>And thus, as has been already remarked, the devil
+made a great mistake when he cast Paul into prison
+at Philippi. To nature's view it might have seemed
+otherwise; but in the judgment of faith, the servant
+of Christ was much more in his right place in prison
+for the truth's sake, than outside at his Master's expense.
+True, Paul might have saved himself. He
+might have been an honored man, owned and acknowledged
+as "a servant of the most high God,"
+if he had only accepted the damsel's testimony, and
+suffered the devil to help him in his work. But he
+could not do this, and hence he had to suffer.
+"And the multitude (ever fickle and easily swayed)
+rose up together against them: and the magistrates
+rent off their clothes, and commanded to beat them.
+And when they had laid many stripes upon them,
+they cast them into prison, charging the jailor to
+keep them safely. Who, having received such a
+charge, <i>thrust</i> them into the inner prison, and made
+their feet fast in the stocks" (vers. 22-24).</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, some might have said, was an end to
+the work of the evangelist in the city of Philippi.
+Here was an effectual stop to the preaching. Not
+so; the prison was the very place, at the moment,
+for the evangelist. His work was there. He was
+to find a congregation within the prison walls which
+he could not have found outside. But this leads us,
+in the third and last place, to the case of</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE HARDENED SINNER.</h3>
+
+<p>It was very unlikely that the jailor would ever
+have found his way to the prayer-meeting at the
+river side. He had little care for such things. He
+was neither an earnest seeker, nor a deceiver. He
+was a hardened sinner, pursuing a very hardening
+occupation. Jailors, from the occupation of their
+office, are, generally speaking, hard and stern men.
+No doubt there are exceptions. There are some
+tender-hearted men to be found in such situations;
+but, as a rule, jailors are not tender. It would
+hardly suit them to be so. They have to do with
+the very worst class of society. Much of the crime
+of the whole country comes under their notice; and
+many of the criminals come under their charge.
+Accustomed to the rough and the coarse, they are
+apt to become rough and coarse themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Now, judging from the inspired narrative before
+us, we may well question if the Philippian jailor
+was an exception to the general rule with respect
+to men of his class. Certainly he does not seem
+to have shown much tenderness to Paul and Silas.
+"He <i>thrust</i> them into the <i>inner</i> prison, and made
+their feet <i>fast</i> in the stocks." He seems to have
+gone to the utmost extreme in making them uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>But God had rich mercy in store for that poor,
+hardened, cruel jailor; and, as it was not at all
+likely that he would go to hear the gospel, the Lord
+sent the gospel to him; and, moreover, He made
+the devil the instrument of sending it. Little did
+the jailor know whom he was thrusting into the inner
+prison&mdash;little did he anticipate what was to
+happen ere another sun should rise. And we
+may add, little did the devil think of what he was
+doing when he sent the preachers of the gospel
+into jail, there to be the means of the jailor's conversion.
+But the Lord Jesus Christ knew what He
+was about to do, in the case of a poor hardened
+sinner. He can make the wrath of man to praise
+Him and restrain the remainder.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>"He everywhere hath sway,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And all things serve His might,<br /></span>
+<span>His ev'ry act pure blessing is,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">His path unsullied light.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>"When He makes bare His arm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Who shall His work withstand?<br /></span>
+<span>When He His people's cause defends,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Who then shall stay His hand?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was His purpose to save the jailor; and so far
+from Satan's being able to frustrate that purpose,
+he was actually made the instrument of accomplishing
+it. "God's purpose shall stand; and He will do
+all His pleasure." And where He sets His love
+upon a poor, wretched, guilty sinner, He will have
+him in heaven, spite of all the malice and rage of
+hell.</p>
+
+<p>As to Paul and Silas, it is very evident that they
+were in their right place in the prison. They were
+there <i>for the truth's sake</i>, and therefore <i>the Lord
+was with them</i>. Hence they were perfectly happy.
+What, though they were confined within the gloomy
+walls of the prison, with their feet made fast in the
+stocks, prison walls could not confine their spirits.
+Nothing can hinder the joy of one who has the
+Lord with him. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego,
+were happy in the fiery furnace. Daniel was happy
+in the lions' den; and Paul and Silas were happy
+in the dungeon of Philippi: "And at midnight Paul
+and Silas prayed, and sang praises to God: and the
+prisoners heard them."</p>
+
+<p>What sounds to issue from the inner prison! We
+may safely say that no such sounds had ever issued
+thence before. Curses and execrations and blasphemous
+words might have been heard; sighs, cries,
+and groans come forth from those walls. But to
+hear the accents of prayer and praise, ascending at
+the midnight hour, must have seemed strange indeed.
+Faith can sing as sweetly in a dungeon as
+at a prayer-meeting. It matters not where we are,
+provided always that we have God with us. His
+presence lights up the darkest cell, and turns a
+dungeon into the very gate of heaven. He can
+make His servants happy anywhere, and give them
+victory over the most adverse circumstances, and
+cause them to shout for joy in scenes where nature
+would be overwhelmed with sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>But the Lord had His eye upon the jailor. He
+had written his name in the Lamb's book of life
+before the foundation of the world, and He was
+now about to lead him into the full joy of His salvation.
+"And suddenly there was a great earthquake,
+so that the foundations of the prison were
+shaken: and immediately all the doors were opened,
+and every one's bands were loosed" (ver. 26).</p>
+
+<p>Now if Paul had not been in full communion with
+the mind and heart of Christ, he would assuredly
+have turned to Silas and said, "Now is the moment
+for us to make our escape. God has most manifestly
+appeared for us, and set before us an open
+door. If ever there was an opening of divine Providence
+surely this is one." But no; Paul knew
+better. He was in the full current of His blessed
+Master's thoughts, and in full sympathy with his</p>
+
+<p>Master's heart. Hence he made no attempt to
+escape. The claims of <i>truth</i> had brought him into
+prison; the activities of <i>grace</i> kept him there. Providence
+opened the door; but faith refused to walk
+out. People talk of being guided by Providence;
+but if Paul had been so guided, the jailor would
+never have been a jewel in his crown.</p>
+
+<p>"And the keeper of the prison awaking out of his
+sleep and seeing the prison doors open, he drew out
+his sword, and would have killed himself, supposing
+that the prisoners had been fled" (ver. 27). This
+proves, very plainly, that the earthquake, with all
+its attendant circumstances, had not touched the
+heart of the jailor. He naturally supposed, when
+he saw the doors open, that the prisoners were all
+gone. He could not imagine a number of prisoners
+sitting quietly in jail when the doors lay open
+and their chains were loosed. And then what was
+to become of him if the prisoners were gone? How
+could he face the authorities? Impossible. Anything
+but that. Death, even by his own hand, was
+preferable to that.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the devil had conducted this hardened sinner
+to the very brink of the precipice, and he was
+about to give him the final and fatal push over the
+edge, and down to the eternal flames of hell; when
+lo, a voice of love sounded in his ear. It was the
+voice of Jesus through the lips of His servant&mdash;a
+voice of tender and deep compassion&mdash;"<i>Do thyself
+no harm</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This was irresistible. A hardened sinner could
+meet an earthquake; he could meet death itself;
+but he could not withstand the mighty melting
+power of love. The hardest heart must yield to
+the moral influence of love. "Then he called for
+a light, and sprang in, and came <i>trembling</i>, and fell
+down before Paul and Silas, and brought them out,
+and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved?"
+Love can break the hardest heart. And surely
+there was love in those words, "Do thyself no
+harm," coming from the lips of one to whom he
+had done so much harm a few hours before.</p>
+
+<p>And, be it noted, there was not a single syllable
+of reproach, or even of reflection, uttered by Paul
+to the jailor. This was Christ-like. It was the
+way of divine grace. If we look through the Gospels,
+we never find the Lord casting reproach upon
+the sinner. He has tears of sorrow; He has touching
+words of grace and tenderness; but no reproaches&mdash;no
+reflections&mdash;no reproach to the poor
+distressed sinner. We cannot attempt to furnish
+the many illustrations and proofs of this assertion;
+but the reader has only to turn to the gospel story
+to see its truth. Look at the prodigal: look at the
+thief. Not one reproving word to either.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is in every case; and thus it was with
+God's Spirit in Paul. Not a word about the harsh
+treatment&mdash;the thrusting into the inner prison&mdash;not
+a word about the stocks. "Do thyself no harm."
+And then, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and
+thou shalt be saved, and thy house."</p>
+
+<p>Such is the rich and precious grace of God. It
+shines, in this scene, with uncommon lustre. It
+delights in taking up hardened sinners, melting and
+subduing their hard hearts, and leading them into
+the sunlight of a full salvation; and all this in a
+style peculiar to itself. Yes, God has His style
+of doing things, blessed be His name; and when
+He saves a wretched sinner, He does it after such
+a fashion as fully proves that His whole heart is in
+the work. It is His joy to save a sinner&mdash;even the
+very chief&mdash;and He does it in a way worthy of
+Himself.</p>
+
+<p>And now, let us look at the fruit of all this.
+The jailor's conversion was most unmistakable.
+Saved from the very brink of hell, he was brought
+into the very atmosphere of heaven. Preserved
+from self-destruction, he was brought into the circle
+of God's salvation; and the evidences of this were
+as clear as could be desired. "And they spake unto
+him the word of the Lord, and to all that were
+in his house. And he took them the same hour of
+the night, and washed their stripes; and was baptized,
+he and all his straightway. And when he
+had brought them into his house, he set meat before
+them, and rejoiced, <i>believing in God, with all
+his house</i>."</p>
+
+<p>What a marvelous change! The ruthless jailor
+has become the generous host! "If any man be
+in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are
+passed away: behold, all things are become new."
+How clearly we can now see that Paul was right in
+not being guided by <i>providences</i>! How much better
+and higher to be led by the "eye" of God! What
+an eternal loss it would have proved to him had he
+walked out at the open door! How much better
+to be conducted out by the very hand that had
+thrust him in&mdash;a hand once the instrument of
+cruelty and sin, now the instrument of righteousness
+and love! What a magnificent triumph!
+What a scene, altogether! How little had the devil
+anticipated such a result from the imprisonment of
+the Lord's servants! He was thoroughly outwitted.
+The tables were completely turned upon him.
+He thought to hinder the gospel, and, behold! he
+was made to help it on. He had hoped to get rid
+of two of Christ's servants, and, lo! he lost one of
+his own. Christ is stronger than Satan; and all
+who put their trust in Him and move in the current
+of His thoughts shall most assuredly share in the
+triumphs of His grace now, and shine in the brightness
+of His glory forever.</p>
+
+<p>Thus much, then, as to "the work of an evangelist."
+Such are the scenes through which he may
+have to pass&mdash;such the cases with which he may
+have to come in contact. We have seen the earnest
+seeker satisfied; the deceiver silenced; the
+hardened sinner saved. May all who go forth with
+the gospel of the grace of God know how to deal
+with the various types of character that may cross
+their path! May many be raised up to do the
+work of an evangelist!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<h3>LETTERS TO AN EVANGELIST</h3>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dearest A</span>&mdash;&mdash;,<br /></p>
+
+<p>I have been much interested, and I trust profited,
+of late, by tracing, through the Gospels and the
+Acts, the various notices of the work of evangelization;
+and it has occured to me that it may not be
+amiss to present to you, as one much occupied in
+the blessed work, a few of the thoughts that have
+suggested themselves to my mind. I shall feel myself
+much more free in this way, than if I were
+writing a formal treatise.</p>
+
+<p>And, first of all, I have been greatly struck with
+the simplicity with which the work of evangelizing
+was carried on in primitive times; so very unlike
+a great deal of what obtains among us. It seems
+to me that we moderns are quite too much hampered
+by conventional rules&mdash;too much fettered by
+the habits of Christendom. We are sadly deficient
+in what I may call spiritual elasticity. We are apt
+to think that in order to evangelize there must be
+a special gift; and even where there is this special
+gift, there must be a great deal of machinery and
+human arrangement. When we speak of doing the
+work of an evangelist, we, for the most part, have
+before our minds great public halls, and crowded
+audiences, for which there is a demand for considerable
+gift and power for speaking.</p>
+
+<p>Now you and I thoroughly believe, that in order
+to preach the gospel publicly, there must be a special
+gift from the Head of the Church; and, moreover,
+we believe according to Eph. iv. 11, that
+Christ has given, and does still give, "evangelists."
+This is clear, if we are to be guided by Scripture.
+But I find in the Gospels, and in the Acts of the
+Apostles, that a quantity of most blessed evangelistic
+work was done by persons who were not specially
+gifted at all, but who had an earnest love for souls,
+and a deep sense of the preciousness of Christ and
+His salvation. And, what is more, I find in those
+who were specially gifted, called, and appointed by
+Christ to preach the gospel, a simplicity, freedom,
+and naturalness in their mode of working, which I
+greatly covet for myself and for all my brethren.</p>
+
+<p>Let us look a little into Scripture. Take that
+lovely scene in John i. 36-45. John pours out his
+heart in testimony to Jesus: "Behold the Lamb of
+God!" His soul was absorbed with the glorious
+Object. What was the result? "Two disciples
+heard him speak, and they followed Jesus." What
+then? "One of the two which heard John speak,
+and followed Him, was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother."
+And what does he do? "<i>He first findeth his
+own brother</i> Simon, and saith unto him, We have
+found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the
+Christ. And he brought him to Jesus." Again,
+"The day following, Jesus would go forth into
+Galilee, and findeth Philip, and saith unto him,
+Follow Me.... <i>Philip findeth Nathanael</i>, and saith
+unto him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in
+the law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth,
+the son of Joseph.... <i>Come and see.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Here then, dearest A., is the style of thing for
+which I earnestly long: this individual work, this
+laying hold of the first man that comes in our way,
+this finding one's own brother, and bringing him to
+Jesus. I do feel we are deficient in this. It is all
+right enough to gather congregations, and address
+them, as God gives ability and opportunity. Neither
+you nor I would pen a single word to detract from
+the value of such a line of work. By all means
+hire rooms, halls, and theatres; put out bills inviting
+people to come; leave no lawful means untried
+to spread the gospel. Seek to get at souls as best
+you can. Far be it from me to cast a damp upon
+any who are seeking to carry on the work in this
+public way.</p>
+
+<p>But does it not strike you that we want more
+of the individual work? more of the private, earnest,
+personal dealing with souls? Do you not
+think that if we had more "Philips" we should
+have more "Nathanaels?" If we had more "Andrews,"
+we should have more "Simons?" I cannot
+but believe it. There is amazing power in an
+earnest personal appeal. Do you not often find
+that it is after the more formal public preaching is
+finished, and the close personal work begins, that
+souls are reached? How is it then that there is so
+little of this latter? Does it not often happen at
+our public preachings, that when the formal address
+is delivered, a hymn sung, and a word of
+prayer offered, all disperse without any attempt at
+individual work? I speak not now, mark you, of
+the preacher&mdash;who cannot possibly reach every
+case, but of the scores of Christians who have been
+listening to him. They have seen strangers enter
+the room, they have sat beside them; they have, it
+may be, noticed their interest, seen the tear stealing
+down the cheek; and yet they have let them
+pass away without a single loving effort to reach
+them, or to follow up the good work.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it may be said, "It is much better to
+allow the Spirit of God to follow up His own work.
+We may do more harm than good. And besides,
+people do not like to be spoken to: they will look
+upon it as an impertinent intrusion, and they will
+be driven away from the place altogether." There
+is considerable weight in all this. I fully appreciate
+it; and I am sure you do likewise, dearest A.
+I fear great blunders are committed by injudicious
+persons intruding upon the sacred privacy of the
+soul's deep and holy exercises. It needs tact and
+judgment; in short, it needs direct spiritual guidance
+to be able to deal with souls; to know whom
+to speak to, and what to say.</p>
+
+<p>But allowing all this, as we do in the fullest possible
+manner, I think you will agree with me that
+there is, as a rule, something lacking in connection
+with our public preachings. Is there not a want
+of that deep, personal, loving interest in souls
+which will express itself in a thousand ways that
+act powerfully on the heart? I confess that I have
+often been pained by what has come under my own
+notice in our preaching-rooms. Strangers come in
+and are left to find a seat wherever they can. No
+one seems to think of them. Christians are there,
+and they will hardly move to make room for them.
+No one offers them a Bible or hymn-book. And
+when the preaching is over, they are allowed to go
+as they came; not a loving word of inquiry as to
+whether they enjoyed the truth preached; not even
+a kindly look which might win confidence and invite
+conversation. On the contrary, there is a
+chilling reserve, amounting almost to repulsiveness.</p>
+
+<p>All this is very sorrowful; and perhaps you will
+tell me that I am drawing too highly colored a
+picture. Alas! the picture is only too true. And
+what makes it all the more deplorable is, that one
+knows as a fact that many persons frequent our
+preaching-rooms and lecture-halls in the deepest
+exercise, and they are only longing to open their
+hearts to some one who could offer them a little
+spiritual counsel; but through timidity, reserve, or
+nervousness, they shrink from making any advance,
+and have but to retire to their homes and to their
+bedchambers, lonely and sad, there to weep in solitude
+because no man cares for their precious souls.
+Now I feel persuaded that much of this might be
+remedied if those Christians who attend the gospel
+preachings were more <i>on the look out</i> for souls: if
+they would attend, not so much for their own profit,
+as in order to be co-workers with God, in seeking
+to bring souls to Jesus. No doubt it is very refreshing
+to Christians to hear the gospel fully and
+faithfully preached. But it would not be the less
+refreshing because they were intensely interested
+in the conversion of souls, and in earnest prayer
+to God in the matter. And, besides, it could in no
+wise interfere with their personal enjoyment and
+profit to cultivate and manifest a lively and loving
+interest in those who surround them, and to seek
+at the close of the meeting to help any who may
+need and desire to be helped. It has a surprising
+effect upon the preacher, upon the preaching, upon
+the whole meeting, when the Christians who attend
+are really entering into, and discharging, their high
+and holy responsibilities to Christ and to souls. It
+imparts a certain tone and creates a certain atmosphere
+which must be felt in order to be understood;
+but when once felt it cannot easily be
+dispensed with.</p>
+
+<p>But, alas, how often is it otherwise! How cold,
+how dull, how dispiriting is it at times to see the
+whole congregation clear out the moment the
+preaching is over! No loving, lingering groups
+gathering round young converts or anxious inquirers.
+Old experienced Christians have been
+present; but, instead of pausing with the fond hope
+that God would graciously use them to speak a
+word in season to him that is weary, they hasten
+away as though it were a matter of life and death
+that they should be home at a certain hour.</p>
+
+<p>Do not suppose, dearest A., that I wish to lay
+down rules for my brethren. Far be the thought.</p>
+
+<p>I am merely, in the freest possible manner, pouring
+out the thoughts of my heart to one with whom I
+have been linked in the work of the gospel for many
+years. I feel convinced there is a something lacking.
+It is my firm persuasion that no Christian is
+in a right condition, if he is not seeking in some
+way to bring souls to Christ. And, on the same
+principle, no assembly of Christians is in a right
+condition if it be not a thoroughly evangelistic assembly.
+We should all be on the lookout for souls;
+and then we may rest assured we should see soul-stirring
+results. But if we are satisfied to go on
+from week to week, month to month, and year to
+year, without a single leaf stirring, without a single
+conversion, our state must be truly lamentable.</p>
+
+<p>But I think I hear you saying, "Where is all the
+Scripture we were to have had? where the many
+quotations from the Gospels and the Acts?" Well,
+I have gone on jotting down the thoughts which
+have for some considerable time occupied my mind;
+and now, space forbids my going further at present.
+But if you so desire, I shall write you a second letter
+on the subject. Meanwhile, may the Lord, by
+His Spirit, make us more earnest in seeking the
+salvation of immortal souls, by every legitimate
+agency. May our hearts be filled with genuine
+love for precious souls, and then we shall be sure
+to find ways and means of getting at them!</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">Ever, believe me, dearest A.,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow,</p>
+<p class="indent2">* * *</p>
+
+
+
+<h3>LETTER II.</h3>
+
+<p>There is one point in connection with our subject
+which has much occupied my mind; and that
+is, the immense importance of cultivating an earnest
+faith in the presence and action of the Holy
+Ghost. We want to remember, at all times, that we
+can do nothing, and that God the Holy Ghost can
+do all. It holds good in the great work of evangelization,
+as in all beside, that it is "not by might,
+nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of
+hosts." The abiding sense of this would keep us
+humble, and yet full of joyful confidence. Humble,
+because we can do nothing; full of joyful confidence,
+because God can do all. Moreover, it would
+have the effect of keeping us very sober and quiet
+in our work&mdash;not cold and indifferent, but calm and
+serious, which is a great matter just now. I was
+much struck with a remark lately made by an aged
+workman, in a letter to one who had just entered
+the field. "Excitement," says this writer, "is not
+power, but weakness. Earnestness and energy are
+of God."</p>
+
+<p>This is most true and most valuable. But I like
+the two sentences taken together. If we were to
+take either apart, I think you and I would prefer
+the latter; and for this reason: there are many, I
+fear, who would regard as "excitement" what you
+and I might really consider to be "earnestness and
+energy." Now I do confess, I love a deep-toned
+earnestness in the work. I do not see how a man
+can be otherwise than deeply and thoroughly in
+earnest, who realizes in any measure the awfulness
+of eternity, and the state of all those who die in
+their sins. How is it possible for any one to think
+of an immortal soul standing on the very brink of
+hell, and in danger at any moment of being dashed
+over, and not be serious and earnest?</p>
+
+<p>But this is not excitement. What I understand by
+excitement is the working up of mere nature, and
+the putting forth of such efforts of nature as are
+designed to work on the natural feelings&mdash;all high
+pressure&mdash;all that is merely sensational. This is
+all worthless. It is evanescent. And not only so,
+but it superinduces weakness. We never find aught
+of this in the ministry of our blessed Lord or His
+apostles: and yet what earnestness! what untiring
+energy! what tenderness! We see an earnestness
+which wore the appearance of being beside oneself;
+an energy which hardly afforded a moment for rest
+or refreshment; and a tenderness which could weep
+over impenitent sinners. All this we see; but no
+excitement. In a word, all was the fruit of the
+Eternal Spirit; and all was to the glory of God.
+Moreover, there was ever that calmness and solemnity
+which becomes the presence of God, and yet
+that deep earnestness which proved that man's
+serious condition was fully realized.</p>
+
+<p>Now, dear brother, this is precisely what we
+want, and what we ought diligently to cultivate. It
+is a signal mercy to be kept from all merely natural
+excitement; and, at the same time, to be duly impressed
+with the magnitude and solemnity of the
+work. Thus the mind will be kept properly balanced,
+and we shall be preserved from the tendency
+to be occupied with <i>our</i> work merely because it is
+ours. We shall rejoice that Christ is magnified,
+and souls are saved, whoever be the instrument
+used.</p>
+
+<p>I have been thinking a good deal lately of that
+memorable time, now exactly ten years ago, when
+the Spirit of God wrought so marvelously in the
+province of Ulster. I think I gathered up some
+valuable instruction from what then came under
+my notice. That was a time never to be forgotten
+by those who were privileged to be eyewitnesses of
+the magnificent wave of blessing which rolled over
+the land. But I now refer to it in connection with
+the subject of the Spirit's action. I have no doubt
+whatever that the Holy Ghost was grieved and hindered
+in the year 1859, by man's interference. You
+remember how that work began. You remember
+the little school-house by the road side, where two
+or three men met, week after week, to pour out
+their hearts in prayer to God, that He would be
+pleased to break in upon the death and darkness
+which reigned around: and that He would revive
+His work, and send out His light and His truth in
+converting power. You know how these prayers
+were heard and answered. You and I were privileged
+to move through these soul-stirring scenes in
+the province of Ulster; and I doubt not the memory
+of them is fresh with you, as it is with me, this
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Well, what was the special character of that work
+in its earlier stages? Was it not most manifestly a
+work of God's Spirit? Did not He take up and
+use instruments the most unfit and unfurnished,
+according to human thinking, for the accomplishment
+of His gracious purpose? Do we not remember
+the style and character of the agents who were
+chiefly used in the conversion of souls? Were they
+not for the most part "unlearned and ignorant
+men?" And further, can we not distinctly recall
+the fact that there was a most decided setting aside
+of all human arrangement and official routine? Working
+men came from the field, the factory, and the
+workshop, to address crowded audiences; and we
+have seen hundreds hanging in breathless interest
+upon the lips of men who could not speak five
+words of good grammar. In short, the mighty tide
+of spiritual life and power rolled in upon us, and
+swept away for the time being a quantity of human
+machinery, and ignored all question of man's authority
+in the things of God and the service of
+Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Now we can well remember, that just in so far as
+the Holy Ghost was owned and honored, did the
+glorious work progress; and, on the other hand,
+in proportion as man intruded himself, in bustling
+self-importance, upon the domain of the Eternal
+Spirit, was the work hindered and quashed. I saw
+the truth of this illustrated in numberless cases.
+There was a vigorous effort made to cause the living
+water to flow in official and denominational channels,
+and this the Holy Ghost would not sanction.
+Moreover, there was a strong desire manifested, in
+many quarters, to make sectarian capital out of the
+blessed movement; and this the Holy Ghost resented.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was this all. The work and the workman
+were <i>lionized</i> in all directions. Cases of conversion
+which were judged to be "striking" were blazed
+abroad and paraded in the public prints. Travellers
+and tourists from all parts visited these persons,
+took notes of their words and ways, and
+wafted the report of them to the ends of the earth.
+Many poor creatures, who had up to that time
+lived in obscurity, unknown and unnoticed, found
+themselves, all of a sudden, objects of interest to
+the wealthy, the noble, and the public at large.
+The pulpit and the press proclaimed their sayings
+and doings; and, as might be expected, they completely
+lost their balance. Knaves and hypocrites
+abounded on all hands. It became a grand point
+to have some strange and extravagant experience
+to tell; some remarkable dream or vision to relate.
+And even where this ill-advised line of action did
+not issue in producing knavery and hypocrisy, the
+young converts became heady and high-minded,
+and looked with a measure of contempt upon old
+established Christians, or those who did not happen
+to be converted after their peculiar fashion&mdash;"stricken,"
+as it was termed.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to this, some very remarkable characters&mdash;men
+of desperate notoriety, who seemed to
+be converted, were conveyed from place to place,
+and placarded about the various streets, and crowds
+gathered to see them and hear them recount their
+history; which history was very frequently a disgusting
+detail of immoralities and excesses which
+ought never to have been named. Several of these
+remarkable men afterwards broke down, and returned
+with increased ardor to their former practices.</p>
+
+<p>These things, dearest A., I witnessed in various
+places. I believe the Holy Ghost was grieved and
+hindered, and the work marred thereby. I am
+thoroughly convinced of this: and hence it is that I
+think we should earnestly seek to honor the blessed
+Spirit; to lean upon Him in all our work; to follow
+where He leads, not run before Him. His work
+will stand: "Whatsoever God doeth it shall be forever."
+"The works that are done upon the earth,
+He is the doer of them." The remembrance of this
+will ever keep the mind well balanced. There is
+great danger of young workmen getting so excited
+about <i>their</i> work, <i>their</i> preaching, <i>their</i> gifts, as to
+lose sight of the blessed Master Himself. Moreover,
+they are apt to make preaching the <i>end</i> instead
+of the <i>means</i>. This works badly in every
+way. It injures themselves, and it mars their work.
+The moment I make preaching my end, I am out
+of the current of the mind of God, whose end is to
+glorify Christ; and I am out of the current of the
+heart of Christ, whose end is the salvation of souls
+and the full blessing of His Church. But where
+the Holy Ghost gets His proper place, where He
+is duly owned and trusted, there all will be right.
+There will be no exaltation of man; no bustling
+self-importance; no parading of the fruits of our
+work; no excitement. All will be calm, quiet,
+real, and unpretending. There will be the simple,
+earnest, believing, patient waiting upon God. Self
+will be in the shade; Christ will be exalted.</p>
+
+<p>I often recall a sentence of yours. I remember
+your once saying to me, "Heaven will be the best
+and safest place to hear the results of our work."
+This is a wholesome word for all workmen. I
+shudder when I see the names of Christ's servants
+paraded in the public journals, with flattering allusion
+to their work and its fruits. Surely those who
+pen such articles ought to reflect upon what they
+are doing: they should consider that they may be
+ministering to the very thing which they ought to
+desire to see mortified and subdued. I am most
+fully persuaded that the quiet, shady, retired path
+is the best and safest for the Christian workman.
+It will not make him less earnest but the contrary.
+It will not cramp his energy, but increase and intensify
+it. God forbid that you or I should pen a
+line or utter a sentence which might in the most remote
+way tend to discourage or hinder a single
+worker in all the vineyard of Christ. No, no, this
+is not the moment for aught of this kind. We want
+to see the Lord's laborers thoroughly in earnest;
+but we believe, most assuredly, that true earnestness
+will ever result from the most absolute dependence
+upon God the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>But only see how I have run on! And yet I
+have not referred to those passages of Scripture of
+which I spoke in my last. Well, dearly beloved in
+the Lord, I am addressing one who is happily familiar
+with the Gospels and Acts, and who therefore
+knows that the great Workman Himself, and all
+those who sought to tread in His blessed footsteps,
+owned and honored the Eternal Spirit as the One
+by whom all their works were to be wrought.</p>
+
+<p>I must now close for the present, my much loved
+brother and fellow-laborer; and I do so with a full
+heart, commending you, in spirit and soul and body,
+to Him who has loved us, and washed us from our
+sins in His own blood, and called us to the honored
+post of workers in His gospel field. May He bless
+you and yours, most abundantly, and increase your
+usefulness a thousandfold!</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+As ever, and for ever,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate work-fellow,<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h3>LETTER III.</h3>
+
+<p>There is another point which stands intimately
+connected with the subject of my last letter, and
+that is, the place the word of God occupies in the
+work of evangelization. In my last letter, as you
+will remember, I referred to the work of the Holy
+Ghost, and the immense importance of giving Him
+His proper place. How clearly the precious word of
+God is connected with the action of the Holy Spirit,
+I need not say. Both are inseparably linked in
+those memorable words of our Lord to Nicodemus&mdash;words
+so little understood&mdash;so sadly misapplied:
+"Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit,
+he cannot enter into the kingdom of God" (John
+iii).</p>
+
+<p>Now, you and I, dearest A., fully believe that in
+the above passage the Word is presented under the
+figure of "water." Thank God, we are not disposed
+to give any credit to the ritualistic absurdity
+of baptismal regeneration. We are, I believe, most
+thoroughly convinced that no one ever did, ever
+will, or ever could, get life by water baptism. That
+all who believe in Christ ought to be baptized we
+fully admit; but this is a totally different thing
+from the fatal error that substitutes an ordinance
+for the atoning death of Christ, the regenerating
+power of the Holy Ghost, and the life-giving virtues
+of the word of God. I shall not waste your
+time or my own in combating this error, but at
+once assume that you agree with me in thinking
+that when our Lord speaks of being "born of water
+and of the Spirit," He refers to the Word and the
+Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, then, the Word is the grand instrument to
+be used in the work of evangelization. Many passages
+of holy Scripture establish this point with
+such clearness and decision as to leave no room
+whatever for dispute. In the first chapter of James,
+ver. 18, we read, "Of His own will begat He us
+<i>with the word of truth</i>." Again, in I Pet. i. 23, we
+read, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed,
+but of incorruptible, <i>by the word of God</i>, which liveth
+and abideth forever." I must quote the whole
+passage because of its immense importance in connection
+with our subject: "For all flesh is as grass,
+and all the glory of man as the flower of grass.
+The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth
+away; but the word of the Lord endureth forever.
+<i>And this is the word which by the gospel is preached
+unto you.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>This last clause is of unspeakable value to the
+evangelist. It binds him, in the most distinct manner,
+to the word of God as the instrument&mdash;the
+only instrument&mdash;the all-sufficient instrument, to be
+used in his glorious work. He is to give the Word
+to the people; and the more simply he gives it the
+better. The pure water should be allowed to flow
+from the heart of God to the heart of the sinner,
+without receiving a tinge from the channel through
+which it flows. The evangelist is to preach the
+Word; and he is to preach it in simple dependence
+upon the power of the Holy Ghost. This is the
+true secret of success in preaching.</p>
+
+<p>But while I urge this great cardinal point in the
+work of preaching&mdash;and I believe it cannot be too
+strongly urged&mdash;I am very far indeed from thinking
+that the evangelist should give his hearers a
+quantity of truth. So far from this, I consider it a
+very great mistake. He ought to leave this to the
+teacher, lecturer, or pastor. I often fear that very
+much of our preaching shoots over the heads of the
+people, owing to the fact of our seeking rather to
+unfold truth than to reach souls. We rest satisfied,
+it may be, with having delivered a very clear and
+forcible lecture, a very interesting and instructive
+exposition of Scripture, something very valuable
+for the people of God; but the unconverted hearer
+has sat unmoved, unreached, unimpressed. There
+has been nothing for him. The lecturer has been
+more occupied with his lecture than with the sinner&mdash;more
+taken up with his subject than with the soul.</p>
+
+<p>Now I am thoroughly convinced that this is a
+serious mistake, and one into which we all&mdash;at
+least I am&mdash;very apt to fall. I deplore it deeply,
+and I earnestly desire to correct it. I question
+if this very mistake may not be viewed as the true
+secret of our lack of success. But, dearest A., I
+should not perhaps say "<i>our</i> lack" but <i>my</i> lack. I
+do not think&mdash;so far as I know aught of your ministry&mdash;that
+you are exactly chargeable with the
+defect to which I am now just referring. Of this,
+however, you will be the best judge yourself; but
+of one thing I am certain, namely, that the most
+successful evangelist is the one who keeps his eye
+fixed on the sinner, who has his heart bent on the
+salvation of souls, yea, the one with whom the love
+for precious souls amounts almost to a passion. It
+is not the man who unfolds the most truth, but the
+man who longs most after souls, that will have the
+most seals to his ministry.</p>
+
+<p>I assert all this, mark you, in the full and clear
+recognition of the fact with which I commenced
+this letter, namely, that the Word is the grand instrument
+in the work of conversion. This fact
+must never be lost sight of, never weakened. It
+matters not what agency may be used to make the
+furrow, or in what form the Word may clothe itself,
+or by what vehicle it may be conveyed; it is only
+by "the Word of truth" that souls are begotten.</p>
+
+<p>All this is divinely true, and we would ever bear
+it in mind. But do we not often find that persons
+who undertake to preach the gospel (particularly
+if they continue long in one place) are very apt to
+leave the domain of the evangelist&mdash;most blessed domain!&mdash;and
+travel into that of the teacher and
+lecturer? This is what I deprecate and deeply
+deplore. I know I have erred in this way myself,
+and I mourn over the error. I write in all loving
+freedom to you&mdash;the Lord has of late deepened immensely
+in my soul the sense of the vast importance
+of earnest gospel preaching. I do not&mdash;God
+forbid that I should&mdash;think the less of the work of
+a teacher or pastor. I believe that wherever there is
+a heart that loves Christ, it will delight to feed and
+tend the precious lambs and sheep of the flock of
+Christ, that flock which He purchased with His
+own blood.</p>
+
+<p>But the sheep must be gathered before they can
+be fed; and how are they to be gathered but by the
+earnest preaching of the gospel? It is the grand
+business of the evangelist to go forth upon the dark
+mountains of sin and error, to sound the gospel
+trumpet and gather the sheep; and I feel convinced
+that he will best accomplish this work, not by
+elaborate exposition of truth; not by lectures however
+clear, valuable, and instructive; not by lovely
+unfoldings of prophetic, dispensational, or doctrinal
+truth&mdash;most precious and important in the right
+place&mdash;but by fervid, pointed, earnest dealing with
+immortal souls; the warning voice, the solemn
+appeal, the faithful reasoning of righteousness,
+temperance, and judgment to come&mdash;the awakening
+presentation of death and judgment, the dread
+realities of eternity, the lake of fire and the worm
+that never dies.</p>
+
+<p>In short, beloved, it strikes me we want awakening
+preachers. I fully admit that there is such a
+thing as <i>teaching</i> the gospel, as well as <i>preaching</i>
+it. For example, I find Paul teaching the gospel
+in Rom. i.-viii. just as I find him preaching the
+gospel in Acts xiii. or xvii. This is of the very
+last importance at all times, inasmuch as there are
+almost sure to be a number of what we call "exercised
+souls" at our public preachings, and these
+need an emancipating gospel&mdash;the full, clear, elevated,
+resurrection gospel.</p>
+
+<p>But admitting all this, I still believe that what is
+needed for successful evangelization is, not so much
+a great quantity of truth as an intense love for
+souls. Look at that eminent evangelist George
+Whitefield. What think you was the secret of his
+success? No doubt you have looked into his
+printed sermons. Have you found any great breadth
+of truth in them? I question it. Indeed I must
+say I have been struck with the contrary. But oh!
+there was that in Whitefield which you and I may
+well covet and long to cultivate. There was a
+burning love for souls&mdash;a thirst for their salvation&mdash;a
+mighty grappling with the conscience&mdash;a bold,
+earnest, face-to-face dealing with men about their
+past ways, their present state, their future destiny.
+These were the things that God owned and blessed;
+and He will own and bless them still. I am persuaded&mdash;I
+write as under the very eye of God&mdash;that
+if our hearts are bent upon the salvation of
+souls, God will use us in that divine and glorious
+work. But on the other hand, if we abandon ourselves
+to the withering influences of a cold, heartless,
+godless fatalism; if we content ourselves with
+a formal and official statement of the gospel&mdash;a
+very cheerless sort of thing; if, to use a vulgar
+phrase, our preaching is on the principle of "take
+it or leave it," need we wonder if we do not see
+conversions? The wonder would be if there were
+any to see.</p>
+
+<p>No, no; I believe we want to look seriously into
+this great practical subject. It demands the solemn
+and dispassionate consideration of all who
+are engaged in the work. There are dangers on
+all sides. There are conflicting opinions on all
+sides. But I cannot conceive how any Christian
+man can be satisfied to shirk the responsibility of
+looking after souls. A man may say, "I am not
+an evangelist; that is not my line; I am more of a
+teacher, or a pastor." Well, I understand this; but
+will any one tell me that a teacher or pastor may
+not go forth in earnest longing after souls? I cannot
+admit it for a moment. Nay more; it does not
+matter in the least what a man's gift is, or even
+though he should not possess any prominent gift at
+all, he can and ought, nevertheless, to cultivate a
+longing desire for the salvation of souls. Would it be
+right to pass a house on fire, without giving warning,
+even though one were not a member of the Fire
+Brigade? Should we not seek to save a drowning
+man, even though we could not command the use
+of a patent life-boat? Who in his senses would
+maintain aught so monstrous? So, in reference to
+souls, it is not so much a gift or knowledge of
+truth that is needed, as a deep and earnest longing
+for souls&mdash;a keen sense of their danger, and a desire
+for their rescue.</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+Ever, dearest A.,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow,<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h3>LETTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p>When I took up my pen to address you in my
+first letter, I had no idea that I should have occasion
+to extend the series to a fourth. However, the
+subject is one of intense interest to me; and there
+are just two or three points further on which I desire
+very briefly to touch.</p>
+
+<p>And in the first place I deeply feel our lack of a
+prayerful spirit in carrying on the work of evangelization.
+I have referred to the subject of the
+Spirit's work; and also to the place which God's
+word ought ever to get; but it strikes me we are
+very deficient in reference to the matter of earnest,
+persevering, believing prayer. This is the true
+secret of power. "We," say the apostles, "will
+give ourselves continually to prayer and to the
+ministry of the Word."</p>
+
+<p>Here is the order: "Prayer, and the ministry of
+the Word." Prayer brings in the power of God;
+and this is what we want. It is not the power of
+eloquence, but the power of God; and this can only
+be had by waiting upon Him. "He giveth power
+to the faint; and to them that have no might He
+increaseth strength. Even the youths shall faint
+and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall:
+but they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their
+strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles;
+they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall
+walk, and not faint" (Isa. xl. 29-31).</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me, dearest A., that we are far too
+mechanical, if I may so express myself, in the
+work. There is too much of what I may call going
+through a service. I greatly fear that some of us
+are more on our legs than on our knees; more in
+the railway carriage than in the closet; more on the
+road than in the sanctuary; more before men than
+before God. This will never do. It is impossible
+that our preaching can be marked by power and
+crowned with results, if we fail in waiting upon
+God. Look at the blessed Master Himself&mdash;that
+great Workman. See how often He was found in
+prayer. At His baptism; at His transfiguration;
+previous to the appointment and mission of the
+twelve. In short, again and again we find that
+blessed One in the attitude of prayer. At one time
+He rises up a great while before day, in order to
+give Himself to prayer. At another time He
+spends the whole night in prayer, because the day
+was given up to work.</p>
+
+<p>What an example for us! May we follow it!
+May we know a little better what it is to agonize in
+prayer. How little we know of this!&mdash;I speak for
+myself. It sometimes appears to me as if we were
+so much taken up with preaching engagements
+that we have no time for prayer&mdash;no time for closet
+work&mdash;no time to be alone with God. We get into
+a sort of whirl of public work; we rush from place
+to place, from meeting to meeting, in a prayerless,
+barren condition of soul. Need we wonder at the
+little result? How could it be otherwise when we
+so fail in waiting upon God? <i>We</i> cannot convert
+souls&mdash;God alone can do this; and if we go on
+without waiting on Him, if we allow public preaching
+to displace private prayer, we may rest assured
+our preaching will prove barren and worthless.
+We really must "give ourselves to prayer" if we
+would succeed in the "ministry of the Word."</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all. It is not merely that we are
+lacking in the holy and blessed practice of private
+prayer. This is, alas! too true, as I have said.
+But there is more than this. We fail in our public
+meetings for prayer. The great work of evangelization
+is not sufficiently remembered in our prayer-meetings.
+It is not definitely, earnestly, and constantly
+kept before God in our public reunions. It
+may occasionally be introduced in a cursory, formal
+manner, and then dismissed. Indeed, I feel there
+is a great lack of earnestness and perseverance in
+our prayer-meetings generally, not merely as to the
+work of the gospel, but as to other things as well.
+There is frequently great formality and feebleness.
+We do not seem like men in earnest. We lack the
+spirit of the widow in Luke xviii., who overcame the
+unjust judge by the bare force of her importunity.
+We seem to forget that God will be inquired of;
+and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently
+seek Him.</p>
+
+<p>It is of no use for any one to say, "God can
+work without our earnest pleading; He will accomplish
+His purposes; He will gather out His own."
+We know all this; but we know also that He who
+has appointed the end has appointed the means;
+and if we fail in waiting on Him, He will get others
+to do His work. The work will be done, no doubt,
+but we shall lose the dignity, the privilege, and the
+reward of working. Is this nothing? Is it nothing
+to be deprived of the sweet privilege of being
+co-workers with God, of having fellowship with
+Him in the blessed work which He is carrying on?
+Alas! alas! that we prize it so little. Still we do
+prize it; and perhaps there are few things in which
+we can more fully taste this privilege than in united
+earnest prayer. Here every saint can join. Here
+all can add their cordial Amen. All may not be
+preachers; but all can pray&mdash;all join in prayer; all
+can have fellowship.</p>
+
+<p>And do you not find, beloved brother, that there
+is always a stream of deep and real blessing where
+<i>the assembly</i> is drawn out in earnest prayer for the
+gospel, and for the salvation of souls? I have invariably
+seen it, and hence it is always a source of
+unspeakable comfort, joy, and encouragement to
+my heart when I see the assembly stirred up to
+pray, for then I am sure God is going to give
+copious showers of blessing.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, when this is the case, when this most
+excellent spirit pervades the whole assembly, you
+may be sure there will be no trouble as to what is
+called "The responsibility of the preaching." It
+will be all the same who does the work, provided it
+is done as well as it can be. If the assembly is
+waiting upon God, in earnest intercession for the
+progress of the work, it will not be a question as to
+the one who is to take the preaching, provided
+Christ is preached and souls are blessed.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is another thing which has of late
+occupied my mind a good deal; and that is our
+method of dealing with young converts. Most
+surely there is immense need of care and caution,
+lest we be found accrediting what is not the genuine
+work of God's Spirit at all. There is very
+great danger here. The enemy is ever seeking to
+introduce spurious materials into the assembly, in
+order that he may mar the testimony and bring
+discredit upon the truth of God.</p>
+
+<p>All this is most true, and demands our serious
+consideration. But does it not seem to you, beloved,
+that we often err on the other side? Do we not
+often, by a stiff and peculiar style, cast a chill upon
+young converts? Is there not frequently something
+repulsive in our spirit and deportment? We
+expect young Christians to come up to a standard
+of intelligence which has taken us years to attain.
+Nor this only. We sometimes put them through a
+process of examination which only tends to harass
+and perplex.</p>
+
+<p>Now assuredly this is not right. The Spirit of
+God would never puzzle, perplex, or repulse a dear
+anxious inquirer&mdash;never, no never. It could never
+be according to the mind or heart of Christ to
+chill the spirit of the very feeblest lamb in all His
+blood-bought flock. He would have us seeking to
+lead them on gently and tenderly&mdash;to soothe, nourish,
+and cherish them, according to all the deep
+love of His heart. It is a great thing to lay ourselves
+out, and hold ourselves open to discern and
+appreciate the work of God in souls, and not to
+mar it by placing our own miserable crotchets as
+stumbling-blocks in their pathway. We need divine
+guidance and help in this as much as in any other
+department of our work. But, blessed be God, He
+is sufficient for this as for all beside. Let us only
+wait on Him: let us cling to Him, and draw upon
+His exhaustless treasury for each case as it arises,
+for exigence of every hour. He will never fail a
+trusting, expectant, dependent heart.</p>
+
+<p>I must now close this series of letters. I think I
+have touched most, if not all, of the points which I
+had in my mind. You will, I trust, bear in mind,
+beloved in the Lord, that I have, in all these letters,
+simply jotted down my thoughts in the utmost
+possible freedom, and in all the intimacy of true
+brotherly friendship. I have not been writing a
+formal treatise, but pouring out my heart to a beloved
+friend and yoke-fellow. This must be borne
+in mind by all who may read these letters.</p>
+
+<p>May God bless and keep you, dearest A. May
+He crown your labours with His richest and best
+blessing! May He keep you from every evil work,
+and preserve you unto His own everlasting kingdom!</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+Ever believe me,<br />
+My dearest A.,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h3>LETTER V.</h3>
+
+<p>It seems as though I must once more take up
+my pen to address you on certain matters connected
+with the work of evangelization, which
+have forced themselves upon my attention for
+some time past. There are three distinct branches
+of the work which I long to see occupying a far
+more definite and prominent place among us; and
+these are, the Tract depot, the Gospel preaching,
+and the Sunday-school.</p>
+
+<p>It strikes me that the Lord is awakening attention
+to the importance of the Tract depot as a valuable
+agency in the work of evangelization; but I question
+if we, on this side of the Atlantic, are thoroughly
+in earnest on the subject. How is this?
+Have books and tracts lost their interest and value
+in our eyes? Or does the fault lie in the mode of
+conducting our Tract depots? To my mind there
+seems to be something lacking in reference to this
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>I would fain see a well-conducted depot in every
+important town; by "well-conducted" I mean one
+taken up and carried on as a direct service to the
+Lord, in true love for souls, deep interest in the
+spread of the truth, and at the same time in a sound
+business way. I have known several depots fall
+to the ground through lack of business habits on
+the part of the conductors. They seemed very
+earnest, sincere persons, but quite unfit to conduct
+a business. In short, they were persons in whose
+hands any business would have fallen through.
+Then in many places there is the most deplorable
+failure as to the valuable and interesting work of
+conducting a depot.</p>
+
+<p>And how can we best reach the people, for whom
+the tracts and books are prepared? I believe by
+having the books and tracts exposed for sale in a
+shop window, where that is possible, so that people
+may see them as they pass, and step in and purchase
+what they want. Many a soul has been laid hold
+of in this way. Many, I doubt not, have been saved
+and blessed by means of tracts, seen for the first
+time in a shop window or arranged on a counter.
+But where there is no such opportunity, the assembly's
+meeting-room is the Tract depot's natural
+home.</p>
+
+<p>There is, manifestly, a real want of a Tract depot
+in every large town, conducted by some one of intelligence
+and sound business habits, who would be
+able to speak to persons about the tracts, and to
+recommend such as might prove helpful to anxious
+inquirers after truth. In this way, I feel persuaded,
+much good might be done. The Christians in the
+town would know where to go for tracts, not only
+for their own personal reading, but also for general
+distribution. Surely if a thing is worth doing at
+all, it is worth doing well; and if the Tract depot
+be not worth attending to, we know not what is.</p>
+
+<p>The Tract depot must be taken up in direct service
+to Christ. And I feel assured that where it is
+so taken up and so carried on, in energy, zeal, and
+integrity, the Lord will own it and He will make it
+a blessing. Is there no one who will take up this
+valuable work for Christ's sake and not for the sake
+of remuneration? Is there no one who will enter
+upon it in simple faith, looking to the living God?</p>
+
+<p>Here lies the root of the matter, dearest A. For
+this branch of the work, as for every other branch,
+we need those who trust God and deny themselves.
+It seems to me that a grand point would be gained
+if the Tract depot were placed on its proper footing,
+and viewed as an integral part of the evangelistic
+work, to be taken up in responsibility to the
+Lord, and carried on in the energy of faith in the
+living God. Every branch of gospel work&mdash;the
+Depot, the Preaching, the Sunday-school&mdash;must be
+carried on in this way. It is all well and most
+valuable to have fellowship&mdash;full cordial fellowship,
+in all our service; but if we wait for fellowship and
+co-operation in the starting of work which comes
+within the range of personal, as well as collective,
+responsibility, we shall find ourselves very much
+behind&mdash;or the work may not be done at all.</p>
+
+<p>I shall have occasion to refer more particularly
+to this point, when I come to treat of the Preaching
+and the Sunday-school. All I want now, is to
+establish the fact that the Tract depot is a branch,
+and a most important and efficient branch, of evangelistic
+work. If this be thoroughly grasped by
+our friends, a great point is gained. I must confess
+to you, dearest A., that my moral sense has often
+been grievously offended by the cold, commercial
+style in which the publishing and sale of books and
+tracts are spoken of&mdash;a style befitting perhaps a
+mere commercial business, but most offensive when
+adopted in reference to the precious work of God.
+I admit in the fullest way&mdash;nay, I actually contend
+for it&mdash;that the proper management of the depot
+demands good sound business habits, and upright
+business principles. But at the same time I am
+persuaded that the Tract depot will never occupy
+its true ground&mdash;never realize the true idea, never
+reach the desired end&mdash;until it is firmly fixed on its
+holy basis, and viewed as an integral part of that
+most glorious work to which we are called&mdash;even the
+work of active, earnest, persevering evangelization.</p>
+
+<p>And this work must be taken up in the sense of
+responsibility to Christ, and in the energy of faith
+in the living God. It will not do for an assembly
+of Christians, or some wealthy individual, to take up
+an inefficient protégé, and commit to such an one
+the management of the affair in order to afford a
+means of living. It is most blessed for all to have
+fellowship in the work; but I am thoroughly convinced
+that the work must be taken up in direct
+service to Christ, to be carried on in love for souls,
+and real interest in the spread of the truth.</p>
+
+<p>I hope to address you again on the other two
+branches of my theme.</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+Meanwhile, I remain, dearest A.,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow,<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h3>LETTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p>I have, in some of the earlier letters of this
+series, dwelt upon the unspeakable importance of
+keeping up with zeal and constancy, a faithful
+preaching of the gospel&mdash;a distinct work of evangelization,
+carried on in the energy of love to precious
+souls, and with direct reference to the glory of
+Christ&mdash;a work bearing entirely upon the unconverted,
+and therefore quite distinct from the work
+of teaching, lecturing, or exhorting, in the bosom of
+the assembly; which latter is, I need not say, of
+equal importance in the mind of our Lord Christ.</p>
+
+<p>My object in referring again to this subject is to
+call your attention to a point in connection with it,
+respecting which, it seems to me, there is a great
+want of clearness amongst some of our friends. I
+question if we are, as a rule, thoroughly clear as to
+the question of individual responsibility in the work
+of the gospel. I admit, of course, that the teacher
+or lecturer is called to exercise his gift, to a very
+great extent, on the same principle as the evangelist;
+that is, on his own personal responsibility to
+Christ; and that the assembly is not responsible
+for his individual services; unless indeed he teach
+unsound doctrine, in which case the assembly is
+bound to take it up.</p>
+
+<p>But my business is with the work of the evangelist;
+and he is to carry on his work outside
+of the assembly. His sphere of action is the wide,
+wide world. "Go ye into all the world, and preach
+the gospel to every creature." Here is the sphere
+and here the object of the evangelist&mdash;"<i>All</i> the
+world"&mdash;"<i>Every</i> creature." He may go forth
+from the bosom of the assembly, and return thither
+again laden with his golden sheaves; nevertheless
+he goes forth in the energy of personal faith in the
+living God, and on the ground of personal responsibility
+to Christ; nor is the assembly responsible for
+the peculiar <i>mode</i> in which he may carry on his
+work. No doubt the assembly is called into action
+when the evangelist introduces the <i>fruit</i> of his work
+in the shape of souls professing to be converted,
+and desiring to be received into fellowship at the
+Lord's table. But this is another thing altogether,
+and must be kept distinct. The evangelist must be
+left free: this is what I contend for. He must not
+be tied down to certain rules or regulations, nor
+cramped by special conventionalities. There are
+many things which a large-hearted evangelist will
+feel perfectly free to do which might not commend
+themselves to the spiritual judgment and feelings
+of some in the assembly; but, provided he does
+not traverse any vital or fundamental principle,
+such persons have no right to interfere with him.</p>
+
+<p>And be it remembered, dearest A., that when
+I use the expression, "spiritual judgment and
+feelings," I am taking the very highest possible
+view of the case, and treating the objector with the
+highest respect. I feel this is but right and proper.
+Every true man has a right to have his feelings and
+judgment&mdash;not to speak of conscience&mdash;treated
+with all due respect. There are, alas! everywhere,
+men of narrow mind, who object to everything that
+does not square with their own notions&mdash;men who
+would fain tie the evangelist down to the exact line
+of things and mode of acting which according to
+their thinking would suit the assembly of God's
+people when gathered for worship at the table of
+the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>All this is a thorough mistake. The evangelist
+should pursue the even tenor of his way, regardless
+of all such narrowness and meddling. Take, for
+example, the matter of singing hymns. The evangelist
+may feel perfectly free to use a class of
+hymns or gospel songs which would be wholly
+unsuitable for the assembly. The fact is, he <i>sings</i>
+the gospel for the same object that he <i>preaches</i> it,
+namely, to reach the sinner's heart. He is just as
+ready to sing "Come" as to preach it.</p>
+
+<p>Such, dearest A., is the judgment which I have
+had on this subject for many years, though I am
+not quite sure if it will fully commend itself to your
+spiritual mind. It strikes me we are in danger of
+slipping into Christendom's false notion of "establishing
+a cause," and "organizing a body." Hence
+it is that the four walls in which the assembly meets
+are regarded by many as a "chapel," and the evangelist
+who happens to preach there is looked upon
+as "the minister of the chapel."</p>
+
+<p>All this has to be carefully guarded against: but
+my object in referring to it now is to clear up the
+point with respect to the gospel preaching. The
+true evangelist is not the minister of any chapel;
+or the organ of any congregation; or the representative
+of a body; or the paid agent of any society.
+No; he is the ambassador of Christ&mdash;the messenger
+of a God of love&mdash;the herald of glad tidings. His
+heart is filled with love to souls; his lips anointed
+by the Holy Ghost; his words clothed with heavenly
+power. Let him alone! Fetter him not by
+your rules and regulations! Leave him to his work
+and to his Master! And further, bear in mind that
+the Church of God can afford a platform broad
+enough for all sorts of workmen and every possible
+style of work, <i>provided only</i> that foundation truth be
+not disturbed. It is a fatal mistake to seek to reduce
+every one and every thing to a dead level.
+Christianity is a living, a divine reality. Christ's
+servants are sent by Him, and to Him they are responsible.
+"Who art thou that judgest another
+man's servant? To his own master he standeth or
+falleth" (Rom. xiv.).</p>
+
+<p>We may depend upon it, dearest A., these things
+demand our serious consideration, if we do not
+want to have the blessed work of evangelization
+marred in our hands.</p>
+
+<p>I have just one other point that I would refer to
+before closing my letter, as it has been rather a
+vexed question in certain places&mdash;I allude to what
+has been termed "the responsibility of the preaching."</p>
+
+<p>How many of our friends have been and are
+harassed about this question! And why? I am
+persuaded that it is from not understanding the
+true nature, character, and sphere of the work of
+evangelization. Hence we have had some persons
+contending for it that the Sunday evening preaching
+should be left open. "Open to what?" That
+is the question. In too many cases it has proved
+to be "open" to a character of speaking altogether
+unsuited to many who had come there, or who had
+been brought by friends, expecting to hear a full,
+clear, earnest gospel. On such occasions our
+friends have been disappointed, and the unconverted
+perfectly unable to understand the meaning
+of the service. Surely such things ought not to be;
+nor would they be if men would only discern the
+simplest thing possible, namely, the distinction
+between all meetings in which Christ's servants
+exercise their ministry on their own personal responsibility,
+and all meetings which are purely reunions
+of the assembly, whether for the Lord's
+Supper, for prayer, or for any other purpose
+whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+Your deeply affectionate,<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h3>LETTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p>Through want of space I was obliged to close
+my last letter without even touching upon the subject
+of the Sunday-school: I must, however, devote
+a page or two to a branch of work which has occupied
+a very large place in my heart for thirty years.
+I should deem my series incomplete were this
+subject left untouched.</p>
+
+<p>Some may question how far the Sunday-school
+can be viewed as an integral part of the work of
+evangelization. I can only say it is mainly in this
+light I regard it. I look upon it as one great and
+most interesting branch of gospel work. The superintendent
+of the Sunday-school and the teacher of
+the Sunday-school class are workers in the wide
+gospel field, just as distinctly as the evangelist or
+preacher of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>I am fully aware that a Sunday-school differs
+materially from an ordinary gospel preaching. It
+is not convened in the same way, or conducted in
+the same manner. There is, if I may so express
+myself, a union of the parent, the teacher, and the
+evangelist, in the person of the Sunday-school
+worker. For the time being he takes the place of
+the parent: he seeks to do the duty of a teacher;
+but he aims at the object of the evangelist&mdash;that
+priceless object, the salvation of the souls of the
+precious little ones committed to his charge. As
+to the mode in which he gains his end&mdash;as to the
+details of his work&mdash;as to the varied agencies which
+he may bring to bear, he alone is responsible.</p>
+
+<p>I am aware that exception is taken to the Sunday-school
+on the ground that its tendency is to
+interfere with parental or domestic training. Now
+I must confess, dearest A., that I cannot see any
+force whatever in this objection. The true object
+of the Sunday-school is, not to supersede parental
+training, but to help it where it exists, or to supply
+its lack where it does not exist. There are, as you
+and I well know, hundreds of thousands of dear
+children who have no parental training at all.
+Thousands have no parents, and thousands more
+have parents who are far worse than none. Look
+at the multitudes that throng the lanes, alleys, and
+courtyards of our large cities and towns, who seem
+hardly a degree above mere animal existence&mdash;yea,
+many of them like little incarnate demons.</p>
+
+<p>Who can think upon all these precious souls
+without wishing a hearty God-speed to all <i>true</i>
+Sunday-school workers, and earnestly longing for
+more thorough earnestness and energy in that most
+blessed work?</p>
+
+<p>I say "<i>true</i>" Sunday-school workers, because I
+fear that many engage in the work who are not
+true, not real, not fit. Many, I fear, take it up as a
+little bit of fashionable religious work, suited to the
+younger members of religious communities. Many,
+too, view it as a kind of set-off to a week of self-indulgence,
+folly, and worldliness. All such persons
+are an actual hindrance rather than a help to
+this sacred service.</p>
+
+<p>Then again, there are many who sincerely love
+Christ, and long to serve Him in the Sunday-school,
+but who are not really fitted for the work. They
+are deficient in tact, energy, order, and rule. They
+lack that power to adapt themselves to the children,
+and to engage their young hearts, which is so essential
+to the Sunday-school worker. It is a great
+mistake to suppose that every one who stands idle
+in the market-place is fit to turn into this particular
+branch of Christian labor. On the contrary, it
+needs a person thoroughly fitted of God for it; and
+if it be asked, "How are we ever to be supplied
+with suited agents for this branch of evangelistic
+service?" I reply, Just in the same way as you
+are to be supplied in any other department&mdash;by
+earnest, persevering, believing prayer. I am most
+thoroughly persuaded that if Christians were more
+stirred up by God's Spirit to feel the importance of
+the Sunday-school&mdash;if they could only seize the
+idea that it is, like the Tract depot and the preaching,
+part and parcel of that most glorious work to
+which we are called in these closing days of Christendom's
+history&mdash;if they were more permeated by
+the idea of the evangelistic nature and object of
+Sunday-school work, they would be more instant
+and earnest in prayer, both in the closet and in the
+public assembly, that the Lord would raise up in
+our midst a band of earnest, devoted, whole-hearted
+Sunday-school workers.</p>
+
+<p>This is the lack, dearest A.; and may God, in
+His abounding mercy, supply it! He is able, and
+surely He is willing. But then He will be waited
+on and inquired of; and "He is the rewarder of
+them that <i>diligently</i> seek Him." I think we have
+much cause for thankfulness and praise for what
+has been done in the way of Sunday-schools during
+the last few years. I well remember the time when
+many of our friends seemed to overlook this branch
+of work altogether. Even now many treat it with
+indifference, thus weakening the hand and discouraging
+the hearts of those engaged in it.</p>
+
+<p>But I shall not dwell upon this, inasmuch as my
+theme is the Sunday-school, and not those who
+neglect or oppose it. I bless God for what I see
+in the way of encouragement. I have often been
+exceedingly refreshed and delighted by seeing some
+of our very oldest friends rising from the table of
+their Lord, and proceeding to arrange the benches
+on which the dear little ones were soon to be ranged
+to hear the sweet story of a Saviour's love. And
+what could be more lovely, more touching, or more
+morally suited, than for those who had just been
+remembering the Saviour's dying love to seek,
+even by the arrangement of the benches, to carry
+out His living words, "Suffer the little children to
+come unto Me?"</p>
+
+<p>There is very much I should like to add as to the
+mode of working the Sunday-school; but perhaps
+it is just as well that each worker should be wholly
+cast upon the living God for counsel and help as to
+details. We must ever remember that the Sunday-school,
+like the Tract depot and the preaching, is
+entirely a work of individual responsibility. This
+is a grand point; and where it is fully understood,
+and where there is real earnestness of heart and
+singleness of eye, I believe there will be no great
+difficulty as to the particular mode of working. A
+large heart, and a fixed purpose to carry on the
+great work and fulfil the glorious mission committed
+to us, will effectually deliver us from the withering
+influence of crotchets and prejudices&mdash;those
+miserable obstructions to all that is lovely and of
+good report.</p>
+
+<p>May God pour out His blessing on all Sunday-schools,
+upon the pupils, the teachers, and the
+superintendents! May He also bless all who are engaged,
+in any way, in the instruction of the young!
+May He cheer and refresh their spirits by giving
+them to reap many golden sheaves in their special
+corner of the one great and glorious gospel field!</p>
+
+<p class="indent2">
+Ever believe me, dearest A.,<br />
+Your deeply affectionate<br />
+* * *<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_LIVING_GOD_AND_A_LIVING_FAITH" id="THE_LIVING_GOD_AND_A_LIVING_FAITH"></a>THE LIVING GOD AND A LIVING FAITH</h2>
+
+
+<p>There is one great substantial fact standing
+prominently forth on every page of the volume
+of God, and illustrated in every stage of
+the history of God's people&mdash;a fact of immense
+weight and moral power at all times, but specially
+in seasons of darkness, difficulty, and discouragement,
+occasioned by the low condition of things
+among those who profess to be on the Lord's side.
+The fact is this, <i>That faith can always count on God,
+and God will always answer faith</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Such is our fact, such our thesis; and if the
+reader will turn with us, for a few moments, to 2
+Chron xx., he will find a very beautiful and very
+striking illustration.</p>
+
+<p>This chapter shows us the good king Jehoshaphat
+under very heavy pressure indeed&mdash;it records
+a dark moment in his history. "It came to pass
+after this also, that the children of Moab, and the
+children of Ammon, and with them other besides
+the Ammonites, came against Jehoshaphat to battle.
+Then" (for people are ever quick to run with
+evil tidings) "there came some that told Jehoshaphat,
+saying, There cometh a great multitude against
+thee from beyond the sea, on this side Syria."
+Here was a difficulty of no ordinary nature. This
+invading host was made up of the descendants of
+Lot and of Esau; and this fact might give rise to
+a thousand conflicting thoughts and distracting
+questions in the mind of Jehoshaphat. They were
+not Egyptians or Assyrians, concerning whom there
+could be no question whatever; but both Esau
+and Lot stood in certain relations to Israel, and a
+question might suggest itself as to how far such relations
+were to be recognized.</p>
+
+<p>Not this only. The practical state of the entire
+nation of Israel&mdash;the actual condition of God's
+people, was such as to give rise to the most serious
+misgivings. Israel no longer presented an unbroken
+front to the invading foe. Their visible
+unity was gone. A grievous breach had been made
+in their battlements. The ten tribes and the two
+were rent asunder, the one from the other. The
+condition of the former was terrible, and that of the
+latter, shaky enough.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the circumstances of king Jehoshaphat were
+dark and discouraging in the extreme; and, even
+as regards himself and his practical course, he was
+but just emerging from the consequences of a very
+humiliating fall, so that his reminiscences would be
+quite as cheerless as his surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>But it is just here that our grand substantial fact
+presents itself to the vision of faith, and flings a
+mantle of light over the whole scene. Things
+looked gloomy, no doubt; but God was to be
+counted upon by faith, and faith could count upon
+Him. God is a never failing resource&mdash;a great
+reality, at all times, and under all circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>"God is our refuge and strength, a very present
+help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though
+the earth be removed, and though the mountains
+be carried into the midst of the sea. Though the
+waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the
+mountains shake with the swelling thereof. There
+is a river, the stream whereof shall make glad the
+city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the
+Most High. God is in the midst of her, she shall
+not be moved: God shall help her, and that right
+early. The heathen raged, the kingdoms were
+moved: He uttered His voice, the earth melted.
+The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is
+our refuge" (Psa. xlvi. I-7).</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was Jehoshaphat's resource in the
+day of his trouble; and to it he at once betook
+himself, in that earnest faith which never fails to
+draw down power and blessing from the living and
+true God, to meet every exigency of the way. "And
+Jehoshaphat feared, and set himself to seek the
+Lord, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah.
+And Judah gathered themselves together, to ask
+help of the Lord; even out of all the cities of Judah
+they came to seek the Lord. And Jehoshaphat
+stood in the congregation of Judah and Jerusalem,
+in the house of the Lord, before the new court, and
+said, O Lord God of our fathers, art not Thou God
+in heaven? and rulest not Thou over all the kingdoms
+of the heathen? and in Thy hand is there
+not power and might, so that none is able to withstand
+Thee? Art not Thou our God, who didst
+drive out the inhabitants of this land before Thy
+people Israel, and gavest it to <i>the seed of Abraham
+Thy friend for ever</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>These are the breathings of faith&mdash;faith that enables
+the soul to take the very highest possible
+ground. It mattered not what unsettled questions
+there might be between Esau and Jacob; there
+were none between Abraham and the Almighty
+God. Now, God had given the land to Abraham,
+His friend. For how long? <i>For ever.</i> This was
+enough. "The gifts and calling of God are without
+repentance." God will never cancel His call,
+or take back a gift. This is a fixed foundation
+principle; and on this faith always takes its stand
+with firm decision. The enemy might throw in a
+thousand suggestions; and the poor heart might
+throw up a thousand reasonings. It might seem
+like presumption and empty conceit, on the part of
+Jehoshaphat, to plant his foot on such lofty ground.
+It was all well enough in the days of David, or of
+Solomon, or of Joshua, when the unity of the nation
+was unbroken, and the banner of Jehovah
+floated in triumph over the twelve tribes of Israel.
+But things were sadly changed; and it ill became
+one in Jehoshaphat's circumstances to use such
+lofty language or assume to occupy such a high
+position.</p>
+
+<p>What is faith's reply to all this? A very simple,
+but a very powerful one&mdash;God never changes. He
+is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever. Had
+He not made Abraham a present of the land of
+Canaan? Had He not bestowed it upon his seed
+forever? Had He not ratified the gift by His word
+and His oath&mdash;these two immutable things in
+which it was impossible for Him to lie? Unquestionably.
+But then what of the law? Did not
+that make some difference? None whatever, as regards
+God's gift and promise. Four centuries
+previous to the giving of the law, was the great
+transaction settled and stablished between the Almighty
+God and Abraham His friend&mdash;and settled
+and stablished forever. Hence nothing can possibly
+touch this. There were no legal conditions
+proposed to Abraham. All was pure and absolute
+grace. God gave the land to Abraham by promise,
+and not by law, in any shape or form.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it was on this original ground that Jehoshaphat
+took his stand; and he was right. It was the
+only thing for him to do. He had not one hair's
+breadth of solid standing ground, short of these
+golden words, "Thou gavest it to the seed of Abraham
+Thy friend forever." It was either this or
+nothing. <i>A living faith always lays hold on the living
+God.</i> It cannot stop short of Him. It looks
+not at men or their circumstances. It takes no account
+of the changes and chances of this mortal
+life. It lives and moves and has its being in the
+presence of the living God; it rejoices in the cloudless
+sunlight of His blessed countenance. It carries
+on all its artless reasonings in the sanctuary, and
+draws all its happy conclusions from the facts discovered
+there. It does not lower the standard according
+to the condition of things around, but
+boldly and decidedly takes up its position on the
+very highest ground.</p>
+
+<p>Now, these actings of faith are always most grateful
+to the heart of God. The living God delights
+in a living faith. We may be quite sure that the
+bolder the grasp of faith, the more welcome it is to
+God. We need never suppose that the blessed
+One is either gratified or glorified by the workings
+of a legal mind. No, no; He delights to be trusted
+without a shadow of reserve or misgiving. He delights
+to be fully counted upon and largely used;
+and the deeper the need, and the darker the surrounding
+gloom, the more is He glorified by the
+faith that draws upon Him.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, we may assert with perfect confidence,
+that the attitude and the utterances of Jehoshaphat,
+in the scene before us, were in full accordance with
+the mind of God. There is something perfectly
+beautiful to see him, as it were, opening the original
+lease, and laying his finger on that clause in
+virtue of which Israel held as tenants forever under
+God. Nothing could cancel that clause or break
+that lease. No flaw there. All was ordered and
+sure. "Thou <i>gavest</i> it to the seed of Abraham Thy
+friend <i>forever</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This was solid ground&mdash;the ground of God&mdash;the
+ground of faith, which no power of the enemy can
+ever shake. True, the enemy might remind Jehoshaphat
+of sin and folly, failure and unfaithfulness.
+Nay, he might suggest to him that the very fact of
+the threatened invasion proved that Israel had
+fallen, for had they not done so, there would be
+neither enemy nor evil.</p>
+
+<p>But for this, too, grace had provided an answer&mdash;an
+answer which faith knew well how to appropriate.
+Jehoshaphat reminds Jehovah of the house
+which Solomon had built to His name. "They
+have built Thee a sanctuary therein for Thy name,
+saying, If, when evil cometh upon us, as a sword,
+judgment, or pestilence, or famine, we stand before
+this house, and in Thy presence (for Thy name is
+in this house), and cry unto Thee in our affliction,
+then Thou will hear and help. And now, behold,
+the children of Ammon, and Moab, and Mount Seir,
+whom Thou wouldest not let Israel invade, when
+they came out of the land of Egypt, but they turned
+from them, and distroyed them not. Behold, I say,
+how they reward us, to come to cast us out of <i>Thy
+possession, which Thou hast given us to inherit</i>. O
+our God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have
+no might against this great company that cometh
+against us; neither know we what to do, but <i>our
+eyes are upon Thee</i>" (vers. 8-12).</p>
+
+<p>Here, truly, is a living faith dealing with the living
+God. It is no mere empty profession&mdash;no lifeless
+creed&mdash;no cold uninfluential theory. It is not
+a man "saying he has faith." Such things will
+never stand in the day of battle. They may do
+well enough when all is calm, smooth, and bright;
+but when difficulties have to be grappled with&mdash;when
+the enemy has to be met face to face, all merely
+nominal faith, all mere lip profession, will prove
+like autumn leaves before the blast. Nothing will
+stand the test of actual conflict but a living personal
+faith in a living personal Saviour-God. This is
+what is needed. It is this which alone can sustain
+the heart, come what may. Faith brings God into
+the scene, and all is strength, victory, and perfect
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was with the king of Judah, in the days
+of 2 Chron. xx. "We have no might; neither
+know we what to do; but our eyes are upon Thee."
+This is the way to occupy God's ground, even with
+the eyes fixed on God Himself. This is the true
+secret of stability and peace. The devil will leave
+no stone unturned to drive us off the true ground
+which, as Christians, we ought to occupy in these
+last days; and we, in ourselves, have no might
+whatever against him. Our only resource is in the
+living God. If our eyes are upon Him, nothing
+can harm us. "Thou wilt keep him in perfect
+peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee, because he
+trusteth in Thee."</p>
+
+<p>Reader, art thou on God's ground? Canst thou
+give a "Thus saith the Lord" for the position
+which thou occupiest, at this moment? Art thou
+consciously standing on the solid ground of holy
+Scripture? Is there anything questionable in thy
+surroundings and associations? We beseech thee
+to weigh these questions solemnly as in the divine
+presence. Be assured they are of moment just
+now. We are passing through critical moments.</p>
+
+<p>Men are taking sides; principles are working and
+coming to a head. Never was it more needful to
+be thoroughly and unmistakably on the Lord's side.
+Jehoshaphat never could have met the Ammonites,
+Moabites, and Edomites, had he not been persuaded
+that his feet were on the very ground which God
+had given to Abraham. If the enemy could have
+shaken his confidence as to this, he would have had
+an easy victory. But Jehoshaphat knew where he
+was; he knew his ground. He understood his
+bearings; and therefore he could fix his eyes with
+confidence upon the living God. He had no misgivings
+as to his position. He did not say, as many
+do, now-a-days, "I am not quite sure. I hope I
+am; but sometimes clouds come over my soul, and
+make me hesitate as to whether I am really on divine
+ground." Ah! no, reader, the king of Judah
+would not have understood such language at all.
+All was clear to him. His eye rested on the
+original grant. He felt sure he was on the true
+ground of the Israel of God; and albeit all Israel
+were not there with him, yet God was with him,
+and that was enough. His was a living faith in
+the living God&mdash;the only thing that will stand in
+the day of trial.</p>
+
+<p>There is something in the attitude and utterance
+of the king of Judah, on that memorable occasion,
+well worthy of the reader's profound attention. His
+feet were firmly fixed on God's ground, and his
+eyes as firmly fixed on God Himself; and in addition
+to this, there was the deep sense of his own
+thorough nothingness. He had not so much as a
+shadow of a doubt as to the fact of his being in
+possession of the very inheritance which God had
+given him. He knew that he was in his right place.
+He did not <i>hope</i> it; still less did he doubt it; no, he
+knew it. He could say, "I believe and am sure."</p>
+
+<p>This is all-important. It is impossible to stand
+against the enemy, if there is anything equivocal in
+our position. If there be any secret misgiving as
+to our being in our right place&mdash;if we cannot give
+a "Thus saith the Lord" for the position which we
+occupy, the path we tread, the associations in which
+we stand, the work in which we are engaged, there
+will, most assuredly, be weakness in the hour of
+conflict. Satan is sure to avail himself of the
+smallest misgiving in the soul. All must be settled
+as to our positive standing, if we would make any
+headway against the enemy. There must be an
+unclouded confidence as to our real position before
+God, else the foe will have an easy victory.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is precisely here that there is so much
+weakness apparent among the children of God.
+Very few, comparatively, are clear, sound, and settled
+as to their foundation&mdash;very few are able, without
+any reserve, to take the blessed ground of being
+washed in the blood of Jesus, and sealed with the
+Holy Spirit. At times they hope it. When things
+go well with them; when they have had a good
+time in the closet; when they have enjoyed nearness
+to God in prayer, or over the Word; while
+they are sitting under a clear, fervent, forcible ministry
+&mdash;at such moments, perhaps, they can venture
+to speak hopefully about themselves. But, very
+soon, dark clouds gather; they feel the workings of
+indwelling sin; they are afflicted with wandering
+thoughts; or it may be, they have been betrayed
+into some levity of spirit, or irritability of temper;
+then they begin to <i>reason</i> about themselves, and to
+question whether they are, in reality, the children
+of God. And from reasonings and questionings,
+they very speedily slip into positive unbelief, and
+then plunge into the thick gloom of a despondency
+bordering on despair.</p>
+
+<p>All this is most sad. It is, at once, dishonoring to
+God, and destructive to the soul's peace; and as to
+progress, in such a condition, it is wholly out of the
+question. How can any one run a race, if he has
+not cleared the starting post? How can he erect a
+building, if he has not laid the foundation? And,
+on the same principle, how can a soul grow in the
+divine life, if he is always liable to doubt whether
+he has that life or not?</p>
+
+<p>But it may be that some of our readers are disposed
+to put such a question as the following,
+"How can I be sure that I am on God's ground?&mdash;that
+I am washed in the blood of Jesus and
+sealed with the Holy Spirit?" We reply, How do
+you know that you are a lost sinner? Is it because
+you feel it? Is mere feeling the ground of your
+faith? If so, it is not a divine faith at all. True
+faith rests <i>only</i> on the testimony of holy Scripture.
+No doubt, it is by the gracious energy of the Holy</p>
+
+<p>Ghost that any one can exercise this living faith;
+but we are speaking now of the true ground of
+faith&mdash;the authority&mdash;the basis on which it rests,
+and that is simply the holy Scriptures which, as the
+inspired apostle tells us, are able to make us wise
+unto salvation, and which even a child could know,
+without the church, the clergy, the fathers, the doctors,
+the councils, the colleges, or any other human
+intervention whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>"Abraham believed God." Here was divine faith.
+It was not a question of feeling. Indeed, if Abraham
+had been influenced by his feelings, he would
+have been a doubter instead of a believer. For
+what had he to build upon in himself? "His own
+body now dead." A poor ground surely on which
+to build his faith in the promise of an innumerable
+seed. But, we are told, "He considered not his
+own body now dead" (Rom. iv.). What, then, did
+he consider? He considered the word of the living
+God, and on that he rested. Now this is faith.
+And mark what the apostle says: "He staggered
+not at the promise of God through unbelief" (for
+unbelief is always a staggerer), "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 <i>therefore</i> it was imputed to
+him for righteousness."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! but," the anxious reader may say, "what has
+all this to say to my case? I am not an Abraham&mdash;I
+cannot expect a special revelation from God.
+How am I to know that God has spoken to me?</p>
+
+<p>How can I possess this precious faith?" Well, dear
+friend, mark the apostle's further statement. "Now,"
+he adds, "it was not written for his (Abraham's)
+sake alone, that it was imputed to him; but for us
+also, to whom it shall be imputed, if"&mdash;if what?&mdash;if
+we feel, realize, or experience aught in ourselves?
+Nay, but "if we believe on Him that raised up
+Jesus our Lord from the dead; who was delivered
+for our offences, and was raised again for our justification."</p>
+
+<p>All this is full of solid comfort and richest consolation.
+It assures the anxious inquirer that he has
+the self-same ground and authority to rest upon
+that Abraham had, with an immensely higher measure
+of light thrown on that ground, inasmuch as
+Abraham was called to believe in a promise, whereas
+we are privileged to believe in an accomplished
+fact. He was called to look forward to something
+which was to be done; we look back at something
+that is done, even an accomplished redemption,
+attested by the fact of a risen and glorified Saviour,
+at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens.</p>
+
+<p>But as to the ground or authority on which we
+are called to rest our souls, it is the same in our
+case as in Abraham's and all true believers' in all
+ages&mdash;it is the word of God&mdash;the holy Scriptures.
+There is no other foundation of faith but this; and
+the faith that rests on any other is not true faith at
+all. A faith resting on human tradition&mdash;on the
+authority of the Church&mdash;on the authority of so-called
+general councils&mdash;on the clergy&mdash;or on
+learned men, is not divine faith, but mere superstition;
+it is a faith which "stands in the wisdom of
+men," and "not in the power of God" (I Cor. ii. 5).</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is utterly impossible for any human pen
+or mortal tongue to overstate the value or importance
+of this grand principle&mdash;this principle of a
+living faith. Its value at the present moment is
+positively unspeakable. We believe it to be the divine
+antidote against most, if not all, the leading
+errors, evils, and hostile influences of the day in
+which our lot is cast. There is a tremendous shaking
+going on around us. Minds are agitated.
+Disturbing forces are abroad. There is a loosening
+of the foundations. Old institutions, to which the
+human mind clings, as the ivy to the oak, are tottering
+on every side; and many are actually fallen:
+and thousands of souls that have been finding shelter
+in them are dislodged and scared, and know
+not whither to turn. Some are saying, "The bricks
+are thrown down, but we will build with hewn
+stone." Many are at their wit's end, and most are
+ill at ease.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all; there is a numerous class, for the
+most part, of those who are not so much concerned
+about the condition and destiny of religious institutions
+and ecclesiastical systems, as about the condition
+and destiny of their own precious souls&mdash;of
+those who are not so much agitated by questions
+about "Broad Church," "High Church," "Low
+Church," "State Church," or "Free Church," as
+about this one great question, "What must I do to
+be saved?" What have we to say to these latter?
+What is the real want of their souls? Simply this,
+"A living faith in the living God." This is what
+is needed for all who are disturbed by what they
+see without, or feel within. Our unfailing resource
+is in the living God and in His Son Jesus Christ,
+as revealed by the Holy Spirit in the holy Scriptures.</p>
+
+<p>Here is the true resting-place of faith, and to
+this we do, most earnestly, most urgently and solemnly,
+invite the anxious reader. In one word, we
+entreat him to stay his whole soul on the word of
+God&mdash;the holy Scriptures. Here we have authority
+for all that we need to know, to believe, or to do.</p>
+
+<p>Is it a question of anxiety about my eternal salvation?
+Hear the following words, "Therefore,
+thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in Zion <i>for
+a foundation</i>, a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner
+stone, <i>a sure foundation</i>: he that believeth shall not
+make haste" (Isa. xxviii. 16). These precious
+words, so pregnant with tranquilizing power, are
+quoted by the inspired apostle in the New Testament
+Scriptures: "Wherefore also it is contained in
+the scripture, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner
+stone, elect, precious: and <i>he that believeth on Him
+shall not be confounded</i>" (I Peter ii. 6).</p>
+
+<p>What solid comfort&mdash;what deep and settled repose
+for the anxious soul is here! God has laid
+the foundation, and that foundation is nothing less
+than His own eternal and co-equal Son, the Son
+who had dwelt from all eternity in His bosom.</p>
+
+<p>This foundation is, in every respect, adequate to
+sustain the whole weight of the counsels and purposes
+of the eternal <span class="smcap">Three in one</span>&mdash;to meet all
+the claims of the nature, the character, and the
+throne of God.</p>
+
+<p>Being all this, it must needs be fully adequate to
+meet all the need of the anxious soul, of what kind
+soever that need may be. If Christ is enough for
+God He must of necessity be enough for man&mdash;for
+any man&mdash;for the reader; and that He is enough
+is proved by the very passage just quoted. He is
+God's own foundation, laid by His own hand, the
+foundation and centre of that glorious system of
+royal and victorious grace set forth in the word
+"Zion." (See Heb. xii. 22-24.) He is God's own
+precious, tried, chief corner stone&mdash;that blessed
+One who went down into death's dark waters&mdash;bore
+the heavy judgment and wrath of God against sin&mdash;robbed
+death of its sting, and the grave of its
+victory&mdash;destroyed him that had the power of death&mdash;wrested
+from the enemy's grasp that terrible
+weapon with which sin had armed him, and made
+it the very instrument of his eternal defeat and confusion.
+Having done all this, He was received up
+into glory, and seated at the right hand of the Majesty
+in the heavens.</p>
+
+<p>Such is God's foundation, to which He graciously
+calls the attention of every one who really feels the
+need of something divinely solid on which to build,
+in view of the hollow and shadowy scenes of this
+world, and in prospect of the stern realities of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Dear reader, you are now invited to build upon
+this foundation. Be assured it is for you as positively
+and distinctly as though you heard a voice
+from heaven speaking to your own very self. The
+word of the living God is addressed "to every creature
+under heaven"&mdash;"Whosoever will" is invited
+to come. The inspired volume has been placed in
+your hand and laid open before your eyes; and for
+what think you? Is it to mock or to tantalize you
+by presenting before you what was never intended
+for you? Ah! no, reader; such is not God's way.
+Does He send His sunlight and showers to mock
+and to tantalize, or to gladden and refresh? Do
+you ever think of calling in question your own very
+personal welcome to study the book of Creation?
+Never; and yet there might be some show of foundation
+of such a question, inasmuch as, since that
+wondrous volume was thrown open, sin has entered
+and thrown its dark blots over the pages thereof.
+But, spite of sin and all its forms and all its consequences,
+spite of Satan's power and malice, God
+has spoken. He has caused His voice to be heard
+in this dark and sinful world. And what has He
+said? "Behold, I lay in Zion a foundation." This
+is something entirely new. It is as though our
+blessed, loving, and ever gracious God had said to
+us, "Here, I have begun on the new. I have laid
+a foundation, on the ground of redemption, which
+nothing can ever touch, neither sin, or Satan, or
+aught else. I <i>lay</i> the foundation, and pledge My
+word that whosoever believes&mdash;whosoever commits
+himself, in childlike, unquestioning confidence, to
+My foundation&mdash;whosoever rests in My Christ&mdash;whosoever
+is satisfied with My precious, tried, chief
+corner stone, shall never&mdash;no, never&mdash;no, never be
+confounded&mdash;never be put to shame&mdash;never be disappointed&mdash;shall
+never perish, world without end."</p>
+
+<p>Beloved reader, dost thou still hesitate? We solemnly
+avow we cannot see even the shadow of a
+foundation of a reason why thou shouldest. If
+there were any question raised, or any condition
+proposed, or any barrier erected, reason would that
+thou mightest hesitate. If there were so much as a
+single preliminary to be settled by thee&mdash;if it were
+made a question of feeling or of experience, or of
+aught else that thou couldst do, or feel, or be, then
+verily thou mightest justly pause. But there is absolutely
+nothing of the sort. There is the Christ of
+God and the word of God, and&mdash;what then? "He
+that believeth shall not be confounded." In short
+it is simply "A living faith in the living God." It
+is taking God at His word. It is believing what
+He says because He says it. It is committing your
+soul to the word of Him who cannot lie. It is doing
+what Abraham did when he believed God and
+was counted righteous. It is doing what Jehoshaphat
+did when he planted his foot firmly on those
+immortal words, "Thou gavest it to the seed of
+Abraham Thy friend, forever." It is doing what
+the patriarchs, the prophets, the apostles, the saints
+in all ages have done, when they rested their souls
+for time and eternity upon that Word which "is
+settled forever in heaven," and thus lived in peace
+and died in hope of a glorious resurrection. It is
+resting calmly and sweetly on the immovable rock
+of holy Scripture, and thus proving the divine and
+sustaining virtue of that which has never failed any
+who who trusted it, and never will, and never can.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! the unspeakable blessedness of having such
+a foundation in a world like this where death,
+decay, and change are stamped upon all; where
+friendship's fondest links are snapped in the twinkling
+of an eye by death's rude hand; where all that
+seems, to nature's view, most stable, is liable to be
+swept away in a moment by the rushing tide of
+popular revolution; where there is absolutely nothing
+on which the heart can lean, and say, "I have
+now found permanent repose." What a mercy, in
+such a scene, to have "A living faith in the living
+God."</p>
+
+<p>"They shall not be ashamed that wait for Me."
+Such is the veritable record of the living God&mdash;a
+record made good in the experience of all those who
+have been enabled, through grace, to exercise a living
+faith. But then we must remember how much
+is involved in those three words, "<i>wait for Me</i>."
+The waiting must be a real thing. It will not do to
+<i>say</i> we are waiting on God, when, in reality, our
+eye is askance upon some human prop or creature
+confidence. We must be absolutely "shut up" to
+God. We must be brought to the end of self, and
+to the bottom of circumstances, in order fully to
+prove what the life of faith is, and what God's resources
+are. God and the creature can never occupy
+the same platform. It must be God alone.
+"My soul, wait thou <i>only</i> upon God; for my expectation
+is from Him. He <i>only</i> is my rock and
+my salvation" (Psa. lxii. 5, 6).</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was with Jehoshaphat, in that scene recorded
+in 2 Chron. xx. He was wholly cast upon
+God. It was either God or nothing. "We have no
+might." But what then? "Our eyes are upon
+Thee." This was enough. It was well for Jehoshaphat
+not to have so much as a single atom of
+might&mdash;a single ray of knowledge. He was in the
+very best possible attitude and condition to prove
+what God was. It would have been an incalculable
+loss to him to have been possessed of the very
+smallest particle of creature strength or creature
+wisdom, inasmuch as it could only have proved a
+hindrance to him in leaning exclusively upon the
+arm and the counsel of the Almighty God. If the
+eye of faith rests upon the living God&mdash;if He fills
+the entire range of the soul's vision, then what do
+we want with might or knowledge of our own?
+Who would think of resting in that which is human
+when he can have that which is divine? Who
+would lean on an arm of flesh, when he can lean
+on the arm of the living God?</p>
+
+<p>Reader, art thou, at this moment in any pressure,
+in any trial, need, or difficulty? If so, let us entreat
+thee to look simply and solely to the living God.
+Turn away thine eyes completely from the creature:
+"Cease from man, whose breath is in his nostrils."</p>
+
+<p>Let thy faith take hold now on the strength of God
+Himself. Put thy whole case into His omnipotent
+hand. Cast thy burden, whatever it is, upon Him.
+Let there be no reserve. He is as willing as He is
+able, and as able as He is willing, to bear all.
+Only trust Him fully. He loves to be trusted&mdash;loves
+to be used. It is His joy, blessed be His
+name, to yield a ready and a full response to the
+appeal of faith. It is worth having a burden, to
+know the blessedness of rolling it over upon Him.
+So the king of Judah found it in the day of his trial,
+and so shall the reader find it now. God never
+fails a trusting heart. "They shall not be ashamed
+that wait for Me." Precious words! Let us mark
+how they are illustrated in the narrative before us.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had Jehoshaphat cast himself completely
+upon the Lord, than the divine response
+fell, with clearness and power, upon his ear.
+"Harken ye, all Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem,
+and thou king Jehoshaphat; thus saith the
+Lord unto you, Be not afraid or dismayed by reason
+of this great multitude; for the battle is not yours,
+but God's ... ye shall not need to fight in this
+battle. Set yourselves, stand ye still, and see the
+salvation of the Lord with you, O Judah and Jerusalem:
+fear not, nor be dismayed; to-morrow go
+out against them; for the Lord will be with you."</p>
+
+<p>What an answer! "The battle is not yours, but
+God's." Only think of God's having a battle with
+people! Assuredly there could be little question
+as to the issue of such a battle. Jehoshaphat had
+put the whole matter into God's hands, and God
+took it up and made it entirely His own. It is
+always thus. Faith puts the difficulty, the trial,
+and the burden into God's hands, and leaves Him
+to act. This is enough. God never refuses to respond
+to the appeal of faith; nay, it is His delight
+to answer it. Jehoshaphat had made it a question
+between God and the enemy. He had said, "They
+have come to cast us out of <i>Thy</i> possession, which
+Thou hast given us to inherit." Nothing could be
+simpler. God had given Israel the land, and He
+could keep them in it, spite of ten thousand foes.
+Thus faith would reason. The self-same Hand that
+had placed them in the land could keep them there.
+It was simply a question of divine power. "O our
+God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have no
+might against this great company that cometh against
+us; neither know we what to do; but our
+eyes are upon Thee."</p>
+
+<p>It is a wonderful point in the history of any soul,
+to be brought to say, "I have no might." It is the
+sure precursor of divine deliverance. The moment
+a man is brought to the discovery of his utter powerlessness,
+the divine word is, "Stand still, and see
+the salvation of God." One does not want "might"
+to "stand still." It needs no effort to "see the
+salvation of God." This holds good in reference
+to the sinner in coming to Christ, at the first; and
+it holds equally good in reference to the Christian
+in his whole career from first to last. The great
+difficulty is to get to the end of our own strength.</p>
+
+<p>Once there, the whole thing is settled. There may
+be a vast amount of struggle and exercise ere we are
+brought to say "without strength!" But, the moment
+we take that ground, the word is, "Stand still,
+and see the salvation of God." Human effort, in
+every shape and form, can but raise a barrier between
+our souls and God's salvation. If God has
+undertaken for us, we may well be still. And has
+He not? Yes, blessed be His holy name, He has
+charged Himself with all that concerns us, for time
+and eternity; and hence we have only to let Him
+act for us, in all things. It is our happy privilege
+to let Him go before us, while we follow on "in
+wonder, love, and praise."</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was in that interesting and instructive
+scene on which we have been dwelling. "Jehoshaphat
+bowed his head, with his face to the ground:
+and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell
+before the Lord, worshiping the Lord. And the
+Levites, of the children of the Kohathites, and of
+the children of the Korhites, stood up to praise
+the Lord God of Israel with a loud voice on high."</p>
+
+<p>Here we have the true attitude and the proper
+occupation of the believer. Jehoshaphat withdrew
+his eyes from "that great company that had come
+against him," and fixed them upon the living God.
+Jehovah had come right in and placed Himself between
+His people and the enemy, just as He had
+done in the day of the exodus, at the Red Sea, so
+that instead of looking at the difficulties, they
+might look at Him.</p>
+
+<p>This, beloved reader, is the secret of victory at
+all times, and under all circumstances. This it is
+which fills the heart with praise and thanksgiving,
+and bows the head in wondering worship. There
+is something perfectly beautiful in the entire bearing
+of Jehoshaphat and the congregation, on the
+occasion before us. They were evidently impressed
+with the thought that they had nothing to do but to
+praise God. And they were right. Had He not
+said to them, "Ye shall not need to fight"? What
+then had they to do? What remained for them?
+Nothing but praise. Jehovah was going out before
+them to fight; and they had but to follow after
+Him in adoring worship.</p>
+
+<p>"And they rose early in the morning, and went
+forth in the wilderness of Tekoa: and as they went
+forth, Jehoshaphat stood and said, Hear me, O
+Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem; believe in
+the Lord your God, so shall ye be established; believe
+His prophets, so shall ye prosper" (2 Chron.
+xx. 20).</p>
+
+<p>It is of the very last importance that God's word
+should ever have its own supreme place in the heart
+of the Christian. God has spoken. He has given
+us His Word; and it is for us to lean unshaken
+thereon. We want nothing more. The divine Word
+is amply sufficient to give confidence, peace, and
+stability to the soul. We do not need evidences
+from man to prove the truth of God's word. That
+Word carries its own powerful evidences with it.
+To suppose that we require human testimony to
+prove that God's word is true, is to imply that
+man's word is more valid, more trustworthy, more
+authoritative, than the word of God. If we need a
+human voice to interpret, to ratify, to make God's
+revelation available, then we are virtually deprived
+of that revelation altogether.</p>
+
+<p>We call the special attention of the reader to this
+point. It concerns the integrity of Holy Scripture.
+The grand question is this, Is God's word sufficient
+or not? Do we really want man's authority to make
+us sure that God has spoken? Far be the thought!
+This would be placing man's word above God's
+word, and thus depriving us of the <i>only</i> solid
+ground on which our souls can lean. This is precisely
+what the devil has been aiming at from the
+very beginning, and it is what he is aiming at now.
+He wants to remove from beneath our feet the solid
+rock of divine revelation, and to give us instead the
+sandy foundation of human authority. Hence it is
+that we do so earnestly press upon our readers the
+urgent need of keeping close to God's word, in
+simple unquestioning faith. It is really the true
+secret of stability and peace. If God's word be
+not enough for us, without man's interference, we
+are positively left without any sure basis of our
+soul's confidence; yea, we are cast adrift on the
+wild watery waste of skepticism, we are plunged in
+doubt and dark uncertainty: we are most miserable.</p>
+
+<p>But, thanks and praise be to God, it is not so.
+"<i>Believe in the Lord your God, so shall ye be established:
+believe His prophets, so shall ye prosper.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Here is the resting-place of faith in all ages. God's
+eternal Word, which is settled forever in heaven,
+which He has magnified according to all His name,
+and which stands forth in its own divine dignity
+and sufficiency before the eye of faith. We must
+utterly reject the idea that aught in the way of human
+authority, human evidences, or human feelings,
+is needful to make the testimony of God full weight
+in the balances of the soul. Grant us but this, that
+God has spoken, and we argue with bold decision
+that nothing more is needed as a foundation for
+genuine faith. In a word, if we want to be established
+and to prosper, we have simply to "Believe
+in the Lord our God." It was this that enabled
+Jehoshaphat to bow his head in holy worship. It
+was this that enabled him to praise God for victory
+ere a single blow was struck. It was this that conducted
+him into "the valley of Berachah" (<i>blessing</i>)
+and surrounded him with spoil more than he could
+carry away.</p>
+
+<p>And now we have the soul-stirring record: "And
+when he had consulted with the people, he appointed
+<i>singers unto the Lord</i>, and that should
+praise the beauty of holiness, as they went out before
+the army, and to say, Praise the Lord: for
+His mercy endureth forever." What a strange advance
+guard for an army! A company of singers!
+Such is faith's way of ordering the battle.</p>
+
+<p>"And when they began to sing and to praise, the
+Lord set ambushments against the children of Ammon,
+Moab, and Mount Seir, which were come
+against Judah, and they were smitten." Only think
+of the Lord setting ambushments! Think of His
+engaging in the business of military tactics! How
+wonderful! God will do any thing that His people
+need, if only His people will confide in Him, and
+leave themselves and their affairs absolutely in His
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"And when Judah came toward the watch-tower
+in the wilderness, they looked unto the multitude,
+and, behold, they were dead bodies fallen to the
+earth, and none escaped." Such was the end of
+"that great company"&mdash;that formidable host&mdash;that
+terrible foe. All vanished away before the presence
+of the God of Israel. Yes, and had they been a
+million times more numerous, and more formidable,
+the issue would have been the same, for circumstances
+are nothing to the living God, and nothing
+to a living faith. When God fills the vision of the
+soul, difficulties fade away, and songs of praise
+break forth from joyful lips.</p>
+
+<p>"And when Jehoshaphat and his people came to
+take away the spoil of them" (for that was all they
+had to do) "they found among them in abundance
+both riches with the dead bodies, and precious jewels,
+which they stripped off for themselves, more
+than they could carry away; and they were three
+days in gathering of the spoil, it was so much.
+And on the fourth day, they assembled themselves
+in the valley of Berachah; for there they blessed
+the Lord."</p>
+
+<p>Such, beloved reader, must ever be the result of
+a living faith in the living God. More than two
+thousand five hundred years have rolled away since
+the occurrence of the event on which we have been
+dwelling; but the record is as fresh as ever. No
+change has come over the living God, or over the
+living faith which ever takes hold of His strength,
+and counts on His faithfulness. It is as true to-day
+as it was in the day of Jehoshaphat, that those who
+believe in the Lord our God shall be established,
+and shall prosper. They shall be endowed with
+strength, crowned with victory, clothed with spoils,
+and filled with songs of praise. May we, then
+through the gracious energy of the Holy Spirit,
+ever be enabled to exercise "<span class="smcap">a living faith in
+the living God</span>!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_SCRIPTURAL_INQUIRY" id="A_SCRIPTURAL_INQUIRY"></a>A SCRIPTURAL INQUIRY</h2>
+
+<h3>AS TO THE TRUE NATURE OF</h3>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Sabbath, the Law, and Christian Ministry</span></h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<h4>THE SABBATH.</h4>
+
+<p>If it were merely a question of the observance or
+non-observance of a day, it might be easily
+disposed of, inasmuch as the apostle teaches us
+in Rom. xiv. 5, 6, and also in Col. ii. 16, that such
+things are not to be made a ground of judgment.
+But seeing there is a great principle involved in the
+Sabbath question, we deem it to be of the very last
+importance to place it upon a clear and Scriptural
+basis. We shall quote the Fourth Commandment
+at full length: "Remember the sabbath day, to
+keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor, and do all
+thy work; but the seventh day is the sabbath of the
+Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work,
+thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant,
+nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy
+stranger that is within thy gates: for in six days
+the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all
+that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore
+the Lord blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed
+it" (Ex. xx. 8-11). This same law is repeated in
+Exodus xxxi. 12-17. And in pursuance thereof we
+find in Numbers xv. a man stoned for gathering
+sticks on the sabbath day. All this is plain and
+absolute enough. Man has no right to alter God's
+law in reference to the sabbath; no more than he
+has to alter it in reference to murder, adultery, or
+theft. This, we presume, will not be called in question.
+The entire body of old Testament Scripture
+fixes the seventh day as the sabbath; and the
+Fourth Commandment lays down the mode in which
+that sabbath was to be observed. Now where, we
+ask, is this precedent followed? Where is this
+command obeyed? Is it not plain that the professing
+Church neither keeps the right day as the sabbath,
+nor does she keep it after the Scripture mode?
+The commandments of God are made of none effect
+by human traditions, and the glorious truths which
+hang around "the Lord's day" are lost sight of.
+The Jew is robbed of his distinctive day and all
+the privileges therewith connected, which are only
+suspended for the present, while judicial blindness
+hangs over that loved and interesting, though now
+judged and scattered, people. And furthermore,
+the Church is robbed of her distinctive day and all
+the glories therewith connected, which if really understood
+would have the effect of lifting her above
+earthly things into the sphere which properly belongs
+to her, as linked by faith to her glorified Head
+in heaven. In result, we have neither pure Judaism
+nor pure Christianity, but an anomalous system
+arising out of an utterly unscriptural combination
+of the two.</p>
+
+<p>However, we desire to refrain from all attempt at
+developing the deeply spiritual doctrine involved in
+this great question, and confine ourselves to the
+plain teaching of Scripture on the subject; and in
+so doing we maintain that if the professing Church
+quotes the Fourth Commandment and parallel scriptures
+in defense of keeping the sabbath, then it is
+evident that in almost every case the law is entirely
+set aside. Observe, the word is, "Thou shalt not
+do any work." This ought to be perfectly binding
+on all who take the Jewish ground. There is no
+room here for introducing what we deem to be
+"works of necessity." We may think it necessary
+to kindle fires, to make servants harness our horses
+and drive us hither and thither. But the law is
+stern and absolute, severe and unbending. It will
+not, it can not, lower its standard to suit our convenience
+or accommodate itself to our thoughts. The
+mandate is, "Thou shalt not do <i>any</i> work," and
+that, moreover, on "the seventh day," which answers
+to our Saturday. We ask for a single passage
+of Scripture in which the day is changed, or in
+which the strict observance of the day is in the
+smallest degree relaxed.</p>
+
+<p>We request the reader of these lines to pause and
+search out this matter thoroughly in the light of
+Scripture. Let him not be scared as by some terrible
+bugbear, but let him, in true Berean nobility of
+spirit, "search the Scriptures." By so doing he
+will find that from the second chapter of Genesis
+down to the very last passage in which the sabbath
+is named, it means the <i>seventh</i> day and none other;
+and further, that there is not so much as a shadow
+of divine authority for altering the mode of observing
+that day. Law is law, and if we are under the
+law we are bound to keep it or else be cursed; for
+"it is written, Cursed is every one that continueth
+not in all things which are written in the book of
+the law to do them " (Deut. xxvii. 26; Gal. iii. 10).</p>
+
+<p>But it will be said, "We are not under the Mosaic
+law; we are the subjects of the Christian economy."
+Granted; most fully, freely and thankfully granted.
+All true Christians are, according to the teaching
+of Romans vii. and viii. and Galatians iii. and iv.,
+the happy and privileged subjects of the Christian
+dispensation. But if so, what is the day which specially
+characterizes that dispensation? Not "the
+seventh day," but "the first day of the week"&mdash;"<span class="smcap">the
+Lord's day</span>." This is pre-eminently the
+Christian's day. Let him observe this day with all
+the sanctity, the sacred reverence, the hallowed retirement,
+the elevated tone, of which his new nature
+is capable. We believe the Christian's retirement
+from all secular things cannot possibly be too profound
+on the Lord's day. The idea of any one,
+calling himself a Christian, making the Lord's day
+a season of what is popularly called recreation, unnecessary
+traveling, personal convenience, or profit
+in temporal things, is perfectly shocking. We are
+of opinion that such acting could not be too severely
+censured. We can safely assert that we never yet
+came in contact with a godly, intelligent, right-minded
+Christian person who did not love and reverence
+the Lord's day; nor could we have any sympathy
+with any one who could deliberately desecrate
+that holy and happy day.</p>
+
+<p>We are aware, alas, that some persons have
+through ignorance or misguided feelings said things
+in reference to the Lord's day which we utterly repudiate,
+and that they have done things on the
+Lord's day of which we wholly disapprove. We
+believe that there is a body of New Testament
+teaching on the important subject of the Lord's day
+quite sufficient to give that day its proper place in
+every well-regulated mind. The Lord Jesus rose
+from the dead on that day (Matt, xxviii. I-6; Mark
+xvi. I, 2; Luke xxiv. I; John xx. I). He met His
+disciples once and again on that day (John xx. 19,
+26). The early disciples met to break bread on
+that day (Acts xx. 7). The apostle, by the Holy
+Ghost, directs the Corinthians to lay by their contributions
+for the poor on that day (I Cor. xvi. 2).
+And finally, the exiled apostle was in the Spirit and
+received visions of the future on that day (Rev. i.
+10). The above scriptures are conclusive. They
+prove that the Lord's day occupies a place quite
+unique, quite heavenly, quite divine. But they as
+fully prove the entire distinctness of the Jewish sabbath
+and the Lord's day. The two days are spoken
+of throughout the New Testament with fully as
+much distinctness as we speak of Saturday and
+Sunday. The only difference is that the latter are
+heathen titles, and the former divine. (Comp. Matt.
+xxviii. I; Acts xiii. 14, xvii. 2, xx. 7; Col. ii. 16).</p>
+
+<p>Having said thus much as to the question of the
+Jewish sabbath and the Lord's day, we shall suggest
+the following questions to the reader, namely:
+Where in the word of God is the sabbath said to
+be changed to the first day of the week? Where
+is there any repeal of the law as to the sabbath?
+Where is the authority for altering the day or the
+mode of observing it? Where in Scripture have
+we such an expression as "the Christian sabbath"?
+Where is the Lord's day ever called the sabbath?<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
+
+<p>We would not yield to any of our dear brethren
+in the various denominations around us in the pious
+observance of the Lord's day. We love and honor
+it with all our hearts; and were it not that the gracious
+providence of God has so ordered it in these
+realms that we can enjoy the rest and retirement of
+the Lord's day without pecuniary loss, we should
+feel called upon to abstain from business, and give
+ourselves wholly up to the worship and service of
+God on that day&mdash;not as a matter of cold legality,
+but as a holy and happy privilege.</p>
+
+<p>It would be the deepest sorrow to our hearts to
+think that a true Christian should be found taking
+common ground with the ungodly, the profane, the
+thoughtless, and the pleasure-hunting multitude, in
+desecrating the Lord's day. It would be sad indeed
+if the children of the kingdom and the children
+of this world were to meet in an excursion train on
+the Lord's day. We feel persuaded that any who
+in any wise profane or treat with lightness the
+Lord's day act in direct opposition to the Word and
+Spirit of God.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE LAW.</h3>
+
+<p>As regards the law, it is looked at in two ways;
+first, as a ground of justification; and secondly, as
+a rule of life. A passage or two of Scripture will
+suffice to settle both the one and the other: "Therefore
+by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be
+justified in His sight: for by the law is the knowledge
+of sin" (Rom. iii. 20). "Therefore we conclude
+that a man is justified by faith without the
+deeds of the law" (ver. 28). Again: "Knowing
+that a man is not justified by the works of the law,
+but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed
+in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by
+the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law;
+for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified"
+(Gal. ii. 16).</p>
+
+<p>Then, as to its being a rule of life, we read,
+"Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead
+to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should be
+married to another, even to Him that is raised from
+the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto
+God" (Rom. vii. 4). "But now are we delivered
+from the law, being dead to that (see margin)
+wherein we were held: that we should serve in newness
+of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter"
+(ver. 6). Observe in this last-quoted passage two
+things: first, "we are delivered from the law;" second,
+not that we may do nature's pleasure, but
+"that we should <i>serve</i> in newness of spirit." Being
+delivered from bondage, it is our privilege to
+"serve" in liberty. Again we read, further on in
+the chapter, "And the commandment which was
+ordained to life, I found to be <i>unto death</i>" (ver. 10).
+It evidently did not prove as a rule of <i>life</i> to him.
+"I was <i>alive without the law</i> once; but <i>when the
+commandment came</i>, sin revived, and <i>I died</i>" (ver. 9).
+Whoever "I" represents in this chapter was alive
+until the law came, and then he died. Hence,
+therefore, the law could not have been a rule of life
+to him; yea, it was the very opposite, even a rule of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, then, it is evident that a sinner cannot
+be justified by the works of the law; and it is equally
+evident that the law is not the rule of the believer's
+life. "For as many as are of the works of the law
+are under the curse" (Gal. iii. 10). The law knows
+no such thing as a distinction between a regenerated
+and an unregenerated man: it curses all who
+attempt to stand before it. It rules and curses a
+man so long as he lives; nor is there any one who
+will so fully acknowledge that he cannot keep it as
+the true believer, and hence no one would be more
+thoroughly under the curse.</p>
+
+<p>What, therefore, is the ground of our justification?
+and what is our rule of life? The word of
+God answers, "We are justified by the faith of
+Christ," and Christ is our rule of life. He bore all
+our sins in His own body on the tree; He was
+made a curse for us; He drained on our behalf the
+cup of God's righteous wrath; He deprived death
+of its sting, and the grave of its victory; He gave
+up His life for us; He went down into death, where
+we lay, in order that He might bring us up in eternal
+association with Himself in life, righteousness,
+favor and glory, before our God and His God, our
+Father and His Father. (See carefully the following
+scriptures: John xx. 17; Rom. iv. 25; v. I-10;
+vi. I-11; vii. <i>passim</i>, viii. I-4; I Cor. i. 30, 31; vi.
+11; xv. 55-57; 2 Cor. v. 17-21; Gal. iii. 13, 25-29;
+iv. 31; Eph. i. 19-23; ii. I-6; Col. ii. 10-15; Heb.
+ii. 14, 15; I Peter i. 23.) If the reader will prayerfully
+ponder all these passages of Scripture he will
+see clearly that we are not justified by the works of
+the law; and not only so, but he will see how we
+are justified. He will see the deep and solid foundations
+of the Christian's life, righteousness and
+peace planned in God's eternal counsels, laid in the
+finished atonement of Christ, developed by God the
+Holy Ghost in the Word, and made good in the
+happy experience of all true believers.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as to the believer's rule of life, the apostle
+does not say, To me to live is the law; but, "To
+me to live is Christ" (Phil. i. 21). Christ is our
+rule, our model, our touchstone, our all. The continual
+inquiry of the Christian should be, not is this
+or that according to law? but is it like Christ?
+The law never could teach me to love, bless and
+pray for my enemies; but this is exactly what the
+gospel teaches me to do, and what the divine nature
+leads me to do. "Love is the fulfilling of the law;"
+and yet, were I to seek justification by the law, I
+should be lost; and were I to make the law my
+standard of action, I should fall far short of my
+proper mark. We are predestinated to be conformed,
+not to the law, but to the image of God's
+Son. We are to be like Him. (See Matt. v. 21-48;
+Rom. viii. 29; I Cor. xiii. 4-8; Rom. xiii. 8-10;
+Gal. v. 14-26; Eph. i. 3-5; Phil. iii. 20, 21; ii. 5;
+iv. 8; Col. iii. I-17.)</p>
+
+<p>It may seem a paradox to some to be told that
+"the righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us"
+(Rom. viii. 4), and yet that we cannot be justified
+by the law, nor make the law our rule of life. Nevertheless,
+thus it is if we are to form our convictions
+by the word of God. Nor is there any difficulty to
+the renewed mind in understanding this blessed
+doctrine. We are by nature "dead in trespasses
+and sins," and what can a dead man do? How can
+a man get life by keeping that which requires life
+to keep it&mdash;a life which he has not? And how do
+we get life? Christ is our life. We live in Him
+who died for us; we are blessed in Him who became
+a curse for us by hanging on a tree; we are
+righteous in Him who was made sin for us; we are
+brought nigh in Him who was cast out for us (Rom.
+v. 6-15; Eph. ii. 4-6; Gal. iii. 13). Having thus
+life and righteousness in Christ, we are called to
+walk as He walked, and not merely to walk as a
+Jew. We are called to purify ourselves even as He
+is pure; to walk in His footsteps; to show forth
+His virtues; to manifest His spirit (John xiii. 14,
+15; xvii. 14-19; I Peter ii. 21; I John ii. 6, 29;
+iii. 3).</p>
+
+<p>We shall close our remarks on this head by suggesting
+two questions to the reader, namely, Would
+the Ten Commandments without the New Testament
+be a sufficient rule of life for the believer? Is
+not the New Testament a sufficient rule without the
+Ten Commandments? Surely that which is insufficient
+cannot be our rule of life.</p>
+
+<p>We receive the Ten Commandments as part of
+the canon of inspiration; and moreover, we believe
+that the law remains in full force to rule and curse
+a man as long as he liveth. Let a sinner only try
+to get life by it, and see where it will put him; and
+let a believer only shape his way according to it,
+and see what it will make of him. We are fully convinced
+that if a man is walking according to the
+spirit of the gospel, he will not commit murder nor
+steal; but we are also convinced that a man, confining
+himself to the standard of the law of Moses
+would fall very far short of the spirit of the gospel.</p>
+
+<p>The subject of "the law" would demand much
+more elaborate exposition, but the limits of this
+paper do not admit of it, and we therefore entreat
+of the reader to look out the various passages of
+Scripture referred to and ponder them carefully.
+In this way we feel assured he will arrive at a sound
+conclusion, and be independent of all human teaching
+and influence. He will see how that a man is
+justified freely by the grace of God through faith
+in a crucified and risen Christ; that he is made a
+partaker of divine life, and introduced into a condition
+of divine and everlasting righteousness, and
+consequent exemption from all condemnation; that
+in this holy and elevated position Christ is his object,
+his theme, his model, his rule, his hope, his
+joy, his strength, his all; that the hope which is set
+before him is to be with Jesus where He is, and to
+be like Him forever. And he will also see that if
+as a lost sinner he has found pardon and peace at
+the foot of the cross, he is not, as an accepted and
+adopted son, sent back to the foot of Mount Sinai,
+there to be terrified and repulsed by the terrible anathemas
+of a broken law. The Father could not
+think of ruling with an iron law the prodigal whom
+He had received to His bosom in purest, deepest,
+richest grace. Oh no! "Being justified by faith,
+we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus
+Christ; by whom also we have access by faith into
+this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of
+the glory of God" (Rom. v. I, 2). The believer is
+justified not by works, but by <i>faith</i>; he stands not
+in law, but in <i>grace</i>; and he waits not for judgment,
+but for <i>glory</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We come now, in the third place, to treat of the
+subject of</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY;</h3>
+
+<p>in reference to which we have only to say, that we hold
+it to be a divine institution: its source, its power,
+its characteristics, are all divine and heavenly. We
+believe that the great Head of the Church received
+in resurrection gifts for His body. He, and not the
+Church, or any section of the Church, is the reservoir
+of the gifts. They are vested in Him, and not
+in the Church. He imparts them as, and to whom,
+He will. No man, nor body of men, can impart
+gifts. This is Christ's prerogative, and His alone;
+and we believe that when He imparts a gift, the
+man who receives that gift is responsible to exercise
+the same, whether as an evangelist, a pastor or a
+teacher, quite independently of all human authority.</p>
+
+<p>We do not by any means believe that all are endowed
+with the above gifts, though all have some
+ministry to fulfil. All are not evangelists, pastors,
+and teachers. Such precious gifts are only administered
+according to the sovereign will of the divine
+Head of the Church. Man has no right to interfere
+with them. Wherever they really exist, it is the
+place of the assembly to recognize them with devout
+thankfulness. Christians are exhorted to remember
+them that are over them in the Lord, to know them
+that guide them, and those who addict themselves to
+the ministry of the saints, and those who have spoken
+to them the word of life. Were they to refuse
+to do so, they would only be forsaking and rejecting
+their own mercies, for all things are theirs. (See
+Rom. xii. 3-8; I Cor. iii. 21-23; xii., xiv., xvi. 15;
+Gal. i. 11-17; Eph. iv. 7-16; I Thess. v. 12, 13;
+Heb. xiii. 7, 17; I Peter iv. 10, 11.)</p>
+
+<p>All this is simple enough. We can easily see
+where a man is divinely qualified for any department
+of ministry. It is not if a man <i>say</i> he has a
+gift, but if he in reality has it. A man may say he
+has a gift on the same principle as he may say he
+has faith (James ii. 14), and it may only be, after
+all, an empty conceit of his own ill-adjusted mind,
+which a spiritual assembly could not recognize for
+a moment. God deals in realities. A divinely-gifted
+evangelist is a reality; a teacher is a reality;
+a pastor is a reality; and such will be duly recognized,
+thankfully received, and counted worthy of
+all esteem and honor for their work's sake.</p>
+
+<p>Now we hold that unless a man has a <i>bona fide</i>
+gift imparted to him by the Head of the Church, all
+the instruction, all the education, and all the training
+that men could impart to him would not constitute
+him a Christian minister. If a man has a gift,
+he is responsible to exercise, to cultivate, and to
+wait upon his gift.</p>
+
+<p>But unless a man has a direct gift from Christ,
+though he had all the learning of a Newton, all the
+philosophy of a Bacon, all the eloquence of a Demosthenes,
+he is not a Christian minister. He may
+be a very gifted and efficient minister of religion, so
+called; but a minister of religion and a minister of
+Christ are two different things. And further, we
+believe that where the Lord Christ has bestowed a
+gift, that gift makes the possessor thereof a Christian
+minister, whom all true Christians are bound
+to own and receive, quite apart from all human appointment:
+whereas, though a man had all the human
+qualifications, human titles and human authority
+which it is possible to possess, and yet lacked
+that one grand reality, namely, Christ's gift, he is
+not a minister of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>We thank God for Christian ministry; and we
+feel assured that there are many truly gifted servants
+of Christ in the various denominations around
+us; but they are ministers of Christ on the ground
+of possessing His gift, and not, by any means, on
+the ground of man's ordination. Man cannot add
+aught to a heaven-bestowed gift. As well might he
+attempt to add a shade to the rainbow, a tint to the
+violet, motion to the waves, height to the snow-capped
+mountains, or daub with a painter's brush
+the peacock's plumage, as attempt to render more
+efficient by his puny authority the gift which has
+come down from the risen and glorified Head of
+the Church. Ah no! the vine, the olive and the
+fig-tree, in Jotham's parable (Judges ix.) needed not
+the appointment of the other trees. God had implanted
+in each its specific virtue. It was only the
+worthless bramble which hailed with delight an appointment
+that raised it from the position of <i>a real
+nothing</i> to be <i>an official something</i>. Thus it is with
+a divinely-gifted man. He has what God has given
+him: he wants, he asks no more. He rises above
+the narrow enclosure which man's authority would
+erect around him, and plants his foot upon that
+elevated ground where prophets and apostles have
+stood. He feels that it lies not within the range of
+the schools and colleges of this world to open to
+him his proper sphere of action. It appertains not
+to them to provide a setting for the precious gem
+which sovereign grace has imparted. The hand
+which has bestowed the gem can alone provide the
+proper setting. The grace which has implanted the
+gift can alone throw open a proper sphere for its
+exercise. What! can it be possible that those gifts
+which emanate from the Church's triumphant and
+glorious Lord are not available for her edification
+until they are dragged through the mire of a heathen
+mythology? Alas for the heart that can think so!
+As well might we say that the fatness of the olive
+and the pure blood of the grape must be mingled
+with the contents of a quagmire to render them
+available for human use.</p>
+
+<p>But it will be asked, "Were there not elders and
+deacons in the early Church, and ought we not to
+have such likewise?" Unquestionably there were
+elders and deacons in the early Church. They
+were appointed by the apostles, or those whom the
+apostles deputed: that is to say, they were appointed
+by the Holy Ghost&mdash;the only One who could then,
+or can now, appoint them. We believe that none
+but God can make or appoint an elder, and therefore
+for man to set about such work is but a powerless
+form, an empty name. Men may, and do,
+point us to the shadows of their own creation, and
+call upon us to recognize in those shadows divine
+realities; but alas! when we examine them in the
+light of Holy Scripture, we cannot even trace the
+outline, to say nothing of the living, speaking features
+of the divine original. We see divinely-appointed
+elders in the New Testament, and we see
+humanly-appointed elders in the professing Church;
+but we can by no means accept the latter as a substitute
+for the former. We cannot accept a mere
+shadow in lieu of the substance. Neither do we
+believe that men have any divine authority for their
+act when they set about making and appointing elders.
+We believe that when Paul, or Timothy, or
+Titus, ordained elders, they did so as acting by the
+power and under the direct authority of the Holy
+Ghost; but we deny that any man, or body of men,
+can so act now. We believe it was the Holy Ghost
+then, and it must be the Holy Ghost now. Human
+assumption is perfectly contemptible. If God raises
+up an elder or a pastor we thankfully own him.
+He both can and does raise up such. He does
+raise up men fitted by His Spirit to take the oversight
+of His flock, and to feed His lambs and
+sheep. His hand is not shortened that He cannot
+provide those blessings for His Church even amid
+its humiliating ruins. The reservoir of spiritual
+gift in Christ the Head is not so exhausted that He
+cannot shed forth upon His body all that is needed
+for the edification thereof. We are of opinion that
+were it not for our impatient attempts to provide
+for ourselves by making pastors and elders of our
+own, we should be far more richly endowed with
+pastors and teachers after God's own heart. We
+need not marvel that He leaves us to our own resources
+when by our unbelief we limit Him in His.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of "proving" Him, we "limit" Him, and
+therefore we are shorn of our strength and left in
+barrenness and desolation; or, what is worse, we
+betake ourselves to the miserable provisions of human
+expediency. However, we believe it is far
+better, if we have not God's reality, to remain in
+the position of real, felt, confessed weakness than
+to put forth the hollow assumption of strength; we
+believe it is better to be real in our poverty than to
+put on the appearance of wealth. It is infinitely
+better to wait on God for whatever He may be
+pleased to bestow, than to limit His grace by our
+unbelief, or hinder His provision for us by making
+provision for ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>We ask, where is the Church's warrant for calling,
+making or appointing pastors? Where have
+we an instance in the New Testament of a Church
+electing its own pastor? Acts i. 23-26 has been
+adduced in proof. But the very wording of the
+passage is sufficient to prove that it furnishes no
+warrant whatever. Even the eleven apostles could
+not elect a brother apostle, but had to commit it to
+higher authority. Their words are, "<span class="smcap">Thou, Lord</span>,
+<i>which knowest the hearts of all</i>, show whether of
+these two <i>Thou hast chosen</i>." This is very plain.
+They did not attempt to choose. God knew the
+heart. He had formed the vessel. He had put
+the treasure therein, and He alone could appoint it
+to its proper place.</p>
+
+<p>It is very evident, therefore, that the case of the
+eleven apostles calling upon the Lord to choose a
+man to fill up their number affords no precedent
+whatever for a congregation electing a pastor: it is
+entirely against any such practice. God alone can
+make or appoint an apostle or an elder, an evangelist
+or a pastor. This is our firm belief, and we ask
+for Scripture proof of its unsoundness. Human
+opinion will not avail; tradition will not avail; expediency
+will not avail. Are we taught from the
+word of God that the early Church ever elected its
+own pastors or teachers? We positively affirm that
+there is not so much as a single line of Scripture in
+proof of any such custom. If we could only find
+direction in the word of God to make and appoint
+pastors, we should at once seek to carry such direction
+into effect; but in the absence of any divine
+warrant we could only regard it as a mimicry on
+our part to attempt any such a thing. Why was
+not the church at Ephesus, or why were not the
+churches at Crete, directed to elect or appoint elders?
+Why was the direction given to Timothy and
+Titus without the slightest reference to the Church,
+or to any part of the Church? Because, as we believe,
+Timothy and Titus acted by the direct power
+and under the direct authority of God the Holy
+Ghost, and hence their appointment was to be regarded
+by the Church as divine.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
+<p>But where have we anything like this now?
+Where is the Timothy or the Titus now? Where is
+there the least intimation in the New Testament
+that there should be a succession of men invested
+with the power to ordain elders or pastors? True,
+the apostle Paul, in his second epistle to Timothy,
+says, "The things which thou hast heard of me
+among many witnesses, the same commit thou to
+faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also"
+(2 Tim. ii. 2). But there is not a word here about
+a succession of men having power to ordain elders
+and pastors. Assuredly teaching is not ordination;
+still less is it imparting the power to ordain. If the
+inspired apostle had meant to convey to the mind
+of Timothy that he was to commit to others authority
+to ordain, and that such authority was to descend
+by a regular chain of succession, he could and
+would have done so; and in that case the passage
+would have run thus: "The power which has been
+vested in you, the same do thou vest in faithful
+men, that they may be able also to ordain others."
+Such, however, is not the case; and we deny that
+there is any man or body of men now upon earth
+possessing power to ordain elders, nor was that
+power or authority ever committed to the Church.
+We hold it to be absolutely divine; and therefore,
+when God sends an elder or a pastor, an evangelist
+or a teacher, we thankfully hail the heaven-bestowed
+gift;<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> but we desire to be delivered from all
+empty pretension. We will have God's reality or
+nothing. We will have heaven's genuine coin, not
+earth's counterfeit. Like the Tirshatha of old,
+who said "that they should not eat of the most holy
+things till there stood up a priest with Urim and
+Thummim" (Ezra ii. 63), so would we say, let us
+rather, if it must be so, remain without office-bearers
+than substitute for God's realities the shadows of
+our own creation. Ezra could not accept the pretensions
+of men. Men might <i>say</i> they were priests;
+but if they could not produce the divine warrant
+and the divine qualifications, they were utterly rejected.
+In order for a man to be entitled to approach
+the altar of the God of Israel, he should not
+only be descended from Aaron, but also be free
+from every bodily blemish. (See Lev. xxi. 16-23.)
+So now, in order for any man to minister in the
+Church of God, he must be a regenerated man, and
+he must have the necessary spiritual qualifications.
+Even St. Paul, in his powerful appeal to the conscience
+and judgment of the church at Corinth, refers
+to his spiritual gifts and the fruits of his labor
+as the indisputable evidences of his apostleship.
+(See 2 Cor. x., xii.)</p>
+
+<p>Before dismissing the subject of the Christian
+Ministry, we would offer a remark upon the practise
+of laying on of hands, which is presented in the
+New Testament in two ways. First, we find it connected
+with the communication of a positive gift.
+"Neglect not the gift that is in thee, which was
+given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the
+hands of the presbytery" (I Tim. iv. 14). This is
+again referred to in the second epistle: "Wherefore
+I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift
+of God which is in thee by the putting on of my
+hands" (2 Tim. i. 6). This latter passage fixes the
+import of the expression "presbytery," as used in
+the first epistle. Both passages prove that the act
+of laying on of hands in Timothy's case was connected
+with the imparting of a gift. But secondly,
+we find the laying on of hands adopted simply for
+the purpose of expressing full fellowship and identification,
+as in Acts xiii. 3. It could not possibly
+mean ordination in this passage, inasmuch as Paul
+and Barnabas had been in the ministry long before.
+It simply gave beautiful expression to the full
+identification of their brethren in that work unto
+which the Holy Ghost had called them, and to
+which He alone could send them forth.</p>
+
+<p>Now we believe that the laying on of hands as
+expressing ordination, if there be not the power to
+impart a gift, is worth nothing, if indeed it be not
+mere assumption; but if it be merely adopted as
+the expression of full fellowship in any special work
+or mission, we should quite rejoice in it. For example,
+if two or three brethren felt themselves called
+of God to go on an evangelistic mission to some
+foreign land, and that those with whom they were
+in communion perceived in them the needed gift
+and grace for such a work, we should deem it exceedingly
+happy were they to set forth their unqualified
+approval and their brotherly fellowship by the
+act of laying on of hands. Beyond this we can see
+no value whatever in that act.</p>
+
+<p>Having thus, so far as our limits would permit,
+treated of the questions of the Sabbath, the Law,
+and the Christian Ministry; having shown that we
+honor and observe the Lord's day, that we give
+the Law its divinely appointed place, and finally,
+that we hold the sacred and precious institution of
+the Christian Ministry, we might close this paper,
+did we not feel called upon to present a few other
+points. In our general teaching and preaching we
+seek to set forth the fundamental truths of the gospel,
+such as the doctrine of the Trinity; the eternal
+Sonship; the personality of the Holy Ghost; the
+plenary inspiration of Holy Scripture; the eternal
+counsels of God in reference to His elect; the fullest
+and freest presentation of His love to a lost
+world; the solemn responsibility of every one who
+hears the glad tidings of salvation to accept the
+same; man's total ruin by nature and by practice;
+his inability to help himself in thought, word, or
+deed; the utter corruption of his will; Christ's incarnation,
+death, and resurrection; His absolute
+deity and perfect humanity in one person; the perfect
+efficacy of His blood to cleanse from all sin;
+perfect justification and sanctification by faith in
+Christ, through the operation of God the Holy
+Ghost; the eternal security of all true believers;
+the entire separation of the Church in calling, standing
+and hope from this present world.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, we hold, in common with many of
+our brethren in the denominations, that the hope of
+the believer is set forth in these words of Christ:
+"I will come again and receive you unto myself;
+that where I am, there ye may be also" (John xiv.</p>
+
+<p>3). We believe that the early Christians were converted
+to "that blessed hope"&mdash;that it was the common
+hope of Christians in apostolic times. To adduce
+proofs would swell this paper into a volume.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, we believe that all disciples should
+meet on the first day of the week to break bread
+(Acts xx. 7); and when so met, they should look to
+the Head of the Church to furnish the needed gifts,
+and to the Holy Ghost to guide in the due administration
+of these gifts.</p>
+
+<p>As to the Scriptural ordinance of baptism, we look
+upon it as a beautiful exhibition of the truth of the
+believer's identification with Christ in death. (See
+Matt. xxviii. 19; Mark xvi. 16; Acts ii. 38, 41; viii.
+38; x. 47, 48; xvi. 33; Rom. vi. 3, 4.)</p>
+
+<p>As regards the precious institution of the Lord's
+Supper, we believe that Christians should celebrate
+it on every Lord's day, and that in so doing they
+commemorate the Lord's death until He come. We
+believe that as baptism sets forth our death with
+Christ, so the Lord's Supper sets forth Christ's
+death for us. We do not see any authority in the
+word of God for regarding the Lord's Supper as "a
+sacrifice," "a sacrament," or "a covenant." The
+word is, "This do in remembrance of Me." (See
+Matt. xxvi. 26-28; Mark xiv. 22-24; Luke xxii. 19,
+20; I Cor. xi. 23-26.)</p>
+
+<p>The above is a very brief but explicit statement
+of what we hold, and preach and practise. We
+meet in public: our worship meetings, our prayer
+meetings, our reading meetings, our lectures, our
+gospel preachings, are all open to the public.</p>
+
+<p>But we have done. We would in this closing line
+entreat the reader to "search the Scriptures." Let
+him try everything by that standard. Let him see
+to it that he has plain Scripture for everything with
+which he stands connected. "To the law and to
+the testimony: if they speak not according to this
+word, it is because there is no light in them" (Isa.
+viii. 20.).</p>
+
+<p>We can honestly say we love with all our hearts
+all those who love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity;
+and wherever there is one who preaches a
+full, free and an everlasting salvation to perishing
+sinners, through the blood of the Lamb, we wish
+him godspeed in the name of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>We now commend the reader to the blessing of
+the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
+If he be a true believer, we pray that in his course
+down here he may be a bright and faithful witness
+for his absent Lord. But if he be one who has not
+yet found peace in Jesus, we would say to him, with
+solemn emphasis and earnest affection, "<span class="smcap">Behold
+the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin
+of the world</span>!" (John i. 29).</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right">C. H. M.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1><a name="THE_MINISTRY_OF_CHRIST" id="THE_MINISTRY_OF_CHRIST"></a>THE MINISTRY OF CHRIST</h1>
+
+<h3>PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE</h3>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class='center'>(Scriptures read before lecture, Exodus xxi. I-6; John xiii. I-10;
+Luke xii. 37.)</div>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<blockquote><p>"For even the Son of Man came not to be ministered
+unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom
+for many." (Mark x. 45.)</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>It is very necessary, beloved friends, to retire
+from all thoughts about our service to the Lord,
+and our work for Him, and to have our hearts occupied
+with His service toward us. And when I say
+this, you will not suppose for a moment that it is
+my desire or thought to weaken in any heart in this
+assembly, in the smallest degree, the desire to work
+for Christ, whatever sphere He may open for you,
+or according to whatever gift He may have bestowed
+upon you. Quite the reverse; indeed, I would seek
+in every way to strengthen and intensify that desire.
+But then one knows, both from experience and observation,
+that we may be so occupied with <i>our</i> work
+and <i>our</i> services that our hearts may lose the sense
+of what Christ is toward us in His marvelous character
+as a servant.</p>
+
+<p>And here let me say that my immediate thesis to-night
+is the Lord Jesus as the servant of His people's
+necessities. That is the field into which we are introduced
+by those scriptures which have been read
+in your hearing. The Lord Jesus is the servant of
+the soul's necessities in every stage of its history,
+from first to last,&mdash;from the depths of your ruin and
+degradation as sinners, in all your weakness and
+failure as saints from day to day, until He plants
+you in the joys of His own kingdom. And His
+services will not end there; for, as we read in Luke
+xii. 37, He will gird Himself, and serve us in the
+glory. Thus His work as a servant overlaps the
+whole of the soul's history, past, present, and future.
+He has served us in the past, He is serving us now,
+and He will serve us forever.</p>
+
+<p>And here allow me to say that the line of truth
+which I have to bring before you to-night is of a
+directly individual character. We were speaking,
+on this night week, of the truth with respect to our
+corporate condition and character, and therefore I
+feel all the more free on this occasion to enter upon
+what is more directly personal&mdash;to speak of truth
+which bears directly on the soul's individual condition
+and wants. And I would ask you, my beloved
+hearers, to place yourselves, so far as through grace
+you can, in all simplicity and reality, straight in
+view of this theme&mdash;Christ the servant of our necessities.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible there may be souls in this room who
+want to begin at the very beginning with this most
+precious theme. They want to know Christ as the
+One who came into this world to serve them in all
+their deep and varied need as lost, self-destroyed,
+guilty, hell-deserving sinners. If there be any such
+present to-night, I would ask them to ponder deeply
+that verse which I have read, "The Son of Man is
+come to serve and to give."</p>
+
+<p>This is a divine reality. Jesus came into this
+world to meet our need, to serve us in all that in
+which we need His precious service, and to give His
+life a ransom for many; to serve us by bearing our
+sins in His own body on the tree, and working out
+a full and an eternal salvation. He did not come to
+get&mdash;He did not come to take&mdash;He did not come to
+be ministered to&mdash;He did not come to be gazed at&mdash;He
+came to be used; and therefore, while the soul
+that is exercised may be raising this harassing question,
+"What can I do for the Lord?" The answer is.</p>
+
+<p>"You must pause and see and believe what the
+Lord has done for you. You must stand still and
+see the salvation of God." Remember those words
+of divine and evangelistic sweetness, "To him that
+<i>worketh not</i>, but believeth on Him that justifieth the
+ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness."
+(Rom. iv. 5.) You can never intelligently or properly
+serve Christ until you know and believe how
+He has served you. You must cease your restless
+doings, and rest in a divinely accomplished work.
+Then, but not until then, will you be able to start
+on a career of Christian service. It is most necessary
+for all anxious souls to understand that all true
+Christian service begins with the possession of eternal
+life, and is rendered in the power of the Holy
+Ghost, the indwelling Spirit, in the light and on the
+authority of holy Scripture. This is the divine
+idea of Christian work and service.</p>
+
+<p>Now, though the primary object of this meeting,
+brethren, is for those who are saints of God, who
+have set out on their course, still I do not think it
+would be according to the heart and sympathies of
+Christ to overlook the fact that there may be some
+soul in this congregation that wants, as I said, just
+to begin at the very beginning with this precious
+mystery&mdash;Christ the servant. I say, there may be
+some here to-night that have never taken the attitude
+of simple repose in Christ's finished work.
+They have, it may be, begun to think of their soul's
+salvation, to think about eternity; but they are occupied
+with the thought that the Lord is claiming
+something from them: "I must do this, I must do
+that, and I must do the other." Now, my beloved
+friends, if such be here, I repeat, with deepest
+earnestness, you must cease altogether from your
+own doings, cease from your own reasonings, cease
+from your own feelings; because, be assured of it,
+it is neither feeling nor thinking nor reasoning nor
+doing at all, but it is pausing and gazing. It is
+hearing and believing. It is looking off from yourselves
+and your service to Christ and His service.
+It is ceasing from your restless and worthless doings,
+and reposing in full, unquestioning confidence
+in the one offering of Jesus Christ, which has perfectly
+satisfied and perfectly glorified God as to the
+great question of your sin and guilt. Here lies the
+divine secret of peace&mdash;peace in Jesus&mdash;peace with
+God&mdash;eternal peace. Nothing will ever be right
+till you get on this ground. If you are occupied
+with your doings for Christ, you will never get
+peace; but if you will only take God at His word,
+and rest in His Christ, you shall possess a peace
+which no power of earth or hell can ever disturb.</p>
+
+<p>Now, my beloved hearers, I ask you, before I
+proceed, this question, Is there a heart in this congregation
+that has not yet rested here? Is there a
+heart here to-night that will say, I am not satisfied
+with Christ's service: I cannot rest in His work?
+What! The Son of God has stooped to serve you.
+The One who made you, the One who gave you life
+and breath and all things, the One to whom all are
+responsible, He has stooped to become your servant.
+It is not a question of asking you to do any
+thing, or asking you to give any thing, because&mdash;mark
+those words&mdash;they are words which sweep all
+through the history of the Son of Man&mdash;they are
+words which, in all their length and breadth and
+fullness, you can take up and use as if you were the
+only object of this service in the world&mdash;"The Son
+of Man is come to serve and to give." He is not
+come to get; He is not come to ask. The legal
+mind leads you to think that God is an exactor&mdash;that
+He is making demands upon you&mdash;that He
+wants your services in one way or another. But oh
+remember, I pray you, that your first great business,
+your primary and all-important work, is to believe
+in Jesus&mdash;to rest sweetly in Him, and in what He
+has done for you on the cross, and in what He is
+doing for you on the throne. "This is the work of
+God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent."
+You remember the interesting question of the
+Psalmist&mdash;a question asked when his eye rested on
+the magnitude and multitude of Jehovah's benefits&mdash;"What
+shall I render unto the Lord for all His
+benefits?" What is the reply? "I will take the
+cup of salvation, and call upon the name of the
+Lord."</p>
+
+<p>Is this the way to "render unto the Lord"? Yes,
+this is just the way that gratifies and glorifies Him.
+If you really want to <i>render</i>, you must <i>take</i>. Take
+what? "The cup of salvation"&mdash;a full and brimming
+cup, most surely; and as you drink of that
+cup, as the glories of God's salvation shine in the
+vision of your soul, then will streams of living praise
+flow from your grateful heart. And you know He
+says, "Whoso offereth praise, glorifieth Me."</p>
+
+<p>In a word, then, you must, first of all, allow your
+soul to dwell upon the marvelous mystery of Christ's
+service toward you in all the depth of your need;
+and the more you dwell upon that, the more will
+you be in the true attitude to serve Him.</p>
+
+<p>Take another striking illustration. When David,
+as you remember, in that remarkable passage in the
+second book of Samuel (chap. vii.), sat in his house
+of cedar, and looked around at all that God had
+done for him, he said, "I must rise and build a
+house." Immediately the prophet was despatched
+to David to correct him on this point: "You shall
+not build Me a house, but I will build you a house."
+You must reverse the matter. God wants you to
+sit down and gaze yet more fully and intently upon
+His actings on your behalf. He wants you to look,
+not only at the past and the present, but to look on
+into the bright future; to see your entire history
+overlapped by His own magnificent grace.</p>
+
+<p>And what, let me ask, was the effect of all this
+upon the heart of David? We have the answer in
+that one pithy statement: "Then went King David
+in, and sat before the Lord, and said, 'Who am I?'"
+Mark the attitude, and ponder the question. They
+are full of deep meaning. "<i>He sat.</i>" This is rest
+and sweet repose. He wanted to go to work too
+soon. No, says God, you must sit down and look
+at my work, and trace my actings on your behalf in
+the past, the present, and the future.</p>
+
+<p>And then the question, "<i>Who am I?</i>" In this
+we see the blessed fact that self was for the moment
+lost sight of. It was flung into the shade by the
+lustre of divine revelation. Self and its poor little
+actings were set aside by the glory of God and the
+rich magnificence of His actings on behalf of His
+servant.</p>
+
+<p>Now, some might have thought that David was an
+active, useful man when he was rising to take the
+trowel to build the house; and they might have
+thought him a good-for-nothing man to be sitting
+still when there was work to be done. But, brethren,
+let us remember that God's thoughts are not as our
+thoughts. He prizes our worship much more highly
+than our work. Indeed, it is only the true and intelligent
+worshiper that can be a true and intelligent
+workman. No doubt God most graciously accepts
+our poor services, even stamped as they so often are
+with mistakes of all sorts. But when it becomes a
+question of the comparative value of service and
+worship, the former must give place to the latter;
+and we know that when our brief span of working
+time shall have expired, our eternity of worship shall
+begin. Sweet thought!</p>
+
+<p>And let me further remark, ere leaving this part
+of our subject, that no one need fear in the least
+that the practical effect of what I have been saying
+will be to cripple your service, or lead you to fold
+your arms in culpable idleness or cold indifference.
+The very reverse is the case, as you may see in the
+history of David himself. Study at your leisure,
+I Chronicles xxviii, xxix. There you have a splendid
+presentation of service&mdash;a most triumphant answer
+to all who would place work before worship.
+There you see, as it were, King David rising from
+the attitude of a worshiper into that of a workman,
+and making ample provision for the building of
+that very house of which he was not allowed to set
+one stone upon another. And not only does he make
+provision according to the claims of holiness, but,
+as he says, "Because I have set my affection to
+the house of my God, I have of mine own proper
+good, of gold and silver, which I have given to the
+house of my God, <i>over and above all</i> that I have
+prepared for the holy house, even three thousand
+talents of gold, of the gold of Ophir, and seven
+thousand talents of refined silver, to overlay the
+walls of the house." In other words, as we should
+express it, out of his own private purse, he gave the
+princely sum of over sixteen millions as a free gift
+toward the house which was to be reared by the
+hand of another. This, as he informs us, was "over
+and above what he had prepared for the holy house,"
+which latter greatly exceeded the amount of England's
+national debt.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we see that it is the true worshiper that
+makes the effective servant. It is when we have
+sat and gazed on the actings of Christ for us that we
+are enabled in any small degree to act for Him.
+And then, too, we shall be able to say with David, as
+he surveyed the untold wealth prepared for the house
+of God, "It is all Thine, and of Thine own have we
+given Thee."</p>
+
+<p>I. But we must now turn for a few moments to
+the opening paragraph of Exodus xxi&mdash;"If thou buy
+a Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve; and in
+the seventh, he shall go out free for nothing. If he
+came in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if
+he were married, then his wife shall go out with him.
+If his master have given him a wife, and she have
+borne him sons or daughters; the wife and her
+children shall be her master's, and he shall go out
+by himself. And if the servant shall plainly say, I
+love my master, my wife, and my children; I will
+not go out free: then his master shall bring him
+unto the judges; he shall also bring him to the door,
+or unto the door-post; and his master shall bore his
+ear through with an awl; and he shall serve him
+forever."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have one of the shadows of good
+things to come&mdash;a shadow or figure of the True Servant,
+the Lord Jesus Christ, that blessed One who
+loved the Church and gave Himself for it. The
+Hebrew servant, having served the legal time, was
+perfectly free to go out; but he loved his wife and
+his children, and that, too, with such a love as led
+him to surrender his own personal liberty for their
+sakes. He proved his love for them by sacrificing
+himself. He might have gone forth and enjoyed his
+freedom, but what of them? How could he leave
+them behind? Impossible. He loved them too well
+for that; and hence he deliberately walked to the
+door-post, and there, in the presence of the judges,
+had his ear bored in token of perpetual service.</p>
+
+<p>This was love indeed. There was no mistake
+about it. The wife and each child, as they gazed
+ever after on that bored ear, could read the touching
+and powerful proof of the love of that servant's
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>Here, beloved, is something for the heart to dwell
+upon&mdash;yea, something over which the heart may well
+break itself. We see in this Old-Testament type
+the everlasting Lover of our souls&mdash;Jesus, the true
+servant. You remember that remarkable occasion in
+our Lord's life when He was setting before His disciples
+the solemn fact of His approaching cross and
+passion. You will find it in the eighth chapter of
+the gospel of Mark: "And He began to teach them
+that the Son of Man must suffer many things, and
+be rejected of the elders, and of the chief priests,
+and scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise
+again. And He spake that saying openly. And
+Peter took Him, and began to rebuke Him." Peter
+would fain, though he knew it not, have interrupted
+the True Servant in His movement to the door-post.
+He would have Him pity Himself, and maintain His
+own personal freedom. But oh, brethren, hearken
+to the withering rebuke administered to the very
+man who just before had made such a fine confession
+of Christ! "But when He had turned about and
+looked on His disciples, He rebuked Peter, saying,
+'Get thee behind Me, Satan; for thou savorest not
+the things that be of God, but the things that be
+of men.' "</p>
+
+<p>Mark the action. "He turned and looked on
+His disciples," as though He would say, If I
+hearken to your counsel, Peter&mdash;if I pity Myself&mdash;if
+I retreat from that cross which lies before Me,
+then what is to become of these? It is the Hebrew
+servant saying, "I love my wife, I love my children,
+I will not go out free."</p>
+
+<p>It is of the very last possible importance for us to
+see that there was no necessity whatever laid upon
+the Lord Jesus Christ to walk to the cross; there
+was no necessity whatever laid upon Him to leave
+the glory which He had with the Father from all
+eternity and come down here; and when He had
+come down into this world, and taken perfect humanity
+upon Him, there was no necessity laid upon
+Him that He should have gone to the cross; for at
+any moment during the whole of His blessed history,
+from the manger of Bethlehem to the cross of Calvary,
+He might have gone back to where He came from.
+Death had no claim upon Him. The prince of this
+world came and had nothing in Him. He could
+say, speaking of His life, "No man taketh it from
+Me, but I lay it down of Myself." (John x. 18.)
+And on His way from the garden to the cross we
+hear Him saying, "Thinkest thou that I cannot now
+pray to My Father, and He shall presently give
+Me more than twelve legions of angels? But how
+then shall the Scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it
+must be?" And may we not say there was much
+more truth than the utterers were aware of in these
+accents of mockery which fell on the blessed Saviour's
+ear as He hung on the cross&mdash;"He saved
+others; Himself He cannot save"? But they might
+have said, Himself He will not save.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, no! blessed forever be His name! He did
+not pity or spare Himself, but He pitied us. He
+beheld us in our hopeless ruin, guilt, misery, and
+danger. He saw that there was no eye to pity, no
+arm to save; and&mdash;all praise to His matchless name!&mdash;He
+laid aside His glory, came down into this
+wretched world, became a man, that as a man
+He might, by the sacrifice of Himself, deliver us
+from the lake of fire, and associate us with Himself
+on the new and eternal ground of accomplished redemption,
+in the power of resurrection-life, according
+to the eternal counsels of God, and to the praise
+of His glory.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we cannot possibly overestimate the importance
+of dwelling upon the fact that there was no
+necessity whatever laid upon our blessed Lord Jesus
+Christ to die on the cross, and to endure the wrath
+of God. Neither in His person, in His nature, nor
+in His relations was He obnoxious to death. He
+was God over all, blessed forever. He was the
+Eternal Son of God. And in His human nature He
+was pure, spotless, sinless, perfect. He knew no
+sin. He did always and only the things that pleased
+God. He glorified Him, and finished His work;
+and He has saved us in such a way as to glorify
+God in the most wonderful manner. He was, to use
+the language of our type, free to go out by Himself;
+but ah, beloved, had He done so, your place and mine
+must inevitably have been the lake of fire forever.</p>
+
+<p>To all this the Holy Ghost delights to bear testimony,
+as one of our own poets has sweetly sung&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>"And, Lord, Thy perfect fitness<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To do a Saviour's part,<br /></span>
+<span>The Holy Ghost doth witness<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To each believer's heart."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Most true; and we might with equal truth say, "His
+fitness to do a servant's part," because it was the very
+height of His glory, the very dignity of His person;
+it was the glory whence He had descended, that enabled
+Him to stoop down to the very depths of His
+people's necessities. There is not a necessity&mdash;no,
+not one&mdash;in the deepest range of His people's
+history, or in the lowest depths of their condition,
+that He has not reached in His marvelous character
+and His divine ministry as the servant of His people's
+necessities.</p>
+
+<p>Brethren, let us never forget this. Nay, rather
+let us constantly cherish in our hearts the most
+grateful remembrance of it. The more we dwell
+upon the height of Christ's personal glory, the more
+fully we shall see the depths of His humiliation.
+The more profoundly we meditate upon the glory of
+what He <i>was</i>, the more we must be arrested by the
+grace of what He <i>became</i>. "Ye know the grace of
+our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich,
+yet for your sakes He became poor, that ye through
+His poverty might be rich."</p>
+
+<p>Who can measure the heights and the depths of
+those two words, "rich" and "poor," in their application
+to our adorable Lord and Saviour? No
+created intelligence can fathom them; but most
+assuredly we should cultivate the habit of dwelling
+upon the love that shines all along the pathway of
+the divine Servant as He walked to the cross for us.
+It is as we dwell upon His love to us that our hearts
+shall be drawn out by the Holy Ghost in the power
+of responsive love to Him. "The love of Christ
+constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if One
+died for all, then were all dead; and that He died
+for all, that they which live should not henceforth
+live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for
+them, and rose again." (2 Cor. v. 14, 15.)</p>
+
+<p>II. Having thus glanced at our Lord's service
+toward us in the past, let us look for a few moments
+at His present service&mdash;at what He is now doing for
+us continually in the presence of God. This we
+have most blessedly presented to us in that part of
+John xiii. which I have read for you this evening.
+The same precious grace shines in this as in all that
+on which we have been dwelling. If we look back at
+the past, we behold the Perfect Servant nailed to the
+cross for us; if we look up to the throne now, we
+behold Him girded for us, not only according to our
+present need, but according to the perfect love of
+His heart&mdash;His love to the Father, His love to the
+Church, His love to each individual believer from
+the beginning to the end of time.</p>
+
+<p>"Now before the feast of the passover, when Jesus
+knew that His hour was come that He should depart
+out of this world unto the Father, having loved His
+own which were in the world, He loved them unto the
+end. And during supper [see Greek], the devil
+having now put into the heart of Judas Iscariot,
+Simon's son, to betray Him; Jesus knowing that
+the Father had given all things into His hands, and
+that He was come from God, and went to God; He
+riseth from supper, and laid aside His garments;
+and took a towel, and girded Himself. After that
+He poureth water into a basin, and began to wash
+the disciples' feet, and to wipe them with the towel
+wherewith He was girded."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have a most marvelous presentation
+of Christ's present service toward "His own
+which are in the world." There is something peculiarly
+precious in the expression, "<i>His own</i>." It
+brings us so very near to the heart of Christ. It is
+so sweet to think that He can look at such poor,
+feeble, failing creatures as we are, and say, They
+are Mine. It matters not what others may think
+about them; they belong to Me, and I must have
+them in a condition worthy of the place whence I
+came, and whither I am going.</p>
+
+<p>This, brethren, is ineffably precious and edifying
+for our souls. It was in the sense of His personal
+glory, in the consciousness that He had come from
+God and was going to God, that He could stoop
+down and wash His people's feet. There was nothing,
+could be nothing, higher than the place whence
+Jesus had come; there was nothing, could be nothing,
+lower than the defiled feet of His disciples:
+but, blessed and praised forever be His name! He
+fills up in His own divine person and marvelous
+service every point between those two extremes.
+He can lay one hand on the throne of God, and the
+other on our feet, and be Himself the divine and
+eternal link between.</p>
+
+<p>Now, there are three things in this scripture
+which I am anxious to put clearly before you this
+evening. In the first place, we have the special action
+of our Lord toward His own in the world; secondly,
+the spring of that action; and thirdly, the
+measure of the action:&mdash;the action, its spring, and
+its measure.</p>
+
+<p>(I.) And first, the action itself. You will bear
+in mind, beloved in the Lord, that what we have
+presented here is not "the washing of regeneration."
+That pertains to the first stage of our Lord's service
+on our behalf. "His own which are in the world"&mdash;all
+who belong to that highly privileged class (and
+that is simply all who believe in His name) have
+passed through that great washing, in virtue of which
+Christ can pronounce them "clean every whit."</p>
+
+<p>There is not a spot or a stain upon the very feeblest
+of that blessed number whom He calls "His own."
+"He that is washed needeth not save to wash his
+feet, but <i>is clean every whit</i>: and <i>ye are clean</i>, but
+not all." If a single spot could be detected on one
+of Christ's own, it would be a dishonor cast upon
+Him, inasmuch as He has washed us from all our
+guilt according to the perfection of His work as the
+Servant of our need, and, far above all, the Servant
+of the eternal counsels, purposes, and glory of God.
+He found us clean never a whit, and He has made
+us "clean every whit."</p>
+
+<p>This is the washing of regeneration, which is
+never repeated. We have a figure of this in the case
+of the priests of the Mosaic economy. On the great
+day of their inauguration they were washed in water.
+This action was never repeated. But after this, from
+day to day, in order to fit them for the daily discharge
+of their priestly functions, they had to wash
+their hands and their feet in the brazen laver in the
+tabernacle, or the brazen sea in the temple. This
+daily washing is the figure of the action in John
+xiii. The two washings, being distinct, must never
+be confounded; and being intimately connected,
+must never be separated. The washing of regeneration
+is divinely and eternally complete: the washing
+of sanctification is being divinely and continually
+carried on. The former is never repeated; the latter
+is never interrupted. That gives us a part <i>in</i> Christ,
+of which nothing can rob us; and this gives us a
+part <i>with</i> Christ, of which any thing may deprive
+us. The one is the basis of our eternal life; the
+other is the ground of our daily communion.</p>
+
+<p>Beloved brethren, see that you understand the
+meaning of having your feet washed, moment by
+moment, by the hands of that blessed One who is
+girded as the divine Servant of your present need.
+It is utterly impossible for any one to overestimate
+the importance of this work; but we may at least
+gather something of its value from our Lord's words
+to Peter; for Peter, like ourselves, alas! was very
+far from seizing the full significance of what his
+Lord was doing. "Then cometh He to Simon</p>
+
+<p>Peter; and Peter saith unto Him, 'Lord, dost Thou
+wash my feet?' Jesus answered and said unto him,
+'What I do thou knowest not now; but thou shalt
+know hereafter. Peter saith unto Him, 'Thou shalt
+never wash my feet.' Jesus answered him, 'If I
+wash thee not, thou hast no part <i>with</i> Me.'"</p>
+
+<p>Here is the grand point&mdash;"part with Me." The
+washing of regeneration gives us a part <i>in</i> Christ:
+the daily washing of sanctification gives us a part
+<i>with</i> Christ. In order to full, intelligent, happy
+communion, we must have a clean conscience, and
+clean feet. The blood of atonement secures the
+former; the water of purification maintains the
+other. But both the blood and the water flowed
+from a crucified Christ. The death of Christ is the
+necessary basis of every thing. He died to make us
+clean; He lives to keep us clean. We are made as
+clean as His death can make us; we are kept as
+clean as His life can keep us.</p>
+
+<p>And, be it remembered, this marvelous ministry
+of Christ on our behalf never ceases. He ever
+liveth to act <i>for</i> us on high, and to act <i>on</i> us and <i>in</i>
+us by His Word and Spirit. He speaks to God for
+us, and He speaks to us for God. He came from
+God, and traveled down to the profoundest depths
+of our need. He has gone back to God, to bear us
+ever on His heart, to meet our daily need, and to
+maintain us in the integrity of the position and relationship
+into which He has introduced us.</p>
+
+<p>This is replete with solid comfort for the soul.
+We are passing through a defiling world, where we
+are constantly liable to contract evils of one kind or
+another which, though they cannot touch our eternal
+life, can very seriously affect our communion. It is
+impossible for us to tread the sanctuary of the divine
+presence with soiled feet; and hence the deep and
+unspeakable blessedness of having One ever in the
+presence of God for us&mdash;One who, having been in
+this scene, knows its true character; and One who,
+having come from God, and gone back to Him,
+knows the full extent of His claims, and all that is
+needful to fit us for fellowship with Him. The provision
+is divinely perfect. Sin or uncleanness can
+never be found in the presence of God. If we can
+make light of either the one or the other, God cannot
+and will not. The holiness that shines in the
+demand for purity is as bright as the grace that
+provides it. Grace has made the provision, but
+holiness demands the application thereof. The
+goodness of God provided a laver for the priests of
+old, but the holiness of God demanded that the
+priests should use that laver. The great washing of
+inauguration introduced them to the office of the
+priesthood; the washing in the laver fitted them for
+the duties of that office. How could acceptable
+priestly service be discharged with unclean hands?
+Impossible. And we may say it is as impossible
+that we can walk in the pathway of holiness if our
+feet are not washed and wiped by that blessed One
+who has girded Himself to serve us in this matter
+perpetually.</p>
+
+<p>All this is divinely simple. There are two links in
+Christianity; namely, the link of eternal life, which
+can never be snapped by any thing; and the link of
+personal communion, which can be snapped in a
+moment by the weight of a feather. Now, it is as
+our ways are cleansed by the holy action of the
+Word, through the Holy Ghost, that our communion
+is maintained in its unbroken integrity. But if I
+am afraid to face the Word of God, or if I am willfully
+refusing its action, how can I enjoy communion
+with God?</p>
+
+<p>I am not speaking now of ignorance of the Word
+of God. The Lord bears with a wonderful amount
+of ignorance in us&mdash;far more than we could bear
+with in one another. I do not now refer to the
+question of ignorance. But suppose a case. A
+young person entered these walls a few weeks ago,
+and took her seat on one of these benches. She was
+dressed out in all the fashion of this world&mdash;her
+head adorned with feathers and flowers, and her
+fingers with jewels. Her heart full of vanity and
+folly. Here the grace of God met her in all its
+fullness and freeness. The arrow of divine conviction
+entered her soul. She was broken down under
+the mighty power of the Word, in the hands of the
+Holy Ghost. She was brought to repentance toward
+God, and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. She was
+saved, there and then, and left the place rejoicing
+in a full salvation. This joy continued for many
+days. She was engrossed with her newly found
+treasure. She never thought about her feathers,
+her flowers, or her jewels. True, she continued to
+wear them, simply because she as yet saw nothing
+wrong in so doing. She knew not as yet that there
+was so much as a single sentence in the Word of
+God bearing upon such things.</p>
+
+<p>Brethren, let me just remind you that we should
+be prepared for such a case as this, and be prepared
+to meet it. Some of us, I fear, have but little wisdom
+or patience to deal with cases of this type.
+We are in undue haste to enter upon what I may
+call the stripping process. This is a mistake. We
+must allow time for the hidden virtues of the kingdom
+of God to develop themselves. We must not
+attempt to reduce the Christian assembly into a
+place in which a certain livery is adopted. This will
+never do. We really cannot reduce all to a dead
+level. We must allow the Word of God to act on
+the life which the Spirit of God has implanted. I do
+nothing but mischief to people if I get them to
+adopt a certain style of dress merely at my suggestion.
+The grand thing is to allow the kingdom of
+God to assert its holy sway over the entire character.
+This is to His glory and the soul's genuine
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>Let us pursue our case. Our young friend, in
+the course of her reading, is arrested by the following
+pointed passage: "In like manner also, that
+women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with
+shamefacedness and sobriety; not with broidered
+hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array; but (which
+becometh women professing godliness) with good
+works." (I Tim. ii. 9, 10.) And again, "Whose
+adorning let it not be that outward adorning of
+plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, or of putting
+on of apparel; but let it be the hidden man of
+the heart, in that which is not corruptible, even the
+ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the
+sight of God of great price." (I Pet. iii. 3, 4.)</p>
+
+<p>Now, here, brethren, we have illustrated for us
+the present ministry of Christ&mdash;the action of the
+Word upon the soul&mdash;the application of the basin to
+the feet&mdash;the washing of water by the Word. It is
+Jesus stooping down to wash the feet of this young
+disciple. The question is, How will she receive the
+action? Will she resist it, or yield to it? Will she
+push away the basin? Will she refuse the gracious
+ministry? "If I wash thee not, thou hast no part
+<i>with</i> Me."</p>
+
+<p>This is very solemn, and it demands our most
+serious attention. Next in moral importance to
+having the conscience purged by the blood of Christ
+stands this cleansing of our ways by the action of
+the Word, through the power of the Holy Ghost.
+The former gives us a part <i>in</i> Christ; the latter, a
+part <i>with</i> Christ. That is never repeated; this must
+never be interrupted. If we really desire fellowship
+with Christ, we must allow Him to wash our feet
+moment by moment. We cannot tread the pure
+precincts of the sanctuary of God with defiled feet
+any more than we can enter them with a defiled
+conscience.</p>
+
+<p>Hence, therefore, dearly beloved in the Lord, let
+us look well to it that we have our ways continually
+submitted to the purifying action of the precious</p>
+
+<p>Word of God. Let us put away every thing which
+that Word condemns; let us abandon every position
+and every association and every practice which that
+Word condemns, that so our holy fellowship with
+Christ may be maintained in its freshness and integrity.
+Nothing is more dangerous than to trifle
+with evil in any shape or form. Ignorance God can
+and does most graciously bear with, but the willful
+resistance of His Word in any one point is sure to
+lead to disastrous results. The heart becomes hardened,
+the conscience seared, the moral sense blunted,
+and the whole moral being gets into a most deplorable
+condition. We get away from the Lord, and
+make shipwreck of faith and a good conscience.
+May the Lord keep us near to Himself, walking with
+Him in tenderness of conscience and uprightness of
+heart. May His Word ever tell in living formative
+power upon our souls, that so our way be cleansed
+according to the claims of the sanctuary of God.</p>
+
+<p>(2.) But let us now inquire for a moment into the
+spring of this action on which we have been dwelling.
+This is presented with touching sweetness and
+power in the first verse of John xiii.&mdash;"Having
+loved His own which were in the world, He loved
+them unto the end."</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, brethren, we have the mighty spring
+of Christ's present ministry. It is the changeless
+love of His heart&mdash;a love that was stronger than
+death, and which many waters could not quench.
+"Christ loved the Church, and gave Himself for it;
+that He might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing
+of water by the Word." (Eph. v. 25, 26.) This is the
+blessed basis and the motive-spring of that marvelous
+ministry which our Lord Jesus Christ is now carrying
+on for us and toward us. He knew what He was
+undertaking when He uttered those words in the
+fortieth Psalm, "Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God."
+He knew what it would cost Him when He took up
+our case. But His love was and is divinely equal to
+all. We need not be afraid of exhausting that love
+which triumphed over all the unutterable horrors of
+Calvary, and went down under the deep and dark
+waters of death and judgment. We may at times
+feel ashamed to have so often to bring our defiled
+feet to that blessed One to cleanse them; but His
+love is equal to all, and that love is the spring of
+His precious and indispensable ministry.</p>
+
+<p>It is a common saying that love is blind, but I
+look upon it as a libel upon love. Most certainly it
+does not and could not apply to the love of Christ.
+He knew all that was in us, and He knows now all
+our ways and all our weakness and all our follies;
+but He loves us notwithstanding all, and in the
+power of that love He acts toward us in order to
+deliver us from all that He sees in us and about us
+which would hinder our holy fellowship with the
+Father and with His Son.</p>
+
+<p>Brethren, of what use, may I ask you, would a
+blind love be to you or to me? Surely, none whatever.
+How could we ever repose in a love which
+only acted toward us in ignorance of our blots and
+blemishes! Impossible. What we want is a love
+superior to all our imperfections, and a love that
+can deliver us from them. This love we have in
+Christ, blessed be His name! It is a love that,
+however it may expose us to ourselves, will never
+expose us to another. It is a love that comes to us
+with the basin and towel, and stoops down in infinite
+tenderness and lowly, matchless grace to wash away
+every soil, and give us the comfortable sense of being
+"clean every whit." This, brethren, is the love
+which you and I need, and this is the love which we
+have found in divine fullness and power in the heart
+of that perfect Servant who is girded for us ever before
+the throne. "Having loved <i>His own</i> which
+were in the world, He loved them"&mdash;how long? As
+long as they behaved themselves, and walked with
+unsoiled feet? Ah, no! this would never do for
+such as we. "He loved them <i>unto the end</i>."
+Precious, perfect, divine, everlasting love! a love
+that overlaps and underlies and outlives all our blots
+and blemishes, our failings and falterings, our wants
+and weaknesses, our wanderings and waywardness;
+a love that has come to us armed with all that our
+condition could possibly demand; a love that will
+never cease to act for us and toward us and in us,
+until it presents us in unblemished perfectness before
+the throne of God.</p>
+
+<p>(3.) And now one word as to the measure of
+Christ's present action for us and toward us. This
+is a point of unspeakable value and importance. It
+is essential for us to know that, whether it be a
+question of Christ's service for us in the past or His
+present service, the measure of both the one and the
+other is and can be nothing less than the claims of
+the sanctuary, the throne, and the nature of God.
+We might suppose that the measure would be our
+necessities, but this would never do. If we think
+of Christ's atoning work, we know, and rejoice to
+know, that precious work has done very much more
+than meet the deepest measure of our necessities
+as sinners. Blessed be God! the work of the cross
+has divinely met all the claims of God. It could
+never give solid peace to our souls merely to know
+that the very highest claims of human conscience
+had been met by the atoning death of Christ. We
+must be assured on divine authority that the highest
+claims of the government, the character, the nature,
+and the glory of God have all been perfectly met
+by the precious work of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it is through infinite grace, and here every
+divinely exercised soul can find settled and eternal
+peace. Nor is it otherwise in respect to Christ's
+present work for us. It could never satisfy our
+souls, brethren, to be told that that work is measured
+by our very deepest need. That need is met,
+no doubt; but it is because Christ's present ministry
+goes far beyond that need, and reaches to, and
+satisfies the claims of, the sanctuary of God.</p>
+
+<p>Unspeakable mercy! Here we may rest in perfect
+tranquillity. We have One on high undertaking for
+us, ever living in the presence of God for us; One
+who not only knows our necessities, but knows also
+the claims of God. He knows what this scene is
+through which we are passing, and He knows what
+that scene is into which He has entered; and, all
+praise to His name! He meets in His own perfect
+ministry both the one and the other. He must needs
+meet all our claims since He meets all God's claims,
+for the less must ever be included in the greater.</p>
+
+<p>What solid comfort is here! What unruffled repose!
+We have One in the presence of God for us,
+in whose hands all our affairs are perfectly, because
+divinely, safe. They can never fall through, never
+go wrong. We may say that ere ever the very
+weakest of those whom Christ calls "His own in the
+world" can fail, Christ Himself must fail, and that
+can be <i>never</i>. His own are as safe as Himself.</p>
+
+<p>What a grand reality! With what perfect confidence
+may we refer every objector, every accuser,
+every opposer, to this blessed manager! And what
+folly, on our part, to attempt to answer such ourselves!
+Oh, beloved brethren, may we learn to
+lean more confidently on that blessed One who thus
+presents Himself before our souls as the girded
+servant of our deep and manifold necessities. May
+we prize His precious ministry more and more&mdash;His
+ministry for us, His ministry to us. May we
+repose more sweetly in the assurance that He is
+speaking to the Father for us, in all our failures, in
+all our shortcomings, in all our sins. May we remember,
+for our exceeding comfort, that even before
+we slip, He has been pleading for us, as He
+pleaded for Peter. "I have prayed for thee," said
+the loving One, "that thy faith fail not." Oh, the
+matchless grace of these words! He did not pray
+that Peter might not fall, but that, having fallen, his
+confidence might not give way, his faith might not
+fail. Thus, too, He pleads for us, and thus we are
+sustained, and thus we are restored when we fall,
+else we should very speedily go from bad to worse,
+and make shipwreck altogether. "He ever liveth
+to make intercession for us." We are sustained by
+His precious and powerful ministry every moment.
+We could not stand for a single hour without Him.
+Things are continually turning up which would prove
+destructive of our fellowship, if we had not that
+blessed One acting for us, whose intervention on
+our behalf never ceases. He knows not only our
+need, but He knows what the sanctuary demands;
+and not only does He know it, but He provides for it,
+according to His own infinite perfectness and acceptance
+before God, meeting His people's necessities.</p>
+
+<p>Now, there are some people&mdash;I do not know
+whether there are any here to-night&mdash;but there are
+some people who have got such a one-sided notion
+of the standing of the believer, that they throw the
+Lord's priestly ministry overboard altogether. I
+say it is one-sided, and there is nothing more dangerous
+than one-sided truth&mdash;nothing. I would
+far rather see a man going through the length and
+breadth of London publishing palpable error, such
+as the simplest mind could detect. I would have
+far less apprehension of the mischievous result of
+his ministry than of the teaching of a man who takes
+up one side of a truth, and presses it in such a way
+as to interfere with some other truth.</p>
+
+<p>Now, there is an adjusting power in the truth of
+God&mdash;an adjusting power in Scripture that constitutes
+one of its brightest moral glories; and hence
+we find that while the Word of God most fully and
+blessedly establishes the truth that the believer
+stands complete in Christ, justified from all things,
+accepted in the Beloved, "clean every whit," it, at
+the same time, with equal clearness and fullness,
+sets forth the fact that the believer is, in himself, a
+poor feeble creature, exposed to manifold snares,
+temptations, and hostile influences; liable at any
+moment to fall into error and evil; utterly unable to
+keep himself, or to grapple with the difficulties and
+dangers which surround him; liable at any moment
+to contract defilement, which would unfit him for
+the holy fellowship and worship of the sanctuary.</p>
+
+<p>How, then, are all those things to be met? How
+is the Christian to be kept in the face of such things?
+Having an evil nature, a crafty foe, and a hostile
+world to cope with, how is he to get on? How is he
+to be kept? How is he to be restored if he wanders?
+How is he to be lifted up if he falls? The answer
+to all these questions is found in that ever-precious
+sentence of inspiration, "He ever liveth to make
+intercession for us;" and again, "He is able to
+save to the uttermost;" and again, "We shall be
+saved by His life;" and again, "Because I live, ye
+shall live also;" and again, "We have an advocate
+with the Father."</p>
+
+<p>Brethren, how the heart delights to give forth and
+to ponder over such utterances as these! They are
+marrow and fatness to the soul. How can any one,
+in the face of such passages&mdash;to say nothing of his
+own necessary experiences as to himself and his
+surroundings&mdash;think of calling in question the grand
+foundation-truth of the priesthood of Christ, in its
+application to believers now? I can only say, I
+know not. But alas! alas! there is no accounting
+for the depths of error into which we may fall, if we
+allow our minds to work, and get away from the direct
+authority of holy Scripture. And we may truly say
+that a most palpable proof of our need of the intercession
+of Christ is to be found in the sad fact
+that any of His servants should be found to deny it.</p>
+
+<p>I shall add no more on this point, save to warn all
+the Lord's dear people against the terrible error of
+denying our continual need of the priestly ministry,
+the precious intercession and all-prevailing advocacy
+of our Lord Jesus Christ&mdash;an error second only to
+the denial of His atoning work. For most surely
+our need of His priesthood is second only to our
+need of His atoning blood.</p>
+
+<p>III. Having then briefly, and, alas! imperfectly,
+glanced at our Lord's ministry in the past and in
+the present, we cannot close without a reference to
+His ministry in the future. Some may feel disposed
+to say, I do not understand how our Lord can ever
+be found serving us in the future. I can understand
+His serving us now on the throne, but how He is to
+serve us in the kingdom is, I confess, beyond me.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it is most marvelous, and had we not
+His own veritable words for it, we might well hesitate
+in our statement of the fact that our Lord
+Christ shall serve His people in the very brightness
+of the glory. But let us hear what He Himself saith
+to us. Turn for a moment to Luke xii. 35: "Let
+your loins be girded about, and your lights burning;
+and ye yourselves like unto men that wait for their
+lord, when he will return from the wedding; that
+when he cometh and knocketh, they may open unto
+him immediately. Blessed are those servants, whom
+the lord when he cometh shall find watching:
+verily I say unto you, that <i>he shall gird himself, and
+make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth
+and serve them</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This is distinct and unmistakable. Most marvelous,
+no doubt, but as plain as it is marvelous.
+Christ will serve us in the kingdom. He will serve
+us forever. His ministry overlaps our entire history.
+It reaches down to the very deepest depths of our
+need as sinners, and up to the very loftiest heights
+of the glory. It goes back to the past, it covers the
+present, and it stretches away into the boundless
+future. Blessed be His name! He loves to serve
+us, and He gives us the assurance that the very
+moment, as it were, that He enters upon the glory of
+name! has given us a whole heart, and nothing can
+satisfy Him in return but a whole heart from us.
+His entire service&mdash;past, present, and future&mdash;is the
+fruit of His perfect love; and nothing can meet His
+desire, with respect to us, save a heart responsive
+in its affections to Him. And where there is this, it
+will express itself in an anxious, earnest longing for
+His coming. "Blessed are those servants, whom
+their lord when he cometh shall find watching."</p>
+
+<p>May the eternal Spirit fill our hearts with genuine
+love to the Person of our own adorable Lord and
+Saviour; that so our one grand and undivided purpose
+may be to live for Him in this scene from which
+He has been cast out, and to wait for that moment
+when we shall see Him as He is, and be like Him
+and with Him forever.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right"><i>C. H. M.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="PRAYER_AND_THE_PRAYER-MEETING" id="PRAYER_AND_THE_PRAYER-MEETING"></a>PRAYER AND THE PRAYER-MEETING</h2>
+
+
+<p>In considering the deeply important subject of
+prayer, two things claim our attention; first,
+the moral basis of prayer; secondly, its moral
+conditions.</p>
+
+<p>I. The basis of prayer is set forth in such words
+as the following: "<i>If ye abide in Me, and My words
+abide in you</i>, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall
+be done unto you." (John xv. 7.) Again, "Beloved,
+<i>if our heart condemn us not</i>, then have we
+confidence toward God. And whatsoever we ask,
+we receive of Him, <i>because we keep His commandments</i>,
+and do those things that are pleasing in His
+sight." (I John iii. 21, 22.) So also, when the
+blessed apostle seeks an interest in the prayers of
+the saints, he sets forth the moral basis of his appeal&mdash;"Pray
+for us; <i>for we trust we have a good
+conscience</i>, in all things willing to live honestly."
+(Heb. xiii. 18.)</p>
+
+<p>From these passages, and many more of like import,
+we learn that, in order to effectual prayer,
+there must be an obedient heart, an upright mind,
+a good conscience. If the soul be not in communion
+with God&mdash;if it be not abiding in Christ&mdash;if it
+be not ruled by His holy commandments&mdash;if the
+eye be not single, how could we possibly look for
+answers to our prayers? We should, as the apostle
+James says, be "asking amiss, that we may consume
+it upon our lusts." How could God, as a
+holy Father, grant such petitions? Impossible.</p>
+
+<p>How very needful, therefore, it is to give earnest
+heed to the moral basis on which our prayers are
+presented. How could the apostle have asked the
+brethren to pray for him, if he had not a good conscience,
+a single eye, an upright mind&mdash;the moral
+persuasion that in all things he really wished to live
+honestly? We may safely assert, he could do no
+such thing.</p>
+
+<p>But may we not often detect ourselves in the
+habit of lightly and formally asking others to pray
+for us? It is a very common formulary amongst
+us&mdash;"Remember me in your prayers," and most
+surely nothing can be more blessed or precious than
+to be borne upon the hearts of God's dear people
+in their approaches to the mercy-seat; but do we
+sufficiently attend to the moral basis? When we
+say, "Brethren pray for us," can we add, as in the
+presence of the Searcher of hearts, "For we trust
+we have a good conscience, in all things willing to
+live honestly"? and when we ourselves bow before
+the throne of grace, is it with an uncondemning
+heart&mdash;an upright mind&mdash;a single eye&mdash;a soul really
+abiding in Christ, and keeping His commandments?</p>
+
+<p>These, beloved reader, are searching questions.
+They go right to the very centre of the heart&mdash;down
+to the very roots and moral springs of our being.
+But it is well to be thoroughly searched&mdash;searched in
+reference to every thing, but especially in reference
+to prayer. There is a terrible amount of unreality
+in our prayers&mdash;a sad lack of the moral basis&mdash;a
+vast amount of "asking amiss."</p>
+
+<p>Hence, the want of power and efficacy in our
+prayers&mdash;hence, the formality&mdash;the routine&mdash;yea,
+the positive hypocrisy. The Psalmist says, "If I
+regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear
+me." How solemn this is! Our God will have
+reality; He desireth truth in the inward parts. He,
+blessed be His name, is real with us, and He will
+have us real with Him. He will have us coming
+before Him as we really are, and with what we
+really want.</p>
+
+<p>How often, alas! it is otherwise, both in private
+and in public! How often are our prayers more
+like orations than petitions&mdash;more like statements of
+doctrine than utterances of need! It seems, at
+times, as though we meant to explain principles to
+God, and give Him a large amount of information.</p>
+
+<p>These are the things which cast a withering influence
+over our prayer-meetings, robbing them of
+their freshness, their interest, and their value.
+Those who really know what prayer is&mdash;who feel its
+value, and are conscious of their need of it, attend
+the prayer-meeting in order to pray, not to hear
+orations, lectures, and expositions from men on
+their knees. If they want lectures, they can attend
+at the lecture-hall or the preaching-room; but when
+they go to the prayer-meeting, it is to pray. To
+them, the prayer-meeting is the place of expressed
+need and expected blessing&mdash;the place of expressed
+weakness and expected power. Such is their idea
+of "the place where prayer is wont to be made;"
+and therefore when they flock thither, they are not
+disposed or prepared to listen to long preaching
+prayers, which would be deemed barely tolerable
+if delivered from the desk, but which are absolutely
+insufferable in the shape of prayer.</p>
+
+<p>We write plainly, because we feel the need of
+great plainness of speech. We deeply feel our want
+of reality, sincerity, and truth in our prayers and
+prayer-meetings. Not unfrequently it happens that
+what we call prayer is not prayer at all, but the
+fluent utterance of certain known and acknowledged
+truths and principles, to which one has listened so
+often that the reiteration becomes tiresome in the
+extreme. What can be more painful than to hear a
+man on his knees explaining principles and unfolding
+doctrines? The question forces itself upon us,
+"Is the man speaking to God, or to us?" If to
+God, surely nothing can be more irreverent or profane
+than to attempt to explain things to Him; but
+if to us, then it is not prayer at all, and the sooner
+we rise from the attitude of prayer the better, inasmuch
+as the speaker will do better on his legs and
+we in our seats.</p>
+
+<p>And, having referred to the subject of attitude,
+we would very lovingly call attention to a matter
+which, in our judgment, demands a little serious
+consideration; we allude to the habit of sitting
+during the holy and solemn exercise of prayer. We
+are fully aware, of course, that the grand question
+in prayer is, to have the <i>heart</i> in a right attitude.
+And further, we know, and would ever bear in mind,
+that many who attend our prayer-meetings are aged,
+infirm, and delicate people, who could not possibly
+kneel for any length of time&mdash;perhaps not at all.
+Then again, it often happens that, even where there
+is not physical weakness, and where there would be
+real desire to kneel down, as feeling it to be the
+proper attitude, yet, from actual want of space, it
+is impossible to change one's position.</p>
+
+<p>All these things must be taken into account; but,
+allowing as broad a margin as possible in which to
+insert these modifying clauses, we must still hold to
+it that there is a very deplorable lack of reverence
+in many of our public reunions for prayer. We
+frequently observe young men, who can neither
+plead physical weakness nor want of space, sitting
+through an entire prayer-meeting. This, we confess,
+is offensive, and we cannot but believe it grieves the
+Spirit of the Lord. We ought to kneel down when
+we can; it expresses reverence and prostration.
+The blessed Master "kneeled down and prayed."
+(Luke xxii. 41.) His apostle did the same, as we
+read in Acts xx. 36, "When he had thus spoken,
+he kneeled down and prayed with them all."</p>
+
+<p>And is it not comely and right so to do? Assuredly
+it is. And can aught be more unseemly than
+to see a number of people sitting, lolling, lounging,
+and gaping about while prayer is being offered?
+We consider it perfectly shocking, and we do here
+most earnestly beseech all the Lord's people to give
+this matter their solemn consideration, and to endeavor,
+in every possible way, both by precept and
+example, to promote the godly habit of kneeling at
+our prayer-meetings. No doubt those who take
+part in the meeting would greatly aid in this matter
+by short and fervent prayers; but of this, more
+hereafter.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+<p>We shall now proceed to consider, in the light of
+holy Scripture, the moral conditions or attributes
+of prayer. There is nothing like having the
+authority of the divine Word for every thing in the
+entire range of our practical Christian life. Scripture
+must be our one grand and conclusive referee
+in all our questions. Let us never forget this.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, saith the Scripture as to the necessary
+moral conditions of prayer? Turn to Matthew
+xviii. 19&mdash;"Again I say unto you, that <i>if two of
+you shall agree</i> on earth as touching any thing that
+they shall ask, it shall be done for them of My
+Father which is in heaven."</p>
+
+<p>Here we learn that one necessary condition of our
+prayers is, <i>unanimity</i>&mdash;cordial agreement&mdash;thorough
+oneness of mind. The true force of the words is,
+"If two of you shall symphonize"&mdash;shall make one
+common sound. There must be no jarring note,
+no discordant element.</p>
+
+<p>If, for example, we come together to pray about
+the progress of the gospel&mdash;the conversion of souls,
+we must be of one mind in the matter&mdash;we must
+make one common sound before our God. It will
+not do for each to have some special thought of his
+own to carry out. We must come before the throne
+of grace in holy harmony of mind and spirit, else
+we cannot claim an answer, on the ground of
+Matthew xviii. 19.</p>
+
+<p>Now, this is a point of immense moral weight.
+Its importance, as bearing upon the tone and character
+of our prayer-meetings, cannot possibly be
+overestimated. It is very questionable indeed
+whether any of us have given sufficient attention to
+it. Have we not to deplore the objectless character
+of our prayer-meetings? Ought we not to come
+together more with some definite object on our
+hearts, as to which we are going to wait together
+upon God? We read in the first chapter of Acts,
+in reference to the early disciples, "These all continued
+<i>with one accord</i> in prayer and supplication,
+with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus,
+and with His brethren."<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> And again, in the second
+chapter, we read, "When the day of Pentecost was
+fully come, they were <i>all with one accord in one place</i>."</p>
+
+<p>They were waiting, according to our Lord's instructions,
+for the promise of the Father&mdash;the gift of
+the Holy Ghost. They had the sure word of promise.
+The Comforter was, without fail, to come; but
+this, so far from dispensing with prayer, was the
+very ground of its blessed exercise. They prayed;
+they prayed in one place; they prayed with one
+accord. They were thoroughly agreed. They all,
+without exception, had one definite object before
+their hearts. They were waiting for the promised
+Spirit; they continued to wait; and they waited
+with one accord, until He came. Men and women,
+absorbed with one object, waited in holy concord,
+in happy symphony&mdash;waited on, day after day, earnestly,
+fervently, harmoniously waited until they were
+indued with the promised power from on high.</p>
+
+<p>Should not we go and do likewise? Is there not a
+sad lack of this "one accord," "one place" principle
+in our midst? True it is, blessed be God, we have
+not to ask for the Holy Ghost to come,&mdash;He has
+come; we have not to ask for the outpouring of the
+Spirit,&mdash;He has been poured out: but we have to
+ask for the display of His blessed power in our
+midst. Supposing our lot is cast in a place where
+spiritual death and darkness reign. There is not so
+much as a single breath of life&mdash;not a leaf stirring.
+The heaven above seems like brass; the earth beneath,
+iron. Such a thing as a conversion is never
+heard of. A withering formalism seems to have
+settled down upon the entire place. Powerless
+profession, dead routine, stupefying mechanical
+religiousness, are the order of the day. What is
+to be done? Are we to allow ourselves to fall under
+the fatal influence of the surrounding malaria? are
+we to yield to the paralyzing power of the atmosphere
+that inwraps the place? Assuredly not.</p>
+
+<p>If not, what then? Let us, even if there be but
+two who really feel the condition of things, get together,
+with one accord, and pour out our hearts to
+God. Let us wait on Him, in holy concord, with
+united, firm purpose, until He send a copious shower
+of blessing upon the barren spot. Let us not fold
+our arms and vainly say, "The time is not come."
+Let us not yield to that pernicious offshoot of a one-sided
+theology, which is rightly called fatalism, and
+say, "God is sovereign, and He works according to
+His own will. We must wait His time. Human
+effort is in vain. We cannot get up a revival. We
+must beware of mere excitement."</p>
+
+<p>All this seems very plausible; and the more so
+because there is a measure of truth in it; indeed it
+is all true, so far as it goes: but it is only one side
+of the truth. It is truth, and nothing but the truth;
+but it is not <i>the whole truth</i>. Hence its mischievous
+tendency. There is nothing more to be dreaded
+than one-sided truth; it is far more dangerous
+than positive, palpable error. Many an earnest
+soul has been stumbled and turned completely out
+of the way by one-sided or misapplied truth.
+Many a true-hearted and useful workman has been
+chilled, repulsed, and driven out of the harvest-field
+by the injudicious enforcement of certain doctrines
+having a measure of truth, but not <i>the</i> full
+truth of God.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing, however, can touch the truth, or weaken
+the force of Matthew xviii. 19. It stands in all its
+blessed fullness, freeness, and preciousness before
+the eye of faith; its terms are clear and unmistakable.
+"If two of you shall agree upon earth, as
+touching <i>any thing</i> that they shall ask, it shall be
+done for them of My Father which is in heaven."
+Here is our warrant for coming together to pray for
+any thing that may be laid on our hearts. Do we
+mourn over the coldness, barrenness, and death
+around us? Are we discouraged by the little apparent
+fruit from the preaching of the gospel&mdash;the
+lack of power in the preaching itself, and the total
+absence of practical result? Are our souls cast
+down by the barrenness, dullness, heaviness, and
+low tone of all our reunions, whether at the table
+of our Lord, before the mercy-seat, or around the
+fountain of holy Scripture?</p>
+
+<p>What are we to do? Fold our arms in cold indifference?
+give up in despair? or give vent to complaining,
+murmuring, fretfulness, or irritation? God
+forbid! What then? Come together, "with one
+accord in one place;" get down on our faces before
+our God, and pour out our hearts, as the heart of
+one man, pleading Matthew xviii. 19.</p>
+
+<p>This, we may rest assured, is the grand remedy&mdash;the
+unfailing resource. It is perfectly true that "God
+is sovereign," and this is the very reason why we
+should wait on Him; perfectly true that "human effort
+is in vain," and that is the very reason for seeking
+divine power; perfectly true that "we cannot
+get up a revival," and that is the very reason for
+seeking to get it <i>down</i>; perfectly true that "we must
+beware of mere excitement;" equally true that we
+must beware of coldness, deadness, and selfish indifference.</p>
+
+<p>The simple fact is, there is no excuse whatever&mdash;so
+long as Christ is at the right hand of God&mdash;so
+long as God the Holy Ghost is in our midst and in
+our hearts&mdash;so long as we have the Word of God
+in our hands&mdash;so long as Matthew xviii. 19 shines
+before our eyes&mdash;there is, we repeat, no excuse
+whatever for barrenness, deadness, coldness, and
+indifference&mdash;no excuse for heavy and unprofitable
+meetings&mdash;no excuse whatever for lack of freshness
+in our reunions or of fruitfulness in our service. Let
+us wait on God, in holy concord, and the blessing is
+sure to come.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART III.</h3>
+
+<p>If we turn to Matthew xxi. 22, we shall find another
+of the essential conditions of effectual
+prayer. "And all things whatsoever ye shall ask in
+prayer, <i>believing</i>, ye shall receive." This is a truly
+marvelous statement. It opens the very treasury of
+heaven to faith. There is absolutely no limit. Our
+blessed Lord assures us that we shall receive whatsoever
+we ask in simple faith.</p>
+
+<p>The apostle James, under the inspiration of the</p>
+
+<p>Holy Ghost, gives us a similar assurance in reference
+to the matter of asking for wisdom. "If any
+of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that <i>giveth
+to all liberally</i>, and upbraideth not; and it shall be
+given him. But"&mdash;here is the moral condition&mdash;"let
+him ask <i>in faith, nothing wavering</i>. For he that
+wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the
+wind and tossed. For let not that man think that
+he shall obtain any thing of the Lord."</p>
+
+<p>From both these passages we learn that if our
+prayers are to have an answer, they must be prayers
+of faith. It is one thing to utter words in the form
+of prayer, and another thing altogether to pray in
+simple faith, in the full, clear, and settled assurance
+that we shall have what we are asking for. It is
+greatly to be feared that many of our so-called
+prayers never go beyond the ceiling of the room.
+In order to reach the throne of God, they must be
+borne on the wings of faith, and proceed from hearts
+united and minds agreed, in holy purpose, to wait
+on our God for the things which we really require.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the question is, are not our prayers and
+prayer-meetings sadly deficient on this point? Is not
+the deficiency manifest from the fact that we see so
+little result from our prayers? Ought we not to examine
+ourselves as to how far we really understand
+these two conditions of prayer, namely, unanimity
+and confidence? If it be true&mdash;and it is true, for
+Christ has said it&mdash;that two persons agreed to ask in
+faith can have whatsoever they ask, why do we not
+see more abundant answers to our prayers? Must
+not the fault be in us?&mdash;are we not deficient in concord
+and confidence?</p>
+
+<p>Our Lord, in Matthew xviii. 19, comes down, as
+we say, to the very smallest plurality&mdash;the smallest
+congregation&mdash;even to "two;" but of course the
+promise applies to dozens, scores, or hundreds. The
+grand point is, to be thoroughly agreed and fully
+persuaded that we shall get what we are asking for.
+This would give a different tone and character altogether
+to our reunions for prayer. It would make
+them very much more real than our ordinary prayer-meeting,
+which, alas! alas! is often poor, cold,
+dead, objectless, and desultory, exhibiting any thing
+but cordial agreement and unwavering faith.</p>
+
+<p>How vastly different it would be if our prayer-meetings
+were the result of a cordial agreement on
+the part of two or more believing souls, to come together
+and wait upon God for a certain thing, and
+to persevere in prayer until they receive an answer!
+How little we see of this! We attend the prayer-meeting
+from week to week&mdash;and very right we
+should&mdash;but ought we not to be exercised before
+God as to how far we are agreed in reference to the
+object or objects which are to be laid before the
+throne? The answer to this question links itself on
+to another of the moral conditions of prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Let us turn to Luke xi. "And He said unto them,
+'Which of you shall have a friend, and shall go unto
+him at midnight, and say unto him, Friend, lend me
+three loaves; for a friend of mine in his journey is
+come to me, and I have nothing to set before him?
+And he from within shall answer and say, Trouble
+me not; the door is now shut, and my children are
+with me in bed; I cannot rise and give thee. I say
+unto you, though he will not rise and give him because
+he is his friend, yet because of his <i>importunity</i>
+he will rise and give him as many as he needeth.
+And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you;
+seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be
+opened unto you. For every one that asketh receiveth;
+and he that seeketh findeth; and to him
+that knocketh it shall be opened.'" (Ver. 5-10.)</p>
+
+<p>These words are of the very highest possible importance,
+inasmuch as they contain part of our
+Lord's reply to the request of His disciples, "Lord,
+teach us to pray." Let no one imagine for a moment
+that we would dare to take it upon ourselves to
+teach people how to pray. God forbid! Nothing is
+further from our thoughts. We are merely seeking
+to bring the souls of our readers into direct contact
+with the Word of God&mdash;the veritable sayings of our
+blessed Lord and Master&mdash;so that, in the light of
+those sayings, they may judge for themselves as to
+how far our prayers and our prayer-meetings come
+up to the divine standard.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, do we learn from Luke xi? what are
+the moral conditions which it sets before us? In the
+first place, it teaches us to be <i>definite</i> in our prayers.
+"Friend, lend me three loaves." There is a positive
+need felt and expressed; there is the one thing
+before the mind and on the heart, and to this one
+thing he confines himself. It is not a long, rambling,
+desultory statement about all sorts of things: it is
+distinct, direct, and pointed,&mdash;I want three loaves,
+I cannot do without them, I must have them, I am
+shut up, the case is urgent, the time of night&mdash;all
+the circumstances give definiteness and earnestness
+to the appeal. He cannot wander from the one point,
+"Friend, lend me three loaves."</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it seems a very untoward time to come&mdash;"midnight."
+Every thing looks discouraging.
+The friend has retired for the night, the door is
+shut, his children are with him in bed, he cannot
+rise. All this is very depressing; but still the definite
+need is pressed: he must have the three loaves.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we cannot but judge that there is a great
+practical lesson here which may be applied, with
+immense profit, to our prayers and our prayer-meetings.
+Must we not admit that our reunions for
+prayer suffer sadly from long, rambling, desultory
+prayers? Do we not frequently give utterance to a
+whole host of things of which we do not really feel
+the need, and which we have no notion of waiting
+for at all? Should we not sometimes be taken very
+much aback were the Lord to appear to us at the
+close of our prayer-meeting and ask us, What do
+you really want Me to give or to do?</p>
+
+<p>We feel most thoroughly persuaded that all this
+demands our serious consideration. We believe it
+would impart great earnestness, freshness, glow,
+depth, reality, and power to our prayer-meetings
+were we to attend with something definite on our
+hearts, as to which we could invite the fellowship of
+our brethren. Some of us seem to think it necessary
+to make one long prayer about all sorts of things&mdash;many
+of them very right and very good, no doubt&mdash;but
+the mind gets bewildered by the multiplicity of
+subjects. How much better to bring some one object
+before the throne, earnestly urge it, and pause,
+so that the Holy Spirit may lead out others, in like
+manner, either for the same thing or something else
+equally definite.</p>
+
+<p>Long prayers are often wearisome; indeed, in
+many cases, they are a positive infliction. It will
+perhaps be said that we must not prescribe any time
+to the Holy Spirit. True indeed;&mdash;away from us
+be the thought! Who would venture upon such a
+piece of daring blasphemy? We are simply comparing
+what we find in Scripture (where their brief
+pointedness is characteristic&mdash;see Matt. vi, John
+xvii., Acts iv. 24-30, Eph. i, iii, etc.) with what we
+too often&mdash;not always, thank God!&mdash;find in our
+prayer-meetings.</p>
+
+<p>Let it, then, be distinctly borne in mind that
+"long prayers" are not the rule in Scripture.
+They are referred to in Mark xii. 40, etc., in
+terms of withering disapproval. Brief, fervent,
+pointed prayers impart great freshness and interest
+to the prayer-meeting; but on the other hand, as
+a general rule, long and desultory prayers exert a
+most depressing influence upon all.</p>
+
+<p>But there is another very important moral condition
+set forth in our Lord's teaching in Luke xi, and
+that is, "<i>importunity</i>." He tells us that the man
+succeeds in gaining his object simply by his importunate
+earnestness. He is not to be put off; he
+must get the three loaves. Importunity prevails even
+where the claims of friendship prove inoperative.
+The man is bent on his object; he has no alternative.
+There is a demand, and he has nothing to
+meet it&mdash;"I have nothing to set before my traveling
+friend." In short, he will not take a refusal.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the question is, how far do we understand
+this great lesson? It is not, blessed be God, that
+He will ever answer us "from within." He will never
+say to us, "Trouble me not"&mdash;"I cannot rise and
+give thee." He is ever our true and ready "Friend"&mdash;"a
+cheerful, liberal, and unupbraiding Giver."
+All praise to His holy name! Still, He encourages
+importunity, and we need to ponder His teaching.
+There is a sad lack of it in our prayer-meetings.
+Indeed, it will be found that in proportion to the
+lack of definiteness is the lack of importunity. The
+two go very much together. Where the thing sought
+is as definite as the "three loaves," there will generally
+be the importunate asking for it, and the firm
+purpose to get it.</p>
+
+<p>The simple fact is, we are too vague and, as a
+consequence, too indifferent in our prayers and
+prayer-meetings. We do not seem like people <i>asking
+for what they want, and waiting for what they ask</i>.
+This is what destroys our prayer-meetings, rendering
+them pithless, pointless, powerless; turning them
+into teaching or talking-meetings, rather than deep-toned,
+earnest prayer-meetings. We feel convinced
+that the whole Church of God needs to be thoroughly
+aroused in reference to this great question; and this
+conviction it is which compels us to offer these hints
+and suggestions, with which we are not yet done.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PART IV.</h3>
+
+<p>The more deeply we ponder the subject which has
+been for some time engaging our attention, and
+the more we consider the state of the entire Church
+of God, the more convinced we are of the urgent
+need of a thorough awakening every where in reference
+to the question of prayer. We cannot&mdash;nor do
+we desire to&mdash;shut our eyes to the fact that deadness,
+coldness, and barrenness seem, as a rule, to characterize
+our prayer-meetings. No doubt we may
+find here and there a pleasing exception, but speaking
+generally, we do not believe that any sober,
+spiritual person will call in question the truth of what
+we state, namely, that the tone of our prayer-meetings
+is fearfully low, and that it is absolutely imperative
+upon us to inquire seriously as to the cause.</p>
+
+<p>In the papers already put forth on this great, all-important,
+and deeply practical subject, we have
+ventured to offer to our readers a few hints and
+suggestions. We have briefly glanced at our lack
+of confidence, our failure in cordial unanimity, the
+absence of definiteness and importunity. We have
+referred in plain terms&mdash;and we must speak plainly
+if we are to speak at all&mdash;to many things which are
+felt by all the truly spiritual amongst us to be not
+only trying and painful, but thoroughly subversive
+of the real power and blessing of our reunions for
+prayer. We have spoken of the long, tiresome,
+desultory, preaching prayers which, in some cases,
+have become so perfectly intolerable, that the Lord's
+dear people are scared away from the prayer-meetings
+altogether. They feel that they are only
+wearied, grieved, and irritated, instead of being refreshed,
+comforted, and strengthened; and hence
+they deem it better to stay away. They judge it to
+be more profitable, if they have an hour to spare, to
+spend it in the privacy of their closet, where they
+can pour out their hearts to God in earnest prayer
+and supplication, than to attend a so-called prayer-meeting,
+where they are absolutely wearied out with
+incessant, powerless, hymn-singing, or long preaching
+prayers.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we more than question the rightness of such
+a course. We seriously doubt if this be at all the
+way to remedy the evils of which we complain. Indeed,
+we are thoroughly persuaded it is not. If
+it be right to come together for prayer and supplication&mdash;and
+who will question the rightness?&mdash;then
+surely it is not right for any one to stay away
+merely because of the feebleness, failure, or even
+the folly of some who may take part in the meeting.
+If all the really spiritual members were to stay away
+on such a ground, what would become of the prayer-meeting?
+We have very little idea of how much is
+involved in the elements which compose a meeting.
+Even though we may not take part audibly in the
+action, yet if we are there in a right spirit&mdash;there
+really to wait upon God, we marvelously help the
+tone of a meeting.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, we must remember that we have something
+more to do in attending a meeting than to
+think of our own comfort, profit, and blessing. We
+must think of the Lord's glory; we must seek to do
+His blessed will, and try to promote the good of
+others in every possible way; and neither of these
+ends, we may rest assured, can be attained by our
+deliberately absenting ourselves from the place where
+prayer is wont to be made.</p>
+
+<p>We repeat, and with emphasis, the words, "<i>deliberately</i>
+absenting ourselves"&mdash;staying away because
+we are not profited by what takes place there.
+Many things may crop up to hinder our being present&mdash;ill-health,
+domestic duties, lawful claims upon
+our time if we are in the employment of others,&mdash;all
+these things have to be taken into account; but
+we may set it down as a fixed principle that <i>the one
+who can designedly absent himself from the prayer-meeting
+is in a bad state of soul</i>. The healthy,
+happy, earnest, diligent soul will be sure to be
+found at the prayer-meeting.</p>
+
+<p>But all this conducts us, naturally and simply, to
+another of those moral conditions at which we have
+been glancing in this series of papers. Let us turn
+for a moment to the opening lines of Luke xviii.
+"And He spake a parable unto them to this end,
+<i>that men ought always to pray, and not to faint</i>: saying,
+'There was in a city a judge, which feared not
+God, neither regarded man. And there was a widow
+in that city, and she came unto him, saying, Avenge
+me of mine adversary. And he would not for a
+while; but afterward he said within himself, Though
+I fear not God, nor regard man, yet, because this
+widow troubleth me, I will avenge her, lest by her
+continual coming she weary me.' And the Lord
+said, 'Hear what the unjust judge saith. And shall
+not God avenge His own elect, which cry day and
+night unto Him, though He bear long with them?
+I tell you that He will avenge them speedily.'"
+(Ver. I-8.)</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, we have pressed upon our attention the
+important moral condition of <i>perseverance</i>. "Men
+ought <i>always</i> to pray, and <i>not to faint</i>." This is
+intimately connected with the definiteness and importunity
+to which we have already referred. We
+want a certain thing; we cannot do without it. We
+importunately, unitedly, believingly, and perseveringly
+wait on our God until He graciously send an
+answer, as He most assuredly will, if the moral basis
+and the moral conditions be duly maintained.</p>
+
+<p><i>But we must persevere.</i> We must not faint, and
+give up, though the answer does not come as speedily
+as we might expect. It may please God to exercise
+our souls by keeping us waiting on Him for days,
+months, or perhaps years. The exercise is good.
+It is morally healthful; it tends to make us real; it
+brings us down to the roots of things. Look, for
+example, at Daniel. He was kept for "three full
+weeks" waiting on God, in profound exercise of
+soul. "In those days I Daniel was mourning three
+full weeks. I ate no pleasant bread, neither came
+flesh nor wine in my mouth, neither did I anoint
+myself at all, till three full weeks were fulfilled."</p>
+
+<p>All this was good for Daniel. There was deep
+blessing in the spiritual exercises through which this
+beloved and honored servant of God was called to
+pass during those three weeks. And what is specially
+worthy of note is, that the answer to Daniel's
+cry had been despatched from the throne of God at
+the very beginning of his exercise, as we read at
+verse 12, "Then said he unto me, 'Fear not Daniel;
+for <i>from the first day that thou didst set thine heart to
+understand, and to chasten thyself before thy God, thy
+words were heard, and I am come for thy words</i>.
+But"&mdash;how marvelous and mysterious is this!&mdash;"the
+prince of the kingdom of Persia withstood me
+one and twenty days; but, lo, Michael, one of the
+chief princes, came to help me; and I remained
+there with the kings of Persia. Now I am come to
+make thee understand what shall befall thy people
+in the latter days."</p>
+
+<p>All this is full of interest. Here was the beloved
+servant of God mourning, chastening himself, and
+waiting upon God. The angelic messenger was
+on his way with the answer. The enemy was permitted
+to hinder; but Daniel continued to wait:
+he prayed, and fainted not; and in due time the
+answer came.</p>
+
+<p>Is there no lesson here for us? Most assuredly
+there is. We, too, may have to wait long in the
+holy attitude of expectancy, and in the spirit of
+prayer; but we shall find the time of waiting most
+profitable for our souls. Very often our God, in
+His wise and faithful dealing with us, sees fit to
+withhold the answer, simply to prove us as to the
+reality of our prayers. The grand point for us is,
+to have an object laid upon our hearts by the Holy
+Ghost&mdash;an object as to which we can lay the finger
+of faith upon some distinct promise in the Word,
+and to persevere in prayer until we get what we
+want. "Praying <i>always</i> with all prayer and supplication
+in the Spirit, and <i>watching</i> thereunto <i>with
+all perseverance</i> and supplication for all saints."
+(Eph. vi. 18.)</p>
+
+<p>All this demands our serious consideration. We
+are as sadly deficient in perseverance as we are in
+definiteness and importunity. Hence the feebleness
+of our prayers and the coldness of our prayer-meetings.
+We do not come together with a definite
+object, and hence we are not importunate, and we
+do not persevere. In short, our prayer-meetings
+are often nothing but a dull routine&mdash;a cold, mechanical
+service&mdash;something to be gone through&mdash;a
+wearisome alternation of hymn and prayer, hymn
+and prayer, causing the spirit to groan beneath the
+heavy burden of mere profitless bodily exercise.</p>
+
+<p>We speak plainly and strongly: we speak as we
+feel. We must be permitted to speak without reserve.
+We call upon the whole Church of God, far
+and wide, to look this great question straight in the
+face&mdash;to look to God about it&mdash;to judge themselves
+about it. Do we not feel the lack of power in all
+our public reunions? Why those barren seasons at
+the Lord's table? Why the dullness and feebleness
+in the celebration of that precious feast which ought
+to stir the very deepest depths of our renewed being?
+Why the lack of unction, power, and edification
+in our public readings&mdash;the foolish speculations
+and the silly questions which have been advanced
+and answered for the last forty years? Why those
+varied evils on which we have been dwelling, and
+which are being mourned over almost every where
+by the truly spiritual? Why the barrenness of our
+gospel services? Why are souls not smitten down
+under the Word? Why is there so little gathering-power?</p>
+
+<p>Brethren, beloved in the Lord, let us rouse ourselves
+to the solemn consideration of these weighty
+matters. Let us not be satisfied to go on with the
+present condition of things. We call upon all those
+who admit the truth of what we have been putting
+forth in these pages on "Prayer and the Prayer-Meeting,"
+to unite in cordial, earnest, united prayer
+and supplication. Let us seek to get together according
+to God; to come as one man and prostrate
+ourselves before the mercy-seat, and perseveringly
+wait upon our God for the revival of His work, the
+progress of His gospel, the ingathering and upbuilding
+of His beloved people. Let our prayer-meetings
+be really prayer-meetings, and not occasions
+for giving out our favorite hymns, and starting our
+fancy tunes. The prayer-meeting ought to be the
+place of expressed heed and expected blessing&mdash;the
+place of expressed weakness and expected power&mdash;the
+place where God's people assemble with one
+accord, to take hold of the very throne of God, to
+get into the very treasury of heaven, and draw
+thence all we want for ourselves, for our households,
+for the Whole Church of God, and for the vineyard
+of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the true idea of a prayer-meeting, if we
+are to be taught by Scripture. May it be more fully
+realized amongst the Lord's people every where.
+May the Holy Spirit stir us all up, and press upon
+our souls the value, importance, and urgent necessity
+of unanimity, confidence, definiteness, importunity,
+and perseverance in all our prayers and
+prayer-meetings.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>Yes, there's a power which man can wield,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">When mortal aid is vain;<br /></span>
+<span>That eye, that arm, that love to reach,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That list'ning ear to gain.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>That power is prayer, which soars on high,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Through Jesus, to the throne,<br /></span>
+<span>And moves the hand which moves the world<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To bring deliverance down.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+<span class="right">C. H. M.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;It may perhaps be useful to notice that in the
+foregoing most needful pages, the beloved author has been
+speaking of the <i>prayer-meeting</i>, and the moral basis and
+conditions of prayer in general, not of personal, secret
+prayer. The importance of it can hardly be overestimated.
+The lack or neglect of this soon tells in the spiritual life of
+the Christian. Is not the lack of this the explanation of
+much leanness of soul, from which knowledge alone is not
+able to lift us up? It is, as it were, the spiritual gauge of
+our soul's condition. There, in the secret of the closet,
+the godly soul ever loves to pour out in its Father's ear its
+trials, its fears, its desires, its wants, its thanksgivings, in
+all their details. And what comfort, what joy, what godly
+strength and purpose, the soul carries from thence! what
+preparation to go through the daily toil, and testings of the
+day! Beloved of the Lord, let us wait on God, that we
+may know more of this secret power, gotten in our closet
+with Him.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right">[Ed.]</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The reader should be informed that the word which is
+rendered "perfect," in the above passage, occurs but this
+once in the entire New Testament. It is [Greek: artios] (artios)
+and signifies, ready, complete, well fitted; as an instrument
+with all its strings, a machine with all its parts, a body
+with all its limbs, joints, muscles, and sinews. The usual
+word for "perfect" is [Greek: teleios] (teleios) which signifies the
+reaching of the moral <i>end</i>, in any particular thing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The reader will distinguish between the expression "in
+the flesh" as used in Gal. ii. 20, and in Rom. viii. 8, 9. In
+the former, it simply refers to our condition as in the body.
+In the latter, it sets forth the principle or ground of our
+standing. The believer is in the body, as to the fact of his
+condition; but he is not in the flesh as to the principle of
+his standing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> ["Thou hast magnified Thy word (or saying) according
+to all Thy Name," seems more exactly to give the meaning
+of the passage. <span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> It is deeply interesting to note that neither the Jews'
+best Friend nor their worst enemy is once formally named
+in the book of Esther; but faith could recognize both the
+one and the other.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> When the jailer at Philippi inquired of Paul and Silas,
+"What must I do to be saved?" they simply replied, "<i>Believe</i>
+on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved, and
+thy house" (Acts xvi. 30, 31). It would, surely, be well
+if this method of dealing with an anxious inquirer were
+more faithfully adopted.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> [There are three very distinct aspects of the death of
+Christ which, to apprehend clearly, is of unspeakable value
+to the soul.
+</p><p>
+1st. That which is typified in the blood of the paschal
+lamb on Israel's doors in Egypt. This is the judgment of
+God against the sinner in the person of the Substitute provided
+for him. Rom. iii. 23-27 applies to this.
+</p><p>
+It brings peace to the soul who believes, for his judgment
+is passed. Christ has borne it in our stead.
+</p><p>
+2nd. As revealed at the passage of the Red Sea. There it
+is fully manifested that God is <i>for</i> His people; He has completely
+overcome their enemy and freed them from his power
+forever. The prince and his hosts, who ruled over them
+unto death, are drowned in the sea. God's people have
+passed out of his dominions, and can now go on with God
+in perfect freedom. No condemnation remains. Henceforth,
+to faith, Satan is a vanquished foe. God's people are delivered;
+they can now, in settled peace, worship, praise, and serve their
+God. Blessed, holy deliverance and service! Rom. vi.-vii.
+gives the full teaching of this aspect of the death of Christ.
+</p><p>
+3rd. As seen in the passage of Jordan. There is no judgment
+to escape there; no foe pressing behind. It is a question
+of entering the good land which is just across. It is
+the death of Christ here as <i>the ending of His people's history</i>
+<i>as children of Adam</i>; that, by resurrection, He may now introduce
+them, as having died and risen with Him, into the
+place of glory where He has gone. By this it can be said,
+"As He is, so are we in this world" (I John iv. 17).
+</p><p>
+Col. ii. 10-iii. 4, is the New Testament doctrine of this
+precious truth. <span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> The reader may here remark that "the old corn of the
+land of Canaan" is a type of Christ risen and glorified. The
+manna is a type of Christ in His humiliation. The remembrance
+of Him in the latter is ineffably precious to the soul.
+It is sweet to look back and trace His way as the lowly,
+humble, self-emptied man. This is to feed upon the hidden
+manna&mdash;"Christ, once humbled here." Nevertheless, a
+risen, ascended and glorified Christ is the true object for the
+heart of the Christian; but to enjoy Him there, the reproach
+of this present evil world&mdash;all conformity to it&mdash;must be
+rolled away from us by the spiritual application of the circumcision
+of Christ. He was not conformed to this world,
+and we must be prepared to identify ourselves with Him
+in this.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> There is a passage in the book of Deuteronomy which,
+as it may present a difficulty to some minds, should be noticed
+here. "And the Lord heard the voice of your words,
+when ye spake unto me; and the Lord said unto me, I have
+heard the voice of the words of this people which they have
+spoken unto thee: <i>they have well said all that they have spoken</i>"
+(Deut. v. 28). From this passage, it might seem as
+though the Lord approved of their making a vow; but if
+my reader will take the trouble of reading the entire context,
+from verse 24 to 27, he will see that it has nothing whatever
+to say to the vow, but that it contains the expression
+of their terror at the consequences of their vow. They were
+not able to endure that which was commanded. "If," said
+they "we hear the voice of the Lord our God any more,
+then we shall die. For who is there of all flesh that hath
+heard the voice of the living God speaking out of the midst
+of the fire, as we have, and lived? Go thou near, and hear
+all that the Lord our God shall say; and speak thou unto us
+all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee; and we
+will hear it and do it." It was the confession of their own
+inability to encounter Jehovah in that awful aspect which
+their proud legality had led Him to assume. It is impossible
+that the Lord could ever commend an abandonment of
+free and changeless grace for a sandy foundation of works
+of law. (See "Notes on the book of Exodus," page 253.
+Same publishers.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> [That is, as many as are on that principle&mdash;of "law,"
+"works of law." <span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> [The Greek word translated "show" is more exactly
+rendered "announce" or "proclaim"&mdash;same word as in
+I Cor. ix. 14. <span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> It is needful to bear in mind that, while the blood of
+Christ is that alone which introduces the believer, in holy
+boldness, into the presence of God, yet it is nowhere set forth
+as our centre, or bond of union. Truly precious is it for
+every blood-washed soul to remember, in the secret of the
+divine presence, that the atoning blood of Jesus has rolled
+away for ever his heavy burden of sin. Yet the Holy Ghost
+can only gather us to the person of a risen and glorified
+Christ, who, having shed the blood of the everlasting covenant,
+is gone up into heaven in the power of an endless life,
+to which divine righteousness inseparably attaches. A living
+Christ, therefore, is our centre and bond of union. The
+blood having answered for us to God, we gather round our
+risen and exalted Head in the heavens. "I, if I be lifted
+up from the earth, will draw all men unto <i>Me</i>." We behold
+in the cup in the Lord's Supper the symbol of shed blood;
+but we are neither gathered round the cup nor the blood,
+but round Him who shed it. The blood of the Lamb has
+put away every obstacle to our fellowship with God; and in
+proof of this the Holy Ghost has come down to baptize believers
+into one body, and gather them round the risen and
+glorified Head. The wine is <i>the memorial</i> of a life shed out
+for sin: the bread is <i>the memorial</i> of a body broken for sin:
+but we are not gathered round a life poured out, nor round
+a body broken, but round a living Christ, who dieth no
+more, who cannot have His body broken any more, or His
+blood shed any more. This makes a serious difference; and
+when looked at in connection with the discipline of the
+house of God, the difference is immensely important. Very
+many are apt to imagine that when any one is put away
+from or refused communion, the question is raised as to there
+being a link between his soul and Christ. A moment's consideration
+of this point in the light of Scripture will be sufficient to prove
+that no such question is raised. If we look
+at the case of the "wicked person" in I Cor. v., we see one
+put away from the communion of the Church on earth who
+was nevertheless a Christian, as people say. He was not,
+therefore, put away because he was not a Christian: such a
+question was never raised; nor should it be in any case.
+How can we tell whether a man is eternally linked with
+Christ or not? Have we the custody of the Lamb's book of
+life? Is the discipline of the Church of God founded upon
+what we can know, or upon what we <i>cannot</i>? Was the man
+in I Cor. v. linked eternally with Christ, or not? Was the
+Church told to inquire? Even suppose we could see a man's
+name written in the book of life, that would not be the
+ground of receiving him into the assembly on earth, or retaining
+him there. That which the Church is held responsible
+for, is to keep herself pure in doctrine, pure in practice,
+and pure in association, and all this on the ground of being
+God's house. "Thy testimonies are very sure; holiness becometh
+Thy house, O Lord, for ever." When any one was
+separated, or "cut off," from the congregation of Israel, was
+it because of not being an Israelite? By no means; but because
+of some moral or ceremonial defilement which could
+not be tolerated in God's Assembly. In Achan's case (Josh.
+vii.), although there were six hundred thousand souls ignorant
+of his sin, yet God says, "<i>Israel hath sinned</i>." Why?
+Because they were looked at as God's Assembly, and there
+was defilement there which, if not judged, all would have
+been broken up.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Those who are competent to do so can look at the original
+of this important chapter, where they will see that the
+word translated "approved" (ver. 19) comes from the same
+root as that translated "examine himself" (ver. 28). Thus
+we see that the man who approves himself takes his place
+amongst the approved, and is the very opposite of those who
+were amongst the heretics. Now the meaning of a heretic is
+not merely one who holds false doctrine, though one may
+be a heretic in so doing, but one who persists in the exercise
+of <i>his own will</i>. The apostle knew that there must be heresies
+at Corinth, seeing that there were sects: those who were
+doing their own will were acting in opposition to God's will,
+and thus producing division; for God's will had reference to
+the whole body. Those who were acting heretically were
+despising the Church of God.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> It may be well to add a word here for the guidance of
+any simple-hearted Christian who may find himself placed
+in circumstances in which he is called upon to decide between
+the claims of different tables which might seem to be
+spread upon the same principle. To confirm and encourage
+such an one in a truthful course of action, I should regard
+as a most valuable service.
+</p><p>
+Suppose, then, I find myself in a place where two or more
+tables have been spread; what am I to do? I believe I am
+to inquire into the <i>origin</i> of these various tables, to see how
+it became needful to have more than one table. If, for example,
+a number of Christians meeting together have admitted
+and retained amongst them any unsound principles,
+affecting the person of the Son of God, or subversive of the
+unity of the Church of God on earth; if, I say, such principles
+be admitted and retained in the assembly, or if persons
+who hold and teach them be received and acknowledged by
+the assembly; under such painful and humiliating circumstances
+the faithful can no longer be there. Why? Because I cannot
+take my place at it without identifyingmyself with manifestly
+unchristian principles. The same remark, of course, applies if
+the case be that of corrupt conduct unjudged by the assembly.
+</p><p>
+Now, if a number of Christians should find themselves
+placed in the circumstances above described, they would be
+called upon to maintain <span class="smcap">the purity of the truth of God</span>
+while acknowledging as ever the oneness of the body. We
+have not only to maintain the grace of the Lord's table, but
+the <i>holiness</i> of it also. Truth is not to be sacrificed in order
+to maintain unity, nor will <i>true</i> unity ever be interfered
+with by the strict maintenance of truth.
+</p><p>
+It is not to be imagined that the unity of the body of
+Christ is interfered with when a community based upon unsound
+principles, or countenancing unsound doctrine or practice,
+is separated from. The Church of Rome charged the
+Reformers with schism because they separated from her; but
+we know that the Church of Rome lay, and still lies, under
+the charge of schism because she imposes false doctrine upon
+her members. Let it only be ascertained that the truth of
+God is called in question by any community, and that, to be
+a member of that community, I must identify myself with
+unsound doctrine or corrupt practice, and then it cannot be
+schism to separate from such a community; nay, I am bound
+to separate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> It is usual to apply the term "unworthily," in this passage,
+to <i>persons</i> doing the act, whereas it really refers to the
+<i>manner</i> of doing it. The apostle never thought of calling in
+question the Christianity of the Corinthians; nay, in the
+opening address of his epistle, he looks at them as "the
+Church of God which is at Corinth, sanctified in Christ Jesus,
+called saints" (or saints by calling). How could he
+use this language in the first chapter, and in the eleventh
+call in question the worthiness of these saints to take their
+seat at the Lord's Supper? Impossible. He looked upon
+them as saints, and as such he exhorted them to celebrate
+the Lord's Supper in a worthy manner. The question of
+any but true Christians being there, is never raised; so that
+it is utterly impossible that the word "unworthily" could
+apply to <i>persons</i>. Its application is entirely to the <i>manner</i>.
+The persons were worthy, but their manner was not; and
+they were called, as saints, to judge themselves as to their
+<i>ways</i>, else the Lord might judge them in their <i>persons</i> as
+was already the case. In a word, it was as true Christians
+they were called to judge themselves. If they were in
+doubt as to that, they were utterly unable to judge anything.
+I never think of setting my child to judge as to
+whether he is my child or not; but I expect him to judge
+himself as to his habits, else, if he do not, I may have to do,
+by chastening, what he ought to do by self-judgment. It is
+because I look upon him as my child, that I will not allow
+him to sit at my table with soiled garments and disorderly
+manners.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The reader will bear in mind that the text does not
+touch the question of Scriptural discipline. There may be
+many members of the flock of Christ who could not be received
+into the Assembly on earth, inasmuch as they may
+possibly be leavened by false doctrine, or wrong practice.
+But, though we might not be able to receive them, we do not,
+by any means, raise the question as to their being in the
+Lamb's book of life. This is not the province nor the prerogative
+of the Church of God. "<i>The Lord</i> knoweth them
+that are His; and let every one that nameth the name of
+Christ depart from iniquity" (2 Tim. ii. 19).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The church of Rome has so entirely departed from the
+truth set forth in the Lord's Supper, that she professes to
+offer, in the mass, "an unbloody sacrifice for the sins of the
+living and the dead." Now, we are taught, in Heb. ix. 22,
+that "without shedding of blood is no remission;" consequently,
+the church of Rome has no remission of sins for her
+members. She robs them of this precious reality, and instead
+thereof, gives them an anomalous and utterly unscriptural
+thing, called "an unbloody sacrifice, or mass." This, which,
+according to her own practice and the testimony of Heb. ix.
+22, can never take away sin, she offers day by day, week by
+week, and year by year. A sacrifice without blood must, if
+Scripture be true, be a sacrifice without remission. Hence,
+therefore, the sacrifice of the mass is a positive blind raised
+by the devil, through the agency of Rome, to hide from the
+sinner's view the glorious sacrifice of Christ, "<i>once offered</i>,"
+and never to be repeated. "Christ, being raised from the
+dead, dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over
+Him" (Rom. vi. 9). Every fresh sacrifice of the mass only
+declares the inefficiency of all the previous sacrifices, so that
+Rome is only mocking the sinner with an empty shadow.
+But she is consistent in her wickedness, for she withholds
+the cup from the laity, and teaches her members that they
+have body and blood and all in the wafer. But, if the blood
+be still in the body, it is manifestly not shed, and then we
+get back to the same gloomy point, namely, "no remission."
+"Without shedding of blood is no remission."
+</p><p>
+How totally different is the precious and most refreshing
+institution of the Lord's Supper, as set before us in the New
+Testament. There we find the bread broken, and the wine
+poured out&mdash;the significant symbols of a body broken, and
+of blood shed. The wine is not in the bread, because the
+blood is not in the body, for, if it were, there would be "no
+remission." In a word, the Lord's Supper is the distinct
+memorial of an eternally accomplished sacrifice; and none
+can communicate thereat, with intelligence or blessing, save
+those who know the full remission of sins. It is not that
+we would, by any means, make knowledge a term of communion,
+for very many of the children of God, through bad
+teaching, and various other causes, do not know the perfect
+remission of sins, and were they to be excluded on that
+ground, it would be making <i>knowledge</i> a term of communion,
+instead of <i>life</i> and <i>obedience</i>. Still, if I do not know, experimentally,
+that redemption is an accomplished fact, I shall
+see but little meaning in the symbols of bread and wine;
+and, moreover, I shall be in great danger of attaching a
+species of efficacy to the memorials, which belongs only to
+the great reality to which they point.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> I can only feel myself responsible to present myself in
+the assembly when it is gathered on proper Church ground,
+i. e., the ground laid down in the New Testament. People
+may assemble, and call themselves the Church of God, in any
+given locality, but if they do not exhibit the characteristic
+features and principles of the Church of God as set forth in
+Holy Scripture, I cannot own them. If they refuse, or lack
+spiritual power, to judge worldliness, carnality, or false doctrine,
+they are evidently not on proper Church ground: they
+are merely a religious fraternity, which, in its collective
+character, I am in no wise responsible before God to own.
+Hence the child of God needs much spiritual power, and
+subjection to the Word, to be able to carry himself through
+all the windings of the professing Church in this peculiarly
+evil and difficult day.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> The same Greek word, <i>ecclesia</i>, has been rendered both
+"church" and "assembly" in our English translation&mdash;"assembly"
+gives the true meaning.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> It is of the utmost importance to distinguish between
+what Christ builds, and what man builds. "The gates of
+hell" shall assuredly prevail against all that is merely of
+man; and hence it would be a fatal mistake to apply to
+man's building words which only apply to Christ's. Man
+may build with "wood, hay, stubble," alas! he does; but
+all that our Lord Christ builds shall stand forever. The
+stamp of eternity is upon every work of His hand. All
+praise to His glorious name!</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> There is no such thing in Scripture as being a member
+of <i>a</i> church. Every true believer is a member of <i>the</i> Church
+of God&mdash;the body of Christ, and can therefore no more be,
+properly, a member of anything else, than my arm can be a
+member of any other body.
+</p><p>
+The only true ground on which believers can gather is set
+forth in that grand statement, "There is one body, and one
+Spirit." And again, "We being many are one loaf, and
+one body" (Eph. iv. 4; I Cor. x. 17). If God declares that
+there is but "one body," it must be contrary to His mind
+to own more than that one.
+</p><p>
+Now, while it is quite true that no given number of believers
+in any given place can be called "the body of
+Christ," or "the assembly of God;" yet they should be
+gathered on the ground of that body and that assembly, and
+on no other ground. We call the reader's special attention
+to this principle. It holds good at all times, in all places,
+and under all circumstances. The fact of the ruin of the
+professing Church does not touch it. It has been true since
+the day of Pentecost; is true at this moment; and shall be
+true until the Church is taken to meet her Head and Lord
+in the clouds, that "<i>there is one body</i>." All believers belong
+to that body; and they should meet on that ground, and on
+no other.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> The reader will need to ponder the distinction between
+the Church viewed as "the body of Christ," and as "the
+house of God." He may study Eph. i. 22; I Cor. xii. for
+the former. Eph. ii. 21; I Cor. iii.; I Tim. iii. for the latter.
+The distinction is as interesting as it is important.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> The reader will do well to note the fact that, in Matt.
+xvi., we have the very earliest allusion to the Church, and
+there our Lord speaks of it as a future thing. He says,
+"On this rock I <i>will</i> build My Church." He does not say,
+"I <i>have</i> been, or I <i>am</i> building." In short the Church had
+no existence until our Lord Christ was raised from the dead
+and glorified at the right hand of God. Then, but not until
+then, the Holy Ghost was sent down to baptize believers,
+whether Jews or Gentiles, into one body, and unite them to
+the risen and glorified Head in heaven. This body has been
+on the earth since the descent of the Holy Ghost; is here
+still, and shall be until Christ comes to fetch it to Himself.
+It is a perfectly unique thing. It is not to be found in Old
+Testament Scripture. Paul expressly tells us it was not revealed
+in other ages; it was hid in God, and never made
+known until it was committed to him. (See, carefully,
+Rom. xvi. 25, 26; Eph. iii. 3-11; Col. i. 24-27.) True it is&mdash;most
+blessedly true&mdash;that God had a people in Old Testament
+times. Not merely the nation of Israel, but a quickened,
+saved, spiritual people, who lived by faith, went to
+heaven, and are there "the spirits of just men made perfect."
+But the Church is never spoken of until Matt. xvi.,
+and there only as a future thing. As to the expression used
+by Stephen, "The Church in the wilderness" (Acts vii. 38),
+it is pretty generally known that it simply refers to the
+congregation of Israel. The <i>termini</i> of the Church's earthly
+history are Pentecost (Acts ii.), and the rapture (I Thess.
+iv. 16, 17).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Let the reader note this title, "<i>Son of Man</i>." It is infinitely
+precious. It is a title indicating our Lord's rejection
+as the Messiah, and leading out into that wide, that universal
+sphere over which He is destined in the counsels of God,
+to rule. It is far wider than Son of David, or Son of Abraham,
+and has peculiar charms for us, inasmuch as it places
+Him before our hearts as the lonely, outcast Stranger, and
+yet as the One who links Himself in perfect grace with us in
+all our need&mdash;One whose footprints we can trace all across
+this dreary desert. "The Son of Man hath not where to lay
+His head." And yet it is as Son of Man that He shall, by-and-by,
+exercise that universal dominion reserved for Him
+according to the eternal counsels of God. See Daniel vii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> The intelligent reader does not need to be told that all
+believers are priests; and, further, that there is no such
+thing as a priest upon earth, save in the sense in which all
+true Christians are priests. The idea of a certain set of men,
+calling themselves priests in contrast with the people&mdash;a
+certain caste distinguished by title and dress from the body
+of Christians, is not Christianity at all, but Judaism or
+intelligently worse. All who read the Bible and bow to its
+authority will be perfectly clear as to these things.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> The reader will notice that in Matthew vi. I, the marginal
+reading is the correct one: "Take heed that ye do not
+your <i>righteousness</i> before men, to be seen of them." Then
+we have the three departments of this righteousness,
+namely, alms-giving (ver. 2); prayer (ver. 3); fasting (ver.
+16). These were the very things Cornelius was doing. In
+short, he feared God, and was working righteousness, according
+to his measure of light.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> [An evangelist will not travel far in our day to find
+persons who will take him warmly by the hand, and profess
+lively interest in his work. A moment's intercourse with
+them, however, will disclose them to be agents of "Christian
+Science," of "Millennial Dawn" of "Seventh Day Adventism"
+or of some one or other of like systems&mdash;messengers of
+Satan, all professing Christianity, though in reality destroyers
+of it; pluming themselves with its name, only to get
+inside and work destruction the more easily. <span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> For a fuller exposition of the doctrine of the sabbath,
+see "Notes on Genesis" (chap. ii.); also, "Notes on Exodus"
+(chaps. xvi. and xxxi.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> We would here offer a remark in reference to the appointment
+of deacons in Acts vi. This case has been adduced in
+proof of the rightness of a congregation electing its own pastor;
+but the proof fails in every particular. In the first
+place, the business of those deacons was "to serve tables."
+Their functions as deacons were temporal, not spiritual.
+They might possess spiritual gift independently altogether
+of their deaconship. Stephen did possess such.
+</p><p>
+But more than this. Although the disciples were called
+upon to look out for men competent to take charge of their
+temporal affairs, yet the apostles alone could appoint them.
+Their words are, "Whom <i>we</i> may appoint over this business."
+In other words, although there is a vast difference
+between a deacon and a pastor, between taking charge of
+money and taking the oversight of souls, yet even in the
+matter of a deacon the appointment in Acts vi. was entirely
+divine; and hence it affords no warrant for a church electing
+its own pastor.
+</p><p>
+We might further add that <i>office</i> and <i>gift</i> are clearly distinguished
+in the word of God. There might be, and were,
+many elders and deacons in any given church, and yet the
+fullest and freest exercise of gift when the whole church
+came together into one place. Elders and deacons might or
+might not have the gift of teaching or exhortation. Such
+gift was quite independent of their special office. In I Cor.
+xiv., where it is said, "Ye may all prophesy one by one,"
+and where we have a full view of the public assembly, there
+is not a word about an elder or a president of any kind whatever.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Let the reader carefully note that <i>gifts</i>, as evangelists,
+pastors, teachers, prophets, being given directly by the
+Head of the Church for the edification of His people on
+earth (see Eph. iv. 8-13) were never appointed or "licensed"
+by apostolic hands or any others. Elders and deacons were
+to act as guides and to serve in the assemblies in which
+they had their place. To this position or <i>office</i> they were
+appointed by an apostle, or one sent by him. [<span class="smcap">Ed.</span>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> How interesting to find "Mary the mother of Jesus" named
+here, as being at the prayer-meeting! What would she have said
+if any one had told her that millions of professing Christians
+would yet be praying to her?</p></div>
+
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="tnote"><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+<p>Due to confusing page numbering, page numbers were excluded and Table of Contents reformatted.</p>
+<p>Periods placed at different headings for consistancy.</p>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</p>
+<p>Obvious typos repaired</p>
+<p>The remaining corrections are hypelinked to their respective locations</p>
+<p>An "a" added " I shall only prove a hindrance, <a href="#a">a</a> weight, a cause of weakness.</p>
+<p>heavy laden changed to <a href="#heavy-laden">heavy-laden</a></p>
+<p>"thradom" misspelled <a href="#thralldom">thralldom</a></p>
+<p>"diciples" misspelled <a href="#disciples">disciples</a></p>
+<p>true hearted changed to <a href="#true-hearted">true-hearted</a></p>
+<p>well regulated changed to <a href="#well-regulated">well-regulated</a></p>
+<p>"O death, where is thy sing changed to O death, where is thy <a href="#sting">sting</a></p>
+<p>"The breaking of break changed to The breaking of <a href="#bread">bread</a></p>
+<p>"decalogue" should be a proper noun (Ten Commandments), changed to <a href="#Decalogue">Decalogue</a></p>
+<p>"compentency" misspelled <a href="#competency">competency</a></p>
+<p>"eucharist" is a proper noun, changed to <a href="#Eucharist">Eucharist</a></p>
+<p>"paraylzed" misspelled, changed to <a href="#paralyzed">paralyzed</a></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Assembly of God
+ Miscellaneous Writings of C. H. Mackintosh, volume III
+
+Author: C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
+
+Release Date: August 30, 2011 [EBook #37274]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark Young, Julio Reis, Moises S. Gomes and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Assembly of God
+
+_Miscellaneous Writings of_ C. H. MACKINTOSH
+
+_Volume III_
+
+LOIZEAUX BROTHERS _New York_
+
+FIRST EDITION 1898 TENTH PRINTING 1960
+
+LOIZEAUX BROTHERS, INC., PUBLISHERS
+
+_A Nonprofit Organization, Devoted to the Lord's Work and to the Spread
+of His Truth_
+
+19 WEST 21ST STREET, NEW YORK 10, N. Y.
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ Pages
+
+ THE MAN OF GOD 3-39
+
+ DECISION FOR CHRIST 1-28
+
+ PRAYER IN ITS PROPER PLACE 1-8
+
+ "GILGAL" 1-48
+
+ THOUGHTS ON CONFIRMATION VOWS 1-16
+
+ THOUGHTS ON THE LORD'S SUPPER 1-46
+
+ THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1-47
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN: HIS POSITION AND HIS WORK 1-32
+
+ THE CHRISTIAN PRIESTHOOD 1-13
+
+ FATHER! THY SOVEREIGN LOVE--_Poem_
+
+ PAPERS ON EVANGELIZATION 1-86
+
+ THE LIVING GOD AND A LIVING FAITH 1-28
+
+ A SCRIPTURAL INQUIRY AS TO THE SABBATH,
+ THE LAW, AND CHRISTIAN MINISTRY 2-28
+
+ THE MINISTRY OF CHRIST; PAST, PRESENT,
+ AND FUTURE 3-30
+
+ PRAYER AND THE PRAYER MEETING 3-23
+
+_The original numbering of these writings has been retained, Many of the
+above may be had separately in pamphlet form._
+
+
+
+"THE MAN OF GOD"
+
+
+The sentence which we have just penned occurs in Paul's second Epistle
+to his beloved son Timothy--an epistle marked, as we know, by intense
+individuality. All thoughtful students of Scripture have noticed the
+striking contrast between the two Epistles of Paul to Timothy. In the
+first, the Church is presented in its order, and Timothy is instructed
+as to how he is to behave himself therein. In the second, on the
+contrary, the Church is presented in its ruin. The house of God has
+become the great house, in the which there are vessels to dishonor as
+well as vessels to honor; and where, moreover, errors and evils
+abound--heretical teachers and false professors, on every hand.
+
+It is in this epistle of individuality, then, that the expression, "The
+man of God" is used with such obvious force and meaning. It is in times
+of general declension, of ruin and confusion that the faithfulness,
+devotedness, and decision of the individual man of God are specially
+called for. And it is a signal mercy for such an one to know that, spite
+of the hopeless failure of the Church as a responsible witness for
+Christ, it is the privilege of the individual to tread as holy a path,
+to taste as deep communion, and to enjoy as rich blessings, as could be
+known in the Church's brightest days.
+
+This is a most encouraging and consolatory fact--a fact established by
+many infallible proofs, and set forth in the very passage from which our
+heading is taken. We shall here quote at length this passage of
+singular weight and power:
+
+"But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been
+assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them; and that from a
+child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee
+wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All
+Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
+doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,
+that the man of God may be _perfect_, throughly _furnished unto all good
+works_"[I.] (2 Tim. iii. 14-17).
+
+Here we have "the man of God," in the midst of all the ruin and
+confusion, the heresies and moral pravities of the last days, standing
+forth in his own distinct individuality, "perfect, thoroughly furnished
+unto all good works." And, may we not ask, what more could be said in
+the Church's brightest days? If we go back to the day of Pentecost
+itself, with all its display of power and glory, have we anything
+higher, or better, or more solid than that which is set forth in the
+words "perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works?"
+
+And is it not a signal mercy for anyone who desires to stand for God, in
+a dark and evil day, to be told that, spite of all the darkness, the
+evil, the error and confusion, he possesses that which can make a child
+_wise_ unto salvation, and make a man _perfect_ and thoroughly furnished
+unto all good works? Assuredly it is; and we have to praise our God for
+it, with full and overflowing hearts. To have access, in days like
+these, to the eternal fountain of inspiration, where the child and the
+man can meet and drink and be satisfied--that fountain so clear that the
+honest, simple soul can understand; and so deep that you cannot reach
+the bottom--that peerless, priceless volume which meets the child at his
+mother's knee, and makes him wise unto salvation; and meets the man in
+the most advanced stage of his practical career and makes him perfect
+and fully furnished for the exigence of every hour.
+
+However, we shall have occasion, ere we close this paper, to look more
+particularly at "the man of God," and to consider what is the special
+force and meaning of this term. That there is very much more involved in
+it than is ordinarily understood, we are most fully persuaded.
+
+There are three aspects in which man is presented in Scripture: in the
+first place, we have _man in nature_; secondly, _a man in Christ_; and,
+thirdly, we have, _the man of God_. It might perhaps be thought that the
+second and third are synonymous; but we shall find a very material
+difference between them. True, I must be a man in Christ before I can be
+a man of God; but they are by no means interchangeable terms.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, consider
+
+
+MAN IN NATURE.
+
+This is a very comprehensive term indeed. Under this title, we shall
+find every possible shade of character, temperament, and disposition.
+Man, on the platform of nature, graduates between two extremes. You may
+view him at the very highest point of cultivation, or at the very lowest
+point of degradation. You may see him surrounded with all the
+advantages, the refinements and the so-called dignities of civilized
+life; or you may find him sunk in all the shameless and barbarous
+customs of savage existence. You may view him in the almost numberless
+grades, ranks, classes, and _castes_ into which the human family has
+distributed itself.
+
+Then again, in the self-same class, or caste, you will find the most
+vivid contrasts, in the way of character, temper, and disposition.
+There, for example, is a man of such an atrocious temper that he is the
+very horror of every one who knows him. He is the plague of his family
+circle, and a perfect nuisance to society. He can be compared to a
+porcupine with all his quills perpetually up; and if you meet him once
+you will not wish to meet him again. There, on the other hand, is a man
+of the sweetest disposition and most amiable temper. He is just as
+attractive as the other is repulsive. He is a tender, loving, faithful
+husband; a kind, affectionate, considerate father; a thoughtful,
+liberal master; a kindly, genial neighbor; a generous friend, beloved by
+all, and justly so: the more you know him the more you must like him,
+and if you meet him once you are sure to wish to meet him again.
+
+Further, you may meet on the platform of nature, a man who is false and
+deceitful to the very heart's core. He delights in lying, cheating, and
+deception. He is mean and contemptible in his thoughts, words and ways;
+a man to whom all who know him would like to give as wide a berth as
+possible. And, on the other hand, you may meet a man of high principle,
+frank, honorable, generous, upright; one who would scorn to tell a lie,
+or do a mean act; whose reputation is unblemished, his character
+unexceptionable. His word would be taken for any amount; he is one with
+whom all who know him would be glad to have dealings; an almost perfect
+natural character; a man of whom it might be said, he lacks but one
+thing.
+
+Finally, as you pass to and fro on nature's platform, you may meet the
+atheist who affects to deny the existence of God; the infidel who denies
+God's revelation; the skeptic and the rationalist who disbelieves
+everything. And, on the other hand, you will meet the superstitious
+devotee who spends his time in prayers and fastings, ordinances, and
+ceremonies; and who feels sure he is earning a place in heaven by a
+wearisome round of religious observances that actually _un_fit him for
+the proper functions and responsibilities of domestic and social life.
+You may meet men of every imaginable shade of religious opinion, high
+church, low church, broad church, and no church; men who, without a
+spark of divine life in their souls, are contending for the powerless
+forms of a traditionary religion.
+
+Now, there is one grand and awfully solemn fact common to all these
+various classes, castes, grades, shades, and conditions of men who
+occupy the platform of nature, and that is there is not so much as a
+single link between them and heaven--there is no link with the Man who
+sits at the right hand of God--no link with the new creation. They are
+unconverted, and without Christ. As regards God, and Christ, and eternal
+life, and heaven, they all--however they may differ morally, socially,
+and religiously--stand on one common ground; they are far from God--they
+are out of Christ--they are in their sins--they are in the flesh--they
+are of the world--they are on their way to hell.
+
+There is really no getting over this, if we are to listen to the voice
+of Holy Scripture. False teachers may deny it. Infidels may pretend to
+smile contemptuously at the idea; but Scripture is plain as can be. It
+speaks in manifold places of a fire that NEVER shall be quenched, and of
+a worm that shall never die.
+
+It is the very height of folly for anyone to seek to set aside the plain
+testimony of the word of God on this most solemn and weighty subject.
+Better far to let that testimony fall, with all its weight and
+authority, upon the heart and conscience--infinitely better to flee
+from the wrath to come than to attempt to deny that it is coming, and
+that, when it does come, it will abide forever--yes, forever, and
+forever, and forever! Tremendous thought!--over-whelming consideration!
+May it speak with living power to the soul of the unconverted reader,
+leading him to cry out in all sincerity, "What is to be done?"
+
+Yes, here is the question, "What must I do to be saved?" The divine
+answer is wrapped up in the following words which dropped from the lips
+of two of Christ's very highest and most gifted ambassadors. "Repent and
+be converted," said Peter to the Jew. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
+and thou shalt be saved and thy house," said Paul to the Gentile. And
+again, the latter of these two blessed messengers, in summing up his own
+ministry, thus defines the whole matter, "Testifying both to the Jews,
+and also to the Greeks, repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord
+Jesus Christ."
+
+How simple! But how real! How deep! How thoroughly practical! It is not
+a nominal, national head belief. It is not saying, in mere flippant
+profession, "I believe." Ah! no; it is something far deeper and more
+serious than this. It is much to be feared that a large amount of the
+professed faith of this our day is deplorably superficial, and that many
+who throng our preaching rooms and lecture halls are, after all, but
+wayside and stony ground hearers. The plough of conviction and
+repentance has not passed over them. The fallow ground has never been
+broken up. The arrow of conviction has never pierced them through and
+through. They have never been broken down, turned inside out--thoroughly
+revolutionized. The preaching of the gospel to all such is just like
+scattering precious seed on the hard pavement or the beaten highway. It
+does not penetrate. It does not enter into the depths of the soul; the
+conscience is not reached; the heart is not affected. The seed lies on
+the surface, it has not taken root, and is soon carried away.
+
+Nor is this all. It is also much to be feared that many of the preachers
+of the present day, in their efforts to make the gospel simple, lose
+sight of the abiding necessity of repentance, and the essential
+necessity of the action of the Holy Ghost, without which so-called faith
+is a mere human exercise and passes away like the vapors of the morning,
+leaving the soul still in the region of nature, satisfied with itself,
+daubed with the untempered mortar of a merely human gospel that cries
+peace, peace, where there is no peace, but the most imminent danger.
+
+All this is very serious, and should lead the soul into profound
+exercise. We want the reader to give it his grave and immediate
+consideration. We would put this pointed question to him, which we
+entreat him to answer, now, "_Have you got eternal life_?" Say, dear
+friend, _have you_? "He that believeth on the Son of God hath eternal
+life." Grand reality! If you have not got this, you have nothing.
+
+You are still on that platform of nature of which we have spoken so
+much. Yes, you are still there; no matter though you were the very
+fairest specimen to be found there--amiable, polished, affable, frank,
+generous, truthful, upright, honorable, attractive, beloved, learned,
+cultivated, and even pious after a merely human fashion. You may be all
+this, and yet not have a single pulsation of eternal life in your soul.
+
+This may sound harsh and severe. But it is true; and you will find out
+its truth sooner or later. We want you to find it out _now_. We want you
+to see that you are a thorough bankrupt, in the fullest sense of that
+word. A deed of bankruptcy has been filed against you in the high court
+of heaven. Here are its terms, "_They that are in the flesh cannot
+please God_." Have you ever pondered these words? Have you ever seen
+their application to yourself? So long as you are unrepentant,
+unconverted, unbelieving, you cannot do a single thing to please
+God--not one. "In the flesh" and "on the platform of nature" mean one
+and the same thing; and so long as you are there, you cannot please God.
+"You must be born again"--must be renewed in the very deepest springs of
+your being: unrenewed nature is wholly unable to see, and unfit to
+enter, the kingdom of God. You must be born of water and of the
+Spirit--that is by the living word of God, and of the Holy Ghost. There
+is no other way by which to enter the kingdom. It is not by
+self-improvement, but by new birth we reach the blessed kingdom of God.
+"That which is born of the flesh is flesh;" and "the flesh profiteth
+nothing," for "they that are in the flesh cannot please God."
+
+How distinct is all this! How pointed! How personal! How earnestly we
+desire that the unawakened or undecided reader should, just now, take it
+home to himself, as though he were the only individual upon the face of
+the earth. It will not do to generalize--to rest satisfied with saying,
+"We are all sinners." No; it is an intensely individual matter. "You
+_must_ be born again." If you again ask, "How?" hear the divine response
+from the lips of the Master Himself, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in
+the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up; that whosoever
+believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."
+
+Here is the sovereign remedy, for every poor broken-hearted,
+conscience-smitten, hell-deserving sinner--for every one who owns
+himself lost--who confesses his sins, and judges himself--for every
+weary, heavy-laden, sin-burdened soul--here is God's own blessed
+promise: Jesus died, that you might live. He was condemned, that you
+might be justified. He drank the cup of wrath, that you might drink the
+cup of salvation. Behold Him hanging on yonder cross for thee. See what
+He did for thee. Believe that He satisfied, on your behalf, _all_ the
+claims of justice before the throne of God. See all your sins laid on
+Him--your guilt imputed to Him--your entire condition represented and
+disposed of by Him. See His atoning death answering perfectly for all
+that was or ever could be brought against you. See Him rising from the
+dead, having accomplished all. See Him ascending into the heavens,
+bearing in His divine Person the marks of His finished atonement. See
+Him seated on the throne of God, in the very highest place of power. See
+Him crowned with glory and honor. Believe in Him, and you will receive
+remission of sins, the gift of eternal life, the seal of the Holy Ghost.
+You will pass off the platform of nature--you will be "_A man in
+Christ_."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[I.] The reader should be informed that the word which is rendered
+"perfect," in the above passage, occurs but this once in the entire New
+Testament. It is [Greek: artios] (artios) and signifies, ready,
+complete, well fitted; as an instrument with all its strings, a machine
+with all its parts, a body with all its limbs, joints, muscles, and
+sinews. The usual word for "perfect" is [Greek: teleios] (teleios) which
+signifies the reaching of the moral _end_, in any particular thing.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+To all whose eyes have been opened to see their true condition by
+nature, who have been brought under the convicting power of the Holy
+Ghost, who know something of the real meaning of a broken heart and a
+contrite spirit--to all such it must be of the deepest possible interest
+to know the divine secret of rest and peace. If it be true--and it is
+true, because God says it--that "they that are _in the flesh_ cannot
+please God," then how is any one to get _out of the flesh_? How can he
+pass off the platform of nature? How can he reach the blessed position
+of those to whom the Holy Ghost declares, "Ye are not in the flesh but
+in the Spirit"?
+
+These are momentous questions, surely. For, be it thoroughly known and
+ever remembered, that no improvement of our old nature is of any value
+whatsoever as to our standing before God. It may be all very well, so
+far as this life is concerned, for a man to improve himself by every
+means within his reach, to cultivate his mind, furnish his memory,
+elevate his moral tone, advance his social position. All this is quite
+true, so true as not to need a moment's argument.
+
+But, admitting in the fullest manner the truth of all this, it leaves
+wholly untouched the solemn and sweeping statement of the inspired
+apostle that, "they that are in the flesh cannot please God." There
+_must_ be a new standing altogether, and this new standing cannot be
+reached by any change in the old nature--by any doings or formalities,
+feelings, ordinances of religion, prayers, alms or sacraments. Do what
+you will with nature and it is nature still. "That which is born of the
+flesh is flesh;" and do what you will with flesh you cannot make it
+spirit. There must be a new life--a life flowing from the new man, the
+last Adam, who has become, in resurrection, the Head of a new race.
+
+How is this most precious life to be had? Hear the memorable
+answer--hear it, anxious reader, hear it and live. "Verily, verily, I
+say unto you, he that heareth My word, and believeth on Him that sent
+Me, _hath_ everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment; but _is
+passed_ from death unto life" (John v. 24).
+
+Here we have a total change of standing; a passing from death to life;
+from a position in which there is not so much as a single link with
+heaven, with the new creation, with the risen Man in glory, into a
+position in which there is not a single link with the first man, with
+the old creation, and this present evil world. And all this is through
+believing on the Son of God--not _saying_ we believe, but really, truly,
+heartily, believing on the Son of God; not by a mere intellectual faith,
+but believing with the heart.
+
+Thus only does any one become
+
+
+A MAN IN CHRIST.
+
+Every true believer is a man in Christ. Whether it be the convert of
+yesterday or the hoary headed saint of fifty or sixty years' standing as
+a Christian, each stands in precisely the same blessed position--he is
+in Christ. There can be no difference here. The practical _state_ may
+differ immensely; but the positive standing is one and the same. As on
+the platform of nature, you may meet with every imaginable shade, class,
+grade, and condition (though all having one common standing) so on the
+new, the divine, the heavenly platform, you may meet with every possible
+variety of practical condition: the greatest possible difference in
+intelligence, experience, and spiritual power, while all possessing the
+same standing before God, all being in Christ. There can be no degrees
+as to standing, whatever there may be as to state. The convert of
+yesterday, and the hoary headed father in Christ are both alike as to
+standing. Each is a man in Christ, and there can be no advance upon
+this. We sometimes hear of, "The higher Christian life:" but, strictly
+speaking, there is no such thing as a higher or a lower Christian life,
+inasmuch as Christ is the life of every believer. It may be that those
+who use the term mean a right thing. They probably refer to the higher
+stages of the Christian life--greater nearness to God, greater likeness
+to Christ, greater power in the Spirit, more devotedness, more
+separation from the world, more entire consecration of heart to Christ.
+But all these things belong to the question of our _state_, not to our
+standing. This latter is absolute, settled, unchangeable. It is in
+Christ--nothing less, nothing more, nothing different. If we are not in
+Christ, we are in our sins; but if we are in Christ, we cannot possibly
+be higher, as to standing.
+
+If the reader will turn with us, for a few moments, to I Cor. xv. 45-48,
+he will find some powerful teaching on this great foundation truth. The
+apostle speaks here of two men, "The first and the second." And let it
+be carefully noted that the Second Man is by no means federally
+connected with the first, but stands in contrast with him--a new,
+independent, divine, heavenly source of life in Himself. The first man
+has been entirely set aside, as a ruined, guilty, outcast creature. We
+speak of Adam federally, as the head of a race. Personally, Adam was
+saved by grace; but if we look at him from a federal standpoint, we see
+him a hopeless wreck.
+
+The first man is an irremediable ruin. This is proved by the fact of a
+_second_ Man; for truly we may say of the men as of the covenants, "If
+the first had been found faultless, then should no place have been
+sought for the Second." But the very fact of a second Man being
+introduced demonstrates the hopeless ruin of the first. Why a second, if
+aught could be made of the first? If our old Adam nature was, in any
+wise, capable of being improved, there was no need of something new. But
+"they that are in the flesh cannot please God." "For in Christ Jesus
+neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
+creation" (Rom. viii.: Gal. vi.).
+
+There is immense moral power in all this line of teaching. It sets forth
+Christianity in vivid and striking contrast with every form of
+religiousness under the sun. Take Judaism or any other _ism_ that ever
+was known or that now exists in this world, and what do you find it to
+be? Is it not invariably something designed for the testing, or
+experimenting for the improvement, or advancement of the first man?
+Unquestionably.
+
+But what is Christianity? It is something entirely new--heavenly,
+spiritual, divine. It is based upon the cross of Christ, in the which
+the first man came to his end, where sin was put away, judgment borne,
+the old man crucified and put out of God's sight forever, so far as all
+believers are concerned. The cross closes, for faith, the history of the
+first man. "I am crucified with Christ," says the apostle. And again,
+"They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with its affections and
+lusts."
+
+Are these mere figures of speech, or do they set forth, in the mighty
+words of the Holy Ghost, the grand fact of the entire setting aside of
+the first man, as utterly worthless and condemned? The latter, most
+assuredly. Christianity starts, as it were, from the open grave of the
+Second Man, to pursue its bright career onward to eternal glory. It is,
+emphatically, a new creation in which there is not so much as a single
+shred of the old thing--for in this "all things are of God." And if
+"_all things_" are of God, there can be nothing of man.
+
+What rest! What comfort! What strength! What moral elevation! What sweet
+relief for the poor burdened soul that has been vainly seeking, for
+years perhaps, to find peace in self-improvement! What deliverance from
+the wretched thralldom of legality, in all its phases, to find out the
+precious secret that my guilty, ruined, bankrupt self--the very thing
+that I have been trying by every means in my power to improve, has been
+completely and forever set aside--that God is not looking for any
+amendment in it--that He has condemned it and put it to death in the
+cross of His Son! What an answer is here to the monk, the ascetic, and
+the ritualist! Oh, that it were understood in all its emancipating
+power! This heavenly, this divine, this spiritual Christianity. Surely
+were it only known in its living power and reality, it would deliver the
+soul from the thousand and one forms of corrupt religion whereby the
+arch-enemy and deceiver is ruining the souls of untold millions. We may
+truly say that Satan's most successful effort against the truth of the
+gospel, against the Christianity of the New Testament, is seen in the
+fact of his leading unconverted people to take and apply to themselves
+ordinances of the Christian religion, and to profess many of its
+doctrines. In this way he blinds their eyes to their own true condition,
+as utterly ruined, guilty, and undone; and strikes a deadly blow at the
+pure gospel of Christ. The best piece that was ever put upon the "old
+garment" of man's ruined nature is the profession of Christianity; and,
+the better the piece, the worse the rent. See Mark ii. 21.
+
+Let us bend an attentive ear to the following weighty words of the
+greatest teacher and best exponent of true Christianity the world ever
+saw. "For _I_ through the law _am dead_ to the law, that I might live to
+God. _I am crucified_ with Christ; nevertheless I live; yet _not I_, but
+Christ liveth in me." Mark this, "I--not I--but Christ." The old
+"I"--"crucified." The new "I"--Christ. "And the life which I now live in
+the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave
+Himself for me" (Gal. ii. 19, 20).[II.]
+
+This, and nothing else, is Christianity. It is not "the old man," the
+first man, becoming religious, even though the religion be the
+profession of the doctrines, and the adopting of the ordinances of
+Christianity. No; it is the death and burial of the old man--the old
+I--and becoming a new man in Christ. Every true believer is a new man in
+Christ. He has passed clean out of the old creation-standing--the old
+estate of sin and death, guilt and condemnation; and he has passed into
+a new creation-standing--a new estate of life and righteousness in a
+risen and glorified Christ, the Head of the new creation, the last Adam.
+
+Such is the position and unalterable standing of the feeblest believer
+in Christ. There is absolutely no other standing for any Christian. I
+must either be in the first man or in the Second. There is no _third_
+man, for the Second Man is the last Adam. There is no middle ground. I
+am either _in Christ_, or I am _in my sins_. But if I am in Christ, I am
+as He is before God. "As _He is so are we_, in this world." He does not
+say, "As He _was_" but "as He _is_." That is, the Christian is viewed by
+God as one with Christ--the Second Man, in whom He delights. We do not
+speak of His Deity, of course, which is incommunicable. That blessed One
+stood in the believer's stead--bore his sins, died his death, paid his
+penalty, represented him in every respect; took all his guilt, all his
+liabilities, all that pertained to him as a man in nature, stood as his
+substitute, in all the verity and reality of that word, and having
+divinely met his case, and borne his judgment, He rose from the dead,
+and is now the Head, the Representative, and the only true definition
+of the believer before God.
+
+To this most glorious and enfranchising truth, Scripture bears the
+amplest testimony. The passage which we have just quoted from Galatians
+is a most vivid, powerful, and condensed statement of it. And if the
+reader will turn to Rom. vi. he will find further evidence. We shall
+quote some of the weighty sentences.
+
+"What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may
+abound? Far be the thought. How shall _we that are dead_ to sin, live
+any longer therein? Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized to
+Jesus Christ were baptized to His death? Therefore we are buried with
+Him by baptism unto death; that _like as Christ_ was raised up from the
+dead by the glory of the Father, _even so we also_ should walk in
+newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of
+His death, we shall be also of resurrection. Knowing this that _our old
+man is crucified with Him_, that the body of sin might be destroyed,
+that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed
+from sin. Now if we _be dead with Christ_, we believe that we shall also
+live with Him. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, dieth no
+more; death hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died
+unto sin once; but in that He liveth He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon
+ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. vi. I-11).
+
+Reader, mark especially these words in the foregoing quotation--"We that
+_are dead_"--"We are buried with Him"--"_Like as Christ_ was raised ...
+_even so_ we also"--"Our old man is crucified with Him"--"Dead with
+Christ"--"Dead indeed unto sin." Do we really understand such
+utterances? Have we entered into their real force and meaning? Do we, in
+very deed, perceive their application to ourselves? These are searching
+questions for the heart, and needful. The real doctrine of Rom. vi. is
+but little apprehended. There are thousands who profess to believe in
+the atoning virtue of the death of Christ, but who do not see aught
+therein beyond the forgiveness of their _sins_. They do not see the
+crucifixion, death, and burial of the old man--the destruction of the
+body of sin--the condemnation of sin--the entire setting aside of the
+old system of things belonging to their first Adam condition--in a word
+their perfect identification with a dead and risen Christ. Hence it is
+that we press this grand and all-important line of truth upon the
+attention of the reader. It lies at the very base of all true
+Christianity, and forms an integral part of the truth of the gospel.
+
+Let us hearken to further evidence on the point. Hear what the apostle
+said to the Colossians: "Wherefore, if ye be _dead with Christ_ from the
+rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
+subject to ordinances, after the commandments and doctrines of men,
+[such as] touch not, taste not, handle not"?--thus it is that human
+ordinances speak to us, telling us not to touch this, not to taste that,
+not to handle the other, as if there could possibly be any divine
+principle involved in such things--"which all are to perish with the
+using;" and "which, have indeed a show of wisdom in will worship, and
+humility, and neglecting of the body--not in any honor--to the
+satisfying of the flesh. If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those
+things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God.
+Set your mind on things that are above, not on things on the earth. For
+_ye have died_ and your life is hid with Christ in God" (Col. ii., iii.
+2).
+
+Here, again, let us inquire how far we enter into the true force,
+meaning, and application of such words as these--"Why as though _living
+in the world_," etc.? Are we living in the world or living in
+heaven--which? The true Christian is one who has died out of this
+present evil world. He has no more to do with it than Christ. "Like as
+Christ ... even so we." He is dead to the law--dead to sin: alive in
+Christ--alive to God--alive in the new creation. He belongs to heaven.
+He is enrolled as a citizen of heaven. His religion, his politics, his
+morals are all heavenly. He is a heavenly man walking on the earth, and
+fulfilling all the duties which belong to the varied relationships in
+which the hand of God has placed him, and in which the word of God most
+fully recognizes him, and amply guides him, such as husband, father,
+master, child, servant, and such like. The Christian is not a monk, an
+ascetic, or a hermit. He is, we repeat, a heavenly, spiritual man, _in_
+the world, but not _of_ it. He is like a foreigner, so far as his
+residence here is concerned. He is in the body, as to the fact of his
+condition; but not in the flesh as to the principle of his standing. He
+is _a man in Christ_.
+
+Ere closing this article, we should like to call the reader's attention
+to 2 Cor. xii. In it he will find, at once, the _positive standing_ and
+the _possible state_ of the believer. The standing is fixed and
+unalterable, as set forth in that one comprehensive sentence--"A man in
+Christ." The state may graduate between the two extremes presented in
+the opening and closing verses of this chapter. A Christian may be in
+the third heaven, amid the seraphic visions of that blessed and holy
+place; or he may, if not watchful, sink down into all the gross and evil
+things named in vers. 20, 21.
+
+It may be asked, "Is it possible that a true child of God could ever be
+found in such a low moral condition?" Alas! alas! reader, it is indeed
+possible. There is no depth of sin and folly into which a Christian is
+not capable of plunging, if not kept by the grace of God. Even the
+blessed apostle himself, when he came down from the third heaven, needed
+"a thorn in the flesh" to keep him from being "exalted above measure."
+We might suppose that a man who had been up in that bright and blessed
+region could never again feel the stirrings of pride. But the plain fact
+is that even the third heavens cannot cure the flesh. It is utterly
+incorrigible and must be judged and kept under, day by day, hour by
+hour, moment by moment, else it will cut out plenty of sorrowful work
+for us.
+
+Still, the believer's standing is in Christ, forever justified,
+accepted, perfect in Him. And, moreover, he must ever judge his state by
+his standing, never his standing by his state. To attempt to reach the
+standing by my state is _legalism_; to refuse to judge my state by the
+standing is _antinomianism_. Both--though so diverse one from the
+other--are alike false, alike opposed to the truth of God, alike
+offensive to the Holy Ghost, alike removed from the divine idea of "A
+man in Christ."
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[II.] The reader will distinguish between the expression "in the flesh"
+as used in Gal. ii. 20, and in Rom. viii. 8, 9. In the former, it simply
+refers to our condition as in the body. In the latter, it sets forth the
+principle or ground of our standing. The believer is in the body, as to
+the fact of his condition; but he is not in the flesh as to the
+principle of his standing.
+
+
+PART III.
+
+Having considered the deeply interesting questions of "a man in nature"
+and "a man in Christ," it remains for us now to consider, in this third
+and last Part, the deeply practical subject of the title of this paper,
+namely,
+
+
+THE MAN OF GOD.
+
+It would be a great mistake to suppose that every Christian is a man of
+God. Even in Paul's day--in the days of Timothy, there were many who
+bore the Christian name who were very far indeed from acquitting
+themselves as men of God, that is, as those who were really God's men,
+in the midst of the failure and error which, even then, had begun to
+creep in.
+
+It is the perception of this fact that renders the second Epistle to
+Timothy so profoundly interesting. In it we have what we may call ample
+provision for the man of God, in the day in which he is called to
+live--a dark, evil, and perilous day, most surely, in which all who will
+live godly must keep the eye steadily fixed on Christ Himself--His
+name--His person--His Word, if they would make any headway against the
+tide.
+
+It is hardly possible to read second Timothy without being struck with
+its intensely individual character. The very opening address is
+strikingly characteristic. "I thank God, whom I serve from my
+forefathers with pure conscience, that without ceasing I have
+remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day."
+
+What glowing words are these! How affecting to harken thus to one man of
+God pouring the deep and tender feelings of his great, large, loving
+heart into the heart of another man of God! The dear apostle was
+beginning to feel the chilling influence that was fast creeping over the
+professing Church. He was tasting the bitterness of disappointed hopes.
+He found himself deserted by many who had once professed to be his
+friends and associates in that glorious work to which he had consecrated
+all the energies of his great soul. Many were becoming "ashamed of the
+testimony of our Lord, and of His prisoner." It was not that they
+altogether ceased to be Christians, or abandoned the Christian
+profession; but they turned their backs upon Paul, and left him alone in
+the day of trial.
+
+Now, it is under such circumstances that the heart turns, with peculiar
+tenderness, to individual faithfulness and affection. If one is
+surrounded, on all hands, by true-hearted confessors--by a great cloud
+of witnesses--a large army of good soldiers of Jesus Christ--if the tide
+of devotedness is flowing around one and bearing him on its bosom, he is
+not so dependent upon individual sympathy and fellowship.
+
+But, on the other hand, when the general condition of things is low,
+when the majority prove faithless, when old associates are dropping off,
+it is then that personal grace and true affection are specially valued.
+The dark background of general declension throws individual devotedness
+into beauteous relief.
+
+Thus it is in this exquisite Epistle which now lies open before us. It
+does the heart good to harken to the breathings of the aged prisoner of
+Jesus Christ, who can speak of serving God from his forefathers with
+pure conscience, and of unceasing remembrance of his beloved son and
+true yoke-fellow.
+
+It is specially interesting to notice that, both in reference to his own
+history and that of his beloved friend, Paul goes back to facts of very
+early date--facts in their own individual paths, facts prior to their
+meeting one another, and prior to what we may call their church
+associations--important and interesting as these things surely are in
+their place. Paul had served God, from his forefathers, with pure
+conscience, before he had known a fellow-Christian. This he could
+continue to do though deserted by all his Christian companions. So also,
+in the case of his faithful friend, he says, "I call to remembrance the
+unfeigned faith that is in thee, which dwelt in thy grandmother Lois,
+and thy mother Eunice: and I am persuaded that is in thee also."
+
+This is very touching and very beautiful. We cannot but be struck with
+such references to the previous history of those beloved men of God. The
+"pure conscience" of the one, and "the unfeigned faith" of the other,
+indicate two grand moral qualities which all must possess if they would
+prove true men of God in a dark and evil day. The former has its
+immediate reference, in all things, to the one living and true God; the
+latter draws all its springs from Him. That, leads us to walk _before_
+God; this, enables us to walk _with_ Him. Both together are
+indispensable in forming the character of the true man of God.
+
+It is utterly impossible to over-estimate the importance of keeping a
+pure conscience before God, in all our ways. It is positively
+invaluable. It leads us to refer everything to God. It keeps us from
+being tossed hither and thither by every wave and current of human
+opinion. It imparts stability and consistency to the entire course and
+character.
+
+We are all in imminent danger of falling under human influence--of
+shaping our way according to the thoughts of our fellow-man, adopting
+his cue, or mounting his hobby.
+
+All this is destructive of the character of the man of God. If you take
+your tone from your fellow, if you suffer yourself to be formed in a
+merely human mould, if your faith stands in the wisdom of man, if your
+object is to please men, then instead of being a man of God, you will
+become a member of a party or clique. You will lose that lovely
+freshness and originality so essential to the individual servant of
+Christ, and become marked by the peculiar and dominant features of a
+sect.
+
+Let us carefully guard against this. It has ruined many a valuable
+servant. Many who might have proved really useful workmen in the
+vineyard, have failed completely through not maintaining the integrity
+of their individual character and path. They began with God. They
+started on their course in the exercise of a pure conscience, and in the
+pursuit of that path which a divine hand had marked out for them. There
+was a bloom, a freshness, and a verdure about them, most refreshing to
+all who came in contact with them. They were taught of God. They drew
+near to the eternal fountain of Holy Scripture and drank for themselves.
+Perhaps they did not know much; but what they did know was real because
+they received it from God, and it turned to good account for "there is
+much food in the tillage of the poor."
+
+But, instead of going on with God, they allowed themselves to get under
+human influence; they got truth secondhand, and became the vendors of
+other men's thoughts; instead of drinking at the fountain head, they
+drank at the streams of human opinion; they lost originality,
+simplicity, freshness, and power, and became mere copyists, if not
+miserable caricatures. Instead of giving forth those "rivers of living
+water" which flow from the true believer in Jesus, they dropped into the
+barren technicalities and cut and dry common-places of mere systematized
+religion.
+
+Beloved Christian reader, all this must be sedulously guarded against.
+We must watch against it, pray against it, believe against it, and live
+against it. Let us seek to serve God, with a pure conscience. Let us
+live in His own immediate presence, in the light of His blessed
+countenance, in the holy intimacy of personal communion with Him,
+through the power of the Holy Ghost. This, we may rest assured, is the
+true secret of power for the man of God, at all times, and under all
+circumstances. We must walk with God, in the deep and cherished sense of
+our own personal responsibility to Him. This is what we understand by "a
+pure conscience."
+
+But will this tend, in the smallest degree, to lessen our sense of the
+value of true fellowship, of holy communion with all those who are true
+to Christ? By no means; indeed it is the very thing which will impart
+power, energy, and depth of tone to the fellowship. If every "man in
+Christ" were only acquitting himself thoroughly as "a man of God," what
+blessed fellowship there would be! what heart work! what glow and
+unmistakable power! How different from the dull formalism of a merely
+nominal assent to certain accredited dogmas of a party, on the one hand,
+and from the mere _esprit de corps_ of cliquism, on the other.
+
+There are few terms in such common use and so little understood as
+"fellowship." In numberless cases, it merely indicates the fact of a
+nominal membership in some religious denomination--a fact which
+furnishes no guarantee whatsoever of living communion with Christ, or
+personal devotedness to His cause. If all who are nominally "in fellow
+ship" were acquitting themselves thoroughly as men of God, what a very
+different condition of things we should be privileged to witness!
+
+But what is fellowship? It is, in its very highest expression, having
+one common object with God, and taking part in the same portion; and
+that object, that portion, is Christ--Christ known and enjoyed through
+the Holy Ghost. This is fellowship with God. What a privilege! What a
+dignity! What unspeakable blessedness! To be allowed to have a common
+object and a common portion with God Himself! To delight in the One in
+whom He delights! There can be nothing higher, nothing better, nothing
+more precious than this. Not even in heaven itself shall we know aught
+beyond this. Our own condition will, thank God, be vastly different.
+
+We shall be done with a body of sin and death, and be clothed with a
+body of glory. We shall be done with a sinful, sorrowful, distracting
+world, where all is directly opposed to God and to us, and we shall
+breathe the pure, invigorating atmosphere of that bright and blessed
+world above.
+
+For, in so far as our fellowship is real, it is now as it shall be then,
+"with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ"--"in the light," and by
+the power of the Holy Ghost.
+
+Thus much as to our fellowship with God. And, as regards our fellowship
+one with another, it is simply as we walk in the light; as we read, "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" (I John i. 7). We can only have fellowship one with another as we
+walk in the immediate presence of God. There may be a vast amount of
+mere intercourse without one particle of divine fellowship. Alas! alas!
+a great deal of what passes for Christian fellowship is nothing more
+than the merest religious gossip--the vapid, worthless, soul-withering
+chit-chat of the religious world, than which nothing can be more
+miserably unprofitable. True Christian fellowship can only be enjoyed in
+the light. It is when we are individually walking with God, in the power
+of personal communion, that we really have fellowship one with another,
+and this fellowship consists in real heart enjoyment of Christ as our
+one object, our common portion. It is not heartless traffic in certain
+favorite doctrines which we receive to hold in common. It is not morbid
+sympathy with those who think, and see, and feel with us in some
+favorite theory or dogma. It is something quite different from all this.
+It is delighting in Christ, in common with all those who are walking in
+the light. It is attachment to Him, to His person, His name, His Word,
+His cause, His people. It is joint consecration of heart and soul to
+that blessed One who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own
+blood, and brought us into the light of God's presence, there to walk
+with Him and with one another. This, and nothing less, is Christian
+fellowship; and where this is really understood it will lead us to pause
+and consider what we say when we declare, in any given case, "such an
+one is in fellowship."
+
+But we must proceed with our Epistle, and there see what full provision
+there is for the man of God, however dark the day may be in which his
+lot is cast.
+
+We have seen something of the importance--yea, rather, we should say the
+indispensable necessity of "a pure conscience," and "unfeigned faith,"
+in the moral equipment of God's man. These qualities lie at the very
+base of the entire edifice of practical godliness which must ever
+characterize the genuine man of God.
+
+But there is more than this. The edifice must be erected as well as the
+foundation laid. The man of God has to work on amid all sorts of
+difficulties, trials, sorrows, disappointments, obstacles, questions
+and controversies. He has his niche to fill, his path to tread, his work
+to do. Come what may, he must serve. The enemy may oppose; the world may
+frown; the Church may be in ruins around him; false brethren may thwart,
+hinder, and desert; strife, controversy, and division may arise and
+darken the atmosphere; still the man of God must move on, regardless of
+all these things, working, serving, testifying, according to the sphere
+in which the hand of God has placed him, and according to the gift
+bestowed upon him. How is this to be done? Not only by keeping a pure
+conscience and the exercise of an unfeigned faith--priceless,
+indispensable qualities! but, further, he has to harken to the following
+weighty word of exhortation--"Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that
+thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the putting on of my
+hands."
+
+The gift must be stirred up, else it may become useless if allowed to
+lie dormant. There is great danger of letting the gift drop into disuse
+through the discouraging influence of surrounding circumstances. A gift
+unused will soon become useless; whereas, a gift stirred up and
+diligently used grows and expands. It is not enough to possess a gift,
+we must wait upon the gift, cultivate it, and exercise it. This is the
+way to improve it.
+
+And observe the special force of the expression, "the gift of God." In
+Eph. iv. we read of "the gift of Christ," and there, too, we find all
+the gifts, from the highest to the lowest range, flowing down from
+Christ the risen and glorified Head of His body, the Church. But in
+second Timothy, we have it defined as "the gift of God." True it
+is--blessed be His holy name!--our Lord Christ is God over all, blessed
+forever, so that the gift of Christ is the gift of God. But we may rest
+assured there is never any distinction in Scripture without a
+difference; and hence there is some good reason for the expression "gift
+of God." We doubt not it is in full harmony with the nature and object
+of the Epistle in which it occurs. It is "the gift of God" communicated
+to "the man of God" to be used by him notwithstanding the hopeless ruin
+of the professing Church, and spite of all the difficulty, darkness, and
+discouragement of the day in which his lot is cast.
+
+The man of God must not allow himself to be hindered in the diligent
+cultivation and exercise of his gift, though everything seems to look
+dark and forbidding, for "God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but
+of power and of love, and of a sound mind." Here we have "God" again
+introduced to our thoughts, and that, too, in a most gracious manner, as
+furnishing His man with the very thing he needs to meet the special
+exigence of his day--"The spirit of power, and of love, and of a sound
+mind."
+
+Marvelous combination! Truly, an exquisite compound after the art of the
+apothecary! Power, love, and wisdom! How perfect! Not a single
+ingredient too much. Not one too little. If it were merely a spirit of
+power, it might lead one to carry things with a high hand. Were it
+merely a spirit of love, it might lead one to sacrifice truth for peace'
+sake; or indolently to tolerate error and evil rather than give offence.
+But the power is softened by the love; and the love is strengthened by
+the power; and, moreover, the spirit of wisdom comes in to adjust both
+the power and the love. In a word, it is a divinely perfect and
+beautiful provision for the man of God--the very thing he needs for "the
+last days" so perilous, so difficult, so full of all sorts of perplexing
+questions and apparent contradictions. If one were to be asked what he
+would consider most necessary for such days as these? surely he should,
+at once, say, "power, love, and soundness of mind." Well, blessed be
+God, these are the very things which He has graciously given to form the
+character, shape the way, and govern the conduct of the man of God,
+right on to the end.
+
+But there is further provision and further exhortation for the man of
+God. "Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of
+me His prisoner; but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel
+according to the power of God." In pentecostal days, when the rich and
+mighty tide of divine grace was flowing in, and bearing thousands of
+ransomed souls upon its bosom; when all were of one heart and one mind;
+when those outside were overawed by the extraordinary manifestations of
+divine power, it was rather a question of partaking of the _triumphs_ of
+the gospel, than its afflictions. But in the days contemplated in second
+Timothy, all is changed. The beloved apostle is a lonely prisoner at
+Rome; all in Asia had forsaken him; Hymeneus and Philetus are denying
+the resurrection; all sorts of heresies, errors, and evils are creeping
+in; the landmarks are in danger of being swept away by the tide of
+apostasy and corruption.
+
+In the face of all this, the man of God has to brace himself up for the
+occasion. He has to endure hardness; to hold fast the form of sound
+words; he has to keep the good thing committed to him; to be strong in
+the grace that is in Christ Jesus; to keep himself _disentangled_
+--however he may be _engaged_; he must keep himself free as a soldier;
+he must cling to God's sure foundation; he must purge himself from the
+dishonorable vessels in the great house; he must _flee_ youthful lusts,
+and _follow_ righteousness, faith, love, peace, with them that call on
+the Lord out of a pure heart. He must avoid foolish and unlearned
+questions. He must turn away from formal and heartless professors. He
+must be thoroughly furnished for all good works, perfectly equipped
+through a knowledge of the Holy Scriptures. He must preach the Word; be
+instant in season and out of season. He must watch in all things; endure
+afflictions; and do the work of an evangelist.
+
+What a category for the man of God! Who is sufficient for these things?
+Where is the spiritual power to be had for such works? It is to be had
+at the mercy-seat. It is to be found in earnest, patient, believing,
+waiting upon the living God, and in no other way. All our springs are
+in Him. We have only to draw upon Him. He is sufficient for the darkest
+day. Difficulties are nothing to Him, and they are bread for faith. Yes,
+beloved reader, difficulties of the most formidable nature are simply
+bread for faith, and the man of faith will develop and grow strong
+thereby. Unbelief says, "There is a lion in the way;" but faith slays
+the lion that roars along the path of the nazarite of God. It is the
+privilege of the true believer to rise above all the hostile influences
+which surround him, no matter what they are, or from whence they spring;
+and, in the calmness and brightness of the divine presence, enjoy as
+high communion, and taste as rich and rare privileges as ever were known
+in the Church's brightest days.
+
+Let us remember this--every man of God needs to remember it: there is no
+comfort, no peace, no strength, no moral power, no true elevation to be
+derived from looking at the ruins. We must look up out of the ruins to
+the place where our Lord Christ has taken His seat, at the right hand of
+the Majesty in the heavens. Or rather, to speak more according to our
+true position, we should look down from our place in the heavens upon
+all the ruins of earth. To realize our place in Christ, and to be
+occupied in heart and soul with Him, is the true secret of power to
+carry ourselves as men of God. To have Christ ever before us--His work
+for the conscience, His person for the heart, His Word for the path, is
+the one grand, sovereign, divine remedy for a ruined self, a ruined
+world, a ruined Church.
+
+But we close. Very gladly would we linger, in company with the reader,
+over the contents of this most precious second Timothy. Truly refreshing
+would it be to dwell upon all its touching allusions, its earnest
+appeals, its weighty exhortations. But this would demand a volume, and
+hence we must leave the Christian reader to study the Epistle for
+himself, praying that the eternal Spirit who indited it may unfold and
+apply it in living power to his soul, so that he may be enabled to
+acquit himself as an earnest, faithful, whole-hearted man of God and
+servant of Christ, in the midst of a scene of hollow profession, and
+heartless worldly religiousness.
+
+May the good Lord stir us all up to a more thorough consecration of
+ourselves, in spirit, soul, and body--all we are and all we have--to His
+service! We think we can really say we long for this--long for it, in
+the deep sense of our lack of it--long for it, more intensely, as we
+grow increasingly sick of the unreal condition of things within and
+around us.
+
+O beloved Christian, let us earnestly, believingly, and perseveringly
+cry to our own ever gracious God to make us more real, more
+whole-hearted, more thoroughly devoted to our Lord Jesus Christ in all
+things.
+
+ IN THE FATHER'S HOUSE
+
+ "The wanderer no more will roam,
+ The lost one to the fold hath come,
+ The prodigal is welcomed home,
+ O Lamb of God, through Thee!
+
+ "Though clothed in rags, by sin defiled,
+ The Father did embrace His child;
+ And I am pardoned, reconciled,
+ O Lamb of God, through Thee!
+
+ "It is the Father's joy to bless;
+ His love has found for me a dress,
+ A robe of spotless righteousness,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "And now my famished soul is fed,
+ A feast of love for me is spread,
+ I feed upon the children's bread,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Yea, in the fulness of His grace,
+ God put me in the children's place,
+ Where I may gaze upon His face,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Not half His Love can I express,
+ Yet, Lord, with joy my lips confess,
+ This blessed portion I possess,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!
+
+ "Thy precious name it is I bear,
+ In Thee I am to God brought near,
+ And all the Father's love I share,
+ O Lamb of God, in Thee!"
+
+
+
+
+DECISION FOR CHRIST
+
+
+In approaching the subject of "Decision for Christ," there are two or
+three obstacles which lie in our way--two or three difficulties which
+hang around the question, which we would fain remove, if possible, in
+order that the reader may be able to view the matter on its own proper
+ground, and in its own proper bearings.
+
+In the first place, we encounter a serious difficulty in the fact that
+very few of us, comparatively, are in a condition of soul to appreciate
+the subject, or to suffer a word of exhortation thereon. We are, for the
+most part, so occupied with the question of our soul's salvation,--so
+taken up with matters affecting ourselves, our peace, our liberty, our
+comfort, our deliverance from the wrath to come, our interest in
+Christ,--that we have but little heart for aught that purely concerns
+Christ Himself--His name, His person, His cause, His glory.
+
+There are, we may say, two things which lie at the foundation of all
+true decision for Christ, namely, a conscience purged by the blood of
+Jesus, and a heart that bows with reverent submission to the authority
+of His Word in all things. Now we do not mean to dwell upon these things
+in this paper; first, because we are anxious to get at once to our
+immediate theme; and secondly, because we have so often dwelt on the
+subject of establishing the conscience in the peace of the gospel, and
+on setting before the heart the paramount claims of the word of God. We
+merely refer to them here for the purpose of reminding the reader that
+they are absolutely essential materials in forming the basis of decision
+for Christ. If my conscience is ill at ease, if I am in doubt as to my
+salvation, if I am filled with "anxious thought" as to whether I am a
+child of God or not, decision for Christ is out of the question. I must
+know that Christ died for me before I can intelligently and happily live
+for Him.
+
+So, also, if there be any reserve in the heart as to my entire
+subjection to the authority of Christ as my Lord and Master; if I am
+keeping some chamber of my heart, be it ever so remote, ever so small,
+closed against the light of His Word, it must of necessity hinder my
+whole-hearted decision for Him in this world. In a word, I must know
+that _Christ is mine_ and _I am His_ ere my course down here can be one
+of unswerving, uncompromising decision for Him. If the reader hesitates
+as to this, if he is still in doubt and darkness, let him pause and turn
+directly to the cross of the Son of God and hearken to what the Holy
+Spirit declares as to all those who simply put their trust therein. Let
+him drink into his inmost soul these words: "Be it known unto you,
+therefore, that through this Man is preached unto you the forgiveness of
+sins; and by Him _all_ that _believe are_ justified from _all_ things
+from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses." Yes, reader,
+these are the glad tidings for you. "_All_, from _all_," by faith in a
+crucified and risen Lord.
+
+But we see another difficulty in the way of our subject. We greatly fear
+that while we speak of decision for Christ, some of our readers may
+suppose that we are contending for some notion or set of notions of our
+own; that we are pressing some peculiar views or principles to which we
+vainly and foolishly venture to apply the imposing title of "Decision
+for Christ." All this we do most solemnly disclaim. The words which
+stand at the head of this paper are the simple expression of our thesis.
+We do not contend for attachment to sect, party, or denomination; for
+adherence to the doctrines or commandments of men. We write in the
+immediate presence of Him who searcheth the hearts and trieth the reins
+of the children of men, and we distinctly avow that our one object is to
+urge upon the Christian reader the necessity of decision for Christ. We
+would not, if we know ourselves, pen a single line to swell the ranks of
+a party, or draw over adherents to any particular doctrinal creed or any
+special form of church polity. We are impressed with the conviction that
+where Christ has His right place in the heart, all will be right; and
+that where He has not, there will be nothing right. And further, we
+believe that nothing but plain decision for Christ can effectually
+preserve the soul from the fatal influences that are at work around us
+in the professing Church. Mere orthodoxy cannot preserve us. Attachment
+to religious forms will not avail in the present fearful struggle. It
+is, we feel persuaded, a simple question of Christ as our _life_, and
+Christ as our _object_. May the Spirit of God now enable us to ponder
+aright the subject of "Decision for Christ"!
+
+It is well to bear in mind that there are certain great truths--certain
+immutable principles--which underlie all the dispensations of God from
+age to age and which remain untouched by all the failure, the folly and
+the sin of man. It is on these great moral truths, these foundation
+principles, that faith lays hold, and in them finds its strength and
+sustenance. Dispensations change and pass away, men prove unfaithful in
+their varied positions of stewardship and responsibility, but the word
+of the Lord endureth forever. It never fails. "Forever, O Lord, Thy word
+is settled in heaven." And again, "Thou hast magnified Thy word above
+all Thy name."[III.] Nothing can touch the eternal truth of God, and
+therefore what we want at all times is to give that truth its proper
+place in our hearts; to let it act on our conscience, form our
+character, and shape our way. "Thy word have I hid in my heart, that I
+might not sin against Thee." "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by
+every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord." This is true
+security. Here lies the real secret of decision for Christ. What God
+has spoken must govern us in the most absolute manner ere our path can
+be said to be one of plain decision. There may be tenacious adherence to
+our own notions, obstinate attachment to the prejudices of the age, a
+blind devotion to certain doctrines and practices resting on a
+traditionary foundation, certain opinions which we have received to hold
+without ever inquiring as to whether or not there be any authority
+whatever for such opinions in Holy Scripture. There may be all this and
+much more, and yet not one atom of genuine decision for Christ.
+
+Now we feel we cannot do better than furnish our readers with an example
+or two drawn from the page of inspired history, which will do more to
+illustrate and enforce our theme than aught that we could possibly
+advance. And first, then, let us turn to the book of Esther, and there
+contemplate for a few moments the instructive history of
+
+
+"MORDECAI THE JEW."
+
+This very remarkable man lived at a time in which the Jewish economy had
+failed through the unfaithfulness and disobedience of the Jewish people.
+The Gentile was in power. The relationship between Jehovah and Israel
+could no longer be publicly acknowledged. The faithful Jew had but to
+hang his harp on the willows and sigh over the faded light of other
+days. The chosen seed was in exile; the city and temple where their
+fathers worshiped were in ruins, and the vessels of the Lord's house
+were in a strange land. Such was the outward condition of things in the
+day in which Mordecai's lot was cast. But in addition to this there was
+a man very near the throne occupying only the second place in the
+empire, sitting beside the very fountain-head of authority, possessing
+princely wealth, and wielding almost boundless influence. To this great
+man, strange to say, the poor exiled Jew sternly refuses to bow. Nothing
+will induce him to yield a single mark of respect to the second man in
+the kingdom. He will save the life of Ahasuerus, but he will not bow to
+Haman.
+
+Reader, why was this? Was this blind obstinacy, or bold decision--which?
+In order to determine this we must inquire as to the real root or
+principle of Mordecai's acting. If, indeed, there was no authority for
+his conduct in the law of God, then must we at once pronounce it to have
+been blind obstinacy, foolish pride, or, it may have been, envy of a man
+in power. But if, on the other hand, there be within the covers of the
+five inspired books of Moses a plain authority for Mordecai's deportment
+in this matter, then must we, without hesitation, pronounce his conduct
+to have been the rare and exquisite fruit of attachment to the law of
+his God, and uncompromising decision for Him and His holy authority.
+
+This makes all the difference. If it be merely a matter of private
+opinion,--a question concerning which each one may lawfully adopt his
+own view,--then, verily, might such a line of conduct be justly termed
+the most narrow-minded bigotry. We hear a great deal now-a-days about
+narrow-mindedness on the one hand, and large-heartedness on the other.
+But as a Roman orator, over two thousand years ago, exclaimed in the
+senate-house of Rome, "Conscript fathers: long since, indeed, we have
+lost the true names of things," so may we, in the bosom of the
+professing Church, at the close of the nineteenth century, repeat, with
+far greater force, "Long since we have lost the true names of things."
+For what do men now call bigotry and narrow-mindedness? A faithful
+clinging to and carrying out of "Thus saith the Lord." And what do they
+designate large-heartedness? A readiness to sacrifice truth on the altar
+of politeness and civility.
+
+Reader, be thou fully assured that thus it is at this solemn moment. We
+do not want to be sour or cynical, morose or gloomy; but we must speak
+the truth if we are to speak at all. We desire that the tongue may be
+hushed in silence, and the pen may drop from the hand, if we could
+basely cushion the plain, bold, unvarnished truth through fear of
+scattering our readers, or to avoid the sneer of the infidel. We cannot
+shut our eyes to the solemn fact that God's truth is being trampled in
+the dust--that the name of Jesus is despised and rejected. We have only
+to pass from city to city, and from town to town, of highly-favored
+England, and read upon the walls the melancholy proofs of the truth of
+our assertions. Truth is flung aside, in cold contempt. The name of
+Jesus is little set by. On the other hand, man is exalted, his reason
+deified, his will indulged. Where must all this end? "In the blackness
+of darkness forever."
+
+How refreshing, in the face of all this, to ponder the history of
+Mordecai the Jew! It is very plain that he knew little and cared less
+about the thoughts of men on the question of narrow-mindedness. He
+obeyed the word of the Lord; and this we must be allowed to call real
+breadth of mind, true largeness of heart. For what, after all, is a
+narrow mind? A narrow mind we hold to be a mind which refuses to open
+itself to admit the truth of God. And what, on the contrary, is a large
+and liberal heart? A heart expanded by the truth and grace of God. Let
+us not be scared away from decision in the path of obedience by the
+scornful epithets which men have bestowed upon that path. It is a path
+of peace and purity, a path where the light of an approving conscience
+is enjoyed, and upon which the beams of divine favor ever pour
+themselves in undimmed lustre.
+
+But why did Mordecai refuse to bow to Haman? Was there any great
+principle at stake? Was it merely a whim of his own? Had he a "Thus
+saith the Lord" for his warrant in refusing a single nod of the head to
+the proud Amalekite? Yes. Let us turn to the seventeenth chapter of the
+book of Exodus, and there we read, "And the Lord said unto Moses, Write
+this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua:
+for I will utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.
+And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it Jehovah-nissi; for
+he said, Because the Lord hath sworn that the Lord will have war with
+Amalek from generation to generation."[IV.]
+
+Here, then, was Mordecai's authority for not bowing to Haman the
+Agagite. A faithful Jew could not do reverence to one with whom Jehovah
+was at war. The heart might plead a thousand excuses and urge a thousand
+reasons. It might seek an easy path for itself on the plea that the
+Jewish system was in ruins and the Amalekite in power, and that
+therefore it was worse than useless, yea, it was positively absurd, to
+maintain such lofty ground when the glory of Israel was gone and the
+Amalekite was in the place of authority. "Of what use," it might be
+argued, "can it be to uphold the standard when all is gone to pieces?
+You are only making your degradation more remarkable by the pertinacious
+refusal to bow your head. Would it not be better to give just one nod?
+That will settle the matter. Haman will be satisfied, and you and your
+people will be safe. Do not be obstinate. Show a tendency to be
+courteous. Do not stand up in that dogged way for a thing so manifestly
+non-essential. Besides, you should remember that the command in Exodus
+xvii. was only to be rehearsed in the ears of Joshua, and only had its
+true application in his bright and palmy days. It was never meant for
+the ears of an exile, never intended to apply in the days of Israel's
+desolation."
+
+All this, and much beside, might have been urged on Mordecai; but ah,
+the answer was simple: "God hath spoken. This is enough for me. True, we
+are a scattered people; but the word of the Lord is not scattered. He
+has not reversed His word about Amalek, nor entered into a treaty of
+peace with him. Jehovah and Amalek are still at war, and Amalek stands
+before me in the person of this haughty Agagite. How can I bow to one
+with whom Jehovah is at war? How can I do homage to a man whom the
+faithful Samuel would hew in pieces before the Lord?" "Well, then," it
+might be further urged upon this devoted Jew, "you will all be
+destroyed. You must either bow or perish." The answer is still most
+simple: "I have nothing to do with consequences. They are in the hand of
+God. Obedience is my path, the results are with Him. It is better to die
+with a good conscience than live with a bad one. It is better to go to
+heaven with an uncondemning heart than remain upon earth with a heart
+that would make me a coward. God has spoken. I can do no otherwise. May
+the Lord help me! Amen."
+
+Oh, how well we can understand the mode in which this faithful Jew would
+be assaulted by the enemy. Nothing but the grace of God can ever enable
+any one to maintain a deportment of unflinching decision at a moment in
+which everything within and around is against us. True it is, we know
+that it is better to suffer anything than deny our Lord or fly in the
+face of His commandments; but yet how little are some of us prepared to
+endure a single sneer, a single scornful look, a single contemptuous
+expression, for Christ's sake. And perhaps there are few things harder,
+for some of us at least, to bear than to be reproached on the ground of
+narrow-mindedness and bigotry. We naturally like to be thought
+large-hearted and liberal. We like to be accounted men of enlightened
+mind, sound judgment, and comprehensive grasp. But we must remember that
+we have no right to be liberal at our Master's expense. We have simply
+to obey.
+
+Thus it was with Mordecai. He stood like a rock, and allowed the whole
+tide of difficulty and opposition to roll over him. He would not bow to
+the Amalekite, let the consequence be what it might. Obedience was his
+path. The results were with God. And look at the result! In one moment
+the tide was turned. The proud Amalekite fell from his lofty eminence,
+and the exiled Jew was lifted from his sackcloth and ashes and placed
+next the throne. Haman exchanged his wealth and dignities for a gallows;
+Mordecai exchanged his sackcloth for a royal robe.
+
+Now it may not always happen that the reward of simple obedience will be
+as speedy and as signal as in Mordecai's case. And moreover, we may say
+that we are not Mordecais, nor are we placed in his position. But the
+principle holds good, whoever and wherever we are. There is not one of
+us, however obscure or insignificant, that has not a sphere within which
+our influence is felt for good or for evil. And besides, independent
+altogether of our circumstances and the apparent results of our conduct,
+we are called upon to obey implicitly the word of the Lord--to have His
+word hidden in our hearts--to refuse with unswerving decision, to do or
+say aught that the word of the living God condemns. "How can I do this
+great wickedness, and sin against God?" This should be the language,
+whether it be the question of a child tempted to steal a lump of sugar,
+or the most momentous step in evil that one can be tempted to take. The
+strength and moral security of Mordecai's position lay in this fact,
+that he had the word of God for his authority. Had it not been so, his
+conduct would have been senseless in the extreme. To have refused the
+usual expression of respect to one in high authority, without some
+weighty reason, could only be regarded as the most unmeaning obstinacy.
+But the moment you introduce a "Thus saith the Lord," the matter is
+entirely changed. The word of the Lord endureth forever. The divine
+testimonies do not fade away or change with the times and seasons.
+Heaven and earth shall pass away, but one jot or tittle of what our God
+hath spoken shall never pass away. Hence, what had been rehearsed in the
+ears of Joshua, as he rested in triumph under the banner of Jehovah, was
+designed to govern the conduct of Mordecai, though clothed in sackcloth
+as an exile, in the city of Shushan. Ages and generations had passed
+away; the days of the Judges and the days of the Kings had run their
+course; but the commandment of the Lord with respect to Amalek had
+lost--could lose--none of its force. "The Lord _hath sworn_ that the
+Lord will have war with Amalek," not merely in the days of Joshua, nor
+in the days of the Judges, nor in the days of the Kings, but "from
+generation to generation." Such was the record--the imperishable and
+immutable record of God; and such was the plain, solid and
+unquestionable foundation of Mordecai's conduct.
+
+And here let us say a few words as to the immense importance of entire
+submission to the word of God. We live in a day which is plainly marked
+by strong self-will. Man's reason, man's will and man's interest are
+working together, with appalling success, to ignore the authority of
+Holy Scripture. So long as the statements of the word of God chime in
+with man's reason, so long as they do not run counter to his will, and
+are not subversive of his interests, so long will he tolerate them; or,
+it may be, he will quote them with a measure of respect, or at least
+with self-complacency; but the moment it becomes a question of Scripture
+_versus_ reason, will or interest, the former is either silently ignored
+or contemptuously rejected. This is a very marked and solemn feature of
+the days that are now passing over our heads. It behooves Christians to
+be aware of it, and to be on their watch-tower. We fear that very few,
+comparatively, are truly alive to the real state of the moral atmosphere
+which enwraps the religious world. We do not refer here so much to the
+bold attacks of infidel writers. To these we have alluded elsewhere.
+What we have now before us is rather the cool indifference on the part
+of professing Christians as to Scripture; the little power which pure
+truth wields over the conscience; the way in which the edge of Scripture
+is blunted or turned aside. You quote passage after passage from the
+inspired volume, but it seems like the pattering of rain upon the
+window: the _reason_ is at work, the _will_ is dominant, _interest_ is
+at stake, human opinions bear sway, God's truth is practically, if not
+in so many words, set aside.
+
+All this is deeply solemn. We know of few things more dangerous than
+intellectual familiarity with the letter of Scripture where the spirit
+of it does not govern the conscience, form the character, and shape the
+way. We want to tremble at the word of God, to bow down in reverential
+submission to its holy authority in all things. A single line of
+Scripture ought to be sufficient for our souls on any point, even
+though, in carrying it out, we should have to move athwart the opinions
+of the highest and best of men. May the Lord raise up many faithful and
+true-hearted witnesses in these last days,--men like the faithful
+Mordecai,--who would rather ascend a gallows than bow to an Amalekite!
+
+For the further illustration of our theme, we shall ask the reader to
+turn to the sixth chapter of the book of Daniel. There is a special
+charm and interest in the history of these living examples presented to
+us in the Holy Scriptures. They tell us how the truth of God was acted
+upon, in other days, by men of like passions with ourselves; they prove
+to us that in every age there have been men who so prized the truth, so
+reverenced the word of the living God, that they would rather face
+death, in its most appalling forms, than to depart one hair's breadth
+from the narrow line laid down by the authoritative voice of their Lord
+and Master. It is healthful to be brought into contact with such
+men--healthful at all times, but peculiarly so in days like the present,
+when there is so much laxity and easy-going profession--so much of mere
+theory--when every one is allowed to go his own way, and hold his own
+opinion, provided always that he does not interfere with the opinions of
+his neighbor--when the commandments of God seem to have so little
+weight, so little power over the heart and conscience. Tradition will
+get a hearing; public opinion will be respected; anything and
+everything, in short, but the plain and positive statements of the word
+of God, will get a place in the thoughts and opinions of men. At such a
+time, it is, we repeat, at once healthful and edifying to muse over the
+history of men like Mordecai the Jew, and Daniel the prophet, and scores
+of others, in whose estimation a single line of Holy Scripture rose far
+above all the thoughts of men, the decrees of governors, and the
+statutes of kings, and who declared plainly that they had nothing
+whatever to do with consequences where the word of the Lord was
+concerned. Absolute submission to the divine command is that which alone
+becomes the creature.
+
+It is not, be it observed and well remembered, that any man or any
+number of men have any right to demand subjection to their decisions or
+decrees. No man has any right to enforce his opinions upon his fellow.
+This is plain enough, and we have to bless God for the inestimable
+privilege of civil and religious liberty, as enjoyed under this
+government. But what we urge upon our readers, just now, is plain
+decision for Christ, and implicit subjection to His authority,
+irrespective of everything, and regardless of consequences. This is what
+we do most earnestly desire for ourselves and for all the people of God
+in these last days. We long for that condition of soul, that attitude of
+heart, that quality of conscience, which shall lead us to bow down in
+implicit subjection to the commandments of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
+Christ. No doubt there are difficulties, stumbling blocks, and hostile
+influences to be encountered. It may be said, for instance, that "It is
+very difficult for one, now-a-days, to know what is really true and
+right. There are so many opinions and so many ways, and good men differ
+so in judgment about the simplest and plainest matters, and yet they all
+profess to own the Bible as the only standard of appeal; and, moreover,
+they all declare that their one desire is to do what is right, and to
+serve the Lord, in their day and generation. How, then, is one to know
+what is true or what is false, seeing that you will find the very best
+of men ranged on opposite sides of the same question?"
+
+The answer to all this is very simple. "If thine eye be single thy whole
+body shall be full of light." But, most assuredly, my eye is not single
+if I am looking at men, and reasoning on what I see in them. A single
+eye rests simply on the Lord and His Word. Men differ, no doubt--they
+have differed, and they ever will differ, but I am to harken to the
+voice of my Lord and do His will. His Word is to be my light and my
+authority, the girdle of my loins in action, the strength of my heart in
+service, my only warrant for moving hither and thither, the stable
+foundation of all my ways. If I were to attempt to shape my way
+according to the thoughts of men, where should I be? How uncertain and
+unsatisfactory would my course be! If I really want to be guided aright,
+my God will surely guide me; but if I am looking to men, if I am
+governed by mixed motives, if I am seeking my own ends and interests, if
+I am seeking to please my fellows, then, undoubtedly, my body shall be
+full of darkness, heavy clouds shall settle down upon my pathway, and
+uncertainty mark all my goings.
+
+Christian reader, think of these things. Think deeply of them. Depend
+upon it they have a just claim upon your attention. Do you earnestly
+desire to follow your Lord? Do you really aim at something beyond mere
+empty profession, cold orthodoxy, or mechanical religiousness? Do you
+sigh for reality, depth, energy, fervor, and whole-heartedness? Then
+make Christ your one object, His Word your rule, His glory your aim. May
+the blessed Spirit be pleased to use for the furtherance of these ends
+our meditation on the interesting narrative of
+
+
+"DANIEL THE PROPHET."
+
+"It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom a hundred and twenty princes,
+which should be over the whole kingdom; and over these, three
+presidents, of whom Daniel was first; that the princes might give
+accounts unto them, and the king should have no damage. Then this Daniel
+was preferred above the presidents and princes, because an excellent
+spirit was in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.
+Then the presidents and princes sought to find occasion against Daniel
+concerning the kingdom; but they could find none occasion or fault;
+forasmuch as he was faithful, neither was there any error or fault found
+in him" (Dan. vi. I-4).
+
+What a testimony! How truly refreshing to the heart! "No error or
+fault!" Even his most bitter enemies could not put their finger upon a
+single blemish in his character, or a flaw in his practical career.
+Truly this was a rare and admirable character--a bright witness for the
+God of Israel, even in the dark days of the Babylonish captivity--an
+unanswerable proof of the fact that no matter where we are situated, or
+how we are circumstanced, no matter how unfavorable our position, or how
+dark the day in which our lot is cast, it is our happy privilege so to
+carry ourselves, in all the details of daily life, as to give no
+occasion to the enemy to speak reproachfully.
+
+How sad when it is otherwise! How humiliating when those who make a high
+profession are found constantly breaking down in the most commonplace
+affairs of domestic and commercial life! There are few things which more
+tend to discourage the heart than that.
+
+No doubt worldly people are only too ready to find occasion against
+those who profess the name of Jesus; and, further, we have to remember
+that there are two sides to every question, and that, very frequently, a
+broad margin must be left for exaggeration, high coloring, and false
+impressions. But still, it is the Christian's plain duty so to walk in
+every position and relationship of life, as that "no error or fault" may
+be found in him. We should not make any excuses for ourselves. The
+duties of our situation, whatever it may happen to be, should be
+scrupulously performed. A careless manner, a slovenly habit, an
+unprincipled mode of acting, on the part of the Christian, is a serious
+damage to the cause of Christ, and a dishonor to His holy name. And, on
+the other hand, diligence, earnestness, punctuality, and fidelity, bring
+glory to that name. And this should ever be the Christian's object. He
+should not aim at his own interest, his own reputation, or his own
+advancement, in seeking to carry himself aright in his family and in his
+calling in life. True, it will promote his interest, establish his
+reputation, and further his progress, to be upright and diligent in all
+his ways; but none of these things should ever be his motive. He is to
+be ever and only governed by the one thing, namely, to please and honor
+his Lord and Master. The standard which the Holy Ghost has set before
+us, as to all these things, is furnished in the words of the apostle to
+the Philippians, "That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God
+without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom
+ye shine as lights in the world." We should not be satisfied with
+anything less than this. "They could find none occasion nor fault,
+forasmuch as he was faithful, neither was there any error or fault found
+in him." Noble testimony! Would that it were more called forth, in this
+our day, by the deportment, the habits, the temper, and ways of all
+those who call themselves Christians.
+
+But there was one point in which Daniel's enemies felt they could lay
+hold of him. "Then said these men, We shall not find any occasion
+against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning _the law
+of his God_." Here was a something in the which occasion might be found
+to ruin this beloved and honored servant of God. It appears that Daniel
+had been in the habit of praying three times a day with his windows open
+toward Jerusalem.
+
+This fact was well known, and was speedily laid hold of, and turned to
+account. "Then these presidents and princes assembled together to the
+king, and said thus unto him, King Darius, live for ever. All the
+presidents of the kingdom, the governors, and the princes, the
+counsellors, and the captains, have consulted together to establish a
+royal statute, and to make a firm decree, that whosoever shall ask a
+petition of any god or man for thirty days, save of thee, O king, he
+shall be cast into the den of lions. Now, O king, establish the decree,
+and sign the writing, that it be not changed, according to the law of
+the Medes and Persians, which altereth not. Wherefore king Darius signed
+the writing and the decree."
+
+Here, then, was a deep plot, a subtle snare, laid for the blameless and
+harmless Daniel. How would he act in the face of all this? Would he not
+feel it right to lower the standard? Well, if the standard was something
+of his own, he might surely lower it, and perhaps he ought. But if it
+were something divine--if his conduct was based upon the truth of God,
+then clearly it was his place to hold it up as high as ever, regardless
+of statutes, decrees, and writings established, signed, and
+countersigned. The whole question hinged upon this. Just as in the case
+of Mordecai the Jew, the question hinged upon the one point of whether
+he had any divine warrant for refusing to bow to Haman; so, in the case
+of Daniel the prophet, the question was, had he any divine authority for
+praying toward Jerusalem. It certainly seemed strange and odd. Many
+might have felt disposed to say to him, "Why persist in this practice?
+What need is there for opening your windows and praying toward
+Jerusalem, in such a public manner? Can you not wait until night has
+drawn her sable curtain around you, and your closet door has shut you
+in, and then pour out your heart to your God? This would be prudent,
+judicious, and expedient. And, surely, your God does not exact this of
+you. He does not regard time, place, or attitude. All times and places
+are alike to Him. Are you wise--are you right, in persisting in such a
+line of action under such circumstances? It was all well enough before
+this decree was signed, when you could pray when and as you thought
+right; but now it does seem like the most culpable fatuity and blind
+obstinacy to persevere; it is as though you really courted martyrdom."
+
+All this, and much more, we may easily conceive, might be suggested to
+the mind of the faithful Jew; but still the grand question remained,
+"What saith the Scripture?" Was there any divine reason for Daniel's
+praying toward Jerusalem? Assuredly there was! In the first place,
+Jehovah had said to Solomon, in reference to the temple at Jerusalem,
+"Mine eyes and My heart shall be there perpetually." Jerusalem was God's
+earthly centre. It was, it is, and ever shall be. True, it was in
+ruins--the temple was in ruins; but God's word was not in ruins; and
+here is faith's simple but solid warrant. King Solomon had said, at the
+dedication of the temple, hundreds of years before Daniel's time, "If
+Thy people sin against Thee, (for there is no man that sinneth not,) and
+Thou be angry with them, and deliver them over before their enemies, and
+they carry them away captive unto a land far off or near. Yet if they
+bethink themselves in the land whither they are carried captive, and
+turn and pray unto Thee, in the land of their captivity, saying, We have
+sinned, we have done amiss, and have dealt wickedly; if they return to
+Thee with all their heart and with all their soul in the land of their
+captivity, whither they have carried them captive, and pray toward their
+land, which Thou gavest unto their fathers, and toward the city which
+Thou hast chosen, and toward the house which I have built for Thy name:
+then hear Thou from the heavens, even from Thy dwelling-place, their
+prayer and their supplications, and maintain their cause, and forgive
+Thy people which have sinned against Thee" (2 Chron. vi. 36-39).
+
+Now this was precisely what Daniel was doing--this was the ground he
+took. He was a captive exile, but his heart was at Jerusalem, and his
+eyes followed his heart. If he could not sing the songs of Zion, he
+could at least breathe his prayers toward Zion's hill. If his harp was
+on the willows at Babylon, his fond affections turned toward the city of
+God, now a heap of ruins, but ere long to be an eternal excellency, "the
+joy of the whole earth." It mattered not to him that a decree had been
+signed by earth's greatest monarch, forbidding him to pray toward the
+city of his fathers and to his father's God. It mattered not to him
+that the lion's den was yawning to receive him, and the lion's jaws
+ready to devour him. Like his brother Mordecai, he had nothing to do
+with consequences. Mordecai would rather mount the gallows than bow to
+Haman, and Daniel would rather descend to the lion's den than cease to
+pray to Jehovah. These, surely, were the worthies. They were men whose
+hearts and consciences were governed absolutely by the word of God. The
+world may dub them bigots and fools; but, oh! how the heart does long
+for such bigots and fools, in these days of false liberality and wisdom!
+
+It might have been said to Mordecai and Daniel that they were contending
+for mere trifles--for things wholly indifferent and non-essential. This
+is an argument often used; but, oh! it has no weight with an honest and
+devoted heart. Indeed, there is nothing more contemptible, in the
+judgment of every true lover of Jesus, than the principle that regulates
+the standard as to essentials and non-essentials. For, what is it?
+Simply this, "All that concerns my salvation is essential; all that
+merely affects the glory of Christ is non-essential." How terrible is
+this! Reader, dost thou not utterly abhor it? What! shall we accept
+salvation as the fruit of our Lord's death, and deem aught that concerns
+Him non-essential? God forbid. Yea; rather let us entirely reverse the
+matter, and regard all that concerns the honor and glory of the name of
+Jesus, the truth of His Word, and the integrity of His cause, as vital,
+essential, and fundamental; and all that merely concerns ourselves as
+non-essential and indifferent. May God grant us this mind! May nothing
+be deemed trivial by us which has for its foundation the word of the
+living God!
+
+Thus it was with those devoted men whose history we have been glancing
+at. Mordecai would not bow his head, and Daniel would not close his
+window. Blessed men! The Lord be praised for such, and for the inspired
+record of their actings. Mordecai would rather surrender life than
+diverge from the truth of God, and Daniel would rather do the same than
+turn away from God's centre. Jehovah had said that He would have war
+with Amalek from generation to generation, and therefore Mordecai would
+not bow. Jehovah had said of Jerusalem, "Mine eyes and My heart shall be
+there perpetually;" therefore Daniel would not cease to pray toward that
+blessed centre. The word of the Lord endureth forever, and faith takes
+its stand on that imperishable foundation. There is an eternal freshness
+about every word that has come forth from the Lord. His truth holds good
+throughout all generations; its bloom can never be brushed away, its
+light can never fade, its edge can never be blunted. All praise be to
+His holy name!
+
+But let us look for a moment at the result of Daniel's faithfulness. The
+king was plunged into the deepest grief when he discovered his mistake.
+"He was sore displeased with himself." So well he might. He had fallen
+into a snare; but Daniel was in good keeping. It was all right with
+him. "The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous runneth into
+it, and is safe." It matters not whether it be a lion's den at Babylon
+or a prison at Philippi; faith and a good conscience can make a man
+happy in either. We question if Daniel ever spent a happier night on
+this earth, than the night he spent in the lion's den. He was there for
+God, and God was there with him. He was there with an approving
+conscience and an uncondemning heart. He could look up from the very
+bottom of that den straight into heaven: yea, that den was heaven upon
+earth to his happy spirit. Who would not rather be Daniel in the den
+than Darius in the palace? The one happy in God; the other "sore
+displeased with himself." Darius would have every one pray to him;
+Daniel would pray to none but God. Darius was bound by his own rash
+decree; Daniel was bound only by the word of the living God. What a
+contrast!
+
+And then see in the end what signal honor was put upon Daniel. He stood
+publicly identified with the one living and true God. "O Daniel," cried
+the king, "servant of the living God." Truly he had earned this title
+for himself. He was, unquestionably, a faithful servant of God. He had
+seen his three brethren cast into a furnace because they would worship
+_only_ the true God, and he had been cast into the lion's den because he
+would pray _only_ to Him; but the Lord had appeared for them and him,
+and given them a glorious triumph. He had allowed them to realize that
+precious promise made of old to their fathers, that they should be the
+head and their enemies the tail; that they should be above and their
+enemies below. Nothing could be more marked--nothing could more forcibly
+illustrate the value which God puts upon plain decision and true-hearted
+devotedness, no matter where, when, or by whom exhibited.
+
+Oh! for an earnest heart in this day of lukewarmness! O Lord, revive Thy
+work!
+
+ How gentle God's commands!
+ How kind His precepts are!
+ We'll cast our burdens on the Lord,
+ And trust His constant care.
+
+ Beneath His watchful eye
+ His saints securely dwell:
+ The hand that bears all nature up,
+ Will guard His children well.
+
+ Why should an anxious load
+ Press down our weary mind?
+ We haste, O Father, to Thy throne,
+ And sweet refreshment find.
+
+ Thy goodness stands approved--
+ Unchanged from day to day:
+ We drop our burdens at Thy feet,
+ To bear a song away!
+
+ ---_Philip Doddrige._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[III.] ["Thou hast magnified Thy word (or saying) according to all Thy
+Name," seems more exactly to give the meaning of the passage. ED.]
+
+[IV.] It is deeply interesting to note that neither the Jews' best
+Friend nor their worst enemy is once formally named in the book of
+Esther; but faith could recognize both the one and the other.
+
+
+
+
+PRAYER,
+
+IN ITS PROPER PLACE
+
+
+There is a strong tendency in the human mind to take a one-sided view of
+things. This should be carefully guarded against. It would ever be our
+wisdom to view things as God presents them to us, in His holy Word. We
+should put things where He puts them, and leave them there. Were this
+more faithfully attended to, the truth would be much more clearly
+understood, and souls much better instructed. There is a divinely
+appointed place for everything, and we should avoid putting right things
+in wrong places, just as carefully as we would avoid setting them aside
+altogether. The one may do as much damage as the other. Let any divine
+institution be taken out of its divinely-appointed place, and it must
+necessarily fail of its divinely-appointed end. This, I imagine, will
+hardly be questioned by any enlightened or well-regulated mind. It will
+be admitted, on all hands, to be wrong to put things in any place but
+just where God intended them to be.
+
+And in proportion to the importance of a right thing is the importance
+of having it in its right place. This remark holds good, in a special
+manner, with respect to the hallowed and most precious exercise of
+prayer. It is hard to imagine how any one, with the word of God in his
+hand, could presume to detract from the value of prayer. It is one of
+the very highest functions, and most important privileges of the
+Christian life. No sooner has the new nature been communicated by the
+Holy Ghost, through faith in Christ, than it expresses itself in the
+sweet accents of prayer. Prayer is the earnest breathing of the new man,
+drawn forth by the operation of the Holy Ghost, who dwells in all true
+believers. Hence, to find any one praying is to find him manifesting
+divine life in one of its most touching and beauteous characteristics,
+namely, dependence. There may be a vast amount of ignorance displayed in
+the prayer, both in its character and object; but the _spirit_ of prayer
+is, unquestionably, divine. A child may ask for a great many foolish
+things; but, clearly, he could not ask for any thing if he had not life.
+The ability and desire to ask are the infallible proofs of life. No
+sooner had Saul of Tarsus passed from death unto life, than the Lord
+says of him, "_Behold he prayeth_!" (Acts ix.) Doubtless he had, as "a
+Pharisee of the Pharisees," said many "long prayers;" but not until he
+"saw that Just One, and heard the voice of His mouth," could it be said
+of him, "behold, _he prayeth_."
+
+Saying prayers and praying, are two totally different things. A
+self-righteous Pharisee may excel in the former; none but a converted
+soul can enjoy the latter. The spirit of prayer is the spirit of the new
+man; the language of prayer is the distinct utterance of the new life.
+The moment a spiritual babe is born into the new creation, it sends up
+its cry of dependence and of trust toward the Source of its birth. Who
+would dare to hush or hinder that cry? Let the babe be gently satisfied
+and encouraged, not ignorantly hindered or rudely silenced. The very cry
+which ignorance would seek to stifle, falls like sweetest music on the
+parent's ear. It is the proof of life. It evidences the existence of a
+new object around which the affections of a parent's heart may entwine
+themselves.
+
+All this is plain enough. It commends itself to every renewed mind. The
+man who could think of hushing the accents of prayer must be wholly
+ignorant of the precious and beautiful mysteries of the new creation.
+The understanding of the praying one may need to be instructed; but oh!
+let not the spirit of prayer be quenched. Let the beams of divine
+revelation, in all their emancipating power, shine in upon the
+struggling conscience, but let not the breathings of the new life be
+interrupted. The newly-converted soul may be in great darkness. The
+chilling mists of legalism may enwrap his spirit. He may not, as yet, be
+able to rest fully in Christ and His accomplished work. His awakened
+conscience may not, as yet, have found its peace-giving answer in the
+precious blood of Jesus. Doubts and fears may sorely beset him. He may
+not know about the important doctrine of the two natures, and the
+continual conflict between them. He is bowed down beneath the
+humiliating sense of indwelling sin, and sees not, as yet, the ample
+provision which redeeming love has made for that very thing, in the
+sacrifice and priesthood--the blood and advocacy of the Lord Jesus
+Christ. The joyous emotions which attended upon the first moments of his
+conversion may have passed away. The beams of the Sun of Righteousness
+may be hidden by the heavy clouds which arise from within and around
+him. It is not with him as in days past. He marvels at the sad change
+which has come over him, and well nigh doubts if he were ever converted
+at all.
+
+Need we wonder that such an one should cry mightily to God? Yea, the
+wonder would be if he could do aught else. How, then, should we treat
+him? Should we teach him not to pray? God forbid. This would be to do
+the work of Satan, who, assuredly, hates prayer most cordially. To drop
+a syllable which could even be understood as making little of an
+exercise so entirely divine, would be to fly in the face of the entire
+book of God, to deny the very example of Christ, and hinder the
+utterance of the Holy Ghost in the new-born soul. The Old and New
+Testament Scriptures literally teem with exhortations and encouragements
+to pray. To quote the passages would fill a volume. The blessed Master
+Himself has left His people an example as to the unceasing exercise of a
+spirit of prayer. He both prayed Himself and taught His disciples to
+pray. The same is true of the Holy Ghost in the apostles. (See the
+following passages; Luke iii. 21; vi. 12; ix. 28, 29; xi. I-13; xviii.
+I-8; Acts i. 14; iv. 31; Rom. xii. 12; xv. 30; Eph. vi. 18; Phil. iv. 6;
+Col. iv. 2-4; I Thess. v. 17; 2 Thess. iii. I, 2; I Tim. ii. I-3; Heb.
+xiii. 18; James v. 14, 15.)
+
+If my reader will look out and ponder the foregoing passages, he will
+have a just view of the place which prayer occupies in the Christian
+economy. He will see that disciples are exhorted to pray; and that it is
+only disciples who are so exhorted. He will see that prayer is a grand
+prominent exercise of the household of God, and that he must be of that
+household to engage in it. He will see that prayer is the undoubted
+utterance of the new life; and that the life therefore must be there to
+utter itself. He will see that prayer is an important part of the
+Christian's privilege; and that it enters in no wise in the foundation
+of the Christian's peace.
+
+Thus, he will be able to put prayer in its proper place; and how
+important it is that it should be so put! How important it is that the
+anxious inquirer should see that the deep and solid foundations of his
+present and everlasting peace were laid in the work of the Cross,
+nineteen centuries ago! How important that the blood of Jesus should
+stand out before the soul in clear and bold relief, in its solitary
+grandeur, as the alone foundation of the sinner's rest! A soul may be
+earnestly seeking and crying for salvation, and all the while be
+ignorant of the great fact that it is ready to his hand--that he is
+actually commanded to accept a free, full, present, personal, and
+eternal salvation--that Christ has done all--that a brimming cup of
+salvation is set before him, which faith has only to take and drink for
+its everlasting satisfaction. The gospel of God's free grace points to
+the rent vail--the empty tomb--the occupied throne above. (Matt. xxviii;
+Heb. i. and x.) What do these things declare? What do they utter in the
+anxious sinner's ear? Salvation! salvation! The rent vail, the empty
+tomb, the occupied throne, all cry out, salvation!
+
+Reader, do you really want salvation? Then why not take it, as God's
+free gift? Are you looking to your own heart or to Christ's finished
+work for salvation? Is it needful, think you, to wait that God should do
+something more for your salvation? If so, then Christ's work were not
+finished; the ransom were not paid. But Christ said "_It is finished_,"
+and God says, "I have found a ransom" (Job xxxiii. John xix.). And if
+_you_ have to do, say, or think aught, to complete the work of
+salvation, then Christ would not be a whole, a perfect Saviour. And,
+further, it would be a plain denial of Rom. iv. 5, which says, "To him
+that _worketh not_, but believeth on Him that _justifieth the ungodly_,
+his faith is counted for righteousness." Take heed that you are not
+mixing up your poor prayers with the glorious work of redemption,
+completed by the Lamb of God on the cross. Prayer is most precious; but,
+remember, "without faith it is impossible to please God" (Heb. xi. 6);
+and if you have faith, you have Christ; and having Christ, you have ALL.
+If you say you are crying for mercy, the word of God points you to
+mercy's copious stream flowing from the finished sacrifice. You have all
+your anxious heart can want in Jesus, and He is God's free gift to you
+just as you are, where you are, _now_. If you had _to be_ aught else but
+what you are, or _to go_ anywhere else from where you are, then
+salvation would not be "by grace, through faith" (Eph. ii. 8). If you
+are anxious to get salvation, and God desires you should have it, why
+need you be another moment without it? It is all ready. Christ died and
+rose again. The Holy Ghost testifies. The word is plain. "_Only
+believe._"
+
+Oh, may the Spirit of God lead any anxious soul to find settled repose
+in Jesus. May He lead you to look away from all besides, straight to an
+all-sufficient atonement. May He give clearness of apprehension, and
+simplicity of faith to all; and may He especially endow all who stand up
+to teach and preach with the ability "rightly to divide the word of
+truth," so that they may not apply to the unregenerate sinner, or the
+anxious inquirer, such passages of Scripture as refer only to the
+established believer. Very serious damage is done both to the truth of
+God, and to the souls of men, by an unskilful division and application
+of the Word. There must be spiritual life, before there can be spiritual
+action; and the _only_ way to get spiritual life is by _believing_ on
+the name of the Son of God[V.] (John i. 12, 13; iii. 14-16, 36; v. 24; xx.
+31). If, therefore, the precepts of God's word be applied to persons who
+have not the spiritual life to act in them, confusion must be the result.
+The precious privileges of the Christian are turned into a heavy yoke for
+the unconverted. A strange system of half-law half-gospel is propounded,
+whereby true Christianity is robbed of its characteristic glory, and the
+souls of men are plunged in mist and perplexity. There is urgent need
+for clearness in setting forth the true ground of a sinner's peace. When
+souls are convicted of sin, and have life, but not liberty, they want a
+full, clear, unclouded gospel. The claims of a divinely-awakened
+conscience can only be answered by the blood of the Cross. If anything,
+no matter what, be added to the finished work of Christ, the soul must
+be filled with doubt and darkness.
+
+May God grant us to know more fully the true place and value of simple
+faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and of earnest prayer in the Holy Ghost.
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[V.] When the jailer at Philippi inquired of Paul and Silas, "What must
+I do to be saved?" they simply replied, "_Believe_ on the Lord Jesus
+Christ and thou shalt be saved, and thy house" (Acts xvi. 30, 31). It
+would, surely, be well if this method of dealing with an anxious
+inquirer were more faithfully adopted.
+
+
+
+
+"GILGAL"
+
+JOSHUA V.
+
+
+"Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning,
+that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope"
+(Rom. xv. 4). These few words furnish a title, distinct and
+unquestionable, for the Christian to range through the wide and
+magnificent field of Old Testament Scripture, and gather therein
+instruction and comfort, according to the measure of his capacity and
+the character or depth of his spiritual need. And were any further
+warrant needed, we have it with equal clearness in the words of another
+inspired epistle: "Now all these things happened unto them (Israel) for
+ensamples; and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends
+of the world are come" (I Cor. x. 11).
+
+No doubt, in reading the Old Testament, as in reading the New, there is
+constant need of watchfulness--need of self-emptiness, of dependence
+upon the direct teaching of the Holy Spirit, by whom all Scripture has
+been indited. The imagination must be checked, lest it lead us into
+crude notions and fanciful interpretations, which tend to no profit,
+but rather to the weakening of the power of Scripture over the soul,
+and hindering our growth in the divine life.
+
+Still, we must never lose sight of the divine charter made out for us in
+Rom. xv. 4--never forget for a single moment that "whatsoever things
+were written aforetime were written for our learning." It is in the
+strength of these words that we invite the reader to accompany us back
+to the opening of the book of Joshua, that we may together contemplate
+the striking and instructive scenes presented there, and seek to gather
+up some of the precious "learning" there unfolded. If we mistake not, we
+shall learn some fine lessons on the banks of the Jordan, and find the
+air of Gilgal most healthful and bracing for the spiritual constitution.
+
+We have all been accustomed to look at Jordan as the figure of
+death--the death of the believer--his leaving this world and going to
+heaven. Doubtless the believer has often read and heard these lines:
+
+ "Could we but stand where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Jordan's stream nor death's cold flood
+ Could fright us from the shore."
+
+But all this line of thought, feeling and experience is very far below
+the mark of true Christianity. A moment's reflection in the true light
+which Scripture pours upon our souls would be sufficient to show how
+utterly deficient is the popular religious thought as to Jordan. For
+instance, when a believer dies and goes to heaven, is he called to
+fight? Surely not. All is rest and peace up yonder--ineffable, eternal
+peace. Not a ripple on that ocean. No sound of alarm throughout that
+pure and holy region. No conflict there. No need of armor. We shall want
+no girdle, because our garments may flow loosely around us. We shall not
+need a breast-plate of righteousness, for divine righteousness has there
+its eternal abode. We shall have no need of sandals, for there will be
+no rough or thorny places in that fair and blissful region. No shield
+called for there, inasmuch as there will be no fiery darts flying. No
+helmet of salvation, for the divine and eternal results of God's
+salvation shall then be reached. No sword, inasmuch as there will be
+neither enemy nor evil occurrent throughout all that blissful, sunny
+region.
+
+Hence, therefore, Jordan cannot mean the death of the believer and his
+going to heaven, for the simplest of all reasons, that it was when
+Israel crossed the Jordan that their fighting, properly speaking, began.
+True they had fought with Amalek in the wilderness; but it was in Canaan
+that their real war commenced. The careful reader of the Scriptures will
+readily see this.
+
+But does not Jordan represent death? Most surely it does. And must not
+the believer cross it? Yes; but he finds it dry, because the Prince of
+Life has gone down into its deepest depths, and opened up a pathway for
+His people, by the which they pass over into their heavenly
+inheritance.
+
+Moses, from Pisgah's top, gazed upon the promised land. _Personally_,
+under the governmental dealings of God, he was prevented from going over
+Jordan. But looking at him _officially_, we know that the law could not
+possibly bring the people into Canaan; so Moses' course must end there,
+for he represents the law.
+
+But Christ, the true Joshua, has crossed the Jordan, and not only
+crossed it, but turned it into a pathway by which the ransomed host can
+pass over dry-shod into the heavenly Canaan. The Christian is not called
+to stand shivering on the brink of the river of death, as one in doubt
+as to how it may go with him. That river is dried up for faith. Its
+power is gone. Our adorable Lord "has abolished death, and brought life
+and incorruptibility to light by the gospel." Faith can now, therefore,
+sing triumphantly, "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy
+victory? The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law;
+but thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus
+Christ" (I Cor. xv. 55-57).
+
+Glorious, enfranchising fact! Let us praise Him for it. Let all our
+ransomed powers adore Him. Let our whole moral being be stirred up to
+chant the praises of Him who has taken the sting from death, and
+destroyed him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and
+conducted us into a sphere which is pervaded throughout with life,
+light, incorruptibility, and glory. May our entire practical career be
+to His glory!
+
+We shall now proceed to examine more particularly the teaching of
+Scripture on this great subject, and may the Holy Spirit Himself be our
+immediate instructor!
+
+"And Joshua rose early in the morning; and they removed from Shittim,
+and came to Jordan, he and all the children of Israel, and lodged there
+before they passed over. And it came to pass after three days, that the
+officers went through the host; and they commanded the people, saying,
+When ye see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the
+priests, the Levites, bearing it, then ye shall remove from your place,
+and go after it. _Yet there shall be a space between you and it_, about
+two thousand cubits by measure: come not near unto it, _that ye may know
+the way by which ye must go: for ye have not passed this way
+heretofore_" (Josh. iii. I-4).
+
+There are three deeply important points in Israel's history which the
+reader would do well to ponder. There is, first, the blood-stained
+lintel, in the land of Egypt; secondly, the Red Sea; thirdly, the river
+Jordan.
+
+Now in each of these we have a type of the death of Christ, in some one
+or other of its grand aspects--for, as we know, that precious death has
+many and various aspects, and nothing can be more profitable for the
+Christian, and nothing, surely, ought to be more attractive, than the
+study of the profound mystery of the death of Christ. There are depths
+and heights in that mystery which eternity alone will unfold; and it
+should be our delight now, under the powerful ministry of the Holy
+Ghost, through the perfect light of Holy Scripture, to search into these
+things for the strength, comfort and refreshment of the inward man.
+
+Looking, then, at the death of Christ, as typified by the blood of the
+paschal lamb, we see in it that which screens us from the judgment of
+God. "I will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and will smite
+all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against
+all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment; I am the Lord. And the
+blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses where ye are; and when
+I see the blood, I will pass over you, and the plague shall not be upon
+you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt" (Ex. xii.).
+
+Now, we need hardly say, it is of the deepest moment for the exercised,
+consciously guilty soul, to know that God has provided a shelter from
+wrath and judgment to come. No right-minded person would think for a
+moment of undervaluing this aspect of the death of Christ. "When I see
+the blood, I will pass over you." Israel's safety rested upon God's
+estimate of the blood. He does not say, "When _you_ see the blood." The
+Judge saw the blood, knew its value, and passed over the house. Israel
+was screened by the blood of the lamb--by God's estimate of that blood,
+not by their own. Precious fact!
+
+How prone we are to be occupied with our thoughts about the blood of
+Christ, instead of with God's thoughts! We feel we do not value that
+precious blood as we ought--who ever did, or ever could? and then we
+begin to question if we are safe, seeing we so sadly fail in our
+estimate of Christ's work and in our love to His person.
+
+Now if our _safety_ depends in the smallest degree upon our estimate of
+Christ's work, or our love to His person, we are in more imminent danger
+than if it depended upon our keeping the law. True it is,--most
+true--who could think of denying it?--we ought to value Christ's work,
+and we ought to love Himself. But if all this be put upon the footing of
+a righteous claim, and if our safety rests upon our answering to that
+claim, then are we in greater danger and more justly condemned than if
+we stood on the ground of a broken law. For just in proportion as the
+claims of Christ are higher than the claims of Moses, and in proportion
+as Christianity is higher than the legal system, so are we worse off, in
+greater danger, farther from peace, if our safety depends upon our
+response to those higher claims.
+
+Mark, it is not that we ought not to answer to such claims; we most
+certainly ought. But who among us does? and hence, so far as we are
+concerned, our ruin and guilt are only made more manifest, and our
+condemnation more righteous, if we stand upon the claims of Christ,
+because we have not answered to them. If we are to be saved by our
+estimate of Christ, by our response to His claims, by our appreciation
+of His love, we are worse off by far than if we were placed under the
+claims of the law of Moses.
+
+But, blessed be God, it is not so. We are saved by grace,--free,
+sovereign, divine and eternal grace,--not by our sense of grace. We are
+sheltered by the blood, not by our estimate of the blood. Jehovah did
+not say, on that awful night, "When _you_ see the blood, and estimate it
+as you ought, I will pass over you." Nothing of the kind. This is not
+the way of our God. He wanted to shelter His people, and to let them
+know that they were sheltered,--perfectly, because divinely
+sheltered,--and therefore He places the matter wholly upon a divine
+basis; He takes it entirely out of their hands, by assuring them that
+their safety rested simply and entirely upon the blood, and upon His
+estimate thereof. He gives them to understand that they had nothing
+whatever to do with providing the shelter. It was His to _provide_. It
+was theirs to _enjoy_.
+
+Thus it stood between Jehovah and His Israel in that memorable night;
+and thus it stands between Him and the soul that simply trusts in Jesus
+now. We are not saved by _our_ love, or _our_ estimate, or _our_
+anything. We are saved by the blood behind which faith has fled for
+refuge, and by God's estimate of it, which faith apprehends. And just as
+Israel, within that blood-stained lintel screened from judgment,--safe
+from the sword of the destroyer,--could feed upon the roasted lamb, so
+may the believer, perfectly sheltered from the wrath to come,--sweetly
+secure from all danger, screened from judgment,--feed upon Christ in all
+the preciousness of what He is.
+
+But more of this by and by.
+
+We are specially anxious that the reader should weigh the point on which
+we have been dwelling, if he be one who has not yet found peace, even as
+to the question of safety from judgment to come, which, as we shall see
+(if God permit) ere we close this paper, is but a part, though an
+ineffably precious part, of what the death of Christ has procured for
+us.
+
+We have very little idea indeed of how much of the leaven of
+self-righteousness cleaves to us, even after our conversion, and how
+immensely it interferes with our peace, our enjoyment of grace, and our
+consequent progress in the divine life. It may be we fancy we have done
+with self-righteousness when we have given up all thought of being saved
+by our works; but alas, it is not so, for the evil takes new forms; and
+of all these, none is more subtle than the feeling that we do not value
+the blood as we ought, and the doubting our safety on that ground. All
+this is the fruit of self-righteousness. We have not done with _self_.
+True, we are not, it may be, making a saviour of our _doings_, but we
+are of our _feelings_. We are seeking, unknown to ourselves perhaps, to
+find some sort of title in our love to God or our appreciation of
+Christ.
+
+Now all this must be given up. We must rest simply on the blood of
+Christ, and upon God's testimony to that blood. He sees the blood. He
+values it as it deserves. He is satisfied. This ought to satisfy us. He
+did not say to Israel, When I see how you behave yourselves; when I see
+the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs, the girded loins, the shod feet,
+I will pass over you.
+
+No doubt all these things had their proper place; but that proper place
+was not as the ground of safety, but as the secret of communion. They
+were called to behave themselves--called to keep the feast; but it was
+as _being_, not _in order to be_, a sheltered people. This made all the
+difference. It was because they were divinely screened from judgment
+that they could keep the feast. They had the authority of the word of
+God to assure them that there was no judgment for them; and if they
+believed that word, they could celebrate the feast in peace and safety.
+"Through faith he kept the passover, and the sprinkling of blood, lest
+He that destroyed the firstborn should touch them" (Heb. xi. 28).
+
+Here lies the deep and precious secret of the whole matter. It was by
+faith he kept the passover. God had said, "When I see the blood, I will
+pass over you," and He could not deny Himself. It would have been a
+denial of His very nature and character, and an ignoring of His own
+blessed remedy, had a single hair of an Israelite's head been touched on
+that deeply solemn night. It was not, we repeat, in anywise a question
+of Israel's state or Israel's deservings. It was simply and entirely a
+question of the value of the blood _in God's sight_, and of the truth
+and authority of His own word.
+
+What stability is here!--what peace and rest! What a solid ground of
+confidence! The blood of Christ! the word of God! True, divinely
+true--let it never be forgotten or lost sight of--it is only by the
+grace of the Holy Spirit that the word of God can be received, or the
+blood of Christ relied upon. Still, it is the word of God and the blood
+of Christ, and nothing else, which give peace to the heart as regards
+all question of coming judgment. There can be no judgment for the
+believer. And why? Because the blood is on the mercy-seat, as the
+perfect proof that judgment has been already executed.
+
+ "He bore on the tree the sentence for me,
+ And now both the Surety and sinner are free."
+
+Yet, all praise to His name, thus it stands as to every soul that simply
+takes God at His word, and rests in the precious blood of Christ. It is
+as impossible that such an one can come into judgment, as that Christ
+Himself can. All who are sheltered by the blood are as safe as the word
+of God is sure--as safe as Christ Himself. It seems perfectly wonderful
+for any poor sinful mortal to be able to pen such words; but the blessed
+fact is, it is either this or nothing. If there is any question as to
+the believer's safety, then the blood of Christ is not on the
+mercy-seat, or it is of no account in the judgment of God. If it be a
+question of the believer's state, of his worthiness, of his feelings,
+of his experience, of his walk, of his love, of his devotedness, of his
+appreciation of Christ, then would there be no force, no value, no truth
+in that glorious sentence, "When I see the blood, I will pass over;" for
+in that case the form of speech should be entirely changed, and a dark
+and chilling shade be cast over its heavenly lustre. It should then be,
+"When I see the blood, and----"
+
+But no, beloved, anxious reader, it is not, and it never can be, thus.
+Nothing must ever be added--not the weight of a feather, to that
+precious blood which has perfectly satisfied God as a Judge, and which
+perfectly shelters every soul that has fled for safety behind it. If the
+righteous Judge has declared Himself satisfied, surely the guilty
+culprit may well be satisfied also. God is satisfied with the blood of
+Jesus; and when the soul is satisfied likewise, all is settled, and
+there is peace as regards the question of judgment. "There is no
+condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus." How can there be, seeing
+He has borne the condemnation in their stead? To doubt the believer's
+exemption from judgment is to make God a liar, and to make the blood of
+Christ of none effect.
+
+The reader will note that thus far we have been occupied only with the
+question of deliverance from judgment--a most weighty question surely.
+But, as we shall see in the course of this series of papers, there is
+far more secured for us by the death of Christ than freedom from
+judgment and wrath, blessed as that is. That peerless sacrifice does a
+great deal more for us than keep God out as a Judge.
+
+But for the present we pause, and shall close this paper with a solemn
+and earnest question to the reader, _Art thou sheltered by the blood of
+Jesus_? Do not rest, beloved, until you can answer with a clear and
+unhesitating "Yes." Remember, you are either sheltered by the blood, or
+exposed to the horrors of eternal judgment.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+In our last paper we had before us Israel under the shelter of the
+blood. A grand reality, most surely: who could duly estimate it? What
+human language could suitably unfold the deep blessedness of being
+screened from the judgment of God by the blood of the Lamb--of being
+within that hallowed circle where wrath and judgment can never come? Who
+can speak aright of the privilege of feeding in perfect safety on the
+Lamb whose precious blood has forever averted from us the wrath of a
+sin-hating God?
+
+But blessed as all this is, there is much more than this. There is far
+more comprehended in the salvation of God than deliverance from judgment
+and wrath. We may have the fullest assurance that our sins are forgiven,
+that God will never enter into judgment with us on account of our sins,
+and yet be very far indeed from the enjoyment of the true Christian
+position. We may be filled with all manner of fears about
+ourselves--fears occasioned by the consciousness of indwelling sin, the
+power of Satan, the influence of the world. All these things may crop up
+before us, and fill us with the gravest apprehensions.
+
+Thus, for example, when we turn to Ex. xiv., we find Israel in the
+deepest distress, and almost overwhelmed with fear. It would seem as if
+they had for the moment lost sight of the fact that they had been under
+the cover of the blood.
+
+Let us look at the passage.
+
+"And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of
+Israel, that they turn and encamp before Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and
+the sea, over against Baal-zephon: before it shall ye encamp by the sea.
+For Pharaoh will say of the children of Israel, They are entangled in
+the land, the wilderness hath shut them in. And I will harden Pharaoh's
+heart, that he shall follow after them: and I will be honored upon
+Pharaoh, and upon all his host; that the Egyptians may know that I am
+the Lord. And they did so. And it was told the king of Egypt that the
+people fled: and the heart of Pharaoh and of his servants was turned
+against the people, and they said, Why have we done this, _that we have
+let Israel go from serving us_?"--mark these words:--"And he made ready
+his chariot, and took his people with him. And he took six hundred
+chosen chariots, and all the chariots of Egypt, and captains over every
+one of them. And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt,
+and he pursued after the children of Israel: and the children of Israel
+went out with a high hand. But the Egyptians pursued after them, all the
+horses and chariots of Pharaoh, and his horsemen, and his army, and
+overtook them, encamping by the sea, beside Pi-hahiroth, before
+Baal-zephon. And when Pharaoh drew nigh, the children of Israel lifted
+up their eyes, and, behold, the Egyptians marched after them; and they
+were _sore afraid_: and the children of Israel _cried out_ unto the
+Lord."
+
+Now, we may feel disposed to ask, Are these the people whom we have seen
+so recently feeding, in perfect safety, under the cover of the blood?
+The very same. Whence, then, these fears, this intense alarm, this
+agonizing cry? Did they really think that Jehovah was going to judge and
+destroy them, after all? Not exactly. Of what, then, were they afraid?
+Of perishing in the wilderness after all. "And they said unto Moses,
+Because there were no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in
+the wilderness? Wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us, to carry us
+forth out of Egypt? Is not this the word that we did tell thee in Egypt,
+saying, Let us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians! For it had been
+better for us to serve the Egyptians, than that we should die in the
+wilderness."
+
+All this was most gloomy and depressing. Their poor hearts seem to
+fluctuate between "graves in Egypt" and death in the wilderness. There
+is no sense of deliverance; no adequate knowledge either of God's
+purposes or of God's salvation. All seems utter darkness, almost
+bordering upon hopeless despair. They are thoroughly hemmed in and "shut
+up." They seem in a worse plight than ever. They heartily wish
+themselves back again amid the brick-kilns and stubble fields of Egypt.
+Deserts sands on either side of them; the sea in front; Pharaoh and all
+his terrific hosts behind!
+
+The case seemed perfectly hopeless; and hopeless it was, so far as they
+were concerned. They were utterly powerless, and they were being made to
+realize it, and this is a very painful process to go through; but very
+wholesome and valuable, yea, most necessary for all. We must all, in one
+way or another, learn the force, meaning, and depth of that phrase,
+"without strength." It is exactly in proportion as we find out what it
+is to be without strength, that we are prepared to appreciate God's "due
+time."
+
+But, we may here inquire, "Is there aught in the history of God's people
+now answering to Israel's experience at the Red Sea?" Doubtless there
+is; for we are told that the things which happened unto Israel are our
+ensamples, or types. And, most surely, the scene at the Red Sea is full
+of instruction for us. How often do we find the children of God plunged
+in the very depths of distress and darkness as to their state and
+prospects! It is not that they question the love of God, or the efficacy
+of the blood of Jesus, nor yet that God will reckon their sins to them,
+or enter into judgment with them. But still, they have no sense of full
+deliverance. They do not see the application of the death of Christ to
+their _evil nature_. They do not realize the glorious truth that by that
+death they are completely delivered from this present evil world, from
+the dominion of sin, and from the power of Satan. They see that the
+blood of Jesus screens them from the judgment of God; but they do not
+see that _they_ are "dead to sin;" that their "old man is crucified
+with Christ;" that not only have their sins been put upon Christ at the
+cross, but _they themselves_, as sinful children of Adam, have been, by
+the act of God, identified with Christ in His death; that God pronounces
+them _dead and risen with Christ_. (See Col. iii. I-4 and the sixth
+chapter of Romans.) But if this precious truth is not apprehended, by
+faith, there is no bright, happy, emancipating sense of full and
+everlasting salvation. They are, to speak according to our type, at
+Egypt's side of the Red Sea, and in danger of falling into the hands of
+the prince of this world. They do not see "_all_ their enemies dead on
+the sea-shore." They cannot sing the song of redemption. No one can sing
+it, until he stands by faith on the wilderness side of the Red Sea, or,
+in other words, until he sees his complete deliverance from sin, the
+world, and Satan--the great foes of every child of God.
+
+Thus, in contemplating the facts of Israel's history, as recorded in the
+first fifteen chapters of Exodus, we observe that they did not raise a
+single note of praise until they had passed through the Red Sea. We hear
+the cry of sore distress under the cruel lash of Pharaoh's task-masters,
+and amid the grievous toil of Egypt's brick-kilns. And we hear the cry
+of terror when they stood "between Migdol and the sea." All this we
+hear; but not one note of praise, not a single accent of triumph, until
+the waters of the Red Sea rolled between them and the land of bondage
+and of death, and they saw all the power of the enemy broken and gone.
+"Thus the Lord saved Israel that day out of the hand of the Egyptians;
+and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea-shore. And _Israel saw
+that great work which the Lord did_ upon the Egyptians: and the people
+feared the Lord and His servant Moses. _Then sang_ Moses and the
+children of Israel."
+
+Now, what is the simple application of all this to us as Christians?
+What grand lesson are we to learn from the scenes on the shores of the
+Red Sea? In a word, of what is the Red Sea a type? And what is the
+difference between the blood-stained lintel and the divided sea?
+
+The Red Sea is the type of the death of Christ, in its application to
+all our spiritual enemies, sin, the world, and Satan. By the death of
+Christ the believer is completely and forever delivered from the _power_
+of sin. He is, alas! conscious of the _presence_ of sin; but its power
+is gone. He has died to sin, in the death of Christ; and what power has
+sin over a dead man? It is the privilege of the Christian to reckon
+himself as much delivered from the dominion of sin as a man lying dead
+on the floor. What power has sin over such an one? None whatever. No
+more has it over the Christian. Sin _dwells_ in the believer, and will
+do so to the end of the chapter; but its _rule_ is gone. Christ has
+wrested the sceptre from the grasp of our old master, and shivered it to
+atoms. It is not merely that His blood has purged our _sins_; but His
+death has broken the power of _sin_.
+
+It is one thing to know that our sins are forgiven, and another thing
+altogether to know that "the body of sin is destroyed"--its rule
+ended--its dominion gone. Many will tell you that they do not question
+the forgiveness of their past sins, but they do not know what to say as
+to indwelling sin. They fear lest, after all, that may come against
+them, and bring them into judgment. Such persons are, to use the figure,
+"between Migdol and the sea." They have not learnt the doctrine of Rom.
+vi. They have not as yet, in their spiritual intelligence and
+apprehension, reached the resurrection side of the Red Sea. They do not
+know what it is to be dead unto sin, and alive unto God through Jesus
+Christ our Lord.
+
+And let the reader particularly note the force of the apostle's word,
+"_reckon_." How very different it is, in every way, from our word,
+"_realize_!" This latter word may do very well where natural or human
+things are concerned. We can realize physical or material facts; but
+where a spiritual truth is involved, it is not a question of realizing,
+but of reckoning. How can I realize that I am dead to sin? All my own
+experience, my own feelings, my inward self-consciousness seems to offer
+a flat contradiction to the truth. I cannot realize that I am dead; but
+God tells me I am. He assures me that He counts me to have died to sin
+when Christ died. I believe it; not because I feel it, but because God
+says it. I reckon myself to be what God tells me I am. If I were
+sinless, if I had no sin in me, I should never be told to reckon myself
+dead to sin; neither should I ever be called to listen to such words as,
+"Let not sin, therefore, _reign_ in your mortal body." But it is just
+because I have sin dwelling in me, and in order to give me full
+practical deliverance from its reigning power, that I am taught the
+grand enfranchising truth, that the dominion of sin is broken by the
+death of Christ in which I also died.
+
+How do I know this? Is it because I feel it? Certainly not. How could I
+feel it? How could I realize it? How could I ever have the
+self-consciousness of it, while in the body? Impossible. But God tells
+me I have died in the death of Christ. I believe it. I do not reason
+about it. I do not stagger at it because I cannot find any evidence of
+its truth in myself. I take God at His word. I reckon myself to be what
+He tells me I am. I do not endeavor to struggle, and strive, and work
+myself into a sinless state which is impossible. Neither do I imagine
+myself to be in it, which were a deceit and a delusion; but by a simple,
+childlike faith, I take the blessed ground which faith assigns me, in
+association with a dead Christ. I look at Christ there, and see in Him,
+according to God's word, the true expression of where I am, in the
+Divine Presence. I do not reason from myself upwards, but I reason from
+God downwards. This makes all the difference. It is just the difference
+between unbelief and faith,--between law and grace--between human
+religion and divine Christianity. If I reason from self, how can I have
+any right thought of what is in the heart of God?--all my conclusions
+must be utterly false. But if, on the other hand, I listen to God and
+believe His Word, my conclusions are divinely sound. Abraham did not
+look at himself and the improbability, nay, the impossibility of having
+a son in his old age; but he believed God and gave glory to Him. And it
+was counted to Him for righteousness.
+
+It is an unspeakable mercy to get done with self, in all its phases and
+in all its workings, and to be brought to rest, in all simplicity, on
+the written Word, and on the Christ which that written Word presents to
+our souls. Self-occupation is a deathblow to fellowship, and a great
+barrier to the soul's rest and progress. It is impossible for any one to
+enjoy settled peace so long as he is occupied with himself. He must
+cease from self, and harken to God's Word, and rest, without a single
+question, on its pure, precious, and everlasting record. God's Word
+never changes. I change; my frames, my feelings, my experience, my
+circumstances, change continually; but God's Word is the same yesterday,
+and to-day, and forever.
+
+Furthermore, it is a grand and essential point for the soul to apprehend
+that Christ is the only definition of the believer's place before God.
+This gives immense power, liberty, and blessing. "As He is, so are we,
+in this world" (I John iv. 17). This is something perfectly wonderful!
+Let us ponder it: let us think of a poor, wretched, guilty slave of
+sin, a bondslave of Satan, a votary of the world, exposed to an eternal
+hell--such an one taken up by sovereign grace, delivered completely from
+the grasp of Satan, the dominion of sin, the power of this present evil
+world--pardoned, washed, justified, brought nigh to God, accepted in
+Christ, and perfectly and forever identified with Him, so that the Holy
+Ghost can say, as Christ is, so is he in this world!
+
+All this seems too good to be true; and, most assuredly, it is too good
+for us to get; but, blessed be the God of all grace, and blessed be the
+Christ of God! it is not too good for Him to give. God gives like
+Himself. He will be God, spite of our unworthiness and Satan's
+opposition. He will act in a way worthy of Himself, and worthy of the
+Son of His love. Were it a question of our deservings, we could only
+think of the deepest and darkest pit of hell. But seeing it is a
+question of what is worthy of God to give, and that He gives according
+to His estimate of the worthiness of Christ, then, verily, we can think
+of the very highest place in heaven. The glory of God, and the
+worthiness of His Son, are involved in His dealings with us; and hence
+everything that could possibly stand in the way of our eternal
+blessedness, has been disposed of in such a manner as to secure the
+divine glory, and furnish a triumphant answer to every plea of the
+enemy. Is it a question of trespass? "He has forgiven us all
+trespasses." Is it a question of sin? He has condemned sin at the cross,
+and thus put it away. Is it a question of guilt? It is canceled by the
+blood of the cross. Is it a question of death? He has taken away its
+sting, and actually made it part of our property. Is it a question of
+Satan? He has destroyed him, by annulling all his power. Is it a
+question of the world? He has delivered us from it, and snapped every
+link which connected us with it.
+
+Thus, beloved Christian reader, it stands with us if we are to be taught
+by Scripture, if we are to take God at His word, if we are to believe
+what He says. And we may add, if it be not thus, we are in our sins;
+under the power of sin; in the grasp of Satan; obnoxious to death; part
+and parcel of an evil, Christless, Godless world, and exposed to the
+unmitigated wrath of God--the vengeance of eternal fire.
+
+Oh that the blessed Spirit may open the eyes of God's people, and give
+them to see their proper place, their full and eternal deliverance in
+association with Christ who died for them, and _in whom they have died_,
+and _thus_ passed out of the power of all their enemies!
+
+
+PART III.
+
+Having glanced at two of the leading points in our subject, namely,
+Israel freed from guilt under the shelter of the blood, and Israel freed
+from all their enemies in the passage of the Red Sea, we have now to
+contemplate for a few moments Israel crossing the Jordan, and
+celebrating the paschal feast at Gilgal, in which they represent the
+risen position of Christians now.
+
+The Christian is one who is not only sheltered from judgment by the
+blood of the Lamb, not only delivered from the power of all his enemies
+by the death of Christ, but is also associated with Him where He now is,
+at the right hand of God; he is, with Christ, passed out of death, in
+resurrection, and is blessed with all spiritual blessings, in the
+heavenlies, in Christ. He is thus a heavenly man, and, as such, is
+called to walk in this world in all the varied relationships and
+responsibilities in which the good hand of God has placed him. He is not
+a monk, or an ascetic, or a man living in the clouds, fit neither for
+earth or heaven. He is not one who lives in a dreamy, misty, unpractical
+region; but, on the contrary, one whose happy privilege it is, from day
+to day, to reflect, amid the scenes and circumstances of earth, the
+graces and virtues of Christ, with whom, through infinite grace, and on
+the solid ground of accomplished redemption, he is linked in the power
+of the Holy Ghost.
+
+Such is the Christian, according to the teaching of the New Testament.
+Let the reader see that he understands it. It is very real, very
+definite, very positive, very practical. A child may know it, and
+realize it, and exhibit it. A Christian is one whose sins are forgiven,
+who possesses eternal life, and knows it; in whom the Holy Ghost dwells;
+he is accepted in and associated with a risen and glorified Christ; he
+has broken with the world, is dead to sin and the law, and finds his
+object and his delight, and his spiritual sustenance, in the Christ who
+loved him and gave Himself for him, and for whose coming he waits every
+day of his life.
+
+This, we repeat, is the New Testament description of a Christian. How
+immensely it differs from the ordinary type of Christian profession
+around us we need not say. But let the reader measure himself by the
+divine standard, and see wherein he comes short; for of this he may rest
+assured, that there is no reason whatsoever, so far as the love of God,
+or the work of Christ, or the testimony of the Holy Ghost, is concerned,
+why he should not be in the full enjoyment of all the rich and rare
+spiritual blessings which appertain to the true Christian position. Dark
+unbelief, fed by legality, bad teaching, and spurious religiousness, rob
+many of God's dear children of their proper place and portion. And not
+only so, but, from want of a thorough break with the world, many are
+sadly hindered from the clear perception and full realization of their
+position and privileges as heavenly men.
+
+But we are rather anticipating the instruction unfolded to us in the
+typical history of Israel, in Josh. iii.-v., to which we shall now turn.
+"And Joshua rose early in the morning; and they removed from Shittim,
+and came to Jordan, he and all the children of Israel, and lodged there
+before they passed over. And it came to pass, after three days, that the
+officers went through the host. And they commanded the people, saying,
+When ye see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the
+priests the Levites bearing it, then ye shall remove from your place,
+and go after it. _Yet there shall be a space between you and it_, about
+two thousand cubits by measure: _come not near unto it, that ye may know
+the way by which ye must go; for ye have not passed this way
+heretofore_" (Josh. iii. I-4).
+
+It is most desirable that the reader should, with all simplicity and
+clearness, seize the true spiritual import of the river Jordan. It
+typifies the death of Christ in one of its grand aspects, just as the
+Red Sea typifies it in another. When the children of Israel stood on the
+wilderness side of the Red Sea, they sang the song of redemption. They
+were a delivered people--delivered from Egypt and the power of Pharaoh.
+They saw all their enemies dead on the sea-shore. They could even
+anticipate, in glowing accents, their triumphal entrance into the
+promised land. "Thou in Thy mercy hast led forth the people which Thou
+hast redeemed; Thou hast guided them in Thy strength unto Thy holy
+habitation. The people shall hear, and be afraid: sorrow shall take hold
+on the inhabitants of Palestina. Then the dukes of Edom shall be amazed;
+the mighty men of Moab, trembling shall take hold upon them: all the
+inhabitants of Canaan shall melt away. Fear and dread shall fall upon
+them: by the greatness of Thine arm they shall be still as a stone; till
+Thy people pass over, O Lord, till the people pass over which Thou hast
+purchased. Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of
+Thine inheritance, in the place, O Lord, which Thou hast made for Thee
+to dwell in; in the sanctuary, O Lord, which Thy hands have established.
+The Lord shall reign for ever and ever."
+
+All this was perfectly magnificent, and divinely true. But they were not
+yet in Canaan. Jordan--of which, most surely, there is no mention in
+their glorious song of victory--lay between them and the promised land.
+True, in the purpose of God and in the judgment of faith, the land was
+theirs; but they had to traverse the wilderness, cross the Jordan, and
+take possession.
+
+How constantly we see all this exemplified in the history of souls! When
+first converted, there is nothing but joy and victory and praise. They
+know their sins forgiven; they are filled with wonder, love, and praise.
+Being justified by faith, they have peace with God, and they can rejoice
+in hope of His glory, yea, and joy in Himself through Jesus Christ our
+Lord. They are in Rom. v. I-11; and, in one sense, there can be nothing
+higher. Even in heaven itself we shall have nothing higher or better
+than "joy in God." Persons sometimes speak of Rom. viii. being higher
+than Rom. v.: but what can be higher than "joy in God"? If we are
+brought to God, we have reached the most exalted point to which any soul
+can come. To know Him as our portion, our rest, our stay, our object,
+our all; to have all our springs in Him, and know Him as a perfect
+covering for our eyes, at all times, and in all places, and under all
+circumstances--this is heaven itself to the believer.
+
+But there is this difference between Rom. v. and viii., that vi. and
+vii. lie between; and when the soul has traveled practically through
+these latter, and learns how to apply their profound and precious
+teaching to the great questions of indwelling sin and the law, then it
+is in a better state, though, most assuredly, not in a higher standing.
+
+We repeat, and with emphasis, the words "_traveled practically_." For it
+must be even so, if we would really enter into these holy mysteries
+according to God. It is easy to talk about being "dead to sin" and "dead
+to the law"--easy to see these things written in Rom. vi. and vii.--easy
+to grasp, in the intellect, the mere theory of these things. But the
+question is, have we made them our own--have they been applied
+practically to our souls by the power of the Holy Ghost? Are they
+livingly exhibited in our ways to the glory of Him who, at such a cost
+to Himself, has brought us into such a marvelous place of blessing and
+privilege?
+
+It is much to be feared that there is a vast amount of merely
+intellectual traffic in these deep and precious mysteries of our most
+holy faith, which, if only laid hold of in spiritual power, would
+produce wonderful results in practice.
+
+But we must return to our theme; and in doing so, we would ask the
+reader if he really understands the true spiritual import of the river
+Jordan? What does it really mean? We have said that it typifies the
+death of Christ. But in what aspect? for that precious death, as we are
+now considering, has many and various aspects. We believe the Jordan
+sets forth the death of our Lord Jesus Christ as that by which we are
+introduced into the inheritance He has obtained for us. The Red Sea
+_delivered Israel from_ Egypt and the power of Pharaoh. Jordan _brought
+them into_ the land of Canaan.
+
+We find both in the death of Christ. He, blessed be His name, has, by
+His death on the cross--His death for us--delivered us from our sins,
+from their guilt and condemnation, from Satan's power, and from this
+present evil world.
+
+But more than this: He has, by the same infinitely precious work,
+brought us _now_ into an entirely new position, in resurrection and in
+living union and association with Himself, where He is at God's right
+hand. Such is the distinct teaching of Eph. ii. "But God, who is rich in
+mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead
+in sins, _hath quickened us together with Christ_, (by grace ye are
+saved;) and _hath raised us up together_, and made us _sit together in
+the heavenlies_ in Christ Jesus" (vers. 4-6).
+
+Note the little word "_hath_." He is not speaking of what God _will_ do,
+but of what He _hath_ done--done for us, and with us, in Christ Jesus.
+The believer has not to wait till he passes out of this life to enjoy
+his inheritance in heaven. In the person of his living and glorified
+Head, through faith, by the Spirit, he belongs there now, and is free to
+all that God has given to all His own.[VI.]
+
+Is all this real and true? Yes! As real and true as that Christ hung on
+the cross and lay in the grave; as real and true as that we were dead in
+trespasses and sins; as real and true as the truth of God can make it;
+as real and true as the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the body of
+every true believer.
+
+Mark, reader, we are not now speaking of the practical working-out of
+all this glorious truth in the life of Christians from day to day. This
+is another thing altogether. Alas, alas! if our only idea of true
+Christian position were to be drawn from the practical career of
+professing Christians, we might give up Christianity as a myth or a
+sham.
+
+But, thank God, it is not so. We must learn what true Christianity is
+from the pages of the New Testament, and, having learnt it there, judge
+ourselves, our ways, our surroundings, by its heavenly light. In this
+way, while we shall ever have to confess and mourn our shortcomings, our
+hearts shall ever, more and more, be filled with praise to Him whose
+infinite grace has brought us into such a glorious position, in union
+and fellowship with His own Son--a position, blessed be God, in nowise
+dependent upon our personal state, but which, if really apprehended,
+must exert a powerful influence upon our entire course, conduct, and
+character.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[VI.] [There are three very distinct aspects of the death of Christ
+which, to apprehend clearly, is of unspeakable value to the soul.
+
+1st. That which is typified in the blood of the paschal lamb on Israel's
+doors in Egypt. This is the judgment of God against the sinner in the
+person of the Substitute provided for him. Rom. iii. 23-27 applies to
+this.
+
+It brings peace to the soul who believes, for his judgment is passed.
+Christ has borne it in our stead.
+
+2nd. As revealed at the passage of the Red Sea. There it is fully
+manifested that God is _for_ His people; He has completely overcome
+their enemy and freed them from his power forever. The prince and his
+hosts, who ruled over them unto death, are drowned in the sea. God's
+people have passed out of his dominions, and can now go on with God in
+perfect freedom. No condemnation remains. Henceforth, to faith, Satan is
+a vanquished foe. God's people are delivered; they can now, in settled
+peace, worship, praise, and serve their God. Blessed, holy deliverance
+and service! Rom. vi.-vii. gives the full teaching of this aspect of the
+death of Christ.
+
+3rd. As seen in the passage of Jordan. There is no judgment to escape
+there; no foe pressing behind. It is a question of entering the good
+land which is just across. It is the death of Christ here as _the ending
+of His people's history_ _as children of Adam_; that, by resurrection,
+He may now introduce them, as having died and risen with Him, into the
+place of glory where He has gone. By this it can be said, "As He is, so
+are we in this world" (I John iv. 17)
+
+Col. ii. 10-iii. 4, is the New Testament doctrine of this precious
+truth. ED.]
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+The more deeply we ponder the typical instruction presented in the river
+Jordan, the more clearly we must see that the whole Christian position
+is involved in the standpoint from which we view it. Jordan means death,
+but, for the believer, a death that is _past_--the death we have gone
+through as identified with Christ, and which, through resurrection, has
+brought us on the other side--the Canaan side--where He is now. He,
+typified by the ark, has passed over before us into Jordan, to stem its
+torrent for us, and make it a dry path for our feet, so that we might
+pass clean over into our heavenly inheritance. The Prince of life has
+destroyed, on our behalf, him that had the power of death. He has taken
+the sting from death; yea, He has made death itself the very means by
+which we reach, even now, in spirit and by faith, the true heavenly
+Canaan.
+
+Let us see how all this is unfolded in our type. Mark particularly the
+commandment given by the officers of the host. "When ye see the ark of
+the covenant of the Lord your God, and the priests the Levites bearing
+it, then ye shall remove from your place, and go after it." The ark must
+go first. They dared not to move one inch along that mysterious way,
+until the symbol of the divine Presence had gone before.
+
+"Yet there shall be a space between you and it, about two thousand
+cubits by measure: _come not near unto it that ye may know the way by
+which ye must go_; for ye have _not passed this way heretofore_." It was
+an awful flood ahead of them. No mortal could tread it with impunity.
+Death and destruction are linked together. "It is appointed unto men
+once to die; but after this the judgment" (Heb. ix.) Who can stand
+before the king of terrors? Who can face that grim and terrible foe? Who
+can encounter the swellings of Jordan? Who, except the Ark go first, can
+face death and judgment? Poor Peter thought he could; but he was sadly
+mistaken. He said unto Jesus, "Lord, whither goest thou? Jesus answered
+him, Whither I go, _thou canst not follow Me now_; but thou shalt follow
+Me afterwards."
+
+How fully these words explain the import of that mystic "space" between
+Israel and the ark. Peter did not understand that space. He had not
+studied aright Josh. iii. 4. He knew nothing of that terrible pathway
+which his blessed Master was about to enter upon. "Peter said unto Him,
+Lord, why cannot I follow Thee now? I will lay down my life for Thy
+sake."
+
+Poor dear Peter! How little he knew of himself, or of that which he
+was--sincerely, no doubt, though ignorantly--undertaking to do! How
+little did he imagine that the very sound of death's dark river, heard
+even in the distance, would be sufficient so to terrify him, as to make
+him curse and swear that he did not know his Master! "Jesus answered
+him, Wilt thou lay down thy life for My sake? Verily, verily, I say unto
+thee, the cock shall not crow till thou hast denied Me thrice."
+
+"Yet there shall be a space between you and it." How needful! How
+absolutely essential! Truly there was a space between Peter and his
+Lord. Jesus had to go before. He had to meet death in its most terrific
+form. He had to tread that rough path in profound solitude--for who
+could accompany Him? "There shall be a space between you and it: come
+not near to it, that ye may know the way by which ye must go; for ye
+have not passed this way heretofore."
+
+"Thou canst not follow Me _now_: but thou shalt follow me _afterwards_."
+Blessed Master! He would not suffer His poor feeble servant to enter
+upon that terrible path, until He Himself had gone before, and so
+entirely changed its character, that the pathway of death should be
+lighted up with the beams of life and the light of God's face. Our Jesus
+has "abolished death, and brought life and incorruptibility to light by
+the gospel."
+
+Thus death is no longer death to the believer. It was death to Jesus, in
+all its intensity, in all its horrors, in all its reality. He met it as
+the power which Satan wields over the soul of man. He met it as the
+penalty due to sin. He met it as the just judgment of God against
+sin--against us. There was not a single feature, not a single
+ingredient, not a single circumstance, which could possibly render
+death formidable which did not enter into the death of Christ. He met
+all; and, blessed be God, _we are accounted as having gone through all
+in and by Him_. We died in Him, so that death has no further claim upon
+us, or power over us. Its claims are disposed of, its power broken and
+gone for all believers. The whole scene is cleared completely of death,
+and filled with life and incorruptibility.
+
+And hence, in Peter's case, we find our Lord, in the last chapter of
+John, most graciously meeting the desire of His servant's heart--a
+desire in which he was perfectly sincere--the desire to follow his
+beloved Lord. "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young,
+thou girdest thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest; but when thou
+shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird
+thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not. This spake He signifying
+by what death he should glorify God." Thus death, instead of being the
+judgment of God to overwhelm Peter, was turned into a means by which
+Peter could glorify God.
+
+What a glorious change! What a stupendous mystery! How it magnifies the
+cross, or rather the One who hung thereon! What a mighty revolution,
+when a poor sinful man can, by death, glorify God! So completely has
+death been robbed of its sting, so thoroughly has its character been
+changed that, instead of shrinking from it with terror, we can meet it,
+if it does come, and go through it with song of victory; and instead of
+its being to us the wages of sin, it is a means by which we can glorify
+God. All praise to Him who has so wrought for us! to Him who has gone
+down into Jordan's deepest depths for us, and made there a highway by
+which His ransomed people can pass over into their heavenly inheritance!
+May our hearts adore Him! May all our powers be stirred up to magnify
+His holy name! May our whole life be devoted to His praise! May we
+appreciate the grace and lay hold of the inheritance.
+
+But we must proceed with our type.
+
+"And Joshua spake unto the priests, saying, Take up the ark of the
+covenant, and pass over before the people. And they took up the ark of
+the covenant, and went before the people. And the Lord said unto Joshua,
+This day will I begin to magnify thee in the sight of all Israel, that
+they may know that as I was with Moses, so I will be with thee." Joshua
+stands before us as a type of the risen Christ, leading His people, in
+the power of the Holy Ghost, into their heavenly inheritance. The
+priests bearing the ark into the midst of Jordan typify Christ going
+down into death for us, and destroying completely its power. "He passed
+through death's dark raging flood, to make our rest secure;" and not
+only to make it secure, but to lead us into it, in association with
+Himself, now, in spirit and by faith; by-and-by, in actual fact.
+
+"And Joshua said unto the children of Israel, Come hither, and hear the
+words of the Lord your God. And Joshua said, Hereby ye shall know that
+the _living_ God is among you, and that He will without fail drive out
+from before you the Canaanites.... Behold, the ark of the covenant of
+the Lord of all the earth passeth over before you into Jordan."
+
+The passage of the ark into Jordan proved two things, namely, the
+presence of the living God in the midst of His people; and that He would
+most surely drive out all their enemies from before them. The death of
+Christ is the basis and the guarantee of everything to faith. Grant us
+but this, that Christ has gone down into death for us, and we argue,
+with all possible confidence, that, in this one great fact, all is
+secured. God is with us, and God is for us. "He that spared not His own
+Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also
+freely give us all things?" The difficulty of unbelief is, "How shall
+He?" The difficulty of faith is, "How shall He _not_?"
+
+Israel might wonder how all the hosts of Canaan could ever be expelled
+from before them: let them gaze on the ark in the midst of Jordan, and
+cease to wonder, cease to doubt. The less is included in the greater.
+And hence we can say, What may we not expect, seeing that Christ has
+died for us? There is nothing too good, nothing too great, nothing too
+glorious, for God to do for us, and in us, and with us, seeing He has
+not spared His only-begotten Son, but delivered Him up for us all.
+Everything is secured for us by the precious death of Christ. It has
+opened up the everlasting flood-gates of the love of God, so that the
+rich streams thereof might flow down into the very depths of our souls.
+It fills us with the sweetest assurance that the One who could bruise
+His only-begotten Son, on the cursed tree, for us, will meet our every
+need, carry us through all our difficulties, and lead us into the full
+possession and enjoyment of all that His eternal purpose of grace has in
+store for us. Having given us such a proof of His love, even when we
+were yet sinners, what may we not expect at His hands now that He views
+us in association with that blessed One who glorified Him in death--the
+death that He died for us? When Israel saw the ark in the midst of
+Jordan, they were entitled to consider that all was secured. As our Lord
+also said to His disciples before leaving them, "Be of good cheer, I
+have overcome the world;" and, in view of His cross, He could say, "Now
+is the prince of this world cast out." True, Israel had, as we know, to
+take possession: they had to plant their feet upon the inheritance; but
+the power that could stem death's dark waters, could also drive out
+every foe from before them, and put them in peaceful possession of all
+that God had promised.
+
+
+PART V.
+
+In closing this series of brief papers on Gilgal, we must turn our
+thoughts to the practical application of that which has been engaging
+our attention. If it be true--and it is true--that Jesus died for us, it
+is equally true that we have died in Him; as one of our own poets has
+sweetly put it:
+
+ "For me, Lord Jesus, Thou hast died
+ And I have died in Thee:
+ Thou'rt risen--my bands are all untied,
+ And now Thou livest in me.
+ The Father's face of radiant grace
+ Shines now in light on me."
+
+Now this is a great practical truth--none more so. It lies at the very
+foundation of all true Christianity. If Christ has died for us, then, in
+very deed, He has taken us completely out of our old condition, with all
+that appertained to it, and placed us upon an entirely new footing. We
+can look back from resurrection-ground on which we now stand, into the
+dark river of death, and see there, in its deepest depths, the memorial
+of the victory gained for us by the Prince of Life. We do not look
+forward to death; we look back at it. We can truly say, "The bitterness
+of death is past."
+
+Jesus met death for us in its most terrible form. Just as the river of
+Jordan was divided when it presented its most formidable
+appearance--"for Jordan overfloweth all its banks all the time of
+harvest"--so our Jesus encountered our last great enemy, vanquished him
+in his most fearful form, and left behind, in the very centre of death's
+dark domain, the imperishable record of His glorious victory. All
+praise, homage, and adoration to His peerless name! It is our privilege,
+by faith and in spirit, to stand on Canaan's side of Jordan, and erect
+our memorial of what the Saviour, the true Joshua, has done for us.
+
+"And it came to pass, when all the people were clean passed over Jordan,
+that the Lord spake unto Joshua, saying, Take you twelve men out of the
+people, _out of every tribe a man_. And command ye them, saying, Take
+you hence out of the midst of Jordan, _out of the place where the
+priests' feet stood firm_, twelve stones; and ye shall carry them over
+with you, and leave them in the lodging-place where ye shall lodge this
+night. Then Joshua called the twelve men whom he had prepared of the
+children of Israel, _out of every tribe a man_. And Joshua said unto
+them, Pass over before the ark of the Lord your God, into the midst of
+Jordan, and take you up _every man of you_ a stone upon his shoulder,
+according unto the number of the tribes of the children of Israel: that
+this may be a sign among you, that when your children ask their fathers
+in time to come, saying, What mean ye by these stones? then ye shall
+answer them, That the waters of Jordan were cut off before the ark of
+the covenant of the Lord; when it passed over Jordan, the waters of
+Jordan were cut off: and these stones shall be _for a memorial_ unto the
+children of Israel for ever" (Josh. iv: I-7).
+
+The great fact was to be seized, and practically carried out by the
+whole assembly, "of every tribe a man"--"every man of you a stone upon
+his shoulder," a stone taken from the very spot where the priests' feet
+stood firm. All were to be brought into living personal contact with the
+great mysterious fact that the waters of Jordan were cut off. All were
+to engage in erecting such a memorial of this fact as should elicit
+inquiry from their children as to what it meant. It was never to be
+forgotten.
+
+What a lesson is here for us! Are we erecting our memorial? Are we
+giving evidence--such evidence as may strike even the mind of a
+child--of the fact that our Jesus has vanquished the power of death for
+us? Are we affording any practical proof in daily life that Christ has
+died for us, and that we have died in Him? Is there aught in our actual
+history, from day to day, answering to the figure set forth in the
+passage just quoted--"every man of you a stone upon his shoulder"? Are
+we declaring plainly that we have passed clean over Jordan--that we
+belong to heaven--that we are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit? Do
+our children see aught in our habits and ways, in our spirit and
+deportment, in our whole character and manner of life, leading them to
+inquire, "What mean ye by these things?" Are we living as those who are
+dead with Christ--dead to sin--dead to the world?
+
+Are we practically freed from the world--letting go our hold of present
+things, in the power of communion with a risen Christ?
+
+These are searching questions for the soul, beloved Christian reader.
+Let us seek to meet them honestly, as in the divine presence. We profess
+these things, we hold them in theory. We say we believe that Jesus died
+for us, and that we died in Him. Where is the proof--where the abiding
+memorial--where the stone on the shoulder? Let us judge ourselves
+honestly before God. Let us no longer rest satisfied with anything short
+of the thorough, practical, habitual carrying out of the great truth
+that "we are dead, and our life is hid with Christ in God." Mere
+profession is worthless. We want the living power--the true result--the
+proper fruit.
+
+"And the people came up out of Jordan on the tenth day of the first
+month, and encamped in Gilgal, in the east border of Jericho. And _those
+twelve stones which they took out of Jordan_"--stones of peculiar
+import--no other stones could tell such a tale, teach such a lesson, or
+symbolize such a stupendous fact--no other stones like them--"those
+twelve stones did Joshua pitch in Gilgal. And he spake unto the children
+of Israel, saying, When your children shall ask their fathers in time to
+come, saying, What mean these stones? then ye shall let your children
+know, saying, _Israel came over this Jordan on dry land_. For the Lord
+your God dried up the waters of Jordan from before you, until ye were
+passed over, as the Lord your God did to the Red Sea, which He dried up
+from before us, until we were gone over: that all the people of the
+earth might know the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty: that ye might
+fear the Lord your God forever."
+
+Here, then, we see Israel at Gilgal. "Everything was finished that the
+Lord commanded Joshua to speak unto the people, according to all that
+Moses commanded Joshua." Every member of the host had passed clean over
+Jordan--not one had been suffered to feel the slightest touch of the
+river of death. Grace had brought them all safely over into the
+inheritance promised to their fathers. They were not only separated from
+Egypt by the Red Sea, but actually brought into Canaan across the dry
+bed of the Jordan, and encamped in Gilgal, in the plains of Jericho.
+
+And now mark what follows. "And it came to pass, when all the kings of
+the Amorites which were on the side of Jordan westward, and all the
+kings of the Canaanites which were by the sea, heard that the Lord had
+dried up the waters of Jordan from before the children of Israel, until
+we were passed over, that their heart melted, neither was there spirit
+in them any more, because of the children of Israel. _At that
+time_"--note the words!--when all the nations were paralyzed with terror
+at the very thought of this people--"at that time the Lord said unto
+Joshua, Make thee _sharp knives_, and circumcise again the children of
+Israel the second time."
+
+How deeply significant is this: How suggestive are these "sharp knives"!
+How needful! If Israel are about to bring the sword upon the Canaanites,
+Israel must have the sharp knife applied to themselves. They had never
+been circumcised in the wilderness. The reproach of Egypt had never been
+rolled away from them. And ere they could celebrate the passover, and
+eat of the old corn of the land of Canaan, they must have the sentence
+of death written upon them. No doubt this was aught but agreeable to
+nature; but it must be done. How could they take possession of Canaan
+with the reproach of Egypt resting upon them? How could uncircumcised
+people dispossess the Canaanites? Impossible! The sharp knives had to do
+their work throughout the camp of Israel ere they could eat of Canaan's
+food or prosecute the warfare which of necessity belongs to it.
+
+"And Joshua made him sharp knives, and circumcised the children of
+Israel at the hill of the foreskins. And this is the cause why Joshua
+did circumcise. All the people that came out of Egypt that were males,
+even all the men of war, died in the wilderness by the way, after they
+came out of Egypt.... And their children, whom he raised up in their
+stead, them Joshua circumcised: for they were uncircumcised, because
+they had not circumcised them by the way.... And the Lord said unto
+Joshua, This day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from off you.
+Wherefore the name of the place is called Gilgal ("rolling") unto this
+day. And the children of Israel encamped in Gilgal, and kept the
+passover on the fourteenth day of the month, at even, in the plains of
+Jericho. And they did eat of the old corn of the land on the morrow
+after the passover, unleavened cakes and parched corn, in the self-same
+day. And the manna ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the old
+corn of the land; neither had the children of Israel manna any more; but
+they did eat of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year."
+
+Here, then, we have a type of the full Christian position. The Christian
+is a heavenly man, dead to the world, crucified with Christ, associated
+with Him where He now is, and, while waiting for His appearing, occupied
+in heart with Him, feeding by faith upon Him as the proper nourishment
+of the new man.
+
+Such is the Christian's position--such his portion. But in order to
+enter fully into the enjoyment thereof, there must be the application of
+the "sharp knife" to all that belongs to mere nature. There must be the
+sentence of death written upon that which Scripture designates as "the
+old man."
+
+All this must be really and practically entered into if we would
+maintain our position or enjoy our proper portion as heavenly men. If we
+are indulging nature; if we are living in a low, worldly atmosphere; if
+we are going in for this world's pursuits, its pleasures, its politics,
+its riches, its honors, its fashions, and its distinctions--then,
+verily, it is impossible that we can be enjoying fellowship with our
+risen Head and Lord.[VII.] Christ is in heaven, and to enjoy Him we must
+be living, in spirit and by faith, where He is. He is not of this world;
+and if we are of it, we cannot be enjoying fellowship with Him. "If we
+say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and
+do not the truth" (I John i. 6).
+
+This is most solemn. If I am living in and of the world, I am walking in
+darkness, and I can have no fellowship with a heavenly Christ.
+"Wherefore," says the blessed apostle, "if ye be dead with Christ from
+the rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
+subject to ordinances?" Do we really understand these words? Have we
+weighed the full force of the expression, "living in the world"? Is the
+Christian not to be as one living in the world? Clearly not. He is to
+live, in spirit, where Christ is. As to fact, he is obviously on this
+earth, moving up and down, and in and out, in the varied relations of
+life, and in the varied spheres of action in which the hand of God has
+set him. But his home is in heaven. His life is there. His object, his
+rest, his proper _all_, is in heaven. He does not belong to earth. His
+citizenship is in heaven; and in order to make this good in practice
+from day to day, there must be the denial of self, the mortification of
+our members.
+
+All this comes vividly out in Col. iii. Indeed, it would be impossible
+to give a more striking exposition of the entire subject of "Gilgal"
+than that presented in the following lines: "If ye then be risen with
+Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the
+right hand of God. Set your affections on things above, not on things on
+the earth. For ye have died, and your life is hid with Christ in God.
+When Christ our life shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
+glory." And now comes the true spiritual import and application of
+"Gilgal" and its "sharp knives"--"Mortify, therefore, your members which
+are upon the earth."
+
+May the Holy Spirit lead us into a deeper and fuller understanding of
+our place, portion and practice as Christians. Would to God that we
+better knew what it is to feed upon the old corn of the land, at the
+true spiritual Gilgal, that thus we might be better fitted for the
+conflict and service to which we are called!
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[VII.] The reader may here remark that "the old corn of the land of
+Canaan" is a type of Christ risen and glorified. The manna is a type of
+Christ in His humiliation. The remembrance of Him in the latter is
+ineffably precious to the soul. It is sweet to look back and trace His
+way as the lowly, humble, self-emptied man. This is to feed upon the
+hidden manna--"Christ, once humbled here." Nevertheless, a risen,
+ascended and glorified Christ is the true object for the heart of the
+Christian; but to enjoy Him there, the reproach of this present evil
+world--all conformity to it--must be rolled away from us by the
+spiritual application of the circumcision of Christ. He was not
+conformed to this world, and we must be prepared to identify ourselves
+with Him in this.
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE CONFIRMATION VOWS
+
+
+"All that the Lord hath spoken we will do." Such were the memorable
+words with which the people of Israel virtually abandoned the ground on
+which the blessed God had just been setting them, and on which, too, He
+had dealt with them in bringing them up out of the land of Egypt. "Ye
+have seen," said He, "what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you
+on eagles' wings, and brought you unto Myself." All this was
+grace--pure, perfect, divine grace. He heard the groans and beheld the
+sorrows of the people amid the darkness and degradation of Egyptian
+bondage, and in His unmingled mercy He came down to deliver them. He
+sought not their aid, He looked not for aught from them. "His own arm
+brought salvation." He acted _for_ them, _with_ them, and _in_ them; and
+that, too, in the solitariness and sovereignty of His own unfailing
+grace. He said to Moses at the opening of the book of Exodus, "_I am
+come down to deliver them_." This was absolute and unqualified grace.
+There was no "if," no "but," no condition, no vow, no resolve. It was
+FREE GRACE, founded upon God's eternal counsels, and righteously
+displayed in immediate connection with "the blood of the Lamb." Hence,
+from first to last, the word to Israel was, "_stand still, and see the
+salvation of Jehovah_." They were not called to "resolve," or to "vow,"
+or to "do." God was acting for them--He was doing ALL: He placed Himself
+between them and every enemy, and every evil. He spread forth the shield
+of His salvation that they might hide themselves behind its impenetrable
+defences, and abide there in peace.
+
+But, alas, Israel made a vow--a strange, a singular vow indeed. Not
+satisfied with God's doings, they would fain talk of their own. They
+would be doing, as if God's salvation were incomplete; and in lamentable
+ignorance of their own weakness and nothingness, they said, "All that
+the Lord hath spoken we will do." This was taking a bold stand, a high
+ground. For a poor worm to make such a vow proved how little grace was
+really understood, or nature's true condition apprehended.
+
+However, Israel having undertaken to "_do_," they were put to the test,
+and the most cursory view of Ex. xix. will be sufficient to show what a
+marked change took place the moment they had uttered the words "we will
+do." The Lord had just reminded them of how He "bare them on eagles'
+wings, and brought them unto Himself;" but now He says, "Set bounds unto
+the people round about, saying, Take heed to yourselves, that ye go not
+up into the mount, or touch the border of it: whosoever toucheth the
+mount shall be surely put to death." This was a very different aspect of
+things. And let my reader remember, it was the simple result of man's
+having said, "I will do." There is far more involved in those words than
+many might imagine. If we take our eyes off from God's actings, and fix
+them on our own, the consequences must be disastrous in the extreme. But
+we shall see this more fully ere we close this paper. Let us now inquire
+how the house of Israel fulfilled their singular vow. We shall see that
+it ended like human vows in every age.[VIII.]
+
+Did they do "_all_" that the Lord commanded? Did they "continue in all
+things which are written in the book of the law, to do them?" Alas, no.
+On the contrary, we find that ere the tables of testimony were given,
+they had broken the very first commandment in the Decalogue, by making a
+golden calf, and bowing down thereto. This was the earliest fruit of
+their broken vow; and then, onward they went, from stage to stage,
+dishonoring the name of the Lord--breaking His laws, despising His
+judgments, trampling under foot His sacred institutions. Then followed
+the stoning of His messengers whom, in patient grace and long-suffering,
+He sent unto them. Finally, when the only-begotten Son came forth from
+the bosom of the Father, they with wicked hearts rejected and with
+wicked hands crucified Him. Thus we pass from Sinai to Calvary: at the
+former we hear man undertaking to do all the Lord's commandments, and at
+the latter see him crucifying the Lord Himself. So much for man's vows,
+so much for man's "_I will do_." The fragments of the tables of
+testimony scattered beneath the fiery mount told the first melancholy
+tale of the failure of man's audacious resolution: nor was there any
+real break in the narrative, which has its closing scene around the
+cross of Calvary. All was failure--gross, unmitigated failure. Thus it
+must ever be when man presumes to vow or resolve in the presence of God.
+
+Now there is a very striking resemblance between Israel's vow at the
+foot of mount Sinai and the Confirmation Vow of the Establishment. We
+have rapidly glanced at the former; let us now refer to the latter.
+
+In "the ministration of public baptism of infants," after various
+prayers and the reading of the Gospel, the minister addresses the
+godfathers and godmothers on this wise: "Dearly beloved, ye have brought
+this child here to be baptized; ye have prayed that our Lord Jesus
+Christ would vouchsafe to receive him, to release him of his sins, to
+sanctify him with the Holy Ghost, to give him the kingdom of heaven and
+everlasting life. Ye have heard also that our Lord Jesus Christ hath
+promised in His gospel to grant all these things that ye have prayed
+for: which promise He, for His part, will most surely keep and perform.
+Wherefore, after this promise made by Christ, this infant must also
+faithfully, for his part, promise by you that are his sureties (until he
+come of age to take it upon himself), that _he will renounce_ the devil
+and all his works, and constantly believe God's holy word and
+_obediently keep His commandments_. I demand, therefore, Dost thou, in
+the name of this child, renounce the devil and all his works, the vain
+pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and
+the carnal desires of the flesh, so that thou wilt not follow nor be led
+by them? _Answer_: I RENOUNCE THEM ALL." Again: "Wilt thou obediently
+keep God's holy will and commandments, and walk in the same all the days
+of thy life? _Answer_: I WILL."
+
+Both the above vows the children, when come to years of discretion,
+deliberately and solemnly take upon themselves, as may be seen by
+reference to "The Order of Confirmation." Thus we have, in the first
+place, people vowing and resolving, on behalf of unconscious infants, to
+"renounce the world, the flesh, and the devil," and to keep all God's
+commandments, all the days of their life; and, in the second place, we
+find those children, in due time, placing themselves under the weight of
+those awful vows; and all this, moreover, as a necessary condition to
+the fulfilment of Christ's promise. That is to say, if they allow aught
+of the world, the flesh or the devil to adhere to them; or if they fail
+in the faithful keeping of _all_ God's commandments, then they cannot be
+saved, but must, so far as they are concerned, inevitably be condemned.
+In short, salvation is here made to depend on a covenant to which man
+makes himself a party. Christ is represented as willing to do His part,
+provided always that man accomplishes his; but not otherwise. In other
+words, there is an "_if_" in the matter, and, as a consequence, there
+never is, and never can be, the certainty of salvation; yea, there can
+only be the constant terror of eternal condemnation hanging over the
+soul; that is, if there is any thought about the matter at all.
+
+If the heart is not perfectly assured of the fact that Christ has in
+very deed done all; that He has put away our sin; that He has forever
+canceled our debt; that He has settled, by His perfect sacrifice, every
+question that could possibly arise, whether it be the charges of
+conscience, the accusings of Satan, or the claims of divine justice;
+that He has not left a cloud on the prospect; that all is perfectly
+done--in a word, that we stand before God in the power of divine
+righteousness, and in the same favor with His own Son; if, I say, there
+be any doubt in the soul as to the eternal truth of all these
+things--then there cannot be settled peace. And that there is not this
+settled peace in the case of those who have taken on themselves the
+above tremendous vows is but too evident from the clouds and darkness
+which hang around their spirits as they tread the next stage of their
+ecclesiastical journey.
+
+We could hardly expect that persons who boldly vow to renounce all evil,
+and perfectly to fulfil all good, could approach the Lord's table with
+any other acknowledgment than the following, namely: "The burden of our
+sins is intolerable." It would need an obtuse conscience to be able to
+shake off the conviction that those vows have been unfulfilled; and
+then, assuredly, the burden must be intolerable. If I have taken vows
+upon me, they will, without doubt, prove in the sequel to be dishonored
+vows; and thus the whole matter of my salvation comes to the ground, and
+I find myself, according to the terms of my own self-chosen covenant,
+righteously exposed to the curses of a broken law. I have undertaken to
+do everything; and yet I have in reality done nothing. Hence I am
+"cursed;" for the word is, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in
+all things which are written in the book of the law, to do them."
+
+Nor will it at all alter the matter to say that those extraordinary vows
+are entered into in dependence upon divine grace; for there cannot be
+such a thing as dependence upon _grace_ when people are placing
+themselves directly under the _law_. No two things can be more opposite
+than law and grace. They are put in direct contrast in Paul's epistles
+to the Romans and Galatians. "Whosoever of you are justified by the law
+([Greek: en nomo]),[IX.] ye are fallen from grace" (Gal. v. 4). Hence, to
+think of depending upon grace when putting myself under law is precisely
+the same as if I were to look to God for grace to enable me to subvert
+the entire gospel of His Son Jesus Christ. "As many as are of works of
+law ([Greek: ergon nomou])[IX.] are under the curse." Could I depend
+upon God's grace to enable me to abide under the curse? The thought is
+preposterous in the extreme. And be it observed that the apostle, in the
+last-quoted passage, does not merely say, "As many as fail to keep the
+law are under the curse." This he distinctly teaches, no doubt; but the
+special point is, that as many as attempt to stand before God on the
+ground of "works of law," are of necessity under the curse, for the
+simplest of all reasons, that they are not able to satisfy His claims.
+In order for man to satisfy God's claims, he must bewhat in himself he
+cannot be; that is, without sin. The law demands, as its right, perfect
+obedience; and those who take upon them the Confirmation Vows promise
+perfect obedience. They promise to renounce all evil, and to fulfil all
+good, in the most absolute manner; and moreover, they make their
+salvation to depend upon their fulfilment of those vows; else why make
+them at all?
+
+This, when looked at in the light of the apostolic teaching in Romans
+and Galatians, is the most complete denial of all the fundamental truths
+of the gospel. In the first place, it is a denial of man's total ruin,
+of his condition as one "dead in trespasses and sins," "alienated from
+the life of God," "without strength," "ungodly," "enmity against God."
+If I can undertake to renounce all evil, and to do all God's
+commandments, then, assuredly, I do not know myself to be a lost,
+ruined, helpless creature; and, as a consequence, I do not need a
+Saviour. If I can boldly undertake to "_renounce_" and to "_do_," to
+"keep" and to "walk," I am manifestly not lost, and hence I do not want
+salvation; I am not dead, and hence I do not want life; I am not
+"without strength," and hence I do not want the energy of that new, that
+divine life which is imparted by the Holy Ghost to all who, by His
+grace, believe in the Son of God. If I am capable of doing for myself, I
+do not want another, even the Lord Jesus Christ, to do all for me.
+
+Again, as flowing out of what has already been stated, those vows do
+entirely set aside the essential glories, divine dignities and sacred
+virtues of the cross of Christ. If I can get a godfather and godmother
+to take vows on them on my behalf until I am capable of taking them on
+myself, then it is evident I cannot possibly know the deep blessedness
+of having all my vows, all my responsibilities and liabilities as a lost
+sinner, all my sins and shortcomings,--everything, in short,--fully and
+eternally answered in the Cross. If there is anything in my case which
+has not been perfectly settled in the Cross, then I must inevitably
+perish. I may make vows and resolutions, but they are as the morning
+cloud that passeth away. I may get a sponsor to renounce the devil on my
+behalf, and I may in due time talk of renouncing him for myself; but
+what if the devil all the while has fast hold of both my sponsor and
+myself? He will not renounce me, unless the chain by which he binds me
+has been snapped asunder by the Cross.
+
+Again, I may get a sponsor to undertake to keep all God's commandments
+for me, and, in due time, I may undertake to keep them for myself; but
+what if neither my sponsor nor I really understand the true nature or
+spirituality, the majesty or stringency, of that law? Yea, more. What if
+both he and I are, by our very vows, made debtors to do the whole law,
+and thus shut up under its terrible curse? What then becomes of all our
+vows and resolutions? Is it not plain that I am throwing overboard the
+cross? Truly so. That cross must either be everything or nothing to me.
+If it is anything it must be everything; and if it is not everything it
+is nothing. Thus it stands, my beloved reader. The gospel of the grace
+of God sets forth Christ as the great Sponsor and Surety of His people.
+The Confirmation Service sets one sinner to stand sponsor for another,
+or for himself. The gospel sets forth One, who is possessed of
+"unsearchable riches," as the security for His people; the Confirmation
+Service sets one bankrupt to stand security for another or for himself.
+What avails such security? Who would accept of it? It is perfectly
+valueless to God and man. If I am a bankrupt, I cannot promise to pay
+anything, and if I could promise, no one would accept of it--yea, it
+would be justly regarded in the light of an empty formality. The
+promissory note of a bankrupt is little worth; and truly the vows and
+resolutions of a poor ruined sinner are not merely an empty formality,
+but a solemn mockery, in the presence of Almighty God. No one who knows
+himself would presume to vow, or resolve, to keep all God's
+commandments--such an one would have the full conviction that he could
+never do anything of the kind.
+
+But, as a further reply to the statement that those Confirmation Vows
+are made in entire dependence upon the grace of God, I would observe
+that grace can only be known or trusted by those who are His. "They that
+know Thy name will put their trust in Thee," and none else. Now, the
+word of God connects eternal life with the knowledge of Him. "This is
+life eternal, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus
+Christ, whom Thou hast sent" (John xvii. 3). If, therefore, I have
+eternal life, I need not make vows to get it. If I am eternally saved, I
+need not make vows to get salvation. If my sins are all canceled by the
+precious blood of the Lamb, I need not make vows to get them canceled.
+Neither baptismal vows, confirmation vows, sacramental vows, nor any
+other vows are necessary for one who has found life, righteousness,
+wisdom, sanctification, redemption--yea, all things in Christ.
+
+The comfort and peace of the feeblest believer are based upon the fact
+that Christ took all his vows, all his liabilities, all his sins, all
+his iniquities entirely upon Himself, and, by His death upon the cross,
+gloriously discharged them all. This sets him entirely free. Hence, it
+follows that if I am not a child of God, I cannot keep vows; and if I
+am, I need not make them. In either case, I deny man's fallen condition,
+and set aside the true glories of the Cross. It may be in ignorance--it
+may be with the most sincere intention--no doubt; but the most profound
+ignorance and the purest sincerity cannot alter the real principle which
+lies at the root of all manner of vows, promises, and resolutions. There
+is, beyond all question, involved therein a plain denial of the great
+foundation-truths of the Christian religion. A vow assumes the
+competency to fulfil. Well, then, if I vow to keep all God's
+commandments perfectly, all the days of my life, I am not lost or
+without strength. I must have strength, else I could not undertake such
+a ponderous responsibility.
+
+And, my reader, remark further the strange anomaly involved in this
+system of vows; that while it denies my lost estate, it robs me of
+everything approaching to a certainty of ever being saved. If I resolve
+to keep God's commandments as a necessary condition of my salvation, I
+never can be sure of being saved until I have fulfilled the condition;
+but inasmuch as I never can fulfil it, I, therefore, never can be sure
+of my salvation; and thus I travel on, from stage to stage, from baptism
+to confirmation, from confirmation to communion, and from communion to
+the death-bed, in a state of miserable doubt and torturing uncertainty.
+This is not the gospel. It is "a different gospel which is not another."
+The immediate effect of the work of Christ, when laid hold of by faith,
+is to give settled peace to the conscience; the effect of the system of
+vows, is to keep the heart in constant doubt and heaviness. How many
+have approached the ordinance of confirmation with trembling hearts, at
+the thought of having to take upon their own shoulders the solemn vows
+which, from the period of their baptism, had rested on their godfathers
+and godmothers. How could it be otherwise with an honest mind? If I am
+really sincere, the thought of having to take on myself those solemn
+baptismal vows, must fill me with horror. Some, alas! go through these
+things with thoughtless hearts and frivolous minds; but it is evident
+the confirmation service was never framed for such. It was designed for
+thoughtful, serious, earnest spirits; and all such must, assuredly,
+retire from the ceremony, with troubled hearts and burdened consciences.
+
+With what different feelings we gaze upon the cross of the Son of God!
+There, in good truth, Satan was renounced, and his works destroyed.
+There the law of God was magnified and made honorable, vindicated, and
+established. There the justice of God was fully answered. There Satan
+was vanquished; there conscience gets its full answer; there the cup of
+God's unmingled wrath against sin was drained to the dregs by His
+blessed Son. Where is the proof of all this? Not in the unaccomplished,
+dishonored vows of poor frail mortals; but in a risen, ascended,
+glorified Christ, seated at the right hand of the Majesty in the
+heavens.
+
+Who that knows aught of the pure and most excellent grace of God, or
+that has tasted aught of the true blessedness of divinely-accomplished
+redemption, could tolerate such language as, "CHRIST FOR HIS PART" and
+"THIS INFANT FOR HIS PART?" Who that has listened, by faith, to those
+words, "It is finished," issuing, as they do, from amid the solemn
+scenes of Calvary, could endure a sinful mortal's "_I do_," or "_I
+will_?" What a total setting aside of grace! What a tarnishing of the
+brightness of God's salvation! What an insult to the righteousness of
+God, which is by faith, and without works! What a manifest return to a
+religion of ordinances and the poor works of man! Christ and an infant,
+or the infant's sureties, are placed on the same platform to work out
+salvation. Is it not so? If not, what mean the words, "Christ for His
+part, and this infant for his part?" Is it not plain that salvation is
+made to depend upon something or some one besides Christ?
+Unquestionably. The vows must be fulfilled, or there is no salvation!
+Miserable condition! Christ's accomplished work abandoned for a sinner's
+unaccomplishable vows and resolutions! Man's "I do" substituted for
+Christ's "I have finished!"
+
+My reader, can you own such a fearful surrender of the truth of God? Are
+you content with such a sandy foundation? Whither, think you, will such
+a system lead you? To heaven, or to Rome? Which? Be honest. Take the New
+Testament, search it from cover to cover, and see if you can find such a
+thing as infants making vows by proxy, to renounce the world, the flesh,
+and the devil, and to keep all God's commandments, in order to
+salvation. There is not so much as a shadow of a foundation for such an
+idea. "By works of law shall no flesh living be justified." "But now the
+righteousness of God, without law, is manifested, being witnessed by the
+law and the prophets." "To him that worketh not, but believeth on Him
+that justified the ungodly, his faith is counted to him for
+righteousness." "For by grace are ye saved, through faith; and that not
+of yourselves it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should
+boast." "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
+according to His mercy He saved us." (See Rom. iii. 20-28; iv. 4, 5;
+Eph. ii. 8, 9; Titus iii. 5-7.)
+
+These are but a very few of the numerous passages which might be adduced
+in proof of the fact that the Confirmation Vows are diametrically
+opposed to the truth of God--totally subversive of the grace of God. If
+my vows mean anything I must be miserable, because I am in imminent
+danger of being lost forever, inasmuch as I have _not_ kept them, and
+never could keep them.
+
+Oh! what sweet relief for the wearied heart and sin-burdened conscience
+in the atoning blood of Jesus! What full deliverance from my worthless
+and worse than worthless vows! _Christ has done all._ He has put away
+sin--made peace--brought in everlasting righteousness--brought life and
+immortality to light. In Him may you, my beloved reader, find abiding
+peace, unfading joy, and everlasting glory. To Him and His perfect work
+I now most affectionately commend you, body, soul, and spirit, fully
+assuring you my object in this paper is not to attack the prejudices, or
+wound the feelings of any, but simply to take occasion to show how the
+perfect work of the Lord Jesus Christ is thrown into full and blessed
+relief by being looked at in contrast with the "Confirmation Vows."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[VIII.] There is a passage in the book of Deuteronomy which, as it may
+present a difficulty to some minds, should be noticed here. "And the
+Lord heard the voice of your words, when ye spake unto me; and the Lord
+said unto me, I have heard the voice of the words of this people which
+they have spoken unto thee: _they have well said all that they have
+spoken_" (Deut. v. 28). From this passage, it might seem as though the
+Lord approved of their making a vow; but if my reader will take the
+trouble of reading the entire context, from verse 24 to 27, he will see
+that it has nothing whatever to say to the vow, but that it contains the
+expression of their terror at the consequences of their vow. They were
+not able to endure that which was commanded. "If," said they "we hear
+the voice of the Lord our God any more, then we shall die. For who is
+there of all flesh that hath heard the voice of the living God speaking
+out of the midst of the fire, as we have, and lived? Go thou near, and
+hear all that the Lord our God shall say; and speak thou unto us all
+that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee; and we will hear it and do
+it." It was the confession of their own inability to encounter Jehovah
+in that awful aspect which their proud legality had led Him to assume.
+It is impossible that the Lord could ever commend an abandonment of free
+and changeless grace for a sandy foundation of works of law. (See "Notes
+on the book of Exodus," page 253. Same publishers.)
+
+[IX.] [That is, as many as are on that principle--of "law," "works of
+law." ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE LORD'S SUPPER;
+
+DESIGNED FOR THE HELP OF CHRISTIANS IN THIS DAY OF DIFFICULTY.
+
+_NEW EDITION, REVISED._
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The institution of the Lord's Supper must be regarded, by every
+spiritual mind, as a peculiarly touching proof of the Lord's gracious
+care and considerate love for His Church. From the time of its
+appointment until the present hour, it has been a steady, though silent,
+witness to a truth which the enemy, by every means in his power, has
+sought to corrupt and set aside, namely, that redemption is an
+accomplished fact to be enjoyed by the weakest believer in Jesus.
+Eighteen centuries have rolled away since the Lord Jesus appointed "the
+bread and the cup" in the Eucharist as the significant symbols of His
+broken body and His blood shed for us; and notwithstanding all the
+heresy, all the schism, all the controversy and strife, the war of
+principles and prejudices which the blotted page of ecclesiastical
+history records, this most expressive institution has been observed by
+the saints of God in every age. True, the enemy has succeeded,
+throughout a vast section of the professing Church, in wrapping it up in
+a shroud of dark superstition; in presenting it in such a way as
+actually to hide from the view of the communicant the grand and eternal
+reality of which it is the memorial; in displacing Christ and His
+accomplished sacrifice by a powerless ordinance--an ordinance, moreover,
+which by the very mode of its administration proves its utter
+worthlessness and opposition to the truth. (See note to page 29.) Yet,
+notwithstanding Rome's deadly error in reference to the ordinance of the
+Lord's Supper, it still speaks to every circumcised ear and every
+spiritual mind the same deep and precious truth--it "shows the Lord's
+death till He come." The body has been broken, the blood has been shed
+ONCE, no more to be repeated; and the breaking of bread is but the
+memorial of this emancipating truth.
+
+With what profound interest and thankfulness, therefore, should the
+believer contemplate "the bread and the cup"! Without a word spoken,
+there is the setting forth of truths at once the most precious and
+glorious: grace reigning--redemption finished--sin put away--everlasting
+righteousness brought in--the sting of death gone--eternal glory
+secured--"grace and glory" revealed as the free gift of God and the
+Lamb--the unity of the "one body," as baptized by "one Spirit." What a
+feast! It carries the soul back, in the twinkling of an eye, over a
+lapse of eighteen hundred years, and shows us the Master Himself, "in
+the same night in which He was betrayed," sitting at the supper table,
+and there instituting a feast which, from that solemn moment, that
+memorable night, until the dawn of the morning, should lead every
+believing heart at once backward to the cross and forward to the glory.
+
+This feast has ever since, by the very simplicity of its character, and
+yet the deep significance of its elements, rebuked the superstition that
+would deify and worship it, the profanity that would desecrate it, and
+the infidelity that would set it aside altogether: and furthermore,
+while it has rebuked all these, it has strengthened, comforted and
+refreshed the hearts of millions of God's beloved saints. It is sweet to
+think of this--sweet to bear in mind, as we assemble on the first day of
+the week round the supper of the Lord, that apostles, martyrs and saints
+have gathered round that feast, and found therein, according to their
+measure, refreshment and blessing. Schools of theology have arisen,
+flourished, and disappeared; doctors and fathers have accumulated
+ponderous tomes of divinity; deadly heresies have darkened the
+atmosphere, and rent the professing Church from one end to the other;
+superstition and fanaticism have put forth their baseless theories and
+extravagant notions; professing Christians have split into sects
+innumerable--all these things have taken place; but the Lord's Supper
+has continued, amid the darkness and confusion, to tell out its simple
+yet comprehensive tale. "As oft as ye eat this bread, and drink this
+cup, ye do show[X.] the Lord's death till He come" (I Cor. xi. 26).
+Precious feast! Thank God for the great privilege of celebrating it! And
+yet is it but a sign, the elements of which must, in nature's view, be
+mean and contemptible. Bread broken, wine poured out--how simple! Faith
+alone can read, in the sign, the thing signified; and therefore it
+needs not the adventitious circumstances which false religion has
+introduced in order to add dignity, solemnity and awe to that which
+derives all its value, its power and its impressiveness from its being a
+memorial of an eternal fact which false religion denies.
+
+May you and I, beloved reader, enter with more freshness and
+intelligence into the meaning of the Lord's Supper, and with deeper
+experience into the blessedness of breaking that bread which is "the
+communion of the body of Christ," and drinking of that cup which is "the
+communion of the blood of Christ."
+
+In closing these few prefatory lines, I commend this treatise to the
+Lord's gracious care, praying Him to make it useful to the souls of His
+people.
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[X.] [The Greek word translated "show" is more exactly rendered
+"announce" or "proclaim"--same word as in I Cor. ix. 14. ED.]
+
+
+THOUGHTS
+
+ON
+
+THE LORD'S SUPPER
+
+ "For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered
+ unto you, That the Lord Jesus, the same night in which He was
+ betrayed, took bread: and when He had given thanks, He brake
+ it, and said, Take, eat; this is My body, which is broken for
+ you: this do in remembrance of Me. After the same manner also
+ He took the cup, when He had supped, saying, This cup is the
+ new testament in My blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it,
+ in remembrance of Me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and
+ drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come."--I
+ Cor. xi. 23-26.
+
+I desire to offer a few brief remarks on the subject of the Lord's
+Supper, for the purpose of stirring up the minds of all who love the
+name and institutions of Christ to a more fervent and affectionate
+interest in this most important and refreshing ordinance.
+
+We should bless the Lord for His gracious consideration of our need in
+having established such a memorial of His dying love, and also in having
+spread a table at which _all_ His members might present themselves
+without any other condition than the indispensable one of personal
+connection with and obedience to Him. The blessed Master knew well the
+tendency of our hearts to slip away from Him, and from each other, and
+to meet this tendency was _one_, at least, of His objects in the
+institution of the Supper. He would gather His people around His own
+blessed person; He would spread a table for them where, in view of His
+broken body and shed blood, they might remember Him, and the intensity
+of His love for them, and from whence, also, they might look forward
+into the future, and contemplate the glory of which the Cross is the
+everlasting foundation. There, if anywhere, they would learn to forget
+their differences, and to love one another; there they might see around
+them those whom THE LOVE OF GOD had invited to the feast, and whom THE
+BLOOD OF CHRIST had made fit to be there.
+
+However, in order that I may the more easily and briefly convey to the
+mind of my reader what I have to say on this subject, I shall confine
+myself to the four following points, viz.:
+
+1st. The nature of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper.
+
+2d. The circumstances under which it was instituted.
+
+3d. The persons for whom it was designed.
+
+4th. The time and manner of its observance.
+
+
+I. And first, as to the nature of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper.
+This is a cardinal point. If we understand not the nature of the
+ordinance, we shall be astray in all our thoughts about it. The Supper,
+then, is purely and distinctly a feast of thanksgiving--thanksgiving for
+grace already received.
+
+The Lord Himself, at the institution of it, marks its character by
+giving thanks. "He took bread: ... when He had given thanks," etc.
+Praise, and not prayer, is the suited utterance of those who sit at the
+table of the Lord.
+
+True, we have much to pray for, much to confess, much to mourn over; but
+the table is not the place for mourners: its language is, "Give strong
+drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of
+heavy hearts. Let him drink and forget his poverty, and remember his
+misery no more." Ours is "a cup of blessing," a cup of thanksgiving, the
+divinely appointed symbol of that precious blood which has procured our
+ransom. "The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body
+of Christ?" How, then, could we break it with sad hearts or sorrowful
+countenances? Could a family circle, after the toils of the day, sit
+down to supper with sighs and gloomy looks? Surely not. The supper was
+the great family meal, the only one that was sure to bring _all the
+family together_. Faces that might not have been seen during the day
+were sure to be seen at the supper table, and no doubt they would be
+happy there. Just so it should be at the Lord's Supper: the family
+should assemble there; and when assembled, they should be happy,
+unfeignedly happy, in the love that brings them together. True, each
+heart may have its own peculiar history--its secret sorrows, trials,
+failures, and temptations, unknown to all around; but these are not the
+objects to be contemplated at the supper: to bring them into view is to
+dishonor the Lord of the feast, and make the cup of blessing a cup of
+sorrow. The Lord has invited us to the feast, and commanded us,
+notwithstanding all our shortcomings, to place the fulness of His love
+and the cleansing efficacy of His blood between our souls and
+everything; and when the eye of faith is filled with Christ, there is no
+room for aught beside. If my sin be the object which fills my eye and
+engages my thoughts, of course I must be miserable, because I am looking
+right away from what God commands me to contemplate; I am remembering my
+misery and poverty, the very things which God commands me to forget.
+Hence the true character of the ordinance is lost, and, instead of being
+a feast of joy and gladness, it becomes a season of gloom and spiritual
+depression; and the preparation for it, and the thoughts which are
+entertained about it are more what might be expected in reference to
+mount Sinai than to a happy family feast.
+
+If ever a feeling of sadness could have prevailed at the celebration of
+this ordinance, surely it would have been on the occasion of its first
+institution, when, as we shall see when we come to consider the second
+point in our subject, there was everything that could possibly produce
+deep sadness and desolation of spirit; yet the Lord Jesus could "give
+thanks;" the tide of joy that flowed through His soul was far too deep
+to be ruffled by surrounding circumstances; He had a joy even in the
+breaking and bruising of His body and in the pouring forth of His blood
+which lay far beyond the reach of human thought and feeling. And if He
+could rejoice in spirit, and give thanks in breaking that bread which
+was to be to all future generations of the faithful the memorial of His
+broken body, should not we rejoice therein, we who stand in the blessed
+results of all His toil and passion? Yes; it becomes us to rejoice.
+
+But it may be asked, Is there no preparation necessary? are we to sit
+down at the table of the Lord with as much indifference as if we were
+sitting down to an ordinary supper table? Surely not--we need to be
+right in our souls, and the first step toward this is peace with
+God--that sweet assurance of our eternal salvation which most certainly
+is not the result of human sighs or penitential tears, but the simple
+result of the finished work of the Lamb of God, attested by the Spirit
+of God. Apprehending this by faith, we apprehend that which makes us
+perfectly fit for God. Many imagine that they are putting honor upon the
+Lord's table when they approach it with their souls bowed down into the
+very dust, under a sense of the intolerable burden of their sins. This
+thought can only flow from the legalism of the human heart, that
+ever-fruitful source of thoughts at once dishonoring to God, dishonoring
+to the Cross of Christ, grievous to the Holy Ghost, and completely
+subversive of our own peace. We may feel quite satisfied that the honor
+and purity of the Lord's table are more fully maintained when THE BLOOD
+OF CHRIST is made the only title than if human sorrow and human
+penitence were superadded.[XI.]
+
+However, the question of preparedness will come more fully before us as
+we proceed with our subject; I shall therefore state another principle
+connected with the nature of the Lord's Supper, viz., that there is
+involved in it an intelligent recognition of the oneness of the body of
+Christ. "The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body
+of Christ? For we, being many, are one bread, and one body; for we are
+all partakers of that one bread." Now there was sad failure and sad
+confusion in reference to this point at Corinth: indeed, the great
+principle of the Church's oneness would seem to have been totally lost
+sight of there. Hence the apostle observes that "when ye come together
+into one place, this is not to eat the Lord's Supper, for every one
+taketh before other _his own_ supper" (I Cor. xi. 20, 21). Here, it was
+isolation, and not unity; an individual, and not a corporate question:
+"_his own supper_" is strikingly contrasted with "_the Lord's Supper_."
+The _Lord's_ Supper demands that the body be fully recognized: if the
+one body be not recognized, it is but sectarianism: the Lord Himself has
+lost His place. If the table be spread upon any narrower principle than
+that which would embrace the whole body of Christ, it is become a
+sectarian table, and has lost its claim upon the hearts of the faithful.
+On the contrary, where a table is spread upon this divine principle,
+which embraces _all_ the members of the body _simply as such_, every one
+who refuses to present himself at it is chargeable with schism, and
+that, too, upon the plain principles of I Cor. xi. "There must," says
+the apostle, "be heresies among you, that they which are approved may be
+made manifest among you."
+
+When the great Church principle is lost sight of by any portion of the
+body, there must be heresies, in order that the approved ones may be
+made manifest! and under such circumstances it becomes the business of
+each one to approve himself, and so to eat. The "approved" ones stand in
+contrast with the heretics, or those who were doing their own
+will.[XII.]
+
+But it may be asked, Do not the numerous denominations at present
+existing in the professing Church altogether preclude the idea of ever
+being able to gather the whole body together? and, under such
+circumstances, is it not better for each denomination to have their own
+table? If there be any force in this question, it merely goes to prove
+that the people of God are no longer able to act upon God's principles,
+but that they are left to the miserable alternative of acting on human
+expediency. Thank God, such is not the case. The truth of the Lord
+endureth forever, and what the Holy Ghost teaches in I Cor. xi. is
+binding upon every member of the Church of God. There were divisions,
+and heresies, and unholiness, existing in the assembly at Corinth, just
+as there are divisions, and heresies, and unholiness, existing in the
+professing Church now; but the apostle did not tell them to set up
+separate tables on the one hand, nor yet to cease from breaking bread on
+the other. No; he presses upon them the principles and the holiness
+connected with "the Church of God," and tells those who could approve
+themselves accordingly to eat. The expression is, "_So let him eat_." We
+are to eat, therefore: our care must be to eat "_so_," as the Holy Ghost
+teaches us; and that is in the true recognition of the holiness and
+oneness of the Church of God.[XIII.] When the Church is despised, the
+Spirit Be-must be grieved and dishonored, and the certain end will be
+spiritual barrenness and freezing formalism: and although men may
+substitute intellectual for spiritual power, and human talents and
+attainments for the gifts of the Holy Ghost, yet will the end be "like
+the heath in the desert." The true way to make progress in the divine
+life is to live for the Church, and not for ourselves. The man who lives
+for the Church is in full harmony with the mind of the Spirit, and must
+necessarily grow. On the contrary, the man who is living for himself,
+having his thoughts revolving round, and his energies concentrated upon,
+himself, must soon become cramped and formal, and, in all probability,
+openly worldly. Yes; he will become worldly, in some sense of that
+extensive term; for the world and the Church stand in direct opposition,
+the one to the other; nor is there any aspect of the world in which this
+opposition is more fully seen than in its religious aspect. What is
+commonly called the _religious world_ will be found, when examined in
+the light of the presence of God, to be more thoroughly hostile to the
+true interests of the Church of God than almost anything.
+
+But I must hasten on to other branches of our subject, only stating
+another simple principle connected with the Lord's Supper, to which I
+desire to call the special attention of the Christian reader; it is
+this: the celebration of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper should be
+the distinct expression of the unity of ALL believers, and not merely of
+the unity of a certain number gathered on certain principles, which
+distinguish them from others. If there be any term of communion
+proposed, save the all-important one of faith in the atonement of
+Christ, and a walk consistent with that faith, the table becomes the
+table of a sect, and possesses no claims upon the hearts of the
+faithful.
+
+Furthermore, if by sitting at the table I must identify myself with any
+one thing, whether it be principle or practice, not enjoined in
+Scripture, as a term of communion, there also the table becomes the
+table of a sect. It is not a question of whether there may be Christians
+there or not; it would be hard indeed to find a table amongst the
+reformed communities of which some Christians are not partakers. The
+apostle did not say, "there must be heresies among you, that they which
+are _Christians_ may be made manifest among you." No; but "that they
+which are _approved_." Nor did he say, "Let a man prove himself a
+Christian, and so let him eat." No; but "let a man approve himself," i.
+e., let him shew himself to be one of those who are not only upright in
+their consciences as to their individual act in the matter, but who are
+also confessing the oneness of the body of Christ. When men set up terms
+of communion of their own, there you find the principle of heresy;
+there, too, there must be schism. On the contrary, where a table is
+spread in such a manner and upon such principles as that a Christian,
+subject to God, can take his place at it, then it becomes schism not to
+be there; for, by being there, and by walking consistently with our
+position and profession there, we, so far as in us lies, confess the
+oneness of the Church of God--that grand object for which the Holy Ghost
+was sent from heaven to earth. The Lord Jesus, having been raised from
+the dead, and having taken His seat at the right hand of God, sent down
+the Holy Ghost to earth for the purpose of forming one body. Mark, to
+form _one body_--not many bodies. He has no sympathy with the many
+bodies, as such; though He has blessed sympathy with many members in
+those bodies, because they, though being members of sects or schisms,
+are nevertheless, members of the one body; but He does not form the many
+bodies, but the one body, for "by one Spirit are we all baptized into
+one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free;
+and have all been made to drink into one Spirit" (I Cor. xii. 13).
+
+I desire that there may be no misunderstanding on this point. I say the
+Holy Ghost cannot approve the schisms in the professing Church, for He
+Himself has said of such, "I praise you not." He is grieved by them--He
+would counteract them; He baptizes all believers into the unity of the
+one body, so that it cannot be thought, by any intelligent mind, that
+the Holy Ghost could sustain schisms, which are a grief and a dishonor
+to Him.
+
+We must however, distinguish between the Spirit's dwelling in the
+Church, and His dwelling in individuals. He dwells in the body of
+Christ, which is the Church (see I Cor. iii. 17; Eph. ii. 22); He dwells
+also in the body of the believer, as we read, "your body is the temple
+of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of God" (I Cor. vi.
+19). The only body or community, therefore, in which the Spirit can
+dwell, is _the whole Church of God_; and the only person in which He can
+dwell is the believer. But, as has already been observed, the table of
+the Lord, in any given locality, should be the exhibition of the unity
+of the whole Church. This leads us to another principle connected with
+the nature of the Lord's Supper, viz., this, It is an act whereby we not
+only shew the death of the Lord until He come, but whereby we also give
+expression to a fundamental truth, which cannot be too strongly or too
+frequently pressed upon the minds of Christians, at the present day,
+viz., that_ all believers are_ "_one loaf--one body_." It is a very
+common error to view this ordinance merely as a channel through which
+grace flows to the soul of the individual, and not as an act bearing
+upon the whole body, and bearing also upon the glory of the Head of the
+Church. That it is a channel through which grace flows to the soul of
+the individual communicant there can be no doubt, for there is blessing
+in every act of obedience. But that individual blessing is but a very
+small part of it, can be seen by the attentive reader of I Cor. xi. It
+is the Lord's death and the Lord's coming, that are brought prominently
+before our souls in the Lord's Supper; and where any one of these
+elements is excluded there must be something wrong. If there be anything
+to hinder the complete showing forth of the Lord's death, or the
+exhibition of the unity of the body, or the clear perception of the
+Lord's coming, then there must be something radically wrong in the
+principle on which the table is spread, and we only need a single eye,
+and a mind entirely subject to the Word and Spirit of Christ, in order
+to detect the wrong.
+
+Let the Christian reader, now, prayerfully examine the table at which
+he periodically takes his place and see if it will bear the threefold
+test of I Cor. xi., and if not, let him, in the name of the Lord, and
+for the sake of the Church, abandon it. There are heresies, and schisms
+flowing from heresies, in the professing Church, but "let a man approve
+himself, and so let him eat" the Lord's Supper; and if, once for all, it
+be asked, What means the term "approved?" it may be answered, It is in
+the first place, to be personally true to the Lord in the act of
+breaking bread; and in the next place, to shake off all schism, and take
+our stand, firmly and decidedly, upon the broad principle which will
+embrace all the members of the flock of Christ. We are not only to be
+careful that we ourselves are walking in purity of heart and life before
+the Lord; but also, that the table of which we partake has nothing
+connected with it that could at all act as a barrier to the unity of the
+Church. It is not merely a personal question. Nothing more fully proves
+the low ebb of Christianity at the present day, or the fearful extent to
+which the Holy Ghost is grieved, than the miserable selfishness which
+tinges, yea, pollutes, the thoughts of professing Christians. Everything
+is made to hinge upon the mere question of self. It is _my_
+forgiveness--_my_ safety--_my_ peace--_my_ happy frames and feelings, and
+not the glory of Christ, or the welfare of His beloved Church. Well,
+therefore, may the words of the prophet be applied to us, "Thus saith
+the Lord, Consider your ways. Go up to the mountain and bring wood, and
+BUILD THE HOUSE; and I will take pleasure in _it_ and I WILL BE
+GLORIFIED. Ye looked for much, and lo, it came to little; and when ye
+brought it home, I did blow upon it. Why? saith the Lord of hosts.
+Because of _My house_ that is waste, and ye run every man to _his own_
+house" (Hag. i. 7-9). Here is the root of the matter. Self stands in
+contrast with the house of God; and, if self be made the object, no
+marvel that there should be a sad lack of spiritual joy, energy, and
+power. To have these, we must be in fellowship with the Spirit's
+thoughts. He thinks of the body of Christ; and, if we are thinking of
+self, we must be at issue with Him; and the consequences are but too
+apparent.
+
+
+II. Having now treated of what I conceive to be by far the most
+important point in our subject, I shall proceed to consider, in the
+second place, the circumstances under which the Lord's Supper was
+instituted. These were particularly solemn and touching. The Lord was
+about to enter into dreadful conflict with all the powers of
+darkness--to meet all the deadly enmity of man; and to drain to the
+dregs the cup of Jehovah's righteous wrath against sin. He had a
+terrible morrow before Him--the most terrible that had ever been
+encountered by man or angel; yet, notwithstanding all this, we read that
+"on _the same night_ in which He was betrayed, He took bread." What
+unselfish love is here! "The same night"--the night of profound
+sorrow--the night of His agony and bloody sweat---the night of His
+betrayal by one, and His denial by another, and His desertion by all of
+His disciples--on that very night, the loving heart of Jesus was full of
+thoughts about His Church--on that very night He instituted the
+ordinance of the Lord's Supper. He appointed the bread to be the emblem
+of His body broken, and the wine to be the emblem of His blood shed; and
+such they are to us now, as often as we partake of them, for the Word
+assures us that "as often as ye eat _this bread_ and drink _this cup_,
+ye do show _the Lord's death_, till He come."
+
+Now, all this, we may say, attaches peculiar importance and sacred
+solemnity to the Supper of the Lord; and, moreover, gives us some idea
+of the consequences of eating and drinking unworthily.[XIV.]
+
+The voice which the ordinance utters in the circumcised ear is ever the
+same. The bread and the wine are deeply significant symbols; the bruised
+corn and the pressed grape being both combined to minister strength and
+gladness to the heart: and not only are they significant in themselves,
+but they are also to be used in the Lord's Supper, as being the very
+emblems which the blessed Master Himself ordained on the night previous
+to His crucifixion; so that faith can behold the Lord Jesus presiding at
+_His own table_--can see Him take the bread and the wine, and hear Him
+say, "Take, eat; this is My body;" and again, of the cup, "Drink ye
+_all_ of it. For this is My blood of the New Testament which is shed for
+many for the remission of sins." In a word, the ordinance leads the soul
+back to the eventful night already referred to--brings before us all the
+reality of the cross and passion of the Lamb of God, in which our whole
+souls can rest and rejoice; it reminds us, in the most impressive
+manner, of the unselfish love and pure devotedness of Him, who, when
+Calvary was casting its dark shadow across His path, and the cup of
+Jehovah's righteous wrath against sin, of which He was about to be the
+bearer, was being filled for Him, could, nevertheless, busy Himself
+about us, and institute a feast which was to be both the expression of
+our connection with Him, and with all the members of His body.
+
+And may we not infer, that the Holy Ghost made use of the expression
+"_the same night_," for the purpose of remedying the disorders that had
+arisen in the church at Corinth? Was there not a severe rebuke
+administered to the selfishness of those who were taking "_their own
+supper_," in the Spirit's reference to the same night in which the Lord
+of the feast was betrayed? Doubtless there was. Can selfishness live in
+the view of the cross? Can thoughts about our own interests, or our own
+gratification, be indulged in the presence of Him who sacrificed Himself
+for us? Surely not. Could we heartlessly and wilfully despise the Church
+of God--could we offend or exclude beloved members of the flock of
+Christ, while gazing on that cross on which the Shepherd of the flock,
+and the Head of the body, was crucified?[XV.] Ah, no; let believers
+only keep near the cross--let them remember "the same night"--let them
+keep in mind the broken body and shed blood of the Lord Jesus Christ,
+and there will soon be an end to heresy, schism, and selfishness. If we
+could only bear in mind that the Lord Himself presides at the table, to
+dispense the bread and wine; if we could hear Him say, "Take this, and
+divide it among yourselves," we should be better able to meet _all_ our
+brethren on the _only_ Christian ground of fellowship which God can own.
+In a word, the person of Christ is God's centre of union. "I," said
+Christ, "if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto _Me_."
+Each believer can hear his blessed Master speaking from the cross, and
+saying of his fellow believers, "_Behold thy brethren_;" and, truly, if
+we could distinctly hear this, we should act, in a measure, as the
+beloved disciple acted towards the mother of Jesus; our hearts and our
+homes would be open to all who have been thus commended to our care. The
+word is, "_Receive ye one another, as Christ also received us to the
+glory of God_."
+
+There is another point worthy of notice, in connection with the
+circumstances under which the Lord's Supper was instituted, namely, its
+connection with the Jewish Passover. "Then came the day of unleavened
+bread, when the Passover must be killed. And He sent Peter and John,
+saying, Go and prepare us the Passover, that we may eat.... And _when
+the hour was come_, He sat down, and the twelve apostles with Him. And
+He said unto them, With desire I have desired to eat this Passover with
+you before I suffer; for I say unto you, I will not any more eat
+thereof, until it be fulfilled in the Kingdom of God. And He took the
+cup [i. e., the cup of the Passover], and gave thanks, and said, Take
+this and divide it among yourselves; for I say unto you, I will not
+drink of the fruit of the vine until the Kingdom of God shall come"
+(Luke xxii. 7-18). The Passover was, as we know, the great feast of
+Israel, first observed on the memorable night of their happy deliverance
+from the thralldom of Egypt. As to its connection with the Lord's
+Supper, it consists in its being the marked _type_ of that of which the
+Supper is the _memorial_. The Passover pointed _forward_ to the cross;
+the Supper points _back_ to it. But Israel was no longer in a fit moral
+condition to keep the Passover, according to the divine thoughts about
+it; and the Lord Jesus, on the occasion above referred to, was leading
+His apostles away altogether from the Jewish element to a new order of
+things. It was no longer to be a lamb sacrificed, but bread broken and
+wine drunk in commemoration of a sacrifice ONCE offered, the efficacy of
+which was to be eternal. Those whose minds are bowed down to Jewish
+ordinances, may still look, in some way or another, for the periodical
+repetition, either of a sacrifice, or of something which is to bring
+them into a place of greater nearness to God.[XVI.]
+
+Some there are who think that in the Lord's Supper the soul makes, or
+renews, a covenant with God, not knowing that if we were to enter into
+covenant with God, we should inevitably be ruined; as the only possible
+issue of a covenant between God and man is the failure of one of the
+parties (i. e., man), and consequent judgment. Thank God, there is no
+such thing as a covenant with us. The bread and wine, in the Supper,
+speak a deep and wondrous truth; they tell of the broken body and shed
+blood of the Lamb of God--the Lamb of God's own providing. Here the soul
+can rest with perfect complacency; it is THE NEW TESTAMENT IN THE BLOOD
+OF CHRIST, and not a covenant between God and man. Man's covenant had
+signally failed, and the Lord Jesus had to allow the cup of the fruit of
+the vine (the emblem of joy in the earth) to pass Him by. Earth had no
+joy for Him--Israel had become "the degenerate plant of a strange
+vine;" wherefore, He had only to say, "I will not drink of the fruit of
+the vine, until the Kingdom of God shall come." A long and dreary season
+was to pass over Israel, ere her King could take any joy in her moral
+condition: but, during that time, "the Church of God" was to "keep the
+feast" of unleavened bread, in all its moral power and significance, by
+putting away the "old leaven of malice and wickedness," as the fruit of
+fellowship with Him whose blood cleanseth from all sin.
+
+However, the fact of the Lord's Supper having been instituted
+immediately after the Passover, teaches us a very valuable principle of
+truth, viz., this: the destinies of the Church and of Israel are
+inseparably linked with the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ. True, the
+Church has a higher place, even identification with her risen and
+glorified Head; yet all rests upon the Cross. Yes; it was on the cross
+that the pure sheaf of corn was bruised and the juices of the living
+vine pressed forth by the hand of Jehovah Himself, to yield strength and
+gladness to the hearts of His heavenly and earthly people forever. The
+Prince of Life took from Jehovah's righteous hand the cup of wrath, the
+cup of trembling, and drained it to the dregs in order that He might put
+into the hands of His people the cup of salvation, the cup of God's
+ineffable love, that they might drink and forget their poverty, and
+remember their misery no more. The Lord's Supper expresses all this.
+There the Lord presides; there the redeemed should meet in holy
+fellowship and brotherly love, to eat and drink before the Lord; and
+while they do so, they can look back at their Master's _night_ of deep
+sorrow, and forward to His day of glory--that "morning without clouds,"
+when "He shall come to be glorified in His saints, and to be admired in
+all them that believe."
+
+
+III. We shall now consider, in the third place, the persons for whom,
+and for whom _alone_, the Lord's Supper was instituted.
+
+The Lord's Supper, then, was instituted for the Church of God--the
+family of the redeemed. All the members of that family should be there;
+for none can be absent without incurring the guilt of disobedience to
+the plain command of Christ and His inspired apostle; and the
+consequence of this disobedience will be positive spiritual decline and
+a complete failure in testimony for Christ. Such consequences, however,
+are the result only of wilful absence from the Lord's table. There are
+circumstances which, in certain cases, may present an insurmountable
+barrier, though there might be the most earnest desire to be present at
+the celebration of the ordinance, as there ever will be where the mind
+is spiritual; but we may lay it down as a fixed principle of truth that
+no one can make progress in the divine life who wilfully absents himself
+from the Lord's table. "ALL the congregation of Israel" were commanded
+to keep the passover (Ex. xii.).
+
+No member of the congregation could with impunity be absent. "The man
+that is clean, and is not in a journey, and forbeareth to keep the
+passover, even the same soul shall be cut off from among his people:
+because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appointed season,
+that man shall bear his sin" (Num. ix. 13).
+
+I feel that it would be rendering really valuable service to the cause
+of truth, and a furtherance of the interests of the Church of God, if an
+interest could be awakened on this important subject. There is too much
+lightness and indifference in the minds of Christians as to the matter
+of their attendance at the table of the Lord; and where there is not
+this indifference, there is an unwillingness arising from imperfect
+views of justification. Now both these hindrances, though so different
+in their character, spring from one and the same source, viz.,
+selfishness. He who is indifferent about the matter will selfishly allow
+trifling circumstances to interfere with his attendance: he will be
+hindered by family arrangements, love of personal ease, unfavorable
+weather, trifling or, as it frequently happens, imaginary bodily
+ailments--things which are lost sight of or counted as nothing when some
+worldly object is to be gained. How often does it happen that men who
+have not spiritual energy to leave their houses on the Lord's day have
+abundant natural energy to carry them some miles to gain some worldly
+object on Monday. Alas that it should be so! How sad to think that
+worldly gain could exert a more powerful influence on the heart of the
+Christian than the glory of Christ and the furtherance of the Church's
+benefit! for this is the way in which we must view the question of the
+Lord's Supper. What would be our feelings, amid the glory of the coming
+kingdom, if we could remember that, while on earth, a fair or a market,
+or some such worldly object, had commanded our time and energies, while
+the assembly of the Lord's people around His table was neglected?
+
+Beloved Christian reader, if you are in the habit of absenting yourself
+from the assembly of Christians, I pray you to ponder the matter before
+the Lord ere you absent yourself again. Reflect upon the pernicious
+effect of your absence in every way. You are failing in your testimony
+for Christ; you are injuring the souls of your brethren, and you are
+hindering the progress of your own soul in grace and knowledge. Do not
+suppose that your actings are without their influence on the whole
+Church of God: you are at this moment either helping or hindering every
+member of that body on earth. "If _one_ member suffer, all the members
+suffer with it." This principle has not ceased to be true, though
+professing Christians have split into so many different divisions. Nay,
+it is so divinely true, that there is not a single believer on earth who
+is not acting either as a helper to, or a drain upon, the whole body of
+Christ; and if there be any truth in the principle already laid down
+(viz., that the assembly of Christians and the breaking of bread in any
+given locality is, or ought to be, the expression of the unity of the
+whole body), you cannot fail to see that if you absent yourself from
+that assembly, or refuse to join in giving expression to that unity, you
+are doing serious damage to all your brethren as well as to your own
+soul. I would lay these considerations on your heart and conscience, in
+the name of the Lord, looking to Him to make them influential.[XVII.]
+
+But not only does this culpable and pernicious indifference of spirit
+act as a hindrance to many, in presenting themselves at the Lord's
+table; imperfect views of justification produce the same unhappy result.
+If the conscience be not perfectly purged, if there be not perfect rest
+in God's testimony about the finished work of Christ, there will either
+be a shrinking from the Supper of the Lord, or an unintelligent
+celebration of it. Those only can show the Lord's death who know,
+through the teaching of the Holy Spirit, the value of the Lord's death.
+If I regard the ordinance as a means whereby I am to be brought into a
+place of greater nearness to God, or whereby I am to obtain a clearer
+sense of my acceptance, it is impossible that I can rightly observe it.
+I must believe, as the gospel commands me to believe, that ALL my sins
+are FOREVER put away ere I can take my place with any measure of
+spiritual intelligence at the Lord's table. If the matter be not viewed
+in this light, the Lord's Supper can only be regarded as a kind of step
+to the altar of God, and we are told in the law that we are not to go up
+by steps to God's altar, lest our nakedness be discovered (Ex. xx. 26).
+The meaning of which is, that all human efforts to approach God must
+issue in the discovery of human nakedness.
+
+Thus we see that if it be indifference that prevents the Christian from
+being at the breaking of bread, it is most culpable in the sight of God,
+and most injurious to his brethren and himself; and if it be an
+imperfect sense of justification that prevents, it is not only
+unwarrantable, but most dishonoring to the love of the Father, the work
+of the Son, and the clear and unequivocal testimony of the Holy Ghost.
+
+But it is not unfrequently said, and that, too, by those who profess
+spirituality and intelligence, "I derive no spiritual benefit by going
+to the assembly: I am as happy in my own room, reading my Bible." I
+would affectionately ask such, Are we to have no higher object before us
+in our actings than our own happiness? Is not obedience to the command
+of our blessed Master--a command delivered on "the same night in which
+He was betrayed"--a far higher and nobler object to set before us than
+anything connected with self? If He desires that His people should
+assemble in His name, for the express object of showing forth His death
+till He come, shall we refuse because we feel happier in our own rooms?
+He tells us to be there: we reply, "We feel happier at home." Our
+happiness, therefore, must be based on disobedience; and, as such, it is
+an unholy happiness. It is much better, if it should be so, to be
+unhappy in the path of obedience than happy in the path of disobedience.
+But I verily believe, the thought of being happier at home is a mere
+delusion, and the end of those deluded by it will prove it such. Thomas
+might have deemed it indifferent whether he was present with the other
+disciples, but he had to do without the Lord's presence, and to wait for
+eight days, until the disciples came together on the first day of the
+week; for there and then the Lord was pleased to reveal Himself to his
+soul. And just so will it be with those who say, "We feel happier at
+home than in the assembly of believers." They will surely be behindhand
+in knowledge and experience; yea, it will be well if they come not under
+the terrible woe denounced by the prophet: "Woe to the idol shepherd
+that _leaveth the flock_! the sword shall be upon his arm, and upon his
+right eye; his arm shall be clean dried up, and his right eye shall be
+utterly darkened" (Zech. xi. 17). And again, "Not forsaking the
+assembling of ourselves together, _as the manner of some is_; but
+exhorting one another, and so much the more as ye see the day
+approaching. For if we sin wilfully, after that we have received the
+knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but
+a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which
+shall devour the adversaries" (Heb. x. 25-27).
+
+As to the objection upon the grounds of the barrenness and
+unprofitableness of Christian assemblies, it will generally be remarked
+that the greatest spiritual barrenness will always be found in
+connection with a captious and complaining spirit; and I doubt not that
+if those who complain of the unprofitableness of meetings, and draw from
+thence an argument in favor of their remaining at home, were to spend
+more time in secret waiting on the Lord for His blessing on the
+meetings, they would have a very different experience.
+
+And now, having shown from Scripture who ought to be at the breaking of
+bread, we shall proceed to consider who ought _not_. On this point
+Scripture is equally explicit: in a word, then, none should be there who
+are not members of the true Church of God. The same law which commanded
+_all_ the congregation of Israel to eat the passover, commanded all
+uncircumcised strangers _not_ to eat; and now that Christ our Passover
+has been sacrificed for us, none can keep the feast, (which is to extend
+throughout this entire dispensation,) nor break the bread nor drink the
+wine in true remembrance of Him, save those who know the cleansing and
+healing virtues of His precious blood. To eat and drink without this
+knowledge, is to eat and drink unworthily--to eat and drink judgment;
+like the woman in Num. v. who drank the water of jealousy, to make the
+condemnation more manifest and awfully solemn.
+
+Now it is in this that Christendom's guilt is specially manifest. In
+taking the Lord's Supper, the professing Church has, like Judas, put her
+hand on the table with Christ and betrayed Him; she has eaten with Him,
+and at the same time lifted up her heel against Him. What will be her
+end? Just like the end of Judas. "He, then, having received the sop,
+_went immediately out_: and"--the Holy Ghost adds, in awful
+solemnity--"IT WAS NIGHT." Terrible night! The strongest expression of
+divine love only elicited the strongest expression of human hatred. So
+will it be with the false professing Church collectively, and each false
+professor individually; and all those who, though baptized in the name
+of Christ, and sitting down at the table of Christ, have nevertheless
+been His betrayers, will find themselves at last thrust out into outer
+darkness--involved in a night which shall never see the beams of the
+morning--plunged in a gulf of endless and ineffable woe; and though they
+may be able to say to the Lord, "We have eaten and drunk in Thy
+presence, and Thou hast taught in our streets," yet His solemn,
+heartrending reply will be, while He shuts the door against them,
+"Depart from Me! I never knew you." O reader, think of this, I pray you;
+and if you be yet in your sins, defile not the Lord's table by your
+presence; but instead of going thither as a hypocrite, repair to Calvary
+as a poor ruined and guilty sinner, and there receive pardon and
+cleansing from Him who died to save just such as you are.
+
+
+IV. Having now considered, through the Lord's mercy, the nature of the
+Lord's Supper; the circumstances under which it was instituted; and the
+persons for whom it was designed; I would only add a word as to what
+Scripture teaches us about the time and manner of its celebration.
+
+Although the Lord's Supper was not _first_ instituted on the first day
+of the week, yet the twenty-fourth of Luke and the twentieth of Acts are
+quite sufficient to prove, to a mind subject to the Word, that that is
+the day on which the ordinance should specially be observed. The Lord
+broke bread with His disciples on "the first day of the week" (Luke
+xxiv. 30); and "on the first day of the week the disciples came together
+to break bread" (Acts xx. 7). These scriptures are quite sufficient to
+prove that it is not once a month, nor once in three months, nor once in
+six months, that disciples should come together to break bread, but once
+a week at least, and that upon the first day of the week. Nor can we
+have any difficulty in seeing that there is a moral fitness in the first
+day of the week for the celebration of the Lord's Supper: it is the
+resurrection day--the Church's day, in contrast with the seventh, which
+was Israel's day; and as, in the institution of the ordinance, the Lord
+led His disciples away from Jewish things altogether, (by refusing to
+drink of the fruit of the vine--the passover cup,--and then instituting
+another ordinance) so, in the day on which that ordinance was to be
+celebrated, we observe the same contrast between heavenly and earthly
+things. It is in the power of resurrection that we can rightly show the
+Lord's death. When the conflict was over, Melchizedek brought forth
+bread and wine, and blessed Abram, in the name of the Lord. Thus, too,
+our Melchizedek, when all the conflict was over and the victory gained,
+came forth in resurrection with bread and wine, to strengthen and cheer
+the hearts of His people, and to breathe upon them that peace which He
+had so dearly purchased.
+
+If, then, the first day of the week be the day on which Scripture
+teaches the disciples to break bread, it is clear that man has no
+authority to alter the period to once a month, or once in six months.
+And I doubt not, when the affections are lively and fervent toward the
+person of the Lord Himself, the Christian will desire to show the Lord's
+death as frequently as possible: indeed, it would seem, from the opening
+of Acts, that the disciples broke bread daily. This we may infer from
+the expression "breaking bread from house to house" (or "at home").
+However, we are not left to depend upon mere inference as to the
+question of the first day of the week being the day on which the
+disciples came together to break bread: we are distinctly taught this,
+and we see its moral fitness and beauty.
+
+Thus much as to the _time_. And now one word about the _manner_. It
+should be the special aim of Christians to show that the breaking of
+bread is their grand and primary object in coming together on the first
+day of the week. They should show that it is not for preaching or
+teaching that they assemble, though teaching may be a happy adjunct, but
+that the breaking of bread is the leading object before their minds. It
+is the work of Christ which we show forth in the Supper, wherefore it
+should have the first place; and when it has been duly set forth, there
+should be a full and unqualified opening left for the work of the Holy
+Ghost in ministry. The office of the Spirit is to set forth and exalt
+the name, the person and the work of Christ; and if He be allowed to
+order and govern the assembly of Christians, as He undoubtedly should,
+He will ever give the work of Christ the primary place.
+
+I cannot close this paper without expressing my deep sense of the
+feebleness and shallowness of all that I have advanced, on a subject of
+really commanding interest. I do feel before the Lord, in whose presence
+I desire to write and speak, that I have so failed to bring out the full
+truth about this matter, that I almost shrink from letting these pages
+see the light. It is not that I have a shadow of doubt as to the truth
+of what I have endeavored to state; no: but I feel that, in writing upon
+such a subject as the breaking of bread, at the time when there is such
+sad confusion among professing Christians, there is a demand for
+pointed, clear, and lucid statements, to which I am little able to
+respond.
+
+We have but little conception of how entirely the question of the
+breaking of bread is connected with the Church's position and testimony
+on earth; and we have as little conception of how thoroughly the
+question has been misunderstood by the professing Church. The breaking
+of bread ought to be the distinct enunciation of the fact that all
+believers are _one body_; but the professing Church, by splitting into
+sects, and by setting up a table for each sect, has practically denied
+that fact.
+
+In truth, the breaking of bread has been cast into the background. The
+table, at which the Lord should preside, is almost lost sight of, by
+being placed in the shade of the pulpit, in which man presides: the
+pulpit, which, alas! is too often the instrument of creating and
+perpetuating disunion, is, to many minds, the commanding object; while
+the table, which if properly understood would perpetuate love and unity,
+is made quite a secondary thing. And even in the most laudable effort to
+recover from such a lamentable condition of things, what complete
+failure have we seen. What has the Evangelical Alliance effected? It has
+effected this, at least, it has developed a need existing among
+professing Christians, which they are confessedly unable to meet. They
+want union, and are unable to attain it. Why? Because they will not give
+up everything which has been _added_ to the truth to meet together
+according to the truth, to break bread as disciples. I say, _as
+disciples_, and not as Church-men, Independents, Baptists, etc. It is
+not that all such may not have much valuable truth, I mean those of them
+who love our Lord Jesus Christ: they certainly may; but they have no
+_truth_ that should prevent them from meeting _together_ to break bread.
+How could truth ever hinder Christians from giving expression to the
+unity of the Church? Impossible! A sectarian spirit in those who hold
+truth may do this, but truth never can. But how is it now in the
+professing Church? Christians, of various communities, can meet for the
+purpose of reading, praying, and singing together during the week, but
+when the first day of the week arrives, they have not the least idea of
+giving the only real and effectual expression of their unity, which the
+Holy Ghost can recognize, which is the breaking of bread. "We being many
+are one bread and one body; for we are _all_ partakers of that _one_
+bread."
+
+The sin at Corinth was their not tarrying one for another. This appears
+from the exhortation with which the apostle sums up the whole question
+(I Cor. xi.), "Wherefore, my brethren, when ye come together to eat,
+tarry one for another." Why were they to tarry one for another? Surely,
+in order that they might the more clearly express their unity. But what
+would the apostle have said, if, instead of coming together, into one
+place, they had gone to different places, according to their different
+views of truth? He might then say with, if possible, greater force, "Ye
+cannot eat the Lord's Supper." (See _margin_.)
+
+It may, however, be asked, "How could all the believers in London meet
+in one place?" I reply, if they could not meet in one place, they could,
+at least, meet on one principle. But how did the believers at Jerusalem
+meet together? The answer is, they were "_of one accord_." This being
+so, they had little difficulty about the question of a meeting-room.
+"Solomon's porch," or anywhere else, would suit their purpose. They gave
+expression to their unity, and that, too, in a way not to be mistaken.
+Neither various localities, nor various measures of knowledge and
+attainment, could, in the least, interfere with their unity. There was
+"one body and one Spirit."
+
+Finally, I would say, the Lord will assuredly honor those who have faith
+to believe and confess the unity of the Church on earth; and the greater
+the difficulty in the way of doing so, the greater will be the honor.
+The Lord grant to all His people a single eye, and a humble and honest
+spirit.
+
+ Thy broken body, gracious Lord,
+ Is shadowed by this broken bread;
+ The wine which in this cup is poured
+ Points to the blood which Thou hast shed.
+
+ And while we meet together thus,
+ We show that we are one in Thee;
+ Thy precious blood was shed for us--
+ Thy death, O Lord, has set us free.
+
+ Brethren in Thee, in union sweet--
+ Forever be Thy grace adored--
+ 'Tis in Thy name, that now we meet,
+ And know Thou'rt with us, gracious Lord.
+
+ We have one hope--that Thou wilt come;
+ Thee in the air we wait to see,
+ When Thou wilt take Thy people home,
+ And we shall ever reign with Thee.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XI.] It is needful to bear in mind that, while the blood of Christ is
+that alone which introduces the believer, in holy boldness, into the
+presence of God, yet it is nowhere set forth as our centre, or bond of
+union. Truly precious is it for every blood-washed soul to remember, in
+the secret of the divine presence, that the atoning blood of Jesus has
+rolled away for ever his heavy burden of sin. Yet the Holy Ghost can
+only gather us to the person of a risen and glorified Christ, who,
+having shed the blood of the everlasting covenant, is gone up into
+heaven in the power of an endless life, to which divine righteousness
+inseparably attaches. A living Christ, therefore, is our centre and bond
+of union. The blood having answered for us to God, we gather round our
+risen and exalted Head in the heavens. "I, if I be lifted up from the
+earth, will draw all men unto _Me_." We behold in the cup in the Lord's
+Supper the symbol of shed blood; but we are neither gathered round the
+cup nor the blood, but round Him who shed it. The blood of the Lamb has
+put away every obstacle to our fellowship with God; and in proof of this
+the Holy Ghost has come down to baptize believers into one body, and
+gather them round the risen and glorified Head. The wine is _the
+memorial_ of a life shed out for sin: the bread is _the memorial_ of a
+body broken for sin: but we are not gathered round a life poured out,
+nor round a body broken, but round a living Christ, who dieth no more,
+who cannot have His body broken any more, or His blood shed any more.
+This makes a serious difference; and when looked at in connection with
+the discipline of the house of God, the difference is immensely
+important. Very many are apt to imagine that when any one is put away
+from or refused communion, the question is raised as to there being a
+link between his soul and Christ. A moment's consideration of this point
+in the light of Scripture will be sufficient to prove that no such
+question is raised. If we look at the case of the "wicked person" in I
+Cor. v., we see one put away from the communion of the Church on earth
+who was nevertheless a Christian, as people say. He was not, therefore,
+put away because he was not a Christian: such a question was never
+raised; nor should it be in any case. How can we tell whether a man is
+eternally linked with Christ or not? Have we the custody of the Lamb's
+book of life? Is the discipline of the Church of God founded upon what
+we can know, or upon what we _cannot_? Was the man in I Cor. v. linked
+eternally with Christ, or not? Was the Church told to inquire? Even
+suppose we could see a man's name written in the book of life, that
+would not be the ground of receiving him into the assembly on earth, or
+retaining him there. That which the Church is held responsible for, is
+to keep herself pure in doctrine, pure in practice, and pure in
+association, and all this on the ground of being God's house. "Thy
+testimonies are very sure; holiness becometh Thy house, O Lord, for
+ever." When any one was separated, or "cut off," from the congregation
+of Israel, was it because of not being an Israelite? By no means; but
+because of some moral or ceremonial defilement which could not be
+tolerated in God's Assembly. In Achan's case (Josh. vii.), although
+there were six hundred thousand souls ignorant of his sin, yet God says,
+"_Israel hath sinned_." Why? Because they were looked at as God's
+Assembly, and there was defilement there which, if not judged, all would
+have been broken up.
+
+[XII.] Those who are competent to do so can look at the original of this
+important chapter, where they will see that the word translated
+"approved" (ver. 19) comes from the same root as that translated
+"examine himself" (ver. 28). Thus we see that the man who approves
+himself takes his place amongst the approved, and is the very opposite
+of those who were amongst the heretics. Now the meaning of a heretic is
+not merely one who holds false doctrine, though one may be a heretic in
+so doing, but one who persists in the exercise of _his own will_. The
+apostle knew that there must be heresies at Corinth, seeing that there
+were sects: those who were doing their own will were acting in
+opposition to God's will, and thus producing division; for God's will
+had reference to the whole body. Those who were acting heretically were
+despising the Church of God.
+
+[XIII.] It may be well to add a word here for the guidance of any
+simple-hearted Christian who may find himself placed in circumstances in
+which he is called upon to decide between the claims of different tables
+which might seem to be spread upon the same principle. To confirm and
+encourage such an one in a truthful course of action, I should regard as
+a most valuable service.
+
+Suppose, then, I find myself in a place where two or more tables have
+been spread; what am I to do? I believe I am to inquire into the
+_origin_ of these various tables, to see how it became needful to have
+more than one table. If, for example, a number of Christians meeting
+together have admitted and retained amongst them any unsound principles,
+affecting the person of the Son of God, or subversive of the unity of
+the Church of God on earth; if, I say, such principles be admitted and
+retained in the assembly, or if persons who hold and teach them be
+received and acknowledged by the assembly; under such painful and
+humiliating circumstances the faithful can no longer be there. Why?
+Because I cannot take my place at it without identifying myself with
+manifestly unchristian principles. The same remark, of course, applies
+if the case be that of corrupt conduct unjudged by the assembly.
+
+Now, if a number of Christians should find themselves placed in the
+circumstances above described, they would be called upon to maintain THE
+PURITY OF THE TRUTH OF GOD while acknowledging as ever the oneness of
+the body. We have not only to maintain the grace of the Lord's table,
+but the _holiness_ of it also. Truth is not to be sacrificed in order to
+maintain unity, nor will _true_ unity ever be interfered with by the
+strict maintenance of truth.
+
+It is not to be imagined that the unity of the body of Christ is
+interfered with when a community based upon unsound principles, or
+countenancing unsound doctrine or practice, is separated from. The
+Church of Rome charged the Reformers with schism because they separated
+from her; but we know that the Church of Rome lay, and still lies, under
+the charge of schism because she imposes false doctrine upon her
+members. Let it only be ascertained that the truth of God is called in
+question by any community, and that, to be a member of that community, I
+must identify myself with unsound doctrine or corrupt practice, and then
+it cannot be schism to separate from such a community; nay, I am bound
+to separate.
+
+[XIV.] It is usual to apply the term "unworthily," in this passage, to
+_persons_ doing the act, whereas it really refers to the _manner_ of
+doing it. The apostle never thought of calling in question the
+Christianity of the Corinthians; nay, in the opening address of his
+epistle, he looks at them as "the Church of God which is at Corinth,
+sanctified in Christ Jesus, called saints" (or saints by calling). How
+could he use this language in the first chapter, and in the eleventh
+call in question the worthiness of these saints to take their seat at
+the Lord's Supper? Impossible. He looked upon them as saints, and as
+such he exhorted them to celebrate the Lord's Supper in a worthy manner.
+The question of any but true Christians being there, is never raised; so
+that it is utterly impossible that the word "unworthily" could apply to
+_persons_. Its application is entirely to the _manner_. The persons were
+worthy, but their manner was not; and they were called, as saints, to
+judge themselves as to their _ways_, else the Lord might judge them in
+their _persons_ as was already the case. In a word, it was as true
+Christians they were called to judge themselves. If they were in doubt
+as to that, they were utterly unable to judge anything. I never think of
+setting my child to judge as to whether he is my child or not; but I
+expect him to judge himself as to his habits, else, if he do not, I may
+have to do, by chastening, what he ought to do by self-judgment. It is
+because I look upon him as my child, that I will not allow him to sit at
+my table with soiled garments and disorderly manners.
+
+[XV.] The reader will bear in mind that the text does not touch the
+question of Scriptural discipline. There may be many members of the
+flock of Christ who could not be received into the Assembly on earth,
+inasmuch as they may possibly be leavened by false doctrine, or wrong
+practice. But, though we might not be able to receive them, we do not,
+by any means, raise the question as to their being in the Lamb's book of
+life. This is not the province nor the prerogative of the Church of God.
+"_The Lord_ knoweth them that are His; and let every one that nameth the
+name of Christ depart from iniquity" (2 Tim. ii. 19).
+
+[XVI.] The church of Rome has so entirely departed from the truth set
+forth in the Lord's Supper, that she professes to offer, in the mass,
+"an unbloody sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead." Now, we
+are taught, in Heb. ix. 22, that "without shedding of blood is no
+remission;" consequently, the church of Rome has no remission of sins
+for her members. She robs them of this precious reality, and instead
+thereof, gives them an anomalous and utterly unscriptural thing, called
+"an unbloody sacrifice, or mass." This, which, according to her own
+practice and the testimony of Heb. ix. 22, can never take away sin, she
+offers day by day, week by week, and year by year. A sacrifice without
+blood must, if Scripture be true, be a sacrifice without remission.
+Hence, therefore, the sacrifice of the mass is a positive blind raised
+by the devil, through the agency of Rome, to hide from the sinner's view
+the glorious sacrifice of Christ, "_once offered_," and never to be
+repeated. "Christ, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death hath
+no more dominion over Him" (Rom. vi. 9). Every fresh sacrifice of the
+mass only declares the inefficiency of all the previous sacrifices, so
+that Rome is only mocking the sinner with an empty shadow. But she is
+consistent in her wickedness, for she withholds the cup from the laity,
+and teaches her members that they have body and blood and all in the
+wafer. But, if the blood be still in the body, it is manifestly not
+shed, and then we get back to the same gloomy point, namely, "no
+remission." "Without shedding of blood is no remission."
+
+How totally different is the precious and most refreshing institution of
+the Lord's Supper, as set before us in the New Testament. There we find
+the bread broken, and the wine poured out--the significant symbols of a
+body broken, and of blood shed. The wine is not in the bread, because
+the blood is not in the body, for, if it were, there would be "no
+remission." In a word, the Lord's Supper is the distinct memorial of an
+eternally accomplished sacrifice; and none can communicate thereat, with
+intelligence or blessing, save those who know the full remission of
+sins. It is not that we would, by any means, make knowledge a term of
+communion, for very many of the children of God, through bad teaching,
+and various other causes, do not know the perfect remission of sins, and
+were they to be excluded on that ground, it would be making _knowledge_
+a term of communion, instead of _life_ and _obedience_. Still, if I do
+not know, experimentally, that redemption is an accomplished fact, I
+shall see but little meaning in the symbols of bread and wine; and,
+moreover, I shall be in great danger of attaching a species of efficacy
+to the memorials, which belongs only to the great reality to which they
+point.
+
+[XVII.] I can only feel myself responsible to present myself in the
+assembly when it is gathered on proper Church ground, i. e., the ground
+laid down in the New Testament. People may assemble, and call themselves
+the Church of God, in any given locality, but if they do not exhibit the
+characteristic features and principles of the Church of God as set forth
+in Holy Scripture, I cannot own them. If they refuse, or lack spiritual
+power, to judge worldliness, carnality, or false doctrine, they are
+evidently not on proper Church ground: they are merely a religious
+fraternity, which, in its collective character, I am in no wise
+responsible before God to own. Hence the child of God needs much
+spiritual power, and subjection to the Word, to be able to carry himself
+through all the windings of the professing Church in this peculiarly
+evil and difficult day.
+
+
+
+
+THE ASSEMBLY OF GOD
+
+OR, THE
+
+ALL-SUFFICIENCY OF THE NAME OF JESUS
+
+
+In a day like the present, when almost every new idea becomes the centre
+or gathering-point of some new association, we cannot but feel the value
+of having divinely formed convictions as to what the assembly of God
+really is. We live in a time of unusual mental activity, and hence there
+is the more urgent need of calm and prayerful study of the word of God.
+That Word, blessed be its Author, is like a rock amid the ocean of human
+thought. There it stands unmoved, notwithstanding the raging of the
+storm and the ceaseless lashing of the waves. And not only does it thus
+stand unmoved itself, but it imparts its own stability to all who simply
+take their stand upon it. What a mercy to make one's escape from the
+heavings and tossings of the stormy ocean, and find a calm resting place
+on that everlasting Rock.
+
+This, truly, is a mercy. Were it not that we have "the law and the
+testimony," where should we be? Whither should we go? What should we do?
+What darkness! What confusion! What perplexity!
+
+A thousand jarring voices fall, at times, upon the ear, and each voice
+seems to speak with such authority, that if one is not well taught and
+grounded in the Word, there is great danger of being drawn away, or, at
+least, sadly unhinged. One man will tell you that _this_ is right;
+another will tell you _that_ is right; a third will tell you that
+_everything_ is right; and a fourth will tell you that _nothing_ is
+right. With reference to the question of church position, you will meet
+with some who go _here_; some who go _there_; some who go _everywhere_;
+and some who go _nowhere_.
+
+Now, under such circumstances, what is one to do? All cannot possibly be
+right. And yet, surely, there is something right. It cannot be that we
+are _compelled_ to live in error, in darkness, or uncertainty. "_There
+is a path_," blessed be God, though "no fowl knoweth it, and the
+vulture's eye hath not seen it. The lion's whelps have not trodden it,
+nor the fierce lion passed by it." Where is this safe and blessed path?
+Hear the divine reply: "Behold, _the fear of the Lord_, that is wisdom:
+and _to depart from evil_ is understanding" (Job xxviii.).
+
+Let us, therefore, in the fear of the Lord, in the light of His
+infallible truth, and in humble dependence upon the teaching of the Holy
+Spirit, proceed to the examination of the subject which stands at the
+head of this paper; and may we have grace to abandon all confidence in
+our own thoughts, and the thoughts of others, so that we may heartily
+and honestly yield ourselves up to be taught only of God.
+
+Now, in order to get fairly into the grand and all-important subject of
+the assembly of God, we have first to state _a fact_; and, secondly, to
+ask _a question_. The fact is this, _There is an assembly of God on the
+earth_. The question is, _What is that assembly_?
+
+I. And, first then, as to our _fact_. There is such a thing as the
+assembly of God on the earth. This is a most important fact, surely. God
+has an assembly on the earth. I do not refer to any merely human
+organization, such as the Greek Church; the Church of Rome; the Church
+of England; the Church of Scotland; or to any of the various systems
+which have sprung from these, framed and fashioned by man's hand, and
+carried on by man's resources. I refer simply to that assembly which is
+gathered by God the Holy Ghost, round the person of God the Son, to
+worship and hold fellowship with God the Father.
+
+If we set forth upon our search for the assembly of God, or for any
+expression thereof, with our minds full of prejudice, preconceived
+thoughts, and personal predilections; or if, in our searchings, we seek
+the aid of the flickering light of the dogmas, opinions, and traditions
+of men, nothing is more certain than that we shall fail to reach the
+truth. To recognize God's assembly, we must be exclusively taught by
+God's Word, and led by God's Spirit; for, of God's assembly, as well as
+of the sons of God, it may be said, "the world knoweth it not."
+
+Hence, then, if we are, in any wise, governed by the spirit of the
+world; if we desire to exalt man; if we seek to commend ourselves to the
+thoughts of men; if our object be to gain the attractive ends of a
+plausible and soul-ensnaring expediency, we may as well, forthwith,
+abandon our search for any true expression of the assembly of God, and
+take refuge in that form of human organization which most fully commends
+itself to our thinkings or our conscientious convictions.
+
+Further, if our object be to find a religious community in which the
+word of God is read, or in which the people of God are found, we may
+speedily satisfy ourselves, for it would be hard indeed to find a
+section of the professing Christian body in which one or both of these
+objects might not be realized.
+
+Finally, if we merely aim at doing all the good we can, without any
+question as to how we do it; if _Per fas aut nefas_, "right or wrong,"
+be our motto in whatever we undertake; if we are prepared to reverse
+those weighty words of Samuel, and say that, "To sacrifice is better
+than to obey, and the fat of rams better than to harken," then is it
+worse than vain for us to pursue our search for the assembly of God,
+inasmuch as that assembly can only be discovered and approved by one who
+has been taught to flee from the thousand flowery pathways of human
+expediency, and to submit his conscience, his heart, his understanding,
+his whole moral being to the supreme authority of "Thus saith the
+Lord."
+
+In one word, then, the obedient disciple knows that there is such a
+thing as God's assembly: and he it is, too, that will be enabled,
+through grace, to understand what is a true expression of it. The
+sincere student of Scripture knows, full well, the difference between
+that which is founded, formed, and governed by the wisdom and the will
+of man, and that which is gathered round, and governed by Christ the
+Lord. How vast is the difference! It is just the difference between God
+and man.
+
+But we may here be asked for the Scripture proofs of our fact that there
+is such a thing on the earth as _the_ assembly of God, and we shall, at
+once, proceed to furnish these; for we may be permitted to say that,
+without the authority of the Word, all statements are utterly valueless.
+What, therefore, saith the Scripture?
+
+Our first proof shall be that famous passage, in Matthew xvi., "When
+Jesus came into the coast of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His disciples,
+saying Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am? And they said, Some
+say that Thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and others, Jeremias,
+or one of the prophets. He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am?
+And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
+living God. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou,
+Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but
+My Father which is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, that thou art
+Peter; and upon this rock I will build My assembly[XVIII.] ([Greek:
+ekklesian]); and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it" (vers.
+13-18).
+
+Here our blessed Lord intimates His purpose to build an assembly, and
+sets forth the true foundation of that assembly, namely, "Christ, the
+Son of the living God." This is an all-important point in our subject.
+The building is founded on the Rock, and that Rock is not the poor
+failing, stumbling, erring Peter, but CHRIST, the eternal Son of the
+living God; and every stone in that building partakes of the Rock-life
+which, as being victorious over all the power of the enemy, is
+indestructible.[XIX.]
+
+Again, passing over a section of Matthew's Gospel, we come to an equally
+familiar passage: "Moreover, if thy brother shall trespass against thee,
+go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear
+thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he will not hear thee, then
+take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three
+witnesses every word may be established. And if he shall neglect to
+hear them, tell it unto the assembly, but if he neglect to hear the
+assembly, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a publican. Verily I
+say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in
+heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth, shall be loosed in
+heaven. Again, I say unto you, that if two of you shall agree on earth
+as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of
+My Father which is in heaven. For where two or three are _gathered_
+together _in My name_, there am I in the midst of them" (chap. xviii.
+15-20).
+
+We shall have occasion to refer to this passage again, under the second
+division of our subject. It is here introduced merely as a link in the
+chain of Scripture evidence of the fact that there is such a thing as
+the assembly of God on the earth. This assembly is not a name, a form, a
+pretence, an assumption. It is a divine reality--an institution of God,
+possessing His seal and sanction. It is a something to be appealed to in
+all cases of personal trespass and dispute which cannot be settled by
+the parties involved. This assembly may consist of only "two or three"
+in any particular place--the smallest plurality, if you please; but
+there it is, owned of God, and its decisions ratified in heaven.
+
+Now, we are not to be scared away from the truth on this subject, by the
+fact that the church of Rome has attempted to base her monstrous
+pretensions on the two passages which we have just quoted. That church
+is not God's assembly, built on the Rock Christ, and gathered in the
+name of Jesus; but a human apostasy, founded on a failing mortal, and
+governed by the traditions and doctrines of men. We must not, therefore,
+suffer ourselves to be deprived of God's reality by reason of Satan's
+counterfeit. God has His assembly on the earth, and we are responsible
+to confess the truth of it, and to be a practical expression of it. This
+may be difficult, in a day of confusion like the present. It will demand
+a single eye--a subject will--a mortified mind. But let the reader be
+assured of this, that it is his privilege to possess as divine certainty
+as to what is a true expression of the assembly of God, as surely as the
+truth concerning his own salvation through the blood of the Lamb; nor
+should he be satisfied without this. I should not be content to go on
+for an hour without the assurance that I am, in spirit and principle,
+associated with those whose ground of gathering is purely their common
+membership in the assembly of God--that assembly which includes all
+saints. I say, in spirit and principle, because I may happen to be in a
+place where there is no such local expression of the assembly; in which
+case I must be satisfied to hold fellowship, in spirit, with all those
+who are thus gathered.
+
+This simplifies the matter amazingly. If I cannot have a true expression
+of God's assembly, I shall have nothing. It will not do to point me to a
+religious community, with some Christians therein, the gospel preached,
+and the ordinances administered.
+
+I must be convinced that in very truth, they are gathered on that ground
+which, in my heart and conscience, frees them from the charge of
+sectarianism. I can own the children of God individually anywhere; but
+sectarianism I cannot own or sanction.
+
+No doubt this will give offence. It will be called bigotry,
+narrow-mindedness, intolerance, and the like. But this need not
+discourage us. All we have to do is to ascertain the truth as to God's
+assembly, and cleave to it, heartily and energetically, at all cost. If
+God has an assembly--and Scripture says He has--then let me be with
+those who maintain its principles, and nowhere else. It must be in this
+as in all other matters, truth or nothing. If there be a local
+expression of that assembly, well; be there in person. If not, be
+content to hold spiritual communion with all who humbly and faithfully
+own and occupy that holy ground. It may sound and seem like liberality
+to be ready to sanction and go with everything and everybody. It may
+appear very easy and very pleasant to be in a place "where everybody's
+will is indulged, and nobody's conscience is exercised"--where we may
+hold what we like, and say what we like, and do what we like, and go
+where we like. All this may seem very delightful--very plausible--very
+popular--very attractive; but oh! it will be barrenness and bitterness
+in the end; and, in the day of the Lord, it will assuredly be burnt up
+as so much wood, hay, and stubble, that cannot stand the action of His
+judgment.
+
+But let us proceed with our Scripture proofs. In the Acts of the
+Apostles, or rather, the Acts of the Holy Ghost, we find the assembly
+formally set up. A passage or two will suffice: "And they, continuing
+daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to
+house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart,
+praising God, and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added
+to the assembly, daily, such as should be saved" (Acts ii. 46, 47). Such
+was the original, simple apostolic order. When a person was converted,
+he thereby belonged to the assembly and took his place in it: there was
+no difficulty in the matter, there were no sects or parties, each
+claiming to be considered _a_ church, a cause, or an interest. There was
+just the one thing, and that was the assembly of God, where He dwelt,
+acted, and ruled. It was not a system formed according to the will, the
+judgment, or even the conscience of man. Man had not, as yet, entered
+upon the business of church-making. This was God's work. It was just as
+exclusively God's province and prerogative to baptize the saved into one
+body by one Spirit, as to save the scattered.[XX.]
+
+Why, we may justly inquire, should it be different now? Why should the
+regenerated seek to belong to something else than that to which they
+already belong--the assembly of God? Is not that sufficient? Assuredly.
+Should they seek aught else? Assuredly not. We repeat, with emphasis,
+"_Either that or nothing_."
+
+True it is, alas! that failure, and ruin, and apostasy have come in.
+Man's wisdom, and his will; or, if you please, his reason, his judgment,
+and his misguided conscience have wrought, in matters ecclesiastical,
+and the result appears before us in the almost numberless and nameless
+sects and parties of the present moment. Still, we are bold to say, that
+the ground of assembling as at the beginning, simply as being members of
+the assembly of God, remains the same, spite of all the failure, the
+error, and the confusion, which have come in. The difficulty in
+reaching it practically may be great, but its reality, when reached, is
+unaltered, and unalterable. In apostolic times the assembly stood out,
+in bold relief, from the dark background of Judaism on the one hand, and
+Paganism on the other. It was impossible to mistake it; there it stood,
+a grand reality! a company of living men, gathered, indwelt, ruled and
+regulated by God the Holy Ghost, so that the unlearned or unbelieving
+coming in, were convinced of all, and constrained to acknowledge that
+God was there. (See carefully, I Cor. xii., xiv. throughout.)
+
+Thus, in this Gospel, our blessed Lord intimates His purpose of building
+an assembly. This assembly is historically presented to us in the Acts
+of the Apostles. Then, when we turn to the Epistles of Paul, we find him
+addressing the assembly in seven distinct places, namely, Rome, Corinth,
+Galatia, Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, and Thessalonica; and finally, in
+the opening of the book of Revelation, we have addresses to seven
+distinct assemblies. Now, in all these places, the assembly of God was a
+plain, palpable, real thing, established and maintained by God Himself.
+It was not a human organization, but a divine institution--a
+testimony--a light bearer for God, in each place.
+
+Thus much as to our Scripture proofs of the fact that God has an
+assembly on the earth, gathered, indwelt, and governed by the Holy Ghost
+who is the true and only Vicar of Christ upon earth. The Gospel
+prophetically intimates the assembly; the Acts historically presents the
+assembly; and the Epistles formally address the assembly. All this is
+plain. And if it be broken into fragments now, it is for us to be
+gathered on the ground of the _one_ assembly of God, and to be a true
+expression of it.
+
+And let it be carefully noted that we will listen to nothing on this
+subject but the voice of Holy Scripture. Let not reason speak, for we
+own it not. Let not tradition lift her voice, for we wholly disregard
+her. Let not expediency thrust itself upon us, for we shall give it no
+place whatever. We believe in the all-sufficiency of Holy
+Scripture--that it is sufficient to furnish the man of God
+thoroughly--to equip him perfectly for all good works (2 Tim. iii. 16,
+17). The word of God is either sufficient or it is not. We believe it to
+be amply sufficient for every exigency of God's assembly. It could not
+be otherwise if God be its author. We must either deny the divinity or
+admit the sufficiency of the Bible. There is not a single hair's breadth
+of middle ground. It is impossible that God could have written an
+imperfect, an insufficient book.
+
+This is a very grave principle in connection with our subject. Many of
+our protestant writers have, in assailing popery, maintained the
+sufficiency and authority of the Bible; but it does seem very plain to
+us that they are always at fault when their opponents turn sharp round
+upon them and demand proof from Scripture for many things sanctioned and
+adopted by protestant communities.
+
+There are many things adopted and practised in the National
+Establishment and other protestant communities, which have no sanction
+in the Word; and when the shrewd and intelligent defenders of popery
+have called attention to these things, and demanded authority for them,
+the weakness of mere protestantism has been strikingly apparent. If we
+admit, for a moment, that, in some things, we must have recourse to
+tradition and expediency, then who will undertake to fix the boundary
+line? If it be allowable to depart from Scripture at all, how far are we
+to go? If the authority of tradition be admitted at all, who is to fix
+its domain? If we leave the narrow and well-defined pathway of divine
+revelation, and enter upon the wide and bewildering field of human
+tradition, has not one man as much right as another to make a choice?
+The gates of hell shall assuredly prevail against every human
+system--against all those corporations and associations which men have
+set on foot. And in no case has that triumph been, even already, made
+more awfully manifest than in that of the church of Rome itself,
+although it has arrogantly laid claim to this very declaration of our
+Lord as the bulwark of its strength. Nothing can withstand the power of
+the gates of hell but the assembly of the living God, for that is built
+upon "the living Stone." Now the local expression of that assembly may
+be but "two or three gathered in the name of Jesus," a poor, feeble,
+despised handful.
+
+It is well to be clear and decided as to this.
+
+Christ's promise can never fail. He has, blessed be His name, come down
+to the lowest possible point by which the assembly can be represented,
+even "_two_." How gracious! How tender! How considerate! How like
+Himself! He attaches all the dignity--all the value--all the efficacy of
+His own divine and deathless name to an obscure handful gathered round
+Himself. It must be very evident to the spiritual mind that the Lord
+Jesus, in speaking of the "two or three" thought not of those vast
+systems which have sprung up in ancient, mediaeval, and modern times,
+throughout the eastern and western world, numbering their adherents and
+votaries, not by "twos or threes," but by kingdoms, provinces, and
+parishes. It is very plain that a baptized kingdom, and "two or three"
+living souls gathered in the name of Jesus, do not and cannot mean the
+same thing. Baptized Christendom is one thing, and the assembly of God
+is another. What this latter is, we have yet to unfold; we are here
+asserting that they are not, and cannot be, the same thing. They are
+constantly confounded, though no two things can be more distinct.[XXI.]
+
+If we would know under what figure Christ presents the baptized world,
+we have only to look at the "leaven" and the "mustard tree" of Matt.
+xiii.
+
+The former gives us the internal, and the latter the external character
+of "the kingdom of heaven"--of that which was originally set up in truth
+and simplicity--a real thing, though small, but which, through Satan's
+crafty working, has become inwardly a corrupt mass, though outwardly a
+far-spreading, showy, popular thing in the earth, gathering all sorts
+beneath the shadow of its patronage. Such is the lesson--the simple but
+deeply solemn lesson to be learnt by the spiritual mind from the
+"leaven" and the "mustard-tree" of Matt. xiii. And we may add, one
+result of learning this lesson would be an ability to distinguish
+between "the kingdom of heaven" and "the assembly of God." The former
+may be compared to a wide morass, the latter to a running stream passing
+through it, and in constant danger of losing its distinctive character,
+as well as its proper direction, by intermingling with the surrounding
+waters. To confound the two things is to deal a deathblow to all godly
+discipline and consequent purity in the assembly of God. If the kingdom
+and the assembly mean one and the same thing, then how should we act in
+the case of "that wicked person" in I Cor. v.? The apostle tells us "to
+put him away." Where are we to put him? Our Lord Himself tells us
+distinctly that "the field is _the world_;" and again, in John xvii., He
+says that His people are not of the world. This makes all plain enough.
+But men tell us, in the very face of our Lord's statement, that the
+field is the assembly, and the tares and wheat, ungodly and godly, are
+to grow together, that they are on no account to be separated. Thus the
+plain and positive teaching of the Holy Ghost in I Cor. v. is set in
+open opposition to the equally plain and positive teaching of our Lord
+in Matt. xiii.; and all this flows from the effort to confound two
+distinct things, namely, "the kingdom of heaven" and "the assembly of
+God."
+
+It would not by any means comport with the object of this paper to enter
+further upon the interesting subject of "the kingdom." Enough has been
+said, if the reader has thereby been convinced of the immense importance
+of duly distinguishing that kingdom from the assembly. What this latter
+is we shall now proceed to inquire; and may God the Holy Ghost be our
+teacher!
+
+II. In handling our question as to the assembly of God, it will give
+clearness and precision to our thoughts to consider the four following
+points, namely:--
+
+First, what is the _material_ of which the assembly is composed?
+
+Secondly, what is the _centre_ round which the assembly is gathered?
+
+Thirdly, what is the _power_ by which the assembly is gathered?
+
+Fourthly, what is the _authority_ on which the assembly is gathered?
+
+I. And, first, then, as to the material of which God's assembly is
+composed; it is, in one word, those possessing salvation, or eternal
+life. We do not enter the assembly in order to be saved, but as those
+who are saved. The word is, "_On_ this rock I will build My Church." He
+does not say, "On My Church I will build the salvation of souls." One of
+Rome's boasted dogmas is this--"There is no salvation out of the true
+Church." Yes, but we can go deeper still, and say, "Off the true Rock
+there is no Church." Take away the Rock, and you have nothing but a
+baseless fabric of error and corruption. What a miserable delusion, to
+think of being saved by that! Thank God, it is not so. We do not get to
+Christ through the Church, but to the Church through Christ. To reverse
+this order is to displace Christ altogether, and thus have neither Rock,
+nor Church, nor salvation. We meet Christ as a life-giving Saviour,
+before we have anything to say to the assembly at all; and hence we
+could possess eternal life, and enjoy full salvation, though there were
+no such thing as the assembly of God on the earth.[XXII.]
+
+We cannot be too simple in grasping this truth, at a time like the
+present, when ecclesiastical pretention is rising to such a height. The
+church, falsely so called, is opening her bosom with delusive
+tenderness, and inviting poor sin-burdened, world-sick, and heavy-laden
+souls to take refuge therein. She, with crafty liberality, throws open
+her treasury door, and places her resources at the disposal of needy,
+craving, yearning souls. And truly those resources have powerful
+attractions for those who are not on "The Rock." There is an ordained
+priesthood, professing to stand in an unbroken line with the
+apostles.--Alas! how different the two ends of the line!--There is a
+continual sacrifice. Alas! a bloodless one, and therefore a worthless
+one. (Heb. ix. 22.)--There is a splendid ritual. Alas! it seeks its
+origin amid the shadows of a by-gone age--shadows which have been for
+ever displaced by the Person, the work, and the offices of the eternal
+Son of God. For ever be His peerless name adored!
+
+The believer has a very conclusive answer to all the pretensions and
+promises of the Romish system. He can say he has found his _all_ in a
+crucified and risen Saviour. What does he want with the sacrifice of the
+mass? He is washed in the blood of Christ. What does he want with a
+poor, sinful, dying priest, who cannot save himself? He has the Son of
+God as his priest. What does he want with a pompous ritual, with all its
+imposing adjuncts? He worships in spirit and in truth, within the
+holiest of all, whither he enters with boldness, through the blood of
+Jesus.
+
+Nor is it merely with Roman Catholicism we have to do in the
+establishment of our first point. We fear there are thousands besides
+Roman Catholics who, in heart, look to the church, if not for salvation,
+at least to be a stepping-stone thereto. Hence the importance of seeing
+clearly that the materials of which God's assembly is composed are those
+possessing salvation, in whom is eternal life; so that whatever be the
+object of that assembly, it most certainly is not to provide salvation
+for its members, seeing that all its members are saved ere they enter it
+at all. God's assembly is a houseful of saved ones from one end to the
+other. Blessed fact! It is not an institution set on foot for the
+purpose of providing salvation for sinners, nor yet for providing for
+their religious wants. It is a saved, living body, formed and gathered
+by the Holy Ghost, to make known to "Principalities and powers in the
+heavenlies, the manifold wisdom of God," and to declare to the whole
+universe the all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus.
+
+Now, the great enemy of Christ and the Church is well aware of what a
+powerful testimony the assembly of God is called and designed to yield
+on the earth; and therefore he has put forth all his hellish energy to
+quash that testimony in every possible way. He hates the name of Jesus,
+and everything tending to glorify that name. Hence his intense
+opposition to the assembly as a whole, and to each local expression
+thereof, wherever it may happen to exist. He has no objection to a mere
+religious establishment set on foot for the purpose of providing for
+man's religious wants, whether maintained by government or by voluntary
+effort. You may set up what you please. You may join what you please.
+You may be what you please; anything and everything for Satan but the
+assembly of God, and the practical expression of it in any given place.
+That he hates most cordially, and will seek to blacken and blast by
+every means in his power. But those consolatory accents of the Lord
+Christ fall with divine power on the ear of faith: "On this rock I will
+build My assembly, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
+
+2. This conducts us naturally to our second point, namely, What is the
+centre round which God's assembly is gathered? The centre is Christ--the
+living Stone, as we read in the Epistle of Peter, "To whom coming as
+unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and
+precious, ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house, a
+holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by
+Jesus Christ" (chap. ii. 4, 5).
+
+It is around the person of a living Christ then, that God's assembly is
+gathered. It is not round a doctrine, however true; nor round an
+ordinance, however important; but round a living, divine Person. This is
+a great cardinal and vital point which must be distinctly seized,
+tenaciously held, and faithfully and constantly avowed and carried out.
+"To whom coming." It is not said "_To which_ coming." We do not come to
+a thing, but to a Person. "Let us go forth therefore unto _Him_" (Heb.
+xiii.). The Holy Ghost leads us _only_ to Jesus. Nothing short of this
+will avail. We may speak of joining _a_ church, becoming a member of a
+congregation, attaching ourselves to a party, a cause, or an interest.
+All these expressions tend to darken and confuse the mind, and hide from
+our view the divine idea of the assembly of God. It is not our business
+to join anything. When God converted us, He joined us by His Spirit to
+Christ and to all the members of Christ, and that should be enough for
+us. Christ is the only centre of God's assembly.
+
+And, we may ask, is not He sufficient? Is it not quite enough for us to
+be "joined to the Lord?" Why add aught thereto? "Where two or three are
+gathered together _in My name_, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt.
+xviii. 20). What more can we need? If Jesus is in our midst, why should
+we think of setting up a human president? Why not unanimously and
+heartily allow Him to take the president's seat, and bow to Him in all
+things? Why set up human authority, in any shape or form, in the house
+of God? But this is done, and it is well to speak plainly about it. Man
+is set up in that which professes to be an assembly of God. We see human
+authority exercised in that sphere in which divine authority alone
+should be acknowledged. It matters not, so far as the foundation
+principle is concerned, whether it be pope, parson, priest, or
+president. It is man set up in Christ's place. It may be the pope
+appointing a cardinal, a legate, or a bishop to his sphere of work; or
+it may be a president appointing a man to exhort or to pray for ten
+minutes. The principle is one and the same. It is human authority acting
+in that sphere where only God's authority should be owned. If Christ be
+in our midst, we can count on Him for everything.
+
+Now, in saying this, we anticipate a very probable objection. It may be
+said by the advocates of human authority, "How could an assembly ever
+get on without some human presidency? Would it not lead to all sorts of
+confusion? Would it not open the door for everyone to intrude himself
+upon the assembly, quite irrespective of gift or qualification?"
+
+Our answer is a very simple one. Jesus is all-sufficient. We can trust
+Him to keep order in His house. We feel ourselves far safer in His
+gracious and powerful hand than in the hands of the most attractive
+human president. We have all spiritual gifts treasured up in Jesus. He
+is the fountain-head of all ministerial authority. "He hath the seven
+stars." Let us only confide in Him, and the order of our assembly will
+be as perfectly provided for as the salvation of our souls. This is just
+the reason of our connecting, in the title of this pamphlet, "The
+all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus" with the "Assembly of God." We
+believe that the name of Jesus is, in very truth, all-sufficient, not
+only for personal salvation, but for all the exigencies of the
+assembly--for worship, communion, ministry, discipline, government,
+everything. Having Him, we have all and abound.
+
+This is the real marrow and substance of our subject. Our one aim and
+object is to exalt the name of Jesus; and we believe He has been
+dishonored in that which calls itself His house. He has been dethroned,
+and man's authority has been set up. In vain does He bestow a
+ministerial gift; the possessor of that gift is not free to exercise it
+without the seal, the sanction, and the authority of man. And not only
+is this so, but if man thinks proper to give his seal, his sanction and
+authority, to one possessing not a particle of spiritual gift--yea, it
+may be, not a particle of spiritual life--he is nevertheless a
+recognized minister. In short, man's authority without Christ's gift
+makes a man a minister; whereas Christ's gift without man's authority
+does not. If this be not a dishonor done to the Lord Christ, what is?
+
+Christian reader, pause here, and deeply ponder this principle of human
+authority. We confess we are anxious you should get to the root of it,
+and judge it thoroughly, in the light of Holy Scripture, and the
+presence of God. It is, be assured of it, the grand point of distinction
+between the principles of the assembly of God and every human system of
+religion under the sun. If you look at all those systems, from Romanism
+down to the most refined form of religious association, you will find
+man's authority recognized and demanded. With that you may minister;
+without it you must not. On the contrary, in the assembly of God,
+Christ's gift _alone_ makes man a minister, apart from all human
+authority. "Not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the
+Father, who raised Him from the dead." (Gal. i. I). This is the grand
+principle of ministry in the assembly of God.
+
+Now, in classing Romanism with all the other religious systems of the
+day, let it, once for all, be distinctly understood that it is _only_ in
+reference to the principle of ministerial authority. God forbid that we
+should think of comparing a system which shuts out the word of God, and
+teaches idolatry, the worship of saints and angels, and a whole mass of
+gross, abominable error and superstition, with those systems where the
+word of God is held up, and more or less of scriptural truth
+promulgated. Nothing can be further from our thoughts. We believe popery
+to be Satan's master-piece, in the way of a religious system, although
+many of the people of God have been, and may yet be, involved therein.
+
+Further, let us at this stage plainly aver that we believe the saints of
+God are to be found in every Protestant community, both as ministers and
+members; and that the Lord uses them in many ways--blesses their work,
+service, and personal testimony.
+
+And, finally, we feel it right to declare that we would not move a
+finger to touch any one of those systems. It is not with the systems we
+have to do; the Lord will deal with them. Our business is with the
+saints in those systems, to seek by every spiritual and scriptural
+agency to get them to own and act upon the divine principles of the
+assembly of God.
+
+Having said thus much, in order to prevent misunderstanding, we return
+with increased power to our point, namely, that the thread of human
+authority runs through every religious system in Christendom, and that,
+in good truth, there is not a hair's breadth of consistent standing
+ground between the church of Rome and a true expression of the assembly
+of God. We believe that an honest seeker after truth, setting out from
+amid the dark shadows of popery, cannot possibly halt until he finds
+himself in the clear and blessed light of that which is a true
+expression of God's assembly. He may take years to travel over the
+intervening space. His steps may be slow and measured; but if only he
+follows the light, in simplicity and godly sincerity, he will find no
+rest between those two extremes. The ground of the assembly of God is
+the true position for all the children of God. Alas! they are not all
+there; but this is only their loss and their Lord's dishonor. They
+should be there because not only is God there, but He is allowed to act
+and _rule_ there.
+
+This latter is of all-importance, inasmuch as it may be truly said, Is
+not God everywhere? And does He not act in various places? True, He is
+everywhere, and He works in the midst of palpable error and evil. But He
+is not allowed to _rule_ in the systems of men, seeing that man's
+authority is really supreme, as we have already shown. And in addition
+to this, if the fact of God's converting and blessing souls in a system
+be a reason why we should be there, then we ought to be in the church of
+Rome, for how many have been converted and blessed in that awful system?
+Even in the recent revival we have heard of persons being stricken in
+Roman Catholic chapels. What proves too much proves nothing at all, and
+hence no argument can be based on the fact of God's working in a place.
+He is sovereign, and may work where He pleases. We are to be subject to
+His authority, and work where we are commanded, My Master may go where
+He pleases, but I must go where I am told.
+
+But some may ask, "Is there no danger of incompetent men intruding their
+ministry upon an assembly of God? And in the event of this, where is the
+difference between that assembly and the systems of men?" We reply,
+assuredly there is very great danger. But then such a thing would be
+_despite_, not in virtue of, the principle. This makes all the
+difference. Yes, indeed, we have seen mistakes and failures which are
+most humiliating.
+
+Let no one imagine that, while we contend for the truth concerning the
+assembly of God, we are at all ignorant or forgetful of the dangers and
+trials to which any carrying out its principles are exposed. Far from
+it. No one could be for twenty-eight years on that ground without being
+painfully conscious of the difficulty of maintaining it. But then the
+very trials, dangers, and difficulties only prove to be so many
+proofs--painful if you please, but proofs of the truth of the position;
+and were there no remedy but an appeal to human authority--a setting up
+of man in Christ's place--a return to worldly systems, we should without
+hesitation pronounce the remedy to be far worse than the disease. For
+were we to adopt the remedy, we should have the very worst symptoms of
+the disease, not to be mourned over as disease, but gloried in as the
+fruits of so-called order.
+
+But blessed be God, there is a remedy. What is it? "_There am I_ in the
+midst." This is enough. It is not, "There is a pope, a priest, a parson,
+or a president in their midst, at their head, in the chair, or in the
+pulpit." No thought of such a thing, from cover to cover of the New
+Testament. Even in the assembly of God at Corinth, where there was most
+grievous confusion and disorder, the inspired apostle never hints at
+such a thing as a human president, under any name whatsoever. "_God is
+the author_ of peace in all the assemblies of the saints" (I Cor. xiv.
+33). God was there to keep order. They were to look to Him, not to a
+man, under any name. To set up man to keep order in God's assembly is
+sheer unbelief, and an open insult to the Divine Presence.
+
+Now, we have been often asked to adduce Scripture in proof of the idea
+of divine presidency in an assembly. We at once reply, "There am I;" and
+"God is the Author." On these two pillars, even had we no more, we can
+triumphantly build the glorious truth of divine presidency--a truth
+which _must_ deliver all, who receive and hold it from God, from every
+system of man, call it by what name you please. It is, in our judgment,
+impossible to recognize Christ as the centre and sovereign ruler in the
+assembly, and continue to sanction the setting up of man. When once we
+have tasted the sweetness of being under Christ, we can never again
+submit to the servile bondage of being under man. This is not
+insubordination or impatience of control. It is only the utter refusal
+to bow to a false authority--to sanction a sinful usurpation. The moment
+we see man usurping authority in that which calls itself the church, we
+simply ask, "Who are you?" and retire to a sphere where God alone is
+acknowledged.
+
+"But, then, there are errors, evils, and abuses even in this very
+sphere." Doubtless; but if there are, we have the word of God to correct
+them. And hence, if an assembly should be troubled by the intrusion of
+ignorant and foolish men--men who have never yet measured themselves in
+the presence of God--men who boldly overleap the wide domain over which
+common sense, good taste, and moral propriety preside, and then vainly
+talk of being led by the Holy Spirit--restless men, who _will_ be at
+something, and who keep the assembly in a continual state of nervous
+apprehension, not knowing what is to come next--should any assembly be
+thus grievously afflicted, what should they do? Abandon the ground in
+impatience, chagrin, and disappointment? give all up as a myth, a fable,
+an idle chimera? go back to that from which they once came out? Alas!
+this is what some have done, thus proving that they never understood
+what they had been doing; or if they had understood it, that they had
+not faith to pursue it. May the Lord have mercy upon such, and open
+their eyes that they may see from whence they have fallen, and get a
+true view of the assembly of God, in contrast with the most attractive
+of the systems of men.
+
+But what is an assembly to do when abuses creep in? Correct them by the
+word of God. This is God's authoritative voice.
+
+We are fully aware of the difficulties and trials connected with any
+expression of the assembly of God. We believe its difficulties and
+trials are perfectly characteristic. There is nothing under the canopy
+of heaven that the devil hates as he hates that. He will leave no stone
+unturned to oppose it. We have seen this exemplified again and again. An
+evangelist may go to a place and preach the all-sufficiency of the name
+of Jesus for the salvation of the soul, and he will have thousands
+hanging on his lips. Let the same man return, and, while he preaches the
+same gospel, take another step and proclaim the all-sufficiency of that
+same Jesus for all the exigencies of an assembly of believers, and he
+will find himself opposed on all hands. Why is this? Because the devil
+hates the very feeblest expression of the assembly of God. You may see a
+town left for ages and generations to its dark and dull routine of
+religious formalism--a dead people gathering once a week to hear a dead
+man go through a dead service, and all the rest of the week living in
+sin and folly. There is not a breath of life, not a leaf stirring. The
+devil likes it well. But let some one come and unfurl the standard of
+the name of Jesus--Jesus for the soul and Jesus for the assembly--and
+you will soon see a mighty change. The rage of hell is excited, and the
+dark and dreadful tide of opposition rises.
+
+This, we most fully believe, is the true secret of many of the bitter
+attacks that have been recently made on those who maintain the
+principles of the assembly of God. No doubt we have to mourn over many
+mistakes, errors, and failures. We have given much occasion to the
+adversary in various ways. We have been a poor blotted epistle, a faint
+and feeble witness, a flickering light. For all this we have to be
+deeply humbled before our God. Nothing could be more unbecoming in us
+than pretention or assumption, or the putting forth of high-sounding
+ecclesiastical claims. The dust is our place. Yes, beloved brethren, the
+place of confession and self-judgment becomes us, in the presence of our
+God.
+
+Still, we are not to let slip the glorious principles of the assembly of
+God because we have so shamefully failed in carrying them out: we are
+not to judge the truth by our exhibition of it, but to judge our
+exhibition by the truth. It is one thing to occupy divine ground, and
+another thing to carry ourselves properly thereon; and while it is
+perfectly right to judge our practice by our principles, yet truth is
+truth for all that, and we may rest assured that the devil hates the
+truth which characterizes the assembly. A mere handful of poor people,
+gathered in the name of Jesus, as members of His body, to break bread in
+remembrance of Him, is a thorn in the side of the devil. True it is that
+such an assembly evokes the wrath of men, inasmuch as it throws their
+office and authority overboard, and they cannot bear that. Yet we
+believe the root of the whole matter will be found in Satan's hatred of
+the special testimony which such an assembly bears to the
+all-sufficiency of the name of Jesus for every possible need of the
+saints of God.
+
+This is a truly noble testimony, and we earnestly long to see it more
+faithfully carried out. We may fully count upon intense opposition. It
+will be with us as it was with the returned captives in the days of Ezra
+and Nehemiah. We may expect to encounter many a Rehum and many a
+Sanballat. Nehemiah might have gone and built any other wall in the
+whole world but the wall of Jerusalem, and Sanballat would never have
+molested him. But to build the wall of Jerusalem was an unpardonable
+offence. And why? Just because Jerusalem was God's earthly centre, round
+which He will yet gather the restored tribes of Israel. This was the
+secret of the enemy's opposition. And mark the affected contempt. "If a
+fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall." And yet Sanballat
+and his allies were not able to break it down. They might cause it to
+cease because of the Jews' lack of faith and energy; but they could not
+break it down when God would have it up. How like is this to the present
+moment! Surely there is nothing new under the sun. There is affected
+contempt, but real alarm. And, oh! if those who are gathered in the name
+of Jesus were only more true in heart to their blessed Centre, what
+testimony there would be! What power! What victory! How it would tell on
+all around. "Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there
+am I." There is nothing like this under the sun, be it ever so feeble
+and contemptible. The Lord be praised for raising up such a witness for
+Himself in these last days. May He greatly increase its effectiveness,
+by the power of the Holy Ghost!
+
+3. We must now very briefly glance at our third point, namely, what is
+the power by which the assembly is gathered. Here again man and his
+doings are set aside. It is not man's will choosing; nor man's reason
+discovering; nor man's judgment dictating; nor man's conscience
+demanding; it is the Holy Ghost gathering souls to Jesus. As Jesus is
+the only centre, so the Holy Ghost is the only gathering power. The one
+is as independent of man as the other. It is "where two or three are
+_gathered_." It does not say "where two or three are _met_." Persons may
+meet together round any centre, on any ground, by any influence, and
+merely form a society, an association, a community. But the Holy Ghost
+gathers saved souls only to Christ.
+
+An assembly may not embrace all the saints of God in a locality. In such
+a case they cannot be called the assembly of God in that place. But if
+they are assembled as members of the body of Christ, they occupy the
+ground of the assembly of God.
+
+This is a very simple truth. A soul led by the Holy Ghost will gather
+only to the name of the Lord; and if we gather to aught else, be it a
+point of truth, or some ordinance or another, we are not in that matter
+led by the Holy Ghost. It is not a question of life or salvation.
+Thousands are saved by Christ that do not own Him as their centre. They
+are gathered to some form of church government, some favorite doctrine,
+some special ordinance, some gifted man. The Holy Ghost will never
+gather to any one of these. He gathers only to a risen Christ. This is
+true of the whole Church of God upon earth; and each local assembly,
+wherever convened, is the expression of the whole.
+
+Now, the _power_ in an assembly will very much depend upon the measure
+in which each member thereof is gathered in integrity of heart to the
+name of Jesus. If I am gathered to a party holding peculiar opinions--if
+I am attracted by the people, or by the teaching--if, in a word, it be
+not the power of the Holy Ghost, leading me to the true Centre of God's
+assembly, I shall only prove a hindrance, a weight, a cause of weakness.
+I shall be to an assembly what a waster is to a candle; and instead of
+adding to the general light and usefulness, I shall do the very reverse.
+
+All this is deeply practical. It should lead to much exercise of heart
+and self-judgment as to what has drawn me to an assembly, and as to my
+ways therein. We are fully persuaded that the tone and testimony of an
+assembly have been greatly weakened by the presence of persons not
+understanding their position. Some present themselves there because they
+get teaching and blessing there which they cannot get anywhere else.
+Some come because they like the simplicity of the worship. Others come
+looking for love. None of these things are up to the mark. We should be
+in an assembly simply because the name of Jesus is the only standard set
+up there, and the Holy Spirit has "gathered" us thereto.
+
+No doubt ministry is most precious, and we shall have it, in more or
+less power, where all is ordered aright. So also as to simplicity of
+worship: we are sure to be simple, and real, and true, when the divine
+presence is realized, and the sovereignty of the Holy Ghost fully owned
+and submitted to. And as to love, if we go _looking for it_ we shall
+surely be thoroughly disappointed: but if we are enabled to _cultivate_
+and _manifest it_, we shall be sure to get a great deal more than we
+expect or deserve. It will generally be found that those persons who are
+perpetually complaining of want of love in others are utterly failing in
+love themselves; and, on the other hand, those who are really walking in
+love will tell you that they receive a thousand times more than they
+deserve. Let us remember that the best way to get water out of a dry
+pump is to pour a little water in. You may work at the handle until you
+are tired, and then go away in fretfulness and impatience, complaining
+of that horrible pump; whereas, if you would just pour in a little
+water, you would get in return a gushing stream to satisfy your utmost
+desire.
+
+We have but little conception of what an assembly would be were each one
+distinctly led by the Holy Ghost, and gathered _only_ to Jesus. We
+should not then have to complain of dull, heavy, unprofitable, trying
+meetings. We should have no fear of an unhallowed intrusion of mere
+nature and its restless doings--no _making_ of prayer--no talking for
+talking's sake--no hymn-book seized to fill a gap. Each one would know
+his place in the Lord's immediate presence--each gifted vessel would be
+filled, fitted, and used by the Master's hand--each eye would be
+directed to Jesus--each heart occupied with Him. If a chapter were read,
+it would be the very voice of God. If a word were spoken, it would tell
+with power upon the heart. If prayer were offered, it would lead the
+soul into the very presence of God. If a hymn were sung, it would lift
+the spirit up to God, and be like sweeping the strings of the heavenly
+harp. We should have no ready-made sermons--no teaching or preaching
+prayers, as though we would explain doctrines to God, or tell Him a
+whole host of things about ourselves--no praying _at_ our neighbors, or
+asking for all manner of graces for them, in which we ourselves are
+lamentably deficient--no singing for music's sake, or being disturbed if
+harmony be interfered with. All these evils should be avoided. We should
+feel ourselves in the very sanctuary of God, and enjoy a foretaste of
+that time when we shall worship in the courts above, and go no more out.
+
+We may be asked, "Where will you find all this down here?" Ah! this is
+the question. It is one thing to present a _beau ideal_ on paper, and
+another thing to realize it in the midst of error, failure, and
+infirmity. Through mercy, some of us have tasted, at times, a little of
+this blessedness. We have occasionally enjoyed moments of heaven upon
+earth. Oh, for more of it! May the Lord, in His great mercy, raise the
+tone of the assemblies everywhere! May He greatly enlarge our capacity
+for more profound communion and spiritual worship! May He enable us so
+to walk, in private life, from day to day so as to judge ourselves and
+our ways in His holy presence, that at least we may not prove a lump of
+lead or a waster to any of God's assemblies.
+
+And then, even though we may not be able to reach in experience the true
+expression of the assembly, yet let us never be satisfied with anything
+less. Let us honestly aim at the loftiest standard, and earnestly pray
+to be lifted up thereto. As to the _ground_ of God's assembly, we should
+hold it with jealous tenacity, and never consent for an hour to occupy
+any other. As to the tone and character of an assembly, they may and
+will vary immensely, and will depend upon the faith and spirituality of
+those gathered. Where the tone of things is felt to be low,--when
+meetings are felt to be unprofitable--where things are said and done
+repeatedly which are felt by the spiritual to be wholly out of place,
+let all who feel it wait on God--wait continually--wait believingly--and
+He will assuredly hear and answer. In this way the very trials and
+exercises which are peculiar to an assembly will have the happy effect
+of casting us more immediately upon Him, and thus the eater will yield
+meat, and the strong sweetness. We must count upon trials and
+difficulties in any expression of the assembly, just because it is _the_
+right and divine way for God's people on earth. The devil will put forth
+every effort to drive us from that true and holy ground. He will try the
+patience, try the temper, hurt the feelings, cause offence in nameless
+and numberless ways--anything and everything to make us forsake the true
+ground of the assembly.
+
+It is well to remember this. We can only hold the divine ground by
+faith. This marks the assembly of God, and distinguishes it from every
+human system. You cannot get on there save by faith. And, further, if
+you want to be somebody, if you are seeking a place, if you want to
+exalt _self_, you need not think of any true expression of the assembly.
+You will soon find your level there, if it be in any measure what it
+should be. Fleshly or worldly greatness, in any shape, will be of no
+account in such an assembly. The Divine Presence withers up everything
+of that kind, and levels all human pretension. Finally, you cannot get
+on in the assembly if you are living in secret sin. The Divine Presence
+will not suit you. Have we not often experienced in the assembly a
+feeling of uneasiness, caused by the recollection of many things which
+had escaped our notice during the week? Wrong thoughts--foolish
+words--unspiritual ways--all these things crowd in upon the mind, and
+exercise the conscience, in the assembly! How is this? Because the
+atmosphere of the assembly is more searching than that which we have
+been breathing during the week. We have not been in the presence of God
+in our private walk. We have not been judging ourselves; and hence, when
+we take our place in a spiritual assembly, our hearts are detected--our
+ways are exposed in the light; and that exercise which ought to have
+gone on in private--even the needed exercise of self-judgment, must go
+on at the table of the Lord. This is poor, miserable work for us, but it
+proves the power of the presence of God in the assembly. Things must be
+in a miserably low state in any assembly when hearts are not thus
+detected and exposed. It is a fine evidence of the power of the Holy
+Spirit in an assembly when careless, carnal, worldly, self-exalting,
+money-loving, unprincipled persons are compelled to judge themselves in
+God's presence, or, failing this, are driven away by the spirituality of
+the atmosphere. Such an assembly is no place for these. They can breathe
+more freely outside.
+
+Now, we cannot but judge that numbers that have departed from the ground
+of the assembly have done so because their practical ways did not
+comport with the purity of the place. No doubt it is easy, in all such
+cases, to find an excuse in the conduct of those who are left behind.
+But if the _roots_ of things were in every case laid bare, we should
+find that many leave an assembly because of inability or reluctance to
+bear its searching light. "Thy testimonies are very sure; holiness
+becometh Thy house, O Lord, forever." Evil _must_ be judged, for God
+cannot sanction it. If an assembly does not it is not practically God's
+assembly at all, though composed of Christians, as we say. To pretend to
+be an assembly of God, and not judge false doctrine and evil ways, would
+involve the blasphemy of saying that God and wickedness can dwell
+together. The assembly of God must keep itself pure, because it is His
+dwelling-place. Men may sanction evil, and call it liberality and
+large-heartedness so to do; but the house of God must keep itself pure.
+Let this great practical truth sink down into our hearts, and produce
+its sanctifying influence upon our course and character.
+
+4. A very few words will suffice to set forth, in the last place, "the
+_authority_" on which the assembly is gathered. It is the word of God
+alone. The charter of the assembly is the eternal Word of the living and
+true God. It is not the traditions, the doctrines, nor the commandments
+of men. A passage of Scripture, to which we have more than once referred
+in the progress of this paper, contains at once the standard round which
+the assembly is gathered, the power by which it is gathered, and the
+authority by which it is gathered--"the name of Jesus"--"the Holy
+Ghost"--"the word of God."
+
+Now these are the same all over the world. Whether I go to New Zealand,
+to Australia, to Canada, to London, to Paris, to Edinburg, or Dublin,
+the Centre, the gathering Power, and the authority are one and the same.
+We can own no other centre but Christ; no gathering energy but the Holy
+Ghost; no authority but the word of God; no characteristic but holiness
+of life and soundness in doctrine.
+
+Such is a true expression of the assembly of God, and we cannot
+acknowledge aught else. Saints of God we can acknowledge, love, and
+honor as such, wherever we find them; but human systems we look upon as
+dishonoring to Christ, and hostile to the true interest of the saints of
+God. We long to see all Christians on the true ground of the assembly.
+We believe it to be the place of real blessing and effective testimony.
+We believe there is a character of testimony yielded by carrying out the
+principles of the assembly which cannot be yielded otherwise, even were
+each member a Whitefield in evangelistic power. We say this not to lower
+evangelistic work. God forbid. We would that all were Whitefields. But
+then we cannot shut our eyes to the fact that many affect to despise the
+assembly, under the plea of going out as evangelists; and when we trace
+their path, and examine the results of their work, we find that they
+have no provision for the souls that have been converted by their means.
+They seem not to know what to do with them. They quarry the stones, but
+do not build them together. The consequence is that souls are scattered
+hither and thither, some persuing a desultory course, others living in
+isolation, all at fault as to true Church ground.
+
+Now, we believe that all these should be gathered on the ground of the
+assembly of God, to have "fellowship in the breaking of bread and in
+prayer." They should "come together on the first day of the week, to
+break bread," looking to the Lord Christ to edify them by the mouth of
+whom He will. This is the simple path--the normal, the divine idea,
+needing, it may be, more faith to realize it, because of the clashing
+and conflicting elements of the present day, but none the less simple
+and true on that account.
+
+We are aware, of course, that all this will be pronounced proselytizing,
+and party spirit, by those who seem to regard it as the very _beau
+ideal_ of Christian liberality and large-heartedness to be able to say,
+"I belong to nothing." Strange, anomalous position! It just resolves
+itself in this: it is _somebody_ professing _nothingism_ in order to get
+rid of all responsibility, and go with all and everything. This is a
+very easy path for nature, and amiable nature, but we shall see what
+will come of it in the day of the Lord. Even now we regard it as
+positive unfaithfulness to Christ, from which may the good Lord deliver
+His people.
+
+But let none imagine that we want to place the evangelist and the
+assembly in opposition. Nothing is further from our thoughts. The
+evangelist should go forth from the bosom of the assembly, in full
+fellowship therewith; he should work not only to gather souls to Christ,
+but also bring them to an assembly, where divinely-gifted pastors might
+watch over them, and divinely-gifted teachers instruct them. We do not
+want to clip the evangelist's wings, but only to guide his movements.
+We are unwilling to see real spiritual energy expended in desultory
+service. No doubt it is a grand result to bring souls to Christ. Every
+soul linked to Jesus is a work done forever. But ought not the lambs and
+sheep to be gathered and cared for? Would anyone be satisfied to
+purchase sheep, and then leave them to wander whithersoever they list?
+Surely not. But whither should Christ's sheep be gathered? Is it into
+the folds of man's erection, or into an assembly gathered on divine
+ground? Into the latter unquestionably; for that, we may rest assured,
+however feeble, however despised, however blackened and maligned, is the
+place for all the lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ.
+
+Here, however, there will be responsibility, care, anxiety, labor, a
+constant demand for watchfulness and prayer; all of which flesh and
+blood would like to avoid, if possible. There is much that is agreeable
+and attractive in the idea of going through the world as an evangelist,
+having thousands hanging on one's lips, and hundreds of souls as the
+seals of one's ministry: but what is to be done with these souls? By all
+means show them their true place with those gathered on the ground of
+the assembly of God, where, notwithstanding the ruin and apostasy of the
+professing body, they can enjoy spiritual communion, worship, and
+ministry. This will involve much trial and painful excise. It was so in
+apostolic times. Those who really cared for the flock of Christ had to
+shed many a tear, send up many an agonizing prayer, spend many a
+sleepless night. But, then, in all these things, they tasted the
+sweetness of fellowship with the chief Shepherd; and when He appears,
+their tears, their prayers, their sleepless nights will be remembered
+and rewarded; while those who are building up human systems will find
+them all come to an end, to be heard of no more forever; and the false
+shepherds, who ruthlessly seize the pastoral staff only to use it as an
+instrument of filthy gain to themselves, shall have their faces covered
+with everlasting confusion.
+
+But, we may be asked, "Is it not worse than useless to seek to carry out
+the principles of the assembly of God, seeing that the professing Church
+is in such complete ruin?" We reply by asking, "Are we to be disobedient
+because the Church is in ruin? Are we to continue in error because the
+dispensation has failed?" Surely not. We own the ruin, mourn over it,
+confess it, take our share in it, and in its sad consequences, seek to
+walk softly and humbly in the midst of it, confessing ourselves to be
+most unfaithful and unworthy. But though we have failed, Christ has not
+failed. He abideth faithful; He cannot deny Himself. He has promised to
+be with His people to the end of the age. Matt. xviii. 20 holds as good
+to-day as it did 1800 years ago. "Let God be true and every man a liar."
+We utterly repudiate the idea of men setting about church-making, or
+pretending to ordain ministers. We look upon it as a pure assumption,
+without a single shadow of Scripture authority. It is God's work to
+gather His Church and raise up ministers. We have no business to form
+ourselves into a church, or to ordain office-bearers. No doubt the Lord
+is very gracious, tender, and pitiful. He bears with our weakness, and
+overrules our mistakes, and where the heart is true to Him, even though
+in ignorance, He will assuredly lead on into higher light.
+
+But we must not use God's grace as a plea for unscriptural acting, any
+more than we should use the Church's ruin as a plea for sanctioning
+error. We have to confess the ruin, count on the grace, and act in
+simple obedience to the word of the Lord. Such is the path of blessing
+at all times. The remnant, in the days of Ezra, did not pretend to the
+power and splendor of Solomon's days, but they obeyed the word of
+Solomon's Lord, and they were abundantly blessed in their deed. They did
+not say, "Things are in ruin, and therefore we had better remain in
+Babylon, and do nothing." No; they simply confessed their own and their
+people's sin, and counted on God. This is precisely what we are to do.
+We are to own the ruin, and count on God.
+
+Finally, if we be asked, "Where is the true expression of this assembly
+of God now?" We reply, "Where Christ is truly the Centre of gathering;
+the one body the ground; the Holy Spirit the Leader; the Holy Scriptures
+the sole authority; and holiness the practice."
+
+Reader, are you assembled on this divine ground? If so, cling to it with
+your whole soul. Are you in this path? If so, press on with all the
+energies of your moral being. Never be content with anything short of
+His dwelling in you, and your conscious nearness to Him. Let not Satan
+rob you of your proper portion by leading you to rest in a mere name.
+Let him not tempt you to mistake your ostensible _position_ for your
+real _condition_. Cultivate secret communion--secret prayer--constant
+self-judgment. Be especially on your guard against every form of
+spiritual pride. Cultivate lowliness, meekness, and brokenness of
+spirit, tenderness of conscience, in your own private walk. Seek to
+combine the sweetest grace towards others with the boldness of a lion
+where truth is concerned. Then will you be a blessing in the assembly of
+God, and an effective witness of the all-sufficiency of the name of
+Jesus.
+
+ The veil is rent:--our souls draw near
+ Unto a throne of grace;
+ The merits of the Lord appear,
+ They fill the holy place.
+
+ His precious blood has spoken there,
+ Before and on the throne:
+ And His own wounds in heaven declare,
+ Th' atoning work is done.
+
+ 'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest,
+ His work can never fail:
+ By Him, our Sacrifice and Priest,
+ We pass within the veil.
+
+ Within the holiest of all,
+ Cleansed by His precious blood,
+ Before the throne we prostrate fall,
+ And worship Thee, O God!
+
+ Boldly the heart and voice we raise,
+ His blood, His name, our plea:
+ Assured our prayers and songs of praise
+ Ascend, by Christ, to Thee.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XVIII.] The same Greek word, _ecclesia_, has been rendered both
+"church" and "assembly" in our English translation--"assembly" gives the
+true meaning.
+
+[XIX.] It is of the utmost importance to distinguish between what Christ
+builds, and what man builds. "The gates of hell" shall assuredly prevail
+against all that is merely of man; and hence it would be a fatal mistake
+to apply to man's building words which only apply to Christ's. Man may
+build with "wood, hay, stubble," alas! he does; but all that our Lord
+Christ builds shall stand forever. The stamp of eternity is upon every
+work of His hand. All praise to His glorious name!
+
+[XX.] There is no such thing in Scripture as being a member of _a_
+church. Every true believer is a member of _the_ Church of God--the body
+of Christ, and can therefore no more be, properly, a member of anything
+else, than my arm can be a member of any other body.
+
+The only true ground on which believers can gather is set forth in that
+grand statement, "There is one body, and one Spirit." And again, "We
+being many are one loaf, and one body" (Eph. iv. 4; I Cor. x. 17). If
+God declares that there is but "one body," it must be contrary to His
+mind to own more than that one.
+
+Now, while it is quite true that no given number of believers in any
+given place can be called "the body of Christ," or "the assembly of
+God;" yet they should be gathered on the ground of that body and that
+assembly, and on no other ground. We call the reader's special attention
+to this principle. It holds good at all times, in all places, and under
+all circumstances. The fact of the ruin of the professing Church does
+not touch it. It has been true since the day of Pentecost; is true at
+this moment; and shall be true until the Church is taken to meet her
+Head and Lord in the clouds, that "_there is one body_." All believers
+belong to that body; and they should meet on that ground, and on no
+other.
+
+[XXI.] The reader will need to ponder the distinction between the Church
+viewed as "the body of Christ," and as "the house of God." He may study
+Eph. i. 22; I Cor. xii. for the former. Eph. ii. 21; I Cor. iii.; I Tim.
+iii. for the latter. The distinction is as interesting as it is
+important.
+
+[XXII.] The reader will do well to note the fact that, in Matt. xvi., we
+have the very earliest allusion to the Church, and there our Lord speaks
+of it as a future thing. He says, "On this rock I _will_ build My
+Church." He does not say, "I _have_ been, or I _am_ building." In short
+the Church had no existence until our Lord Christ was raised from the
+dead and glorified at the right hand of God. Then, but not until then,
+the Holy Ghost was sent down to baptize believers, whether Jews or
+Gentiles, into one body, and unite them to the risen and glorified Head
+in heaven. This body has been on the earth since the descent of the Holy
+Ghost; is here still, and shall be until Christ comes to fetch it to
+Himself. It is a perfectly unique thing. It is not to be found in Old
+Testament Scripture. Paul expressly tells us it was not revealed in
+other ages; it was hid in God, and never made known until it was
+committed to him. (See, carefully, Rom. xvi. 25, 26; Eph. iii. 3-11;
+Col. i. 24-27.) True it is--most blessedly true--that God had a people
+in Old Testament times. Not merely the nation of Israel, but a
+quickened, saved, spiritual people, who lived by faith, went to heaven,
+and are there "the spirits of just men made perfect." But the Church is
+never spoken of until Matt. xvi., and there only as a future thing. As
+to the expression used by Stephen, "The Church in the wilderness" (Acts
+vii. 38), it is pretty generally known that it simply refers to the
+congregation of Israel. The _termini_ of the Church's earthly history
+are Pentecost (Acts ii.), and the rapture (I Thess. iv. 16, 17).
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN
+
+HIS POSITION AND HIS WORK.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+What is the true position of a Christian? and what has he got to do? are
+questions of the very deepest practical importance. It is assumed, of
+course, that he has eternal life: without this, one cannot be a
+Christian at all. "He that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting
+life." This is the common portion of all believers. It is not a matter
+of attainment, a matter of progress, a thing which some Christians have
+and others have not. It belongs to the very feeblest babe in the family
+of God, as well as to the most matured and experienced servant of
+Christ. All are possessed of eternal life, and can never by any
+possibility lose it.
+
+But our present theme is not life, but position and work; and in
+considering it, we shall ask the reader to turn for a moment to a
+passage in Heb. xiii. Perhaps we cannot do better than quote it for him.
+There is nothing like the plain and solid word of Holy Scripture.
+
+"Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines; for it is a
+good thing that the heart be established with grace; not with meats,
+which have not profited them that have been occupied therein. We have an
+altar, whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle. For
+the bodies of those beasts, whose blood is brought into the sanctuary by
+the high priest for sin are burned without the camp. Wherefore Jesus
+also, that He might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered
+without the gate. Let us go forth therefore unto Him without the camp,
+bearing His reproach. For here have we no continuing city, but we seek
+one to come" (vers. 9-14).
+
+Here, then, we have one grand aspect of the Christian's position. It is
+defined by the position of his Lord. This makes it divinely simple; and,
+we may add, divinely settled. The Christian is identified with Christ.
+Amazing fact! "As He is so _are_ we in this world." It is not said, "As
+He is, so _shall_ we be in the world to come." No; this would not come
+up to the divine idea. It is, "so are we _in this world_." The position
+of Christ defines the position of the Christian.
+
+But this glorious fact tells in a double way; it tells upon the
+Christian's place before God; and it tells on his place as regards this
+present world. It is upon the latter that Heb. xiii. instructs us so
+blessedly, and it is that which is now more especially before us.
+
+Jesus suffered without the gate. This fact is the basis on which the
+apostle grounds his exhortation to the Hebrew believers to go forth
+without the camp. The cross of Christ closed his connection with the
+camp of Judaism; and all who desire to follow Him must go outside to
+where He is. The final breach with Israel is presented, morally, in the
+death of Christ; doctrinally, in the Epistle to the Hebrews;
+historically, in the destruction of Jerusalem. In the judgment of faith,
+Jerusalem was as thoroughly rejected when the Messiah was nailed to the
+cross, as it was when the army of Titus left it a smouldering ruin. The
+instincts of the divine nature, and the inspired teachings of Scripture,
+go before the actual facts of history.
+
+"Jesus suffered without the gate." For what end? "That He might sanctify
+(or set apart to God) the people with His own blood." What follows? What
+is the necessary practical result? "Let us go forth therefore unto Him
+without the camp, bearing His reproach."
+
+But what is "the camp?" Primarily, Judaism; but, most unquestionably, it
+has a moral application to every organized system of religion under the
+sun. If that system of ordinances and ceremonies which God Himself had
+set up--if Judaism, with its imposing ritual, its splendid temple, its
+priesthood and its sacrifices, has been found fault with, condemned, and
+set aside, what shall be said of any or all of those organizations which
+have rebuilt it? If our Lord Christ is outside of that, how much more
+out of these!
+
+Yes, Christian reader, we may rest assured that the outside place, the
+place of rejection and reproach is that to which we are called, if we
+would know aught of true fellowship with our Lord Jesus Christ. Mark the
+words! "Let us go forth." Will any Christian say, "No; I cannot go
+forth. My place is inside the camp. I must work there?" If so, then,
+there must be moral distance between you and Jesus, for He is as surely
+outside the camp as He is on the throne of God. If your sphere of work
+lies inside the camp, when your Master tells you to go forth, what shall
+we say for your work? Can it be "gold, silver, precious stones?" Can it
+have your Lord's approving smile? It may exhibit His overruling hand,
+and illustrate His sovereign goodness; but can it possibly have His
+unqualified approval while carried on in a sphere from which He commands
+you to go forth?
+
+The all-important thing for every true servant is to be found exactly
+where his Master would have him. The question is not, "Am I doing a
+great deal of work? but am I pleasing my Master? I may seem to be doing
+wonders in the way of work; my name may be heralded to the ends of the
+earth as a most laborious, devoted, and successful workman; and, all the
+while, I may be in an utterly false position, indulging my own unbroken
+will, pleasing myself, and seeking some personal end or object."
+
+All this is very solemn indeed, and demands the consideration of all who
+really desire to be found in the current of God's thoughts. We live in
+a day of much wilfulness. The commandments of Christ do not govern all.
+We think for ourselves, in place of submitting ourselves absolutely to
+the authority of the Word. When our Lord tells us to go forth without
+the camp, we, instead of yielding a ready obedience, begin to reason as
+to the results which we can reach by remaining within. Scripture seems
+to have little or no power over our souls. We do not aim at simply
+pleasing Christ. Provided we can make great show of work, we think all
+is right. We are more occupied with results which, after all, may only
+tend to magnify ourselves, than with the earnest purpose to do what is
+agreeable to the mind of Christ.
+
+But are we to be idle? Is there nothing for us to do in the outside
+place to which we are called? Is Christian life to be made up of a
+series of negations? Is there nothing positive? Let Heb. xiii. furnish
+the clear and forcible answer to all these inquiries. We shall find it
+quite as distinct in reference to our _work_ as it is in reference to
+our _position_.
+
+What, then, have we got to do? Two things; and these two in their
+comprehensive range take in the whole of a Christian's life in its two
+grand aspects. They give us the inner and the outer life of the true
+believer. In the first place, we read, "By Him therefore let us offer
+the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our
+lips, giving thanks to His name."
+
+Is not this something? Have we not here a very elevated character of
+work? Yes, verily, the most elevated that can possibly engage the
+energies of our renewed being. It is our privilege to be occupied,
+morning, noon, eventide, and midnight, in presenting the sacrifice of
+praise to God--a sacrifice which, He assures us, is ever most acceptable
+to Him. "Whoso offereth praise," He says, "glorifieth Me."
+
+Let us carefully note this. Praise is to be the primary and continual
+occupation of the believer. We, in our fancied wisdom, would put work in
+the first place. We are disposed to attach chief importance to bustling
+activity. We have such an overweening sense of the value of _doing_,
+that we lose sight of the place which worship occupies in the thoughts
+of God.
+
+Again, there are some who vainly imagine that they can please God by
+punishing their bodies. They think that He delights in their vigils,
+fastings, floggings, and flagellations. Miserable, soul-destroying,
+God-dishonoring delusion! Will not those who harbor it and act upon it
+bend their ears and their hearts to those gracious words which we have
+just penned, "Whoso offereth praise glorifieth Me?" True, it is, that
+those words are immediately followed by that grand practical statement,
+"And to him that ordereth his conversation aright, will I show the
+salvation of God." But still, here, as everywhere, the highest place is
+assigned to praise, not to work. And, most assuredly, no man can be
+said to be ordering his conversation aright who abuses his body and
+renders it unfit to be the vessel or instrument by which he can serve
+God.
+
+No, reader, if we really desire to please God, to gratify His heart and
+to glorify His name, we shall give our heart's attention to Heb. xiii.
+15, and seek to offer the sacrifice of praise _continually_. Yes,
+"continually." Not merely now and then, when all goes on smoothly and
+pleasantly. Come what may, it is our high and holy privilege to offer
+the sacrifice of praise to God. It does so glorify God when His people
+live in an atmosphere of praise. It imparts a heavenly tone to their
+character, and speaks more powerfully to the hearts of those around them
+than if they were preaching to them from morning till night. A Christian
+should "rejoice in the Lord alway," always reflecting back upon this
+dark world the blessed beams of his Father's countenance.
+
+Thus it should ever be. Nothing is so unworthy of a Christian as a
+fretful spirit, a gloomy temper, a sour, morose-looking face. And not
+only is it unworthy of a Christian, but it is dishonoring to God, and it
+causes the enemies of truth to speak reproachfully. No doubt, tempers
+and dispositions vary; and allowance must be made in cases of weak
+bodily health, and of circumstances of sorrow. It is not easy to look
+pleasant when the body is in suffering; and, further, we should be very
+far indeed from the commending anything like levity or the everlasting
+smile of mere unsubdued nature.
+
+But Scripture is clear and explicit. It tells us to "offer the sacrifice
+of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving
+thanks to His name." How simple! "_The fruit of our lips._" This is what
+our God delights in. It is His joy to be surrounded with the praises of
+hearts filled to overflowing with His abounding goodness. Thus it will
+be throughout eternity, in that bright home of love and glory to which
+we are so rapidly hastening.
+
+And let the reader specially note the words, "_By Him_." We are to offer
+our sacrifice of praise by the hand of our Great High Priest, who is
+ever in the presence of God for us. This is most consolatory and
+assuring to our hearts. Jesus presents our sacrifice of praise to God.
+It must therefore be ever acceptable, coming thus by the priestly hand
+of the Great Minister of the sanctuary. It goes up to God, not as it
+proceeds from us, but as it is presented by Him. Divested of all the
+imperfection and failure attaching to us, it ascends to God in all the
+fragrance and acceptancy belonging to Him. The feeblest note of praise,
+the simple "Thank God!" is perfumed with the incense of Christ's
+infinite preciousness. This is unspeakably precious: and it should
+greatly encourage us to cultivate a spirit of praise. We should be
+"continually" praising and blessing God. A murmuring or fretful word
+should never cross the lips of one who has Christ for his portion, and
+who stands identified with that blessed One in His position and His
+destiny.
+
+But we must draw this paper to a close by a rapid glance at the other
+side of the Christian's work. If it is our privilege to be continually
+praising and blessing God, it is also our privilege to be doing good to
+man. "But to do good and to communicate forget not; for with such
+sacrifices God is well pleased." We are passing through a world of
+misery, of sin and death and sorrow. We are surrounded by broken hearts
+and crushed spirits, if we would only look them out.
+
+Yes; this is the point; _if we would only look them out_. It is easy for
+us to close our eyes to such things, to turn away from them, to forget
+that there are such things always within reach of us. We can sit in our
+easy chair, and speculate about truth, doctrines, and the letter of
+Scripture; we can discuss the theories of Christianity, and split hairs
+about prophecy and dispensational truth, and, all the while, be
+shamefully failing in the discharge of our grand responsibility as
+Christians. We are in imminent danger of forgetting that Christianity is
+a living reality. It is not a set of dogmas, a number of principles
+strung together on a thread of systematized divinity, which unconverted
+people can have at their fingers' ends. Neither is it a set of
+ordinances to be gone through, in dreary formality, by lifeless,
+heartless professors. No; it is life--life eternal--life implanted by
+the Holy Ghost, and expressing itself in those two lovely forms on which
+we have been dwelling, namely, praise to God and doing good to man. Such
+was the life of Jesus when He trod this earth of ours. He lived in the
+atmosphere of praise; and He went about doing good.
+
+And He is our life, and He is our model on which the life is to be
+formed. The Christian should be the living expression of Christ, by the
+power of the Holy Ghost. It is not a mere question of leading what is
+called a religious life, which very often resolves itself into a
+tiresome round of duties which neither yield "praise" to God nor one
+atom of "good" to man. There must be _life_, or it is all perfectly
+worthless. "The kingdom of God is not meat or drink; but righteousness
+and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost. For he that in these things serveth
+Christ is acceptable to God, and approved of men" (Rom. xiv. 17, 18).
+
+Beloved Christian reader, let us earnestly apply our hearts to the
+consideration of these great practical truths. Let us seek to be
+Christians not merely in name but in reality. Let us not be
+distinguished as the mere vendors of peculiar "_views_." Oh! how
+worthless are views! How utterly profitless is discussion! How wearisome
+are theological hair-splittings! Let us have life, light, and love.
+These are heavenly, eternal, divine. All else is vanity. How we do long
+for reality in this world of sham--for deep thinkers and earnest workers
+in this day of shallow talkers!
+
+NOTE.--The reader will find it profitable to compare Heb. xiii. 13-16
+with I Peter ii. 4-9. "Let us go forth therefore unto Him," says Paul.
+"To whom coming," says Peter. Then we have "The holy priesthood"
+offering up spiritual sacrifices of praise. And "the royal priesthood"
+doing good and communicating--"showing forth the virtues of Him who hath
+called us out of darkness into His marvelous light." The two scriptures
+give us a magnificent view of fundamental, devotional and practical
+Christianity.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+We must ask the reader to open his Bible and read Heb. x. 7-24. In it he
+will find a very deep and marvelous view of the Christian's position and
+his work. The inspired writer gives us, as it were, three solid pillars
+on which the grand edifice of Christianity rests. These are, first, _the
+will of God_; secondly, _the work of Christ;_ and, thirdly, _the witness
+of the Holy Ghost_, in Scripture. If these grand realities be laid hold
+of in simple faith, the soul _must_ have settled peace. We may assert,
+with all possible confidence, that no power of earth or hell, men or
+devils, can ever disturb the peace which is founded upon Heb. x. 7-17.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, dwell, for a few moments, on the manner
+in which the apostle unfolds, in this magnificent passage,
+
+
+THE WILL OF GOD.
+
+In the opening of the chapter, we are instructed as to the utter
+inadequacy of the sacrifices under the law. They could never make the
+conscience perfect--they could never accomplish the will of God--never
+fulfil the gracious desire and purpose of His heart. "The law, having a
+shadow of good things to come, and not the very image of the things, can
+never with those sacrifices which they offered year by year continually
+make the comers thereunto perfect. For then would they not have ceased
+to be offered? because _the worshipers once purged_ should have had _no
+more conscience of sins_."
+
+Let the reader carefully note this. "The worshipers once purged should
+have had no more conscience of sins." He does not say--"No more
+_consciousness of sins_." There is an immense difference between these
+two things; and yet, it is to be feared, they are often confounded. The
+Christian has, alas, the consciousness of _sin in him_, but he ought to
+have no conscience of _sins on him_, inasmuch as he is purged once and
+forever, by the precious blood of Christ.
+
+Some of the Lord's people have a habit of speaking of their continual
+need of applying to the blood of Christ, which, to say the least of it,
+is by no means intelligent, or in accordance with the accurate teaching
+of Holy Scripture. It seems like humility; but, we may rest assured,
+true humility can only be found in connection with the full, clear,
+settled apprehension of the truth of God, and as to His gracious will
+concerning us. If it be His will that we should have "no more conscience
+of sins," it cannot be true humility, on our part, to go on from day to
+day, and year to year, with the burden of sins upon us. And, further, if
+it be true that Christ has borne our sins and put them away forever--if
+He has offered one perfect sacrifice for sins, ought we not assuredly to
+know that we are perfectly pardoned and perfectly purged? Is it--can it
+be, true humility to reduce the blood of Christ to the level of the
+blood of bulls and of goats? But this is what is virtually done,
+though, no doubt, unwittingly, by all who speak of applying continually
+to the blood of Christ. One reason why God found fault with the
+sacrifices under the law was, as the apostle tells us, "In those
+sacrifices there is a remembrance again made of sins every year." This,
+blessed be His name, was not according to His mind. He desired that
+every trace of guilt and every remembrance of it should be blotted out,
+once and forever; and hence it cannot be His will that His people should
+be continually bowed down under the terrible burden of unforgiven sin.
+It is _contrary_ to His will; it is subversive of their peace, and
+derogatory to the glory of Christ and the efficacy of His one sacrifice.
+
+One grand point of the inspired argument, in Hebrews x., is to show that
+the continual remembrance of sins and the continual repetition of the
+sacrifice go together; and therefore, if Christians now are to have the
+burden of sins constantly on the heart and conscience, it follows that
+Christ should be offered again and again--which were a blasphemy. His
+work is done, and hence our burden is gone--gone forever. "It is not
+possible that the blood of bulls and goats should take away sin.
+Wherefore, when He cometh into the world, He saith, Sacrifice and
+offering Thou wouldest not, but a body hast Thou prepared Me. In
+burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin Thou hast had no pleasure. Then
+said I, Lo, I come (in the volume of the book it is written of Me) to do
+Thy will, O God. Above, when He said, Sacrifice and offering and
+burnt-offerings and offerings for sin Thou wouldest not, neither hadst
+pleasure therein (which are offered by the law) then said He, Lo, I come
+to do Thy will, O God. He taketh away the first that He may establish
+the second. By the which will we are sanctified (or set apart) by the
+offering of the body of Jesus Christ _once_."
+
+Here we are conducted, in the most distinct and forcible manner, to the
+eternal source of the whole matter, namely, the will of God--the purpose
+and counsel formed in the divine mind, before the foundation of the
+world, before any creature was formed, before sin or Satan existed. It
+was the will of God, from all eternity, that the Son should, in due
+time, come forth and do a work which was to be the foundation of the
+divine glory and of all the counsels and purposes of the Trinity.
+
+It would be a very grave error indeed to suppose that redemption was an
+afterthought with God. He had not, blessed be His holy name, to sit down
+and plan what He would do, when sin entered. It was all settled
+beforehand. The enemy, no doubt, imagined that he was gaining a
+wonderful victory when he meddled with man in the garden of Eden. In
+point of fact, he was only giving occasion for the display of God's
+eternal counsels in connection with the work of the Son. There was no
+basis for those counsels, no sphere for their display in the fields of
+creation. It was the meddling of Satan--the entrance of sin--the ruin of
+man, that opened a platform on which a Saviour-God might display the
+riches of His grace, the glories of His salvation, the attributes of His
+nature, to all created intelligences.
+
+There is great depth and power in those words of the eternal Son, "In
+the volume of the book it is written of Me." To what "volume" does He
+here refer? Is it to Old Testament scripture merely? Surely not; the
+apostle quotes from the Old Testament, but it is nothing less than the
+roll of God's eternal counsels in which the "vast plan" was laid,
+according to which, in the appointed time, the eternal Son was to come
+forth and appear on the scene, in order to accomplish the divine will,
+vindicate the divine glory, confound the enemy utterly, put away sin,
+and save ruined man in a manner which yields a richer harvest of glory
+to God than ever He could have reaped in the fields of an unfallen
+creation.
+
+All this gives immense stability to the soul of the believer. Indeed it
+is utterly impossible for human language to set forth the preciousness
+and blessedness of this line of truth. It is such rich consolation to
+every pious soul to know that One has appeared in this world to do the
+will of God--whatever that will might be. "Lo, I come to do Thy will O
+God." Such was the one undivided purpose and object of that perfect
+human heart. He never did His own will in anything. He says, "I came
+down from heaven, not to do Mine own will, but the will of Him that sent
+Me." It mattered not to Him what that will might involve to Himself
+personally. The decree was written down in the eternal volume that He
+should come and do the divine will; and, all homage to His peerless
+name! He came and did it perfectly. He could say, "A body hast Thou
+prepared Me." "Mine ears hast Thou opened." "I clothe the heavens with
+blackness, and I make sackcloth their covering. The Lord God hath given
+Me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in
+season to him that is weary: He wakeneth morning by morning, He wakeneth
+Mine ear to hear as the learned. The Lord God hath opened Mine ear, and
+I was not rebellious, neither turned away back. I gave My back to the
+smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: I hid not My
+face from shame and spitting" (Isa. l. 3-6).
+
+But this leads us, in the second place, to contemplate
+
+
+THE WORK OF CHRIST.
+
+It was ever the delight of the heart of Jesus to do His Father's will
+and finish His work. From the manger at Bethlehem to the cross of
+Calvary, the one grand object that swayed His devoted heart was the
+accomplishment of the will of God. He perfectly glorified God, in all
+things. This, blessed be God, perfectly secures our full and everlasting
+salvation, as the apostle in this passage, so distinctly states. "By the
+which will we are sanctified, through the offering of the body of Jesus
+Christ once."
+
+Here our souls may rest, beloved reader, in sweetest peace and unclouded
+certainty. It was the will of God that we should be set apart to
+Himself, according to all the love of His heart, and all the claims of
+His throne; and our Lord Christ, in due time, in pursuance of the
+everlasting purpose as set forth "in the volume of the book," came forth
+from the glory which He had with the Father, before all worlds, to do
+the work which forms the imperishable basis of all the divine counsels
+and of our eternal salvation.
+
+And--forever be His name adored!--He has finished His work. He has
+perfectly glorified God in the midst of the scene in which He has been
+so dishonored. At all cost He has vindicated Him and made good His every
+claim. He magnified the law and made it honorable. He vanquished every
+foe, removed every obstacle, swept away every barrier, bore the judgment
+and wrath of a sin-hating God; destroyed death and him that had the
+power of it, extracted its sting, and spoiled the grave of its victory.
+In a word, He gloriously accomplished all that was written in the volume
+of the book concerning Him; and now we see Him crowned with glory and
+honor, at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. He travelled
+from the throne to the dust of death, in order to accomplish the will of
+God, and having done so, He has gone back to the throne, in a new
+character and on a new footing. His pathway from the throne to the cross
+was marked by the footprints of divine and everlasting love; and His
+pathway from the cross back to the throne is sprinkled by His atoning
+blood. He came from heaven to earth to do the will of God, and, having
+done it, He returned to heaven again, thus opening up for us "a new and
+living way" by which we draw nigh to God, in holy boldness and liberty,
+as purged worshipers.
+
+All is done. Every question is settled. Every barrier is removed. The
+vail is rent. That mysterious curtain which, for ages and generations,
+had shut God in from man, and shut man out from God, was rent in twain,
+from top to bottom, by the precious death of Christ; and now we can look
+right up into the opened heavens and see on the throne the Man who bore
+our sins in His own body on the tree. A seated Christ tells out, in the
+ear of faith, the sweet emancipating tale that all that had to be done
+is done--done forever--done for God--done for us. Yes; all is settled
+now, and God can, in perfect righteousness, indulge the love of His
+heart, in blotting out all our sins and bringing us nigh unto Himself in
+all the acceptance of the One who sits beside Him on the throne.
+
+And let the reader carefully note the striking and beautiful way in
+which the apostle contrasts _a seated Christ in heaven with the standing
+priest on earth_. "Every priest standeth daily ministering, and offering
+oftentimes the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But this
+Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins, forever ([Greek: eis
+to dienekes]--in perpetuity) sat down on the right hand of God; from
+henceforth expecting till His enemies be made His footstool. For by one
+offering He hath perfected forever (in perpetuity) them that are
+sanctified."
+
+This is exceedingly blessed. The priest, under the Levitical economy,
+could never sit down, for the obvious reason that his work was never
+done. There was no seat provided in the temple or in the tabernacle.
+There is remarkable force and significance in the manner in which the
+inspired writer puts this. "_Every priest_"--"standeth _daily_"--"offering
+ _oftentimes_"--"_the same sacrifices_"--"which can _never take
+away sins_." No human language could possibly set forth, more
+graphically, the utter inefficacy of the Levitical ceremonial. How
+strange that, in the face of such a passage of Holy Scripture, Christendom
+should have set up a human priesthood, with its daily sacrifice!--a
+priesthood moreover, not belonging to the tribe of Levi, not
+springing from the house of Aaron, and therefore having no
+sort of divine title or sanction. And, then as to the sacrifice, it is,
+according to their own admission, a sacrifice without blood, and
+therefore a sacrifice without remission, for, "Without the shedding of
+blood there is no remission" (Heb. ix. 22).
+
+Hence, this self-made priesthood is a daring usurpation, and her
+sacrifices a worthless vanity--a positive lie--a mischievous delusion.
+The priests of whom the apostle speaks in Heb. x. were priests of the
+tribe of Levi and of the house of Aaron--the only house, the only tribe
+ever recognised of God as having any title to assume the office and the
+work of an earthly priest. And, further, the sacrifices which the
+Aaronic priests offered were appointed by God, for the time being, to
+serve as _figures_ of Him that was to come; but they never gave Him any
+pleasure, inasmuch as they could never take away sins; and the true
+Priest having come, the true sacrifice having been offered, the figures
+have been forever abolished.
+
+Now, in view of all this, what shall we say of Christendom's priests and
+Christendom's sacrifices? What will a righteous Judge say to them? We
+cannot attempt to dwell upon such an awful theme. We can merely say,
+alas! alas! for the poor souls that are deluded and ruined by such
+antichristian absurdities. May God in His mercy deliver them and lead
+them to rest in the one offering of Jesus Christ--that precious blood
+that cleanses from all sin. May many be led to see that a repeated
+sacrifice and a seated Christ are in positive antagonism. If the
+sacrifice must be repeated, Christ has no right to His seat and to His
+crown--God pardon the very penning of the words! If Christ has a divine
+right to His seat and to His crown, then to repeat a sacrifice is simply
+a blasphemy against His cross, His name, His glory. To repeat in any
+way, or under any form whatsoever, the sacrifice, is to deny the
+efficacy of Christ's one offering, and to rob the soul of anything like
+an approach to the knowledge of remission of sins. A repeated sacrifice
+and perfect remission are an absolute contradiction in terms.
+
+But we must turn, for a moment, to the third grand point in our subject,
+namely,
+
+
+THE WITNESS OF THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+This is of the deepest possible moment for the reader to understand. It
+gives great completeness to the subject. How are we to know that Christ
+has, by His work on the cross, absolutely and divinely accomplished the
+will of God? Simply by the witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture. This
+is the third pillar on which the Christian's position rests, and it is
+as thoroughly divine and, therefore, as thoroughly independent of man as
+the other two. It is very evident that man had nothing to do with the
+eternal counsels of the Trinity--nothing to do with the glorious work
+accomplished on the cross. All this is clear; and it is equally clear
+that man has nothing to do with the authority on which our souls receive
+the joyful news as to the _will of God_, and _the work of Christ_,
+inasmuch as it is nothing less than _the witness of the Holy Ghost_.
+
+We cannot be too simple as to this. It is not, by any means, a question
+of our feelings, our frames, our evidences, or our experiences--things
+interesting in their right place. We must receive the truth solely and
+simply on the authority of that august Witness who speaks to us in Holy
+Scripture. Thus we read, "Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness to
+us; for after that He had said before, This is the covenant that I will
+make with them after those days, saith the Lord; I will put My laws
+into their hearts, and in their minds will I write them; and their sins
+and iniquities will I remember no more."
+
+Here, then, we have fully before us the solid foundation of the
+Christian's position and the Christian's peace. It is all of God, from
+first to last. The _will_, the _work_, and the _witness_ are all divine.
+The Lord be praised for this glorious fact! What should we do, what
+would become of us, were it otherwise? In this day of confusion, when
+souls are tossed about by every wind of doctrine--when the beloved sheep
+of Christ are driven hither and thither, in bewilderment and
+perplexity--when ritualism with its ignorant absurdities, and
+rationalism with its impudent blasphemies, and spiritualism with its
+horrible traffic with demons, are threatening the very foundations of
+our faith, how important it is for Christians to know what those
+foundations really are, and that they should be consciously resting
+thereon!
+
+
+PART III.
+
+We would recall for a moment to the reader's attention the third point
+in our subject, namely, "The witness of the Holy Ghost in Scripture." We
+feel it to be of too much importance to be dismissed with such a cursory
+glance as we were able to give it at the close of our last paper.
+
+It is absolutely essential to the enjoyment of settled peace that the
+heart should rest _solely_ on the authority of Holy Scripture. Nothing
+else will stand. Inward evidences, spiritual experiences, comfortable
+frames, happy feelings, are all very good, very valuable, and very
+desirable; indeed we cannot prize them too highly in their right place.
+But, most assuredly, their right place is not at the foundation of the
+Christian position. If we look to such things as the ground of our
+peace, we shall very soon become clouded, uncertain, and miserable.
+
+The reader cannot be too simple in his apprehension of this point. He
+must rest like a little child upon the testimony of the Holy Ghost in
+the Word. It is blessedly true that "He that believeth hath the witness
+in himself." And again, "The Spirit itself beareth witness with our
+spirit that we are the children of God." All this is essential to
+Christianity; but it must, in no wise, be confounded with the witness
+of the Holy Ghost, as given to us in Holy Scripture. The Spirit of God
+never leads any one to build upon His work as the ground of peace, but
+only upon the finished work of Christ, and the unchangeable word of God;
+and we may rest assured that the more simply we rest on these the more
+settled our peace will be, and the clearer our evidences, the brighter
+our frames, the happier our feelings, the richer our experiences. In
+short, the more we look away from self and all its belongings, and rest
+in Christ, on the clear authority of Scripture, the more spiritually
+minded we shall be; and the inspired apostle tells us that "to be
+spiritually minded (or, the minding of the Spirit) is life and peace."
+The best evidence of a spiritual mind is childlike repose in Christ and
+His Word. The clearest proof of an unspiritual mind is self-occupation.
+It is a poor affair to be trafficking in _our_ evidences, or _our_
+anything. It looks like piety, but it leads away from Christ--away from
+Scripture--away from God; and this is not piety, or faith, or
+Christianity.
+
+We are intensely anxious that the reader should seize, with great
+distinctness, the importance of committing his whole moral being to the
+divine authority of the word of God. It will never fail him. All else
+may go, but "the word of our God shall stand forever." Heart and flesh
+may fail. Internal evidences may become clouded; frames, feelings, and
+experiences may all prove unsatisfactory; but the word of the Lord, the
+testimony of the Holy Ghost, the clear voice of Holy Scripture, must
+ever remain unshaken. "And this is the Word which by the gospel is
+preached unto us."
+
+Thus much, then, as to the divine and everlasting basis of the
+Christian's position, as set forth in the tenth chapter of the Epistle
+to the Hebrews. Let us, now, see what this same scripture tells us of
+the Christian's work, and of the sphere in which that work is to be
+carried on.
+
+The Christian is brought into the immediate presence of God, inside the
+veil, into the holiest of all. This is his proper place, if indeed we
+are to listen to the voice of Scripture. "Having therefore, brethren,
+boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a _new_ and
+_living_ way which He hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is
+to say, His flesh; and having a high-priest over the house of God; _let
+us draw near_ with a true heart, in full assurance of faith, having our
+hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with
+pure water."
+
+Our God, blessed be His holy name, would have us near unto Himself. He
+has made out for us a title clear and indisputable in "_the blood of
+Jesus_." Nothing more is needed. That precious blood stands out before
+the eye of faith in all its infinite value. In it alone we read our
+title. It is not the blood _and_ something else--be that something what
+it may. The blood constitutes our exclusive title. We come before God in
+all the perfect efficacy of that blood which rent the veil, glorified
+God as to the question of sin, canceled our guilt according to all the
+demands of infinite holiness, silenced, forever, every accuser, every
+foe. We enter by a new and living way--a way which can never become old
+or dead. We enter by the direct invitation, yea, by the distinct command
+of God. It is positive disobedience not to come. We enter to receive the
+loving welcome of our Father's heart, it is an insult to that love not
+to come. He tells us to "come boldly"--to "draw near" with full,
+unclouded confidence--a boldness and confidence commensurate with the
+love that invites us; the word that commands us, and the blood that fits
+and entitles us. It is offering dishonor to the eternal Trinity not to
+draw near.
+
+Reader, is all this, think you, understood and taught in Christendom?
+Say, do Christendom's creeds, confessions, and liturgical services
+harmonize with apostolic teaching in Heb. x.? Alas! alas! they do not.
+Nay, they are in direct antagonism; and the state of souls, accordingly,
+is the very reverse of what it ought to be. In place of "draw near" it
+is keep off. In place of liberty and boldness, it is legality and
+bondage. In place of a heart sprinkled from an evil conscience, it is a
+heart bowed down beneath the intolerable burden of unforgiven sin. In
+place of a great High Priest seated on the throne of God, in virtue of
+accomplished redemption, we have poor mortal--not to say sinful--priests
+standing from week to week, all the year round in wearisome routine,
+actually contradicting, in their barren formularies, the very
+foundation truths of Christianity.
+
+How truly deplorable is all this! And then the sad condition of the
+Lord's dear people, the lambs and sheep of that precious flock for which
+He died! It is this that so deeply affects us. It is of little use
+attacking Christendom. We quite admit this; but we yearn over the souls
+of God's people. We long to see them fully delivered from false
+teaching, from Judaism, legalism, and every other _ism_ that robs them
+of a full salvation and a precious Saviour. We long to reach them with
+the clear and soul-satisfying teachings of Holy Scripture, so that they
+may know and enjoy the things that are freely given to them of God. We
+can truly say there is nothing which gives us such painful concern as
+the state of the Lord's dear people, scattered upon the dark mountains
+and desolate moors: and one special object for which we desire to live
+is to be the instrument of leading them into those green pastures and
+beside those still waters where the true Shepherd and Bishop of their
+souls longs to feed them, according to all the deep and tender love of
+His heart. He would have them near Himself, reposing in the light of His
+blessed countenance. It is not according to His mind or His loving heart
+that His people should be kept at a dim cold distance from His presence,
+in doubt and darkness. Ah, no; reader, His word tells us to draw
+near--to come boldly--to appropriate freely--to make our very own all
+the precious privileges to which a Father's love invites us, and a
+Saviour's blood entitles us.
+
+"_Let us draw near._" This is the voice of God to us. Christ has opened
+up the way. The veil is rent, our place is in the holiest of all, the
+conscience sprinkled, the body washed, the soul entering intelligently
+into the atoning value of the blood, and the cleansing, sanctifying
+power of the Word--its action upon our habits, our ways, our
+associations, our entire course and character.
+
+All this is of the very utmost practical value to every true lover of
+holiness--and every true Christian is a lover of holiness. "The body
+washed with pure water" is a perfectly delightful thought. It sets forth
+the purifying action of the word of God on the Christian's entire course
+and character. We must not be content with having the heart sprinkled by
+the blood; we must also have the body washed with pure water.
+
+And what then? "_Let us hold fast_ the profession of our hope ([Greek:
+elpidos]) without wavering (for He is faithful that promised)." Blessed
+parenthesis! We may well hold fast, seeing He is faithful. Our hope can
+never make ashamed. It rests, in holy calmness, upon the infallible
+faithfulness of Him who cannot lie, whose word is settled for ever in
+heaven, far above all the changes and chances of this mortal life, above
+the din of controversy, the strife of tongues, the impudent assaults of
+infidelity, the ignorant ravings of superstition--far away above all
+these things, eternally settled in heaven is that Word which forms the
+ground of our "hope."
+
+It well becomes us, therefore, to hold fast. We should not have a single
+wavering thought--a single question--a single misgiving. For a Christian
+to doubt is to cast dishonor upon the word of a faithful God. Let
+sceptics, and rationalists, and infidels doubt, for they have nothing to
+believe, nothing to rest upon, no certainty. But for a child of God to
+doubt, is to call in question the faithfulness of the divine Promiser.
+We owe it to His glory, to say nothing of our own peace, to "hold fast
+the confession of our hope without wavering." Thus may it be with every
+beloved member of the household of faith, until that longed-for moment
+"when faith and hope shall cease, and love abide alone."
+
+But there is one more interesting branch of Christian work at which we
+must glance ere closing this paper. "_Let us consider one another_, to
+provoke unto love and to good works."
+
+This is in lovely moral keeping with all that has gone before. The grace
+of God has so richly met all our personal need--setting before us such
+an array of precious privileges--an opened heaven--a rent veil--a
+crowned and seated Saviour--a great High Priest--a perfectly purged
+conscience--boldness to enter--a hearty welcome--a faithful Promiser--a
+sure and certain hope: having all these marvelous blessings in full
+possession, what have we got to do? To consider ourselves? Nay verily;
+this were superfluous and sinfully selfish. We could not possibly do so
+well for ourselves as God has done for us. He has left nothing unsaid,
+nothing undone, nothing to be desired. Our cup is full and running over.
+What remains? Simply to "consider one another;" to go out in the
+activities of holy love, and serve our brethren in every possible way;
+to be on the lookout for opportunities of doing good; to be ready for
+every good work; to seek in a thousand little ways to make hearts glad;
+to seek to shed a ray of light on the moral gloom around us; to be a
+stream of refreshing in this sterile and thirsty wilderness.
+
+These are some of the things that make up a Christian's work. May we
+attend to them! May we be found provoking one another, not to envy and
+jealousy, but to love and good works; exhorting one another daily;
+diligently availing ourselves of the public assembly, and so much the
+more, as we see the day approaching.
+
+May the Holy Spirit engrave upon the heart of both writer and reader
+these most precious exhortations so thoroughly characteristic of our
+glorious Christianity--"_Let us draw near_"--"_Let us hold fast_"--"_Let
+us consider one another!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+ The veil is rent:--our souls draw near
+ Unto a throne of grace;
+ The merits of the Lord appear,
+ They fill the holy place.
+
+His precious blood has spoken there. Before and on the throne:
+
+And His own wounds in heaven declare, The atoning work is done.
+
+'Tis finished!--here our souls have rest, His work can never fail: By
+Him, our Sacrifice and Priest, We pass within the veil.
+
+Within the holiest of all, Cleansed by His precious blood, Before the
+throne we prostrate fall And worship Thee, O God! */
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN PRIESTHOOD
+
+
+We want the reader to open his Bible and read I Pet. ii. I-9. In this
+lovely scripture he will find three words on which we will ask him to
+dwell with us for a little. They are words of weight and power--words
+which indicate three great branches of practical Christian truth--words
+conveying to our hearts a fact which we cannot too deeply ponder,
+namely, that Christianity is a living and divine reality. It is not a
+set of doctrines, however true; a system of ordinances, however
+imposing; a number of rules and regulations, however important.
+Christianity is far more than any or all of these things. It is a
+living, breathing, speaking, active, powerful reality--something to be
+seen in the every day life--something to be felt in the scenes of
+personal, domestic history, from hour to hour--something formative and
+influential--a divine and heavenly power introduced into the scenes and
+circumstances through which we have to move, as men, women, and
+children, from Sunday morning to Saturday night. It does not consist in
+holding certain views, opinions, and principles, or in going to this
+place of worship or that.
+
+Christianity is the life of Christ communicated to the
+believer--dwelling _in_ him--and flowing out _from_ him, in the ten
+thousand little details which go to make up our daily practical life. It
+has nothing ascetic, or sanctimonious about it. It is genial, pure,
+elevated, holy, divine. Such is Christianity. It is Christ dwelling in
+the believer, and reproduced, by the power of the Holy Ghost, in the
+believer's daily practical career.
+
+But let us turn to our three words; and may the Eternal Spirit expound
+their deep and holy meaning to our souls!
+
+And first, then, we have the word "living." "To whom coming, as unto a
+living Stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious,
+ye also, as living stones, are built up."
+
+Here we have what we may call the foundation of Christian priesthood.
+There is evidently an allusion here to that profoundly interesting scene
+in Matt. xvi. to which we must ask the reader to turn for a moment.
+
+"When Jesus was come into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His
+disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?[XXIII.]
+And they said, 'Some say Thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias; and
+others, Jeremias, or one of the prophets.'"
+
+There was endless speculation, simply because there was no real
+heart-work respecting the blessed One. Some said this, some said that;
+and, in result, no one cared who or what He was; and hence He turns away
+from all this heartless speculation, and puts the pointed question to
+His own, "But whom say ye that I am?" He desired to know what they
+thought about Him--what estimate their hearts had formed of Him. "And
+Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the
+_living_ God."
+
+Here we have the true confession. Here lies the solid foundation of the
+whole edifice of the Church of God and all true practical
+Christianity--"Christ the Son of the _living_ God." No more dim
+shadows--no more powerless forms--no more lifeless ordinances--all must
+be permeated by this new, this divine, this heavenly life which has come
+into this world, and is communicated to all who believe in the name of
+the Son of God.
+
+"And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona;
+for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which
+is in heaven. And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter; and upon
+this rock I _will build_ My Church; and the gates of hell shall not
+prevail against it."
+
+Now, it is evidently to this magnificent passage that the apostle Peter
+refers in the second chapter of his first epistle, when he says, "To
+whom coming, as unto a _living_ stone, disallowed indeed of men, but
+chosen of God, and precious, ye also, as _living_ stones (the same
+words), are built up," etc. All who believe in Jesus are partakers of
+His risen, victorious, _rock_ life. The life of Christ, the Son of the
+living God, flows through all His members, and through each in
+particular. Thus we have the _living_ God, the _living_ Stone, the
+_living_ stones. It is all life together--life flowing down from a
+living source, through a living channel, and imparting itself to all
+believers, thus making them living stones.
+
+Now, this life having been tried and tested, in every possible way, and
+having come forth victorious, can never again be called to pass through
+any process of trial, testing, or judgment whatsoever. It has passed
+through death and judgment. It has gone down under all the waves and
+billows of divine wrath, and come forth at the other side in
+resurrection, in divine glory and power--a life victorious, heavenly,
+and divine, beyond the reach of all the powers of darkness. There is no
+power of earth or hell, men or devils, that can possibly touch the life
+which is possessed by the very smallest and most insignificant stone in
+Christ's assembly. All believers are built upon the living Stone,
+Christ; and are thus constituted living stones. He makes them like
+Himself in every respect, save of course, in His incommunicable deity.
+Is He a living Stone? They are living stones. Is He a precious Stone?
+They are precious stones. Is He a rejected Stone? They are rejected
+stones--rejected, disallowed of men. They are, in every respect,
+identified with Him. Ineffable privilege!
+
+Here, then, we repeat, is the solid foundation of the Christian
+priesthood--the priesthood of all believers. Before any one can offer up
+a spiritual sacrifice, he must come to Christ, in simple faith, and be
+built on Him as the foundation of the whole spiritual building.
+"Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture (Isa. xxviii. 16),
+Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone, elect, precious; and he that
+believeth in Him shall not be confounded."
+
+How precious are these words! God Himself has laid the foundation, and
+that foundation is Christ; and all who simply believe in Christ--all who
+give Him the confidence of their hearts--all who rest satisfied with
+Him, are made partakers of His resurrection-life, and thus made living
+stones.
+
+How blessedly simple is this! We are not asked to assist in laying the
+foundation. We are not called upon to add the weight of a feather to it.
+God has laid the foundation, and all we have to do is to believe and
+rest thereon; and He pledges His faithful word that we shall never be
+confounded. The very feeblest believer in Jesus has God's own gracious
+assurance that he shall never be confounded--never be ashamed--never
+come into judgment. He is as free from all charge of guilt and every
+breath of condemnation as that living Rock on whom he is built.
+
+Beloved reader, are you on this foundation? Are you built on Christ?
+Have you come to Him as God's living Stone, and given Him the full
+confidence of your heart? Are you thoroughly satisfied with God's
+foundation? or are you seeking to add something of your own--your own
+works, your prayers, your ordinances, your vows and resolutions, your
+religious duties? If so, if you are seeking to add the smallest jot to
+God's foundation, you may rest assured, you will be confounded. God will
+not suffer such dishonor to be offered to His tried, elect, precious,
+chief corner Stone. Think you that He could allow aught, no matter what,
+to be placed beside His beloved Son, in order to form, with Him, the
+foundation of His spiritual edifice? The bare thought were an impious
+blasphemy. No; it must be Christ alone. He is enough for God, and He may
+well be enough for us; and nothing is more certain than that all who
+reject, or neglect, turn away from, or add to, God's foundation, shall
+be covered with everlasting confusion.
+
+But, having glanced at the foundation, let us look at the
+superstructure. This will lead us to the second of our three weighty
+words. "To whom coming as unto a _living_ Stone ... ye also, as living
+stones, are built up a spiritual house, a _holy_ priesthood, to offer
+up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ."
+
+All true believers are holy priests. They are made this by spiritual
+birth, just as Aaron's sons were priests in virtue of their natural
+birth. The apostle does not say, Ye _ought to be_ living stones, and, Ye
+ought to be holy priests. He says ye _are_ such. No doubt, being such,
+we are called upon to act accordingly; but we must be in a position
+before we can discharge the duties belonging to it. We must be in a
+relationship before we can know the affections which flow out of it. We
+do not become priests by offering priestly sacrifices. But being,
+through grace, made priests, we are called upon to present the
+sacrifice. If we were to live a thousand years twice told, and spend all
+that time working, we could not work ourselves into the position of holy
+priests; but the moment we believe in Jesus--the moment we come to Him
+in simple faith--the moment we give Him the full confidence of our
+hearts, we are born anew into the position of holy priests, and are then
+privileged to draw nigh and offer the priestly sacrifice. How could any
+one, of old, have constituted himself a son of Aaron? Impossible. But
+being born of Aaron, he was thereby made a member of the priestly house.
+We speak not now of capacity, but simply of the position. This latter
+was reached not by effort, but by birth.
+
+And now, let us enquire as to the nature of the sacrifice which, as holy
+priests, we are privileged to offer. We are "to offer up spiritual
+sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." So also in Heb. xiii.
+15, we read, "By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to
+God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to His
+name."
+
+Here, then, we have the true nature and character of that sacrifice
+which, as holy priests, we are to offer. It is praise--"praise to God
+continually." Blessed occupation! Hallowed exercise! Heavenly
+employment! And this is not to be an occasional thing. It is not merely
+at some peculiarly favored moment, when all looks bright and smiling
+around us. It is not to be merely amid the glow and fervor of some
+specially powerful public meeting, when the current of worship flows
+deep, wide, and rapid. No; the word is, "praise _continually_." There is
+no room, no time for complaining or murmuring, fretfulness and
+discontent, impatience and irritability, lamenting about our
+surroundings, whatever these may be, complaining about the weather,
+finding fault with those who are associated with us, whether in public
+or in private, whether in the congregation, in the business, or in the
+family circle.
+
+Holy priests should have no time for any of these things. They are
+brought nigh to God, in holy liberty, peace, and blessing. They breathe
+the atmosphere and walk in the sunlight of the divine presence, in the
+new creation, where there are no materials for a sour and discontented
+mind to feed upon. We may set it down as a fixed principle--an
+axiom--that whenever we hear anyone pouring out a string of complaints
+about circumstances, his neighbors etc., such an one is not realizing
+the place of holy priesthood, and, as a consequence, not exhibiting its
+practical fruits. A holy priest should "rejoice in the Lord
+always"--ever ready to praise God. True, he may be tried in a thousand
+ways; but he brings his trials to God in communion, not to his
+fellow-man in complaining. "Hallelujah" is the proper utterance of the
+very feeblest member of the Christian priesthood.
+
+But we must now look, for a moment, at the third and last branch of our
+present theme. This is presented in that highly expressive word "royal."
+The apostle goes on to say, "But ye are a chosen generation, a _royal_
+priesthood ... that ye should show forth the virtues (see margin) of Him
+who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous light."
+
+This completes the lovely picture of the Christian priesthood.[XXIV.] As
+_holy_ priests, we draw nigh to God, and present the sacrifice of
+praise. As royal priests we go forth among our fellow-men, in all the
+details of practical daily life, to show forth the virtues--the
+graces--the lovely moral features of Christ. Every movement of a royal
+priest should emit the fragrance of the grace of Christ.
+
+Mark again, the apostle does not say, _Ye ought to be_ royal priests. He
+says ye _are_; and as such we are to show forth the virtues of Christ.
+Nothing else becomes a member of the royal priesthood. To be occupied
+with myself, to be taking counsel for my own ease, my own interest, my
+own enjoyment, to be seeking my own ends, and caring about my own
+things, is not the act of a royal priest at all. Christ never did so;
+and I am told to show forth His virtues. He, blessed be His name, grants
+to His people, in this the time of His absence, to anticipate the day
+when He shall come forth as a Royal Priest, and sit upon His throne, and
+send forth the benign influence of His dominion to the ends of the
+earth. We are called to be the present expression of the kingdom of
+Christ--the expression of Himself.
+
+And let none suppose that the actings of a royal priest are to be
+confined to the matter of _giving_. This would be a grave mistake. No
+doubt, a royal priest will give, and give liberally if he has it; but to
+limit him to the mere matter of communicating would be to rob him of
+some of the most precious functions of his position. The very man who
+penned the words on which we are dwelling said on one occasion--and said
+it without shame, "Silver and gold have I none;" and yet at that very
+moment, he was acting as a royal priest, by bringing the precious
+virtue of the name of Jesus to bear on the impotent man (Acts. iii.).
+The blessed Master Himself, we know, possessed no money; but He went
+about doing good; and so should we: nor do we need money to do it.
+Indeed it very often happens that we do mischief instead of good with
+our silver and gold. We may take people off the ground on which God has
+placed them, namely, the ground of honest industry, and make them
+dependent upon human alms. Moreover, we may often make hypocrites and
+sycophants of people by our injudicious use of money.
+
+Hence, therefore, let no one imagine that he cannot act as a royal
+priest without earthly riches. What riches are required to speak a
+kindly word--to drop the tear of sympathy--to give the soothing, genial
+look? None whatever save the riches of God's grace--the unsearchable
+riches of Christ, all of which are laid open to the most obscure member
+of the Christian priesthood. I may be poorly clad, without a penny in
+the world, and yet carry myself truly as a royal priest, by diffusing
+around me the fragrance of the grace of Christ.
+
+But, perhaps, we cannot more suitably close these few remarks on the
+Christian priesthood, than by giving a very vivid illustration drawn
+from the inspired page--the narrative of two beloved servants of Christ
+who were enabled, under the most distressing circumstances, to acquit
+themselves as holy and royal priests.
+
+Turn to Acts xvi. 19-34. Here we have Paul and Silas thrust into the
+innermost part of the prison at Philippi, their backs covered with
+stripes, and their feet fast in the stocks, in the darkness of the
+midnight hour. What were they doing? murmuring and complaining? Ah, no!
+They had something better and brighter to do. Here were two really
+"living stones," and nothing that earth or hell could do could hinder
+the life that was in them expressing itself in its proper accents.
+
+But what, we repeat, were these living stones doing? these partakers of
+the rock-life--the victorious, resurrection-life of Christ--how did they
+employ themselves? Well, then, in the first place, as _holy_ priests
+they offered the sacrifice of praise to God. Yes, "at midnight, Paul and
+Silas prayed and sang praises to God." How precious is this! How morally
+glorious! How truly refreshing! What are stripes, or stocks, or prison
+walls, or gloomy nights, to living stones and holy priests? Nothing more
+than a dark background to throw out into bright and beauteous relief the
+living grace that is in them. Talk of circumstances! Ah, it is little
+any of us know of trying circumstances. Poor things that we are, the
+petty annoyances of daily life are often more than enough to cause us to
+lose our mental balance. Paul and Silas were really in trying
+circumstances; but they were there as living stones and holy priests.
+
+Yes, reader, and they were there as royal priests, likewise. How does
+this appear? Certainly not by scattering silver and gold. It is not
+likely the dear men had much of these to scatter. But oh, they had what
+was better, even "the virtues of Him who had called them out of darkness
+into His marvelous light." And where do these virtues shine out? In
+those touching words addressed to the jailer, "_Do thyself no harm_."
+These were the accents of a _royal_ priest, just as the song of praise
+was the voice of a _holy_ priest. Thank God for both! The voices of the
+holy priests went directly up to the throne of God and did their work
+there; and the words of the royal priests went directly to the jailer's
+hard heart and did their work there. God was glorified and the jailer
+saved by two men rightly discharging the functions of "_the Christian
+priesthood_."
+
+
+
+
+ Father! Thy sovereign love has sought
+ Captives to sin, gone far from Thee:
+ The work that Thine own Son hath wrought,
+ Has brought us back, in peace, and free!
+
+ And now, as sons before Thy Face,
+ With joyful steps the path we tread,
+ Which leads us on to that blest place
+ Prepared for us, by Christ our Head.
+
+ Thou gav'st us, in eternal love,
+ To Him, to bring us home to Thee;
+ Suited to Thine own thoughts above
+ As sons, like Him, with Him to be.
+
+ Oh, boundless grace! What fills with joy
+ Unmingled all that enter there;
+ God's Nature, Love without alloy,
+ Our hearts are given e'en now to share!
+
+ Oh, keep us, Love Divine, near Thee!
+ That we our nothingness may know;
+ And ever to Thy glory be,
+ Walking in faith while here below.
+
+ J. N. D.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIII.] Let the reader note this title, "_Son of Man_." It is
+infinitely precious. It is a title indicating our Lord's rejection as
+the Messiah, and leading out into that wide, that universal sphere over
+which He is destined in the counsels of God, to rule. It is far wider
+than Son of David, or Son of Abraham, and has peculiar charms for us,
+inasmuch as it places Him before our hearts as the lonely, outcast
+Stranger, and yet as the One who links Himself in perfect grace with us
+in all our need--One whose footprints we can trace all across this
+dreary desert. "The Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." And yet
+it is as Son of Man that He shall, by-and-by, exercise that universal
+dominion reserved for Him according to the eternal counsels of God. See
+Daniel vii.
+
+[XXIV.] The intelligent reader does not need to be told that all
+believers are priests; and, further, that there is no such thing as a
+priest upon earth, save in the sense in which all true Christians are
+priests. The idea of a certain set of men, calling themselves priests in
+contrast with the people--a certain caste distinguished by title and
+dress from the body of Christians, is not Christianity at all, but
+Judaism or intelligently worse. All who read the Bible and bow to its
+authority will be perfectly clear as to these things.
+
+
+
+
+
+PAPERS ON EVANGELIZATION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+A WORD TO THE EVANGELIST.
+
+
+We trust it may not be deemed out of place if we venture to offer a word
+of counsel and encouragement to all who have been and are engaged in the
+blessed work of preaching _the gospel of the grace of God_. We are, in
+some measure, aware of the difficulties and discouragements which attend
+upon the path of every evangelist, whatever may be his sphere of labor
+or measure of gift; and it is our heart's desire to hold up the hands
+and cheer the hearts of all who may be in danger of falling under the
+depressing power of these things. We increasingly feel the immense
+importance of an earnest, fervent gospel testimony everywhere; and we
+dread exceedingly any falling off therein. We are imperatively called to
+"do the work of an evangelist," and not to be moved from that work by
+any arguments or considerations whatsoever.
+
+Let none imagine that, in writing thus, we mean to detract, in the
+smallest degree, from the value of teaching, lecturing, or exhortation.
+Nothing is further from our thoughts. "These things ought ye to have
+done, and not to leave the other undone." We mean not to compare the
+work of the evangelist with that of the teacher, or to exalt the former
+at the expense of the latter. Each has its own proper place, its own
+distinctive interest and importance.
+
+But is there not a danger, on the other hand, of the evangelist
+abandoning his own precious work in order to give himself to the work of
+teaching and lecturing? Is there not a danger of the evangelist becoming
+merged in the teacher? We fear there is; and it is under the influence
+of this very fear that we pen these few lines. We observe, with deep
+concern, some who were once known amongst us as earnest and eminently
+successful evangelists, now almost wholly abandoning their work and
+becoming teachers and lecturers.
+
+This is most deplorable. _We really want evangelists._ A true evangelist
+is almost as great a rarity as a true pastor. Alas! alas! how rare are
+both! The two are closely connected. The evangelist gathers the sheep;
+the pastor feeds and cares for them. The work of each lies very near the
+heart of Christ--the Divine Evangelist and Pastor; but it is with the
+former we have now more immediately to do--to encourage him in his work,
+and to warn him against the temptation to turn aside from it. We cannot
+afford to lose a single ambassador just now, or to have a single
+preacher silent. We are perfectly aware of the fact that there is in
+some quarters a strong tendency to throw cold water upon the work of
+evangelization. There is a sad lack of sympathy with the preacher of the
+gospel; and, as a necessary consequence, of active co-operation with
+him in his work. Further, there is a mode of speaking of gospel
+preaching which argues but little sympathy with the heart of Him who
+wept over impenitent sinners, and who could say, at the very opening of
+His blessed ministry, "The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He
+hath anointed Me _to preach the gospel to the poor_" (Isa. lxi.; Luke
+iv.). And again, "Let us go into the next towns, that I may preach there
+also: for therefore came I forth" (Mark i. 38).
+
+Our blessed Lord was an indefatigable preacher of the gospel, and all
+who are filled with His mind and spirit will take a lively interest in
+the work of all those who are seeking in their feeble measure to do the
+same. This interest will be evinced, not only by earnest prayer for the
+divine blessing upon the work, but also by diligent and persevering
+efforts to get immortal souls under the sound of the gospel.
+
+This is the way to help the evangelist, and this way lies open to every
+member of the Church of God--man, woman, or child. All can thus help
+forward the glorious work of evangelization. If each member of the
+assembly were to work diligently and prayerfully in this way, how
+different would it be with the Lord's dear servants who are seeking to
+make known the unsearchable riches of Christ.
+
+But, alas! how often is it otherwise. How often do we hear even those
+who are of some repute for intelligence and spirituality, when referring
+to meetings for gospel testimony, say, "Oh, I am not going there; it is
+_only_ the gospel." Think of that! "_Only the gospel._" If they would
+put the idea into other words, they might say, "It is _only_ the heart
+of God--_only_ the precious blood of Christ--_only_ the glorious record
+of the Holy Ghost."
+
+This would be putting the thing plainly. Nothing is more sad than to
+hear professing Christians speak in this way. It proves too clearly that
+their souls are very far away from the heart of Jesus. We have
+invariably found that those who think and speak slightingly of the work
+of the evangelist are persons of very little spirituality; and on the
+other hand, the most devoted, the most true hearted, the best taught
+saints of God, are always sure to take a profound interest in that work.
+How could it be otherwise? Does not the voice of Holy Scripture bear the
+clearest testimony to the fact of the interest of the Trinity in the
+work of the gospel? Most assuredly it does. Who first preached the
+gospel? Who was the first herald of salvation? Who first announced the
+good news of the bruised Seed of the woman? The Lord God Himself, in the
+garden of Eden. This is a telling fact in connection with our theme. And
+further, let us ask, who was the most earnest, laborious, and faithful
+preacher that ever trod this earth? The Son of God. And who has been
+preaching the gospel for the last eighteen centuries? The Holy Ghost
+sent down from heaven.
+
+Thus then we have the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost all actually
+engaged in the work of evangelization; and if this be so, who are we to
+dare to speak slightingly of such a work? Nay, rather may our whole
+moral being be stirred by the power of the Spirit of God so that we may
+be able to add our fervent and deep Amen to those precious words of
+inspiration, "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel
+of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!" (Isa. lii. 7; Rom. x.
+15.)
+
+But it may be that these lines shall be scanned by some one who has been
+engaged in the work of preaching the gospel, and is beginning to feel
+rather discouraged. It may be that he has been called to preach in the
+same place for years, and he feels burdened by the thought of having to
+address the same audience, on the same subject, week after week, month
+after month, year after year. He may feel at a loss for something new,
+something fresh, some variety. He may sigh for some new sphere, where
+the subjects which are familiar to him will be new to the people. Or, if
+this cannot be, he may feel led to substitute lectures and expositions
+for the fervid, pointed, earnest preaching of the gospel.
+
+If we have in any measure set forth the reader's feelings on this
+subject, we think it will greatly help him in his work to bear in mind
+that the one grand theme of the true evangelist is Christ. The power to
+handle that theme is the Holy Ghost. The one to whom that theme is to be
+unfolded is the poor lost sinner. Now, Christ is ever new; the power of
+the Holy Ghost is ever fresh; the soul's condition and destiny ever
+intensely interesting. Furthermore, it is well for the evangelist to
+bear in mind, on every fresh occasion of rising to preach, that his
+unconverted hearers are totally ignorant of the gospel, and hence he
+should preach as though it were the first time they had ever heard the
+message, and the first time he had ever delivered it. For, be it
+remembered, the preaching of the gospel, in the divine acceptation of
+the phrase, is not a mere barren statement of evangelical doctrine--a
+certain form of words enunciated over and over again in wearisome
+routine. Far, very far from it. The gospel is really the large loving
+heart of God welling up and flowing forth toward the poor lost sinner in
+streams of life and salvation. It is the presentation of the atoning
+death and glorious resurrection of the Son of God; and all this in the
+present energy, glow, and freshness of the Holy Ghost, from the
+exhaustless mine of Holy Scripture. Moreover, _the_ one absorbing object
+of the preacher is to win souls for Christ, to the glory of God. For
+this he labors and pleads; for this he prays, weeps, and agonizes; for
+this he thunders, appeals, and grapples with the heart and conscience of
+his hearer. His object is not to teach doctrines, though doctrines may
+be taught; his object is not to expound Scripture, though Scripture may
+be expounded. These things lie within the range of the teacher or
+lecturer; but let it never be forgotten, the preacher's object is to
+bring the Saviour and the sinner together--to win souls to Christ. May
+God by His Spirit keep these things ever before our hearts, so that we
+may have a deeper interest in the glorious work of evangelization!
+
+We would, in conclusion, merely add a word of exhortation in reference
+to the Lord's Day evening. We would, in all affection, say to our
+beloved and honored fellow-laborers, Seek to give that one hour to the
+great business of the soul's salvation. There are 168 hours in the week,
+and, surely, it is the least we may devote _one_ of these to this
+momentous work. It so happens that during that interesting hour we can
+get the ear of our fellow-sinner. Oh, let us use it to pour in the sweet
+story of God's free love and of Christ's full salvation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A MOTTO FOR THE EVANGELIST.
+
+(2 Cor. x. 16.)
+
+
+"To _preach the gospel in the regions beyond you_." These words, while
+they set forth the large-heartedness of the self-denying and devoted
+apostle, do also furnish a fine model for the evangelist, in every age.
+The gospel is a traveler; and the preacher of the gospel must be a
+traveler likewise. The divinely-qualified and divinely-sent evangelist
+will fix his eye upon "_the world_." He will embrace, in his benevolent
+design, the human family. From house to house; from street to street;
+from city to city; from province to province; from kingdom to kingdom;
+from continent to continent; from pole to pole. Such is the range of the
+"good news" and the publisher thereof. "The regions beyond" must ever be
+the grand gospel motto. No sooner has the gospel lamp cast its cheering
+beams over a district, than the bearer of that lamp must think of the
+regions beyond. Thus the work goes on. Thus the mighty tide of grace
+rolls, in enlightening and saving power, over a dark world which lies in
+"the region of the shadow of death."
+
+ "Waft, waft, ye winds, the story,
+ And you, ye waters, roll,
+ Till, like the sea of glory,
+ It spreads from pole to pole."
+
+Christian reader, are you thinking of "the regions beyond you?" This
+expression may, in your case, mean the next house, the next street, the
+next village, the next city, the next kingdom, or the next continent.
+The application is for your own heart to ponder: but say, are you
+thinking of "the regions beyond you?" I do not want you to abandon your
+present post at all; or, at least, not until you are fully persuaded
+that your work, at the post, is done. But, remember, the gospel plough
+should never stand still. "_Onward_" is the motto of every true
+evangelist. Let the shepherds abide by the flocks; but let the
+evangelists betake themselves hither and thither, to gather the sheep.
+Let them sound the gospel trump, far and wide, o'er the dark mountains
+of this world, to gather together the elect of God. This is the design
+of the gospel. This should be the object of the evangelist, as he sighs
+after "the regions beyond." When Caesar beheld, from the coast of Gaul,
+the white cliffs of Britain, he earnestly longed to carry his arms
+thither. The evangelist, on the other hand, whose heart beats in unison
+with the heart of Jesus, as he casts his eye over the map of the world,
+longs to carry the gospel of peace into regions which have heretofore
+been wrapped in midnight gloom, covered with the dark mantle of
+superstition, or blasted beneath the withering influences of "a form of
+godliness without the power."
+
+It would, I believe, be a profitable question for many of us to put to
+ourselves, how far are we discharging our holy responsibilities to "the
+regions beyond." I believe the Christian who is not cultivating and
+manifesting an evangelistic spirit, is in a truly deplorable condition.
+I believe, too, that the assembly which is not cultivating and
+manifesting an evangelistic spirit is in a dead state. One of the truest
+marks of spiritual growth and prosperity, whether in an individual or in
+an assembly, is earnest anxiety after the conversion of souls. This
+anxiety will swell the bosom with most generous emotions; yea, it will
+break forth in copious streams of benevolent exertion, ever flowing
+toward "the regions beyond." It is hard to believe that "the word of
+Christ" is "dwelling richly" in any one who is not making some effort to
+impart that word to his fellow-sinners. It matters not what may be the
+amount of the effort; it may be to drop a few words in the ear of a
+friend, to give a tract, to pen a note, to breathe a prayer. But one
+thing is certain, namely, that a healthy, vigorous Christian will be an
+evangelistic Christian--a teller of good news--one whose sympathies,
+desires, and energies, are ever going forth toward "the regions beyond."
+"I must preach the gospel to other cities also, for therefore am I
+sent." Such was the language of the true Evangelist.
+
+It is very doubtful whether many of the servants of Christ have not
+erred in allowing themselves, through one influence or another, to
+become too much localized--too much tied in one place. They have dropped
+into routine work--into a round of stated preaching in the same place,
+and, in many cases, have paralyzed themselves and paralyzed their
+hearers also. I speak not, now, of the labors of the pastor, the elder,
+or the teacher, which must, of course, be carried on in the midst of
+those who are the proper subjects of such labors. I refer more
+particularly to the evangelist. Such an one should never suffer himself
+to be localized. The world is his sphere--"the regions beyond," his
+motto--to gather out God's elect, his object--the current of the Spirit,
+his line of direction. If the reader should be one whom God has called
+and fitted to be an evangelist, let him remember these four things--the
+sphere, the motto, the object, and the line of direction, which all must
+adopt if they would prove fruitful laborers in the gospel field.
+
+Finally, whether the reader be an evangelist or not, I would earnestly
+intreat him to examine how far he is seeking to further the gospel of
+Christ. We must not stand idle. Time is short! Eternity is rapidly
+posting on! The Master is most worthy! Souls are most precious! The
+season for work will soon close! Let us, then, in the name of the Lord,
+be up and doing. And when we have done what we can, in the regions
+around, let us carry the precious seed into "THE REGIONS BEYOND."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE WORK OF AN EVANGELIST.
+
+(Acts xvi. 8-31.)
+
+
+We ventured to offer a word to the evangelist, which we now follow up
+with a paper on the evangelist's work; and we cannot do better than
+select, as the basis of our remarks, a page from the missionary record
+of one of the greatest evangelists that ever lived. The passage of
+Scripture that stands at the head of this article furnishes specimens of
+three distinct classes of hearers, and also the method in which they
+were met by the great apostle of the Gentiles, guided, most surely, by
+the Holy Ghost. We have, first, _the earnest seeker_; secondly, _the
+false professor_; and thirdly, _the hardened sinner_. These three
+classes are to be met everywhere, and at all times, by the Lord's
+workman; and hence we may be thankful for an inspired account of the
+right mode of dealing with such. It is most desirable that those who go
+forth with the gospel should have skill in dealing with the various
+conditions of soul that come before them, from day to day; and there can
+be no more effectual way of attaining this skill than the careful study
+of the models given us by God the Holy Ghost.
+
+Let us then, in the first place, look at the narrative of
+
+
+THE EARNEST SEEKER.
+
+The laborious apostle, in the course of his missionary journeyings,
+came to Troas, and there a vision appeared to him in the night, "There
+stood a man of Macedonia, and prayed him, saying, Come over into
+Macedonia and help us. And after he had seen the vision, immediately we
+endeavored to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the Lord had
+called us for to preach the gospel unto them. Therefore loosing from
+Troas, we came with a straight course to Samothracia, and the next day
+to Neapolis; and from thence to Philippi, which is the chief city of
+that part of Macedonia, and a colony: and we were in that city abiding
+certain days. And on the Sabbath we went out of the city by a river
+side, where prayer was wont to be made; and we sat down, and spake unto
+the women which resorted thither. And a certain woman named Lydia, a
+seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira, which worshiped God, heard
+us; whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended unto the things that
+were spoken of Paul. And when she was baptized, and her household, she
+besought us, saying, If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord,
+come into my house and abide there. And she constrained us" (Acts xvi.
+8-15).
+
+Here, then, we have a touching picture--something well worth gazing at
+and pondering. It is a picture of one who, having through grace gotten a
+measure of light, was living up to it, and was earnestly seeking for
+more. Lydia, the seller of purple, belonged to the same interesting
+generation as the eunuch of Ethiopia, and the centurion of Caesarea. All
+three appear on the page of inspiration as quickened souls not
+emancipated--not at rest--not satisfied. The eunuch had gone from
+Ethiopia to Jerusalem in search of something on which to rest his
+anxious soul. He had left that city still unsatisfied, and was devoutly
+and earnestly hanging over the precious page of inspiration. The eye of
+God was upon him, and He sent His servant Philip with the very message
+that was needed to solve his difficulties, answer his questions, and set
+his soul at rest. God knows how to bring the Philips and the eunuchs
+together. He knows how to prepare the heart for the message and the
+message for the heart. The eunuch was a worshiper of God; but Philip is
+sent to teach him how to see God in the face of Jesus Christ. This was
+precisely what he wanted. It was a flood of fresh light breaking in upon
+his earnest spirit, setting his heart and conscience at rest, and
+sending him on his way rejoicing. He had honestly followed the light as
+it broke in upon his soul, and God sent him more.
+
+Thus it is ever. "To him that hath shall more be given." There never was
+a soul who sincerely acted up to his light that did not get more light.
+This is most consolatory and encouraging to all anxious enquirers. If
+the reader belongs to this class, let him take courage. If he is one of
+those with whom God has begun to work, then let him rest assured of
+this, that He who hath begun a good work will perform the same until the
+day of Jesus Christ. He will, most surely, perfect that which
+concerneth His people.
+
+But let no one fold his arms, settle upon his oars, and coolly say, "I
+must wait God's time for more light. I can do nothing--my efforts are
+useless. When God's time comes I shall be all right; till then, I must
+remain as I am." These were not the thoughts or feelings of the
+Ethiopian eunuch. He was one of the earnest seekers; and all earnest
+seekers are sure to be happy finders. It must be so, for "God is a
+rewarder of them that diligently seek Him" (Heb. xi. 6).
+
+So also with the centurion of Caesarea. He was a man of the same stamp.
+He lived up to his light. He fasted, he prayed, and gave alms. We are
+not told whether he had read the sermon on the mount: but it is
+remarkable that he exercised himself in the three grand branches of
+practical righteousness set forth by our Lord in the sixth chapter of
+Matthew.[XXV.] He was moulding his conduct and shaping his way according
+to the standard which God had set before him. His righteousness exceeded
+the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, and therefore he entered
+the kingdom. He was, through grace, a real man, earnestly following the
+light as it streamed in upon his soul, and he was led into the full
+blaze of the gospel of the grace of God. God sent a Peter to Cornelius,
+as he had sent a Philip to the eunuch. The prayers and alms had gone up
+as a memorial before God, and Peter was sent with a message of full
+salvation through a crucified and risen Saviour.
+
+Now it is quite possible that there are persons who, having been rocked
+in the cradle of easy-going evangelical profession, and trained up in
+the flippant formalism of a self-indulgent, heaven-made-easy religion,
+are ready to condemn the pious conduct of Cornelius, and pronounce it
+the fruit of ignorance and legality. Such persons have never known what
+it was to deny themselves a single meal, or to spend an hour in real,
+earnest prayer, or to open their hand, in true benevolence, to meet the
+wants of the poor. They have heard and learnt, perchance, that salvation
+is not to be gained by such means--that we are justified by faith
+without works--that it is to him that worketh not, but believeth on Him
+that justifieth the ungodly.
+
+All this is most true; but what right have we to imagine that Cornelius
+was praying, fasting, and giving alms in order to earn salvation? None
+whatever--at least if we are to be governed by the inspired narrative,
+and we have no other means of knowing aught about this truly excellent
+and interesting character. He was informed by the angel that his prayers
+and his alms had gone up as a memorial before God. Is not this a clear
+proof that these prayers and alms were not the trappings of
+self-righteousness, but the fruits of a righteousness based on the
+knowledge which he had of God? Surely the fruits of self-righteousness
+and legality could never have ascended as a memorial to the throne of
+God; nor could Peter ever have said concerning a mere legalist that he
+was one who feared God and worked righteousness.
+
+Ah, no, reader; Cornelius was a man thoroughly in earnest. He lived up
+to what he knew, and he would have been quite wrong to go further. To
+him the salvation of his immortal soul, the service of God, and
+eternity, were grand and all-absorbing realities. He was none of your
+easy-going professors, full of flippant, vapid, worthless talk, but
+_doing_ nothing. He belonged to another generation altogether. He
+belonged to the _working_, not the _talking_ class. He was one on whom
+the eye of God rested with complacency, and in whom the mind of heaven
+was profoundly interested.
+
+And so was our friend of Thyatira, Lydia, the seller of purple. She
+belonged to the same school--she occupied the same platform as the
+centurion and the eunuch. It is truly delightful to contemplate these
+three precious souls--to think of one in Ethiopia; another at Caesarea;
+and a third at Thyatira or Philippi. It is particularly refreshing to
+contrast such downright thorough-going, earnest souls, with many in this
+our day of boasted light and knowledge, who have got the plan of
+salvation, as it is termed, in their heads, the doctrines of grace on
+the tongue, but the world in the heart; whose absorbing object is self,
+self, self,--miserable object!
+
+We shall have occasion to refer more fully to these latter under our
+second head; but, for the present, we shall think of the earnest Lydia;
+and we must confess it is a far more grateful exercise. It is very plain
+that Lydia, like Cornelius and the eunuch, was a quickened soul; she was
+a worshiper of God; she was one who was right glad to lay aside her
+purple-selling, and betake herself to a prayer-meeting, or to any such
+like place where spiritual profit was to be had, and where there were
+good things going. "Birds of a feather flock together," and so Lydia
+soon found out where a few pious souls, a few kindred spirits, were in
+the habit of meeting to wait on God in prayer.
+
+All this is lovely. It does the heart good to be brought in contact with
+this deep-toned earnestness. Surely the Holy Ghost has penned this
+narrative, like all Holy Scripture, for our learning. It is a specimen
+case, and we do well to ponder it. Lydia was found diligently availing
+herself of any and every opportunity; indeed she exhibited the real
+fruits of divine life, the genuine instincts of the new nature. She
+found out where saints met for prayer, and took her place among them.
+She did not fold her arms and settle down on her lees, to wait, in
+antinomian indolence and culpable idleness, for some extraordinary
+undefinable thing to come upon her, or some mysterious change to come
+over her. No; she went to a prayer-meeting--the place of expressed
+need--the place of expected blessing: and there God met her, as He is
+sure to meet all who frequent such scenes in Lydia's spirit. God never
+fails an expectant heart. He has said, "They shall not be ashamed that
+wait for Me;" and, like a bright and blessed sunbeam on the page of
+inspiration, shines that pregnant, weighty, soul-stirring sentence, "God
+is a rewarder of them that DILIGENTLY seek Him." He sent a Philip to the
+eunuch in the desert of Gaza. He sent a Peter to the centurion, in the
+town of Caesarea. He sent a Paul to a seller of purple, in the suburbs of
+Philippi; and He will send a message to the reader of these lines, if he
+be a really earnest seeker after God's salvation.
+
+It is ever a moment of deepest interest when a prepared soul is brought
+in contact with the full gospel of the grace of God. It may be that that
+soul has been under deep and painful exercise for many a long day,
+seeking rest but finding none. The Lord has been working by His Spirit,
+and preparing the ground for the good seed. He has been making deep the
+furrows so that the precious seed of His Word may take permanent root,
+and bring forth fruit to His praise. The Holy Ghost is never in haste.
+His work is deep, sure and solid. His plants are not like Jonah's gourd,
+springing up in a night and perishing in a night. All that He does will
+stand, blessed be His name. "I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall
+be forever." When He convicts, converts, and liberates a soul, the stamp
+of His own eternal hand is upon the work, in all its stages.
+
+Now, it must have been a moment of intense interest when one in Lydia's
+state of soul was brought in contact with that most glorious gospel
+which Paul carried (Acts xvi. 14). She was thoroughly prepared for his
+message; and surely his message was thoroughly prepared for her. He
+carried with him truth which she had never heard and never thought of.
+As we have already remarked, she had been living up to her light; she
+was a worshiper of God; but we are bold to assert that she had no idea
+of the glorious truth which was lodged in the heart of that stranger who
+sat beside her at the prayer-meeting. She had come thither--devout and
+earnest woman that she was--to pray and to worship, to get some little
+refreshment for her spirit, after the toils of the week. How little did
+she imagine that at that meeting she should hear the greatest preacher
+that ever lived, save One, and that she should hear the very highest
+order of truth that had ever fallen upon mortal ears.
+
+Yet thus it was. And, oh, how important it was for Lydia to have been at
+that memorable prayer meeting! How well it was she had not acted as so
+many, now-a-days, act, who after a week of toil in the shop, the
+warehouse, the factory, or the field, take the opportunity of lying in
+bed on Sunday!
+
+How many there are whom you will see at their post from Monday morning
+till Saturday night, working away with all diligence at their calling,
+but for whom you will look in vain at the meeting on the Lord's day. How
+is this? They will tell you, perhaps, that they are so worn out on
+Saturday night that they have no energy to rise on Sunday, and therefore
+they spend this day in sloth, lounging, and self-indulgence. They have
+no care for their souls, no care for eternity, no care for Christ. They
+care for themselves, for their families, for the world, for
+money-making; and hence you will find them up with the dawn of Monday
+and off to their work.
+
+Lydia did not belong to this class at all. No doubt she attended to her
+business, as every right-minded person will. We dare say--indeed, we are
+sure--she kept very excellent purple, and was a fair, honest trader, in
+every sense of the word. But she did not spend her Sabbath in bed, or
+lounging about her house, or nursing herself up, and making a great fuss
+about all she had to do during the week. Neither do we believe that
+Lydia was one of those self-occupied folk whom a shower of rain is
+sufficient to keep away from a meeting. No; Lydia was of a different
+stamp altogether. She was an earnest woman, who felt she had a soul to
+save, and an eternity before her, and a living God to serve and worship.
+
+Would to God we had more Lydias in this our day! It would give a charm,
+and an interest, and a freshness to the work of an evangelist, for
+which many of the Lord's workmen have to sigh in vain. We seem to live
+in a day of terrible unreality as to divine and eternal things. Men,
+women, and children are real enough at their money-making, their
+pursuits, and their pleasures; but oh, when the things of God, the
+things of the soul, the things of eternity, are in question, the aspect
+of people is that of a yawning indifference. But the moment is rapidly
+approaching--every beat of the pulse, every tick of the watch, brings us
+nearer to it--when the yawning indifference shall be exchanged for
+"weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth." If this were more deeply
+felt, we should have many more Lydias, prepared to lend an attentive ear
+to Paul's gospel.
+
+What force and beauty in those words, "Whose heart the Lord opened, that
+_she attended_ unto the things that were spoken of Paul." Lydia was not
+one of those who go to meetings to think of anything and everything but
+the things that are spoken by the Lord's messengers. She was not
+thinking of her purple, or of the prices, or the probable gains or
+losses. How many of those who fill our preaching rooms and lecture halls
+follow the example of Lydia? Alas! we fear but very few indeed. The
+business, the state of the markets, the state of the funds, money,
+pleasure, dress, folly--a thousand and one things are thought of, and
+dwelt upon, and attended to, so that the poor vagrant, volatile heart is
+at the ends of the earth instead of "_attending_" to the things that are
+spoken.
+
+All this is very solemn, and very awful. It really ought to be looked
+into and thought of. People seem to forget the responsibility involved
+in hearing the gospel preached. They do not seem to be in the smallest
+degree impressed with the weighty fact that the gospel never leaves any
+unconverted person where it finds him. He is either saved by receiving,
+or rendered more guilty by rejecting it. Hence it becomes a serious
+matter to hear the gospel. People may attend gospel meetings as a matter
+of custom, as a religious service, or because they have nothing else to
+do, and the time would hang heavy upon their hands; or they may go
+because they think that the mere act of going has a sort of merit
+attached to it. Thus thousands attend preachings at which Christ's
+servants, though not Pauls in gift, power, or intelligence, unfold the
+precious grace of God in sending His only begotten Son into the world to
+save us from everlasting torment and misery. The virtue and efficacy of
+the atoning death of the divine Saviour--the Lamb of God--the dread
+realities of eternity--the awful horrors of hell, and the unspeakable
+joys of heaven--all these weighty matters are handled, according to the
+measure of grace bestowed upon the Lord's messengers, and yet how little
+impression is produced! They "reason of righteousness, temperance, and
+judgment to come," and yet how few are made even to "tremble!"
+
+And why? Will anyone presume to excuse himself for rejecting the gospel
+message on the ground of his inability to believe it? Will he appeal to
+the very case before us, and say, "The Lord opened her heart; and if He
+would only do the same for me, I, too, should attend; but until He does,
+I can do nothing"? We reply, and with deep seriousness, Such an argument
+will not avail thee in the day of judgment. Indeed we are most
+thoroughly convinced that thou wilt not dare to use it then. Thou art
+making a false use of Lydia's charming history. True it is, blessedly
+true, the Lord opened her heart; and He is ready to open thine also, if
+there were in thee but the hundredth part of Lydia's earnestness.
+
+And dost thou not know full well, reader, that there are two sides to
+this great question, as there are to every question? It is all very
+well, and sounds very forcibly, for thee to say, "I can do nothing." But
+who told thee this? Where hast thou learnt it? We solemnly challenge
+thee, in the presence of God, Canst thou look up to Him and say, "I can
+do nothing--I am not responsible?" Say, is the salvation of thy
+never-dying soul just _the_ one thing in which thou canst do nothing?
+Thou canst do a lot of things in the service of the world, of self, and
+of Satan; but when it becomes a question of God, the soul, and eternity,
+you coolly say, "I can do nothing--I am not responsible."
+
+Ah! it will never do. All this style of argument is the fruit of a
+one-sided theology. It is the result of the most pernicious reasoning of
+the human mind upon certain truths in Scripture which are turned the
+wrong way and sadly misapplied. But it will not stand. This is what we
+urge upon the reader. It is of no possible use arguing in this way. The
+sinner is responsible; and all the theology, and all the reasoning, and
+all the fallacious though plausible objections that can be scraped
+together, can never do away with this weighty and most serious fact.
+
+Hence, therefore, we call upon the reader to be, like Lydia, in earnest
+about his soul's salvation--to let every other question, every other
+point, every other subject, sink into utter insignificance in comparison
+with this one momentous question--the salvation of his precious soul.
+Then, he may depend upon it, the One who sent Philip to the eunuch, and
+sent Peter to the centurion, and sent Paul to Lydia, will send some
+messenger and some message to him, and will also open his heart to
+attend. Of this there cannot possibly be a doubt, inasmuch as Scripture
+declares that "God is not willing that any should perish, but that all
+should come to repentance." All who perish, after having heard the
+message of salvation--the sweet story of God's free love, of a Saviour's
+death and resurrection--shall perish without a shadow of an excuse,
+shall descend into hell with their blood upon their guilty heads. Their
+eyes shall then be open to see through all the flimsy arguments by which
+they have sought to prop themselves up in a false position, and lull
+themselves to sleep in sin and worldliness.
+
+But let us dwell for a moment on "the things that were spoken of Paul."
+The Spirit of God hath not thought proper to give us even a brief
+outline of Paul's address at the prayer-meeting. We are therefore left
+to other passages of Holy Scripture to form an idea of what Lydia heard
+from his lips on that interesting occasion. Let us take, for example,
+that famous passage in which he reminds the Corinthians of the gospel
+which he had preached to them. "Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you
+the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and
+wherein ye stand; by which also ye are saved if ye keep in memory what I
+preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain. For I delivered unto
+you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for
+our sins according to the Scriptures; and that He was buried, and that
+He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures" (I Cor. xv.
+I-4).
+
+Now we may safely conclude that the foregoing passage of Scripture
+contains a compendium of the things that were spoken of Paul at the
+prayer-meeting at Philippi. The grand theme of Paul's preaching was
+Christ--Christ for the sinner--Christ for the saint--Christ for the
+conscience--Christ for the heart. He never allowed himself to wander
+from this great centre, but made all his preachings and all his
+teachings circulate round it with admirable consistency. If he called on
+men, both Jews and Gentiles, to repent, the lever with which he worked
+was Christ. If he urged them to believe, the object which he held up
+for faith was Christ, on the authority of Holy Scripture. If he reasoned
+of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, the One that gave
+cogency and moral power to his reasoning was Christ. In short, Christ
+was the very gist and marrow, the sum and substance, the foundation and
+top stone of Paul's preaching and teaching.
+
+But, for our present purpose, there are three grand subjects, found in
+Paul's preaching, to which we desire to call the reader's attention.
+These are, first, the grace of God; secondly, the Person and work of
+Christ; and thirdly, the testimony of the Holy Ghost as given in the
+Holy Scriptures.
+
+We do not attempt to go into these vast subjects here; we merely name
+them, and entreat the reader to ponder them, to muse over them, and seek
+to make them his own.
+
+(I) The grace of God--His free, sovereign favor--is the source from
+whence salvation flows--salvation in all the length, breadth, height,
+and depth of that most precious word--salvation which stretches, like a
+golden chain, from the bosom of God, down to the very deepest depths of
+the sinner's guilty and ruined condition, and back again to the throne
+of God--meets all the sinner's necessities, overlaps the whole of the
+saint's history, and glorifies God in the highest possible manner.
+
+(2) Then, in the second place, the Person of Christ and His finished
+work are the _only_ channel through which salvation can possibly flow to
+the lost and guilty sinner. It is not the Church and her sacraments,
+religion and its rites and ceremonies--man or his doings in any shape or
+form. It is the death and resurrection of Christ. "He died for our sins,
+was buried, and rose again the third day." This was the gospel which
+Paul preached, by which the Corinthians were saved, and the apostle
+declares, with solemn emphasis, "If any man preach any other gospel, let
+him be accursed." Tremendous words for this our day!
+
+(3) But, thirdly, the authority on which we receive the salvation is the
+testimony of the Holy Ghost in Scripture. It is "according to the
+Scriptures." This is a most solid and comforting truth. It is not a
+question of feelings, or experiences, or evidences; it is a simple
+question of faith in God's word wrought in the heart by God's Spirit.
+
+It is a serious reflection for the evangelist, that wherever God's
+Spirit is at work, there Satan is sure to be busy. We must remember and
+ever be prepared for this. The enemy of Christ and the enemy of souls is
+always on the watch, always hovering about to see what he can do, either
+to hinder or corrupt the work of the gospel. This need not terrify or
+even discourage the workman; but it is well to bear it in mind and be
+watchful. Satan will leave no stone unturned to mar or hinder the
+blessed work of God's Spirit. He has proved himself the ceaseless,
+vigilant enemy of that work, from the days of Eden down to the present
+moment.
+
+Now, in tracing the history of Satan, we find him acting in two
+characters, namely, as a serpent, or as a lion--using craft or violence.
+He will try to deceive; and, if he cannot succeed, then he will use
+violence. Thus it is in this sixteenth chapter of the Acts. The
+apostle's heart had been cheered and refreshed by what we moderns should
+pronounce, "a beautiful case of conversion." Lydia's was a very real and
+decided case, in every respect. It was direct, positive, and
+unmistakable. She received Christ into her heart, and forthwith took
+Christian ground by submitting to the deeply significant ordinance of
+baptism. Nor was this all. She immediately opened her house to the
+Lord's messengers. Hers was no mere lip profession. It was not merely
+_saying_ she believed. She proved her faith in Christ, not only by going
+down under the water of baptism, but also by identifying herself and her
+household with the name and cause of that blessed One whom she had
+received into her heart by faith.
+
+All this was clear and satisfactory. But we must now look at something
+quite different. The serpent appears upon the scene in the person of
+
+
+THE DECEIVER.
+
+"It came to pass, as we went to prayer, a certain damsel possessed with
+a spirit of divination met us, which brought her masters much gain by
+soothsaying. The same followed Paul and us, and cried, saying, These men
+are the servants of the most high God, which show unto us the way of
+salvation. And this did she many days. But Paul, being grieved, turned
+and said to the spirit, I command thee in the name of Jesus Christ to
+come out of her. And he came out the same hour" (vers. 16-18).
+
+Here, then, was a case eminently calculated to test the spirituality and
+integrity of the evangelist. Most men would have hailed such words from
+the lips of this damsel as an encouraging testimony to the work. Why
+then was Paul grieved? Why did he not allow her to continue to bear
+witness to the object of his mission? Was she not saying the truth? Were
+they not the servants of the most high God? And were they not showing
+the way of salvation? Why be grieved with--why silence such a witness?
+Because it was of Satan; and, most assuredly, the apostle was not going
+to receive testimony from him. He could not allow Satan to help him in
+his work. True, he might have walked about the streets of Philippi owned
+and honored as a servant of God, if only he had consented to let the
+devil have a hand in the work. But Paul could never consent to this. He
+could never suffer the enemy to mix himself up with the work of the
+Lord. Had he done so, it would have given the deathblow to the testimony
+at Philippi. To have permitted Satan to put his hand to the work, would
+have involved the total shipwreck of the mission to Macedonia.
+
+It is deeply important for the Lord's workman to weigh this matter. We
+may rest assured that this narrative of the damsel has been written for
+our instruction.
+
+It is not only a statement of what has occurred, but a sample of what
+may and indeed what does occur every day.[XXVI.]
+
+Besides Christendom is full of false profession. There are multitudes of
+false professors at this moment, throughout the wide domain of Christian
+profession. It is sad to have to say it, but so it is, and we must press
+the fact upon the attention of the reader. We are surrounded, on all
+sides, by those who give a merely nominal assent to the truths of the
+Christian religion. They go on, from week to week, and from year to
+year, professing to believe certain things which they do not in reality
+believe at all. There are thousands who, every Lord's Day, profess to
+believe in the forgiveness of sins, and yet, were such persons to be
+examined, it would be found that they either do not think about the
+matter at all, or, if they do think, they deem it the very height of
+presumption for any one to be sure that his sins are forgiven.
+
+This is very serious. Only think of a person standing up in the presence
+of God and saying, "I believe in the forgiveness of sins," and all the
+while he does not believe any such thing! Can anything be more
+hardening to the heart, or more deadening to the conscience than this?
+It is our firm persuasion that the forms and the formularies of
+professing Christianity are doing more to ruin precious souls than all
+the forms of moral pravity put together. It is perfectly appalling to
+contemplate the countless multitudes that are at this moment rushing
+along the well-trodden highway of religious profession, down to the
+eternal flames of hell. We feel bound to raise a warning note. We want
+the reader most solemnly to take heed as to this matter.
+
+We have only instanced one special formulary, because it refers to a
+subject of very general interest and importance. How few, comparatively,
+are clear and settled as to the question of forgiveness of sins! How few
+are able, calmly, decidedly, and intelligently, to say, "_I know_ that
+my sins are forgiven!" How few are in the real enjoyment of full
+forgiveness of sins, through faith in that precious blood that cleanseth
+from all sin! How solemn, therefore, to hear people giving utterance to
+such words as these, "I believe in the forgiveness of sins," while, in
+fact, they do not believe their own very utterance! Is the reader in the
+habit of using such a form of words? Does he believe it? Say, dear
+friend, are thy sins forgiven? Art thou washed in the precious atoning
+blood of Christ? If not, why not? The way is open. There is no
+hindrance. Thou art perfectly welcome, this moment, to the free benefits
+of the atoning work of Christ. Though thy sins be as scarlet; though
+they be black as midnight, black as hell; though they rise like a
+dreadful mountain before the vision of thy troubled soul, and threaten
+to sink thee into eternal perdition; yet do these words shine with
+divine and heavenly lustre on the page of inspiration, "_The blood of
+Jesus Christ, God's Son, cleanseth us from_ ALL _sin_" (I John i. 7).
+
+But mark, friend, do not go on, week after week, mocking God, hardening
+thine own heart, and carrying out the schemes of the great enemy of
+Christ, by a false profession. This marks the damsel possessed by a
+spirit of divination, and here her history links itself with the present
+awful condition of Christendom. What was the burden of her song, during
+those "many days" in the which the apostle narrowly considered her case?
+"These men are the servants of the most high God, which _show unto us_
+the way of salvation." But she was not saved--she was not delivered--she
+was, all the while, under Satan's power herself.
+
+Thus it is with Christendom--thus it is with each false professor
+throughout the length and breadth of the professing Church. We know of
+nothing, even in the deepest depths of moral evil, or in the darkest
+shades of heathenism, more truly awful than the state of careless,
+hardened, self-satisfied, fallow-ground professors, who on each
+successive Lord's Day give utterance, either in their prayers or their
+singing, to words which, so far as they are concerned, are wholly
+false.
+
+The thought of this is, at times, almost over-whelming. We cannot dwell
+upon it. It is really too sorrowful. We shall therefore pass on, having
+once more solemnly warned the reader against every shade and degree of
+false profession. Let him not say or sing aught that he does not
+heartily believe. The devil is at the bottom of all false profession,
+and by means thereof he seeks to bring discredit on the work of the
+Lord.
+
+But how truly refreshing to contemplate the actings of the faithful
+apostle in the case of the damsel. Had he been seeking his own ends, or
+had he been merely a minister of religion, he might have welcomed her
+words as a tributary stream to swell the tide of his popularity, or
+promote the interest of his cause. But Paul was not a mere minister of
+religion; he was a minister of Christ--a totally different thing. And we
+may notice that the damsel does not say a word about Christ. She
+breathes not the precious, peerless name of Jesus. There is total
+silence as to Him. This stamps the whole thing as of Satan. "No man can
+call Jesus Lord but by the Holy Ghost." People may speak of God, and of
+religion; but Christ has no place in their hearts. The Pharisees, in the
+ninth of John, could say to the poor man, "Give God the praise;" but in
+speaking of Jesus, they could say, "This man is a sinner."
+
+Thus it is ever in the case of corrupt religion, or false profession.
+Thus it was with the damsel in Acts xvi. There was not a syllable about
+Christ.
+
+There was no truth, no life, no reality. It was hollow and false. It was
+of Satan; and hence Paul would not and could not own it; he was grieved
+with it and utterly rejected it.
+
+Would that all were like him! Would that there were the singleness of
+eye to detect, and the integrity of heart to reject the work of Satan in
+much that is going on around us! Such an eye Paul, through grace,
+possessed. He was not to be deceived. He saw that the whole affair was
+an effort of Satan to mix himself up with the work, that thus he might
+spoil it altogether. "But Paul, being grieved, turned and said to the
+spirit, I command thee, in the name of Jesus Christ, to come out of her.
+And he came out the same hour."
+
+This was true spiritual action. Paul was not in any haste to come into
+collision with the evil one, or even to pronounce upon the case at all;
+he waited many days; but the very moment that the enemy was detected he
+is resisted and repulsed with uncompromising decision. A less spiritual
+workman might have allowed the thing to pass, under the idea that it
+might turn to account and help forward the work. Paul thought
+differently; and he was right. He would take no help from Satan. He was
+not going to work by such an agency; and hence, in the name of Jesus
+Christ--that name which the enemy so sedulously excluded--he puts Satan
+to flight.
+
+But no sooner was Satan repulsed as the serpent, than he assumed the
+character of a lion. Craft having failed, he tried violence. "And when
+her masters saw that the hope of their gains was gone, they caught Paul
+and Silas and drew them into the market-place unto the rulers, and
+brought them to the magistrates, saying, These men, being Jews, do
+exceedingly trouble our city, and teach customs which are not lawful for
+us to receive, neither to observe, being Romans. And the multitude rose
+up together against them; and the magistrates rent off their clothes,
+and commanded to beat them. And when they had laid many stripes upon
+them, they cast them into prison, charging the jailor to keep them
+safely" (vers. 19-23).
+
+Thus the enemy seemed to triumph; but be it remembered that Christ's
+warriors gain their most splendid victories by apparent defeat. The
+devil made a great mistake when he cast the apostle into prison. Indeed
+it is consolatory to reflect that he has never done anything else but
+make mistakes, from the moment that he left his first estate down to the
+present moment. His entire history, from beginning to end, is one tissue
+of errors.
+
+And thus, as has been already remarked, the devil made a great mistake
+when he cast Paul into prison at Philippi. To nature's view it might
+have seemed otherwise; but in the judgment of faith, the servant of
+Christ was much more in his right place in prison for the truth's sake,
+than outside at his Master's expense. True, Paul might have saved
+himself. He might have been an honored man, owned and acknowledged as "a
+servant of the most high God," if he had only accepted the damsel's
+testimony, and suffered the devil to help him in his work. But he could
+not do this, and hence he had to suffer. "And the multitude (ever fickle
+and easily swayed) rose up together against them: and the magistrates
+rent off their clothes, and commanded to beat them. And when they had
+laid many stripes upon them, they cast them into prison, charging the
+jailor to keep them safely. Who, having received such a charge, _thrust_
+them into the inner prison, and made their feet fast in the stocks"
+(vers. 22-24).
+
+Here, then, some might have said, was an end to the work of the
+evangelist in the city of Philippi. Here was an effectual stop to the
+preaching. Not so; the prison was the very place, at the moment, for the
+evangelist. His work was there. He was to find a congregation within the
+prison walls which he could not have found outside. But this leads us,
+in the third and last place, to the case of
+
+
+THE HARDENED SINNER.
+
+It was very unlikely that the jailor would ever have found his way to
+the prayer-meeting at the river side. He had little care for such
+things. He was neither an earnest seeker, nor a deceiver. He was a
+hardened sinner, pursuing a very hardening occupation. Jailors, from the
+occupation of their office, are, generally speaking, hard and stern men.
+No doubt there are exceptions. There are some tender-hearted men to be
+found in such situations; but, as a rule, jailors are not tender. It
+would hardly suit them to be so. They have to do with the very worst
+class of society. Much of the crime of the whole country comes under
+their notice; and many of the criminals come under their charge.
+Accustomed to the rough and the coarse, they are apt to become rough and
+coarse themselves.
+
+Now, judging from the inspired narrative before us, we may well question
+if the Philippian jailor was an exception to the general rule with
+respect to men of his class. Certainly he does not seem to have shown
+much tenderness to Paul and Silas. "He _thrust_ them into the _inner_
+prison, and made their feet _fast_ in the stocks." He seems to have gone
+to the utmost extreme in making them uncomfortable.
+
+But God had rich mercy in store for that poor, hardened, cruel jailor;
+and, as it was not at all likely that he would go to hear the gospel,
+the Lord sent the gospel to him; and, moreover, He made the devil the
+instrument of sending it. Little did the jailor know whom he was
+thrusting into the inner prison--little did he anticipate what was to
+happen ere another sun should rise. And we may add, little did the devil
+think of what he was doing when he sent the preachers of the gospel into
+jail, there to be the means of the jailor's conversion. But the Lord
+Jesus Christ knew what He was about to do, in the case of a poor
+hardened sinner. He can make the wrath of man to praise Him and restrain
+the remainder.
+
+ "He everywhere hath sway,
+ And all things serve His might,
+ His ev'ry act pure blessing is,
+ His path unsullied light.
+
+ "When He makes bare His arm,
+ Who shall His work withstand?
+ When He His people's cause defends,
+ Who then shall stay His hand?"
+
+It was His purpose to save the jailor; and so far from Satan's being
+able to frustrate that purpose, he was actually made the instrument of
+accomplishing it. "God's purpose shall stand; and He will do all His
+pleasure." And where He sets His love upon a poor, wretched, guilty
+sinner, He will have him in heaven, spite of all the malice and rage of
+hell.
+
+As to Paul and Silas, it is very evident that they were in their right
+place in the prison. They were there _for the truth's sake_, and
+therefore _the Lord was with them_. Hence they were perfectly happy.
+What, though they were confined within the gloomy walls of the prison,
+with their feet made fast in the stocks, prison walls could not confine
+their spirits. Nothing can hinder the joy of one who has the Lord with
+him. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, were happy in the fiery furnace.
+Daniel was happy in the lions' den; and Paul and Silas were happy in the
+dungeon of Philippi: "And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang
+praises to God: and the prisoners heard them."
+
+What sounds to issue from the inner prison! We may safely say that no
+such sounds had ever issued thence before. Curses and execrations and
+blasphemous words might have been heard; sighs, cries, and groans come
+forth from those walls. But to hear the accents of prayer and praise,
+ascending at the midnight hour, must have seemed strange indeed. Faith
+can sing as sweetly in a dungeon as at a prayer-meeting. It matters not
+where we are, provided always that we have God with us. His presence
+lights up the darkest cell, and turns a dungeon into the very gate of
+heaven. He can make His servants happy anywhere, and give them victory
+over the most adverse circumstances, and cause them to shout for joy in
+scenes where nature would be overwhelmed with sorrow.
+
+But the Lord had His eye upon the jailor. He had written his name in the
+Lamb's book of life before the foundation of the world, and He was now
+about to lead him into the full joy of His salvation. "And suddenly
+there was a great earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were
+shaken: and immediately all the doors were opened, and every one's bands
+were loosed" (ver. 26).
+
+Now if Paul had not been in full communion with the mind and heart of
+Christ, he would assuredly have turned to Silas and said, "Now is the
+moment for us to make our escape. God has most manifestly appeared for
+us, and set before us an open door. If ever there was an opening of
+divine Providence surely this is one." But no; Paul knew better. He was
+in the full current of His blessed Master's thoughts, and in full
+sympathy with his Master's heart. Hence he made no attempt to escape.
+The claims of _truth_ had brought him into prison; the activities of
+_grace_ kept him there. Providence opened the door; but faith refused to
+walk out. People talk of being guided by Providence; but if Paul had
+been so guided, the jailor would never have been a jewel in his crown.
+
+"And the keeper of the prison awaking out of his sleep and seeing the
+prison doors open, he drew out his sword, and would have killed himself,
+supposing that the prisoners had been fled" (ver. 27). This proves, very
+plainly, that the earthquake, with all its attendant circumstances, had
+not touched the heart of the jailor. He naturally supposed, when he saw
+the doors open, that the prisoners were all gone. He could not imagine a
+number of prisoners sitting quietly in jail when the doors lay open and
+their chains were loosed. And then what was to become of him if the
+prisoners were gone? How could he face the authorities? Impossible.
+Anything but that. Death, even by his own hand, was preferable to that.
+
+Thus the devil had conducted this hardened sinner to the very brink of
+the precipice, and he was about to give him the final and fatal push
+over the edge, and down to the eternal flames of hell; when lo, a voice
+of love sounded in his ear. It was the voice of Jesus through the lips
+of His servant--a voice of tender and deep compassion--"_Do thyself no
+harm_."
+
+This was irresistible. A hardened sinner could meet an earthquake; he
+could meet death itself; but he could not withstand the mighty melting
+power of love. The hardest heart must yield to the moral influence of
+love. "Then he called for a light, and sprang in, and came _trembling_,
+and fell down before Paul and Silas, and brought them out, and said,
+Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" Love can break the hardest heart. And
+surely there was love in those words, "Do thyself no harm," coming from
+the lips of one to whom he had done so much harm a few hours before.
+
+And, be it noted, there was not a single syllable of reproach, or even
+of reflection, uttered by Paul to the jailor. This was Christ-like. It
+was the way of divine grace. If we look through the Gospels, we never
+find the Lord casting reproach upon the sinner. He has tears of sorrow;
+He has touching words of grace and tenderness; but no reproaches--no
+reflections--no reproach to the poor distressed sinner. We cannot
+attempt to furnish the many illustrations and proofs of this assertion;
+but the reader has only to turn to the gospel story to see its truth.
+Look at the prodigal: look at the thief. Not one reproving word to
+either.
+
+Thus it is in every case; and thus it was with God's Spirit in Paul. Not
+a word about the harsh treatment--the thrusting into the inner
+prison--not a word about the stocks. "Do thyself no harm." And then,
+"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy
+house."
+
+Such is the rich and precious grace of God. It shines, in this scene,
+with uncommon lustre. It delights in taking up hardened sinners, melting
+and subduing their hard hearts, and leading them into the sunlight of a
+full salvation; and all this in a style peculiar to itself. Yes, God has
+His style of doing things, blessed be His name; and when He saves a
+wretched sinner, He does it after such a fashion as fully proves that
+His whole heart is in the work. It is His joy to save a sinner--even the
+very chief--and He does it in a way worthy of Himself.
+
+And now, let us look at the fruit of all this. The jailor's conversion
+was most unmistakable. Saved from the very brink of hell, he was brought
+into the very atmosphere of heaven. Preserved from self-destruction, he
+was brought into the circle of God's salvation; and the evidences of
+this were as clear as could be desired. "And they spake unto him the
+word of the Lord, and to all that were in his house. And he took them
+the same hour of the night, and washed their stripes; and was baptized,
+he and all his straightway. And when he had brought them into his house,
+he set meat before them, and rejoiced, _believing in God, with all his
+house_."
+
+What a marvelous change! The ruthless jailor has become the generous
+host! "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are
+passed away: behold, all things are become new." How clearly we can now
+see that Paul was right in not being guided by _providences_! How much
+better and higher to be led by the "eye" of God! What an eternal loss
+it would have proved to him had he walked out at the open door! How much
+better to be conducted out by the very hand that had thrust him in--a
+hand once the instrument of cruelty and sin, now the instrument of
+righteousness and love! What a magnificent triumph! What a scene,
+altogether! How little had the devil anticipated such a result from the
+imprisonment of the Lord's servants! He was thoroughly outwitted. The
+tables were completely turned upon him. He thought to hinder the gospel,
+and, behold! he was made to help it on. He had hoped to get rid of two
+of Christ's servants, and, lo! he lost one of his own. Christ is
+stronger than Satan; and all who put their trust in Him and move in the
+current of His thoughts shall most assuredly share in the triumphs of
+His grace now, and shine in the brightness of His glory forever.
+
+Thus much, then, as to "the work of an evangelist." Such are the scenes
+through which he may have to pass--such the cases with which he may have
+to come in contact. We have seen the earnest seeker satisfied; the
+deceiver silenced; the hardened sinner saved. May all who go forth with
+the gospel of the grace of God know how to deal with the various types
+of character that may cross their path! May many be raised up to do the
+work of an evangelist!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXV.] The reader will notice that in Matthew vi. I, the marginal
+reading is the correct one: "Take heed that ye do not your
+_righteousness_ before men, to be seen of them." Then we have the three
+departments of this righteousness, namely, alms-giving (ver. 2); prayer
+(ver. 3); fasting (ver. 16). These were the very things Cornelius was
+doing. In short, he feared God, and was working righteousness, according
+to his measure of light.
+
+[XXVI.] [An evangelist will not travel far in our day to find persons
+who will take him warmly by the hand, and profess lively interest in his
+work. A moment's intercourse with them, however, will disclose them to
+be agents of "Christian Science," of "Millennial Dawn" of "Seventh Day
+Adventism" or of some one or other of like systems--messengers of Satan,
+all professing Christianity, though in reality destroyers of it; pluming
+themselves with its name, only to get inside and work destruction the
+more easily. ED.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+LETTERS TO AN EVANGELIST.
+
+
+DEAREST A----,
+
+I have been much interested, and I trust profited, of late, by tracing,
+through the Gospels and the Acts, the various notices of the work of
+evangelization; and it has occured to me that it may not be amiss to
+present to you, as one much occupied in the blessed work, a few of the
+thoughts that have suggested themselves to my mind. I shall feel myself
+much more free in this way, than if I were writing a formal treatise.
+
+And, first of all, I have been greatly struck with the simplicity with
+which the work of evangelizing was carried on in primitive times; so
+very unlike a great deal of what obtains among us. It seems to me that
+we moderns are quite too much hampered by conventional rules--too much
+fettered by the habits of Christendom. We are sadly deficient in what I
+may call spiritual elasticity. We are apt to think that in order to
+evangelize there must be a special gift; and even where there is this
+special gift, there must be a great deal of machinery and human
+arrangement. When we speak of doing the work of an evangelist, we, for
+the most part, have before our minds great public halls, and crowded
+audiences, for which there is a demand for considerable gift and power
+for speaking.
+
+Now you and I thoroughly believe, that in order to preach the gospel
+publicly, there must be a special gift from the Head of the Church; and,
+moreover, we believe according to Eph. iv. 11, that Christ has given,
+and does still give, "evangelists." This is clear, if we are to be
+guided by Scripture. But I find in the Gospels, and in the Acts of the
+Apostles, that a quantity of most blessed evangelistic work was done by
+persons who were not specially gifted at all, but who had an earnest
+love for souls, and a deep sense of the preciousness of Christ and His
+salvation. And, what is more, I find in those who were specially gifted,
+called, and appointed by Christ to preach the gospel, a simplicity,
+freedom, and naturalness in their mode of working, which I greatly covet
+for myself and for all my brethren.
+
+Let us look a little into Scripture. Take that lovely scene in John i.
+36-45. John pours out his heart in testimony to Jesus: "Behold the Lamb
+of God!" His soul was absorbed with the glorious Object. What was the
+result? "Two disciples heard him speak, and they followed Jesus." What
+then? "One of the two which heard John speak, and followed Him, was
+Andrew, Simon Peter's brother." And what does he do? "_He first findeth
+his own brother_ Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messias,
+which is, being interpreted, the Christ. And he brought him to Jesus."
+Again, "The day following, Jesus would go forth into Galilee, and
+findeth Philip, and saith unto him, Follow Me.... _Philip findeth
+Nathanael_, and saith unto him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in the
+law, and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of
+Joseph.... _Come and see._"
+
+Here then, dearest A., is the style of thing for which I earnestly long:
+this individual work, this laying hold of the first man that comes in
+our way, this finding one's own brother, and bringing him to Jesus. I do
+feel we are deficient in this. It is all right enough to gather
+congregations, and address them, as God gives ability and opportunity.
+Neither you nor I would pen a single word to detract from the value of
+such a line of work. By all means hire rooms, halls, and theatres; put
+out bills inviting people to come; leave no lawful means untried to
+spread the gospel. Seek to get at souls as best you can. Far be it from
+me to cast a damp upon any who are seeking to carry on the work in this
+public way.
+
+But does it not strike you that we want more of the individual work?
+more of the private, earnest, personal dealing with souls? Do you not
+think that if we had more "Philips" we should have more "Nathanaels?" If
+we had more "Andrews," we should have more "Simons?" I cannot but
+believe it. There is amazing power in an earnest personal appeal. Do you
+not often find that it is after the more formal public preaching is
+finished, and the close personal work begins, that souls are reached?
+How is it then that there is so little of this latter? Does it not often
+happen at our public preachings, that when the formal address is
+delivered, a hymn sung, and a word of prayer offered, all disperse
+without any attempt at individual work? I speak not now, mark you, of
+the preacher--who cannot possibly reach every case, but of the scores of
+Christians who have been listening to him. They have seen strangers
+enter the room, they have sat beside them; they have, it may be, noticed
+their interest, seen the tear stealing down the cheek; and yet they have
+let them pass away without a single loving effort to reach them, or to
+follow up the good work.
+
+No doubt it may be said, "It is much better to allow the Spirit of God
+to follow up His own work. We may do more harm than good. And besides,
+people do not like to be spoken to: they will look upon it as an
+impertinent intrusion, and they will be driven away from the place
+altogether." There is considerable weight in all this. I fully
+appreciate it; and I am sure you do likewise, dearest A. I fear great
+blunders are committed by injudicious persons intruding upon the sacred
+privacy of the soul's deep and holy exercises. It needs tact and
+judgment; in short, it needs direct spiritual guidance to be able to
+deal with souls; to know whom to speak to, and what to say.
+
+But allowing all this, as we do in the fullest possible manner, I think
+you will agree with me that there is, as a rule, something lacking in
+connection with our public preachings. Is there not a want of that deep,
+personal, loving interest in souls which will express itself in a
+thousand ways that act powerfully on the heart? I confess that I have
+often been pained by what has come under my own notice in our
+preaching-rooms. Strangers come in and are left to find a seat wherever
+they can. No one seems to think of them. Christians are there, and they
+will hardly move to make room for them. No one offers them a Bible or
+hymn-book. And when the preaching is over, they are allowed to go as
+they came; not a loving word of inquiry as to whether they enjoyed the
+truth preached; not even a kindly look which might win confidence and
+invite conversation. On the contrary, there is a chilling reserve,
+amounting almost to repulsiveness.
+
+All this is very sorrowful; and perhaps you will tell me that I am
+drawing too highly colored a picture. Alas! the picture is only too
+true. And what makes it all the more deplorable is, that one knows as a
+fact that many persons frequent our preaching-rooms and lecture-halls in
+the deepest exercise, and they are only longing to open their hearts to
+some one who could offer them a little spiritual counsel; but through
+timidity, reserve, or nervousness, they shrink from making any advance,
+and have but to retire to their homes and to their bedchambers, lonely
+and sad, there to weep in solitude because no man cares for their
+precious souls. Now I feel persuaded that much of this might be remedied
+if those Christians who attend the gospel preachings were more _on the
+look out_ for souls: if they would attend, not so much for their own
+profit, as in order to be co-workers with God, in seeking to bring souls
+to Jesus. No doubt it is very refreshing to Christians to hear the
+gospel fully and faithfully preached. But it would not be the less
+refreshing because they were intensely interested in the conversion of
+souls, and in earnest prayer to God in the matter. And, besides, it
+could in no wise interfere with their personal enjoyment and profit to
+cultivate and manifest a lively and loving interest in those who
+surround them, and to seek at the close of the meeting to help any who
+may need and desire to be helped. It has a surprising effect upon the
+preacher, upon the preaching, upon the whole meeting, when the
+Christians who attend are really entering into, and discharging, their
+high and holy responsibilities to Christ and to souls. It imparts a
+certain tone and creates a certain atmosphere which must be felt in
+order to be understood; but when once felt it cannot easily be dispensed
+with.
+
+But, alas, how often is it otherwise! How cold, how dull, how
+dispiriting is it at times to see the whole congregation clear out the
+moment the preaching is over! No loving, lingering groups gathering
+round young converts or anxious inquirers. Old experienced Christians
+have been present; but, instead of pausing with the fond hope that God
+would graciously use them to speak a word in season to him that is
+weary, they hasten away as though it were a matter of life and death
+that they should be home at a certain hour.
+
+Do not suppose, dearest A., that I wish to lay down rules for my
+brethren. Far be the thought.
+
+I am merely, in the freest possible manner, pouring out the thoughts of
+my heart to one with whom I have been linked in the work of the gospel
+for many years. I feel convinced there is a something lacking. It is my
+firm persuasion that no Christian is in a right condition, if he is not
+seeking in some way to bring souls to Christ. And, on the same
+principle, no assembly of Christians is in a right condition if it be
+not a thoroughly evangelistic assembly. We should all be on the lookout
+for souls; and then we may rest assured we should see soul-stirring
+results. But if we are satisfied to go on from week to week, month to
+month, and year to year, without a single leaf stirring, without a
+single conversion, our state must be truly lamentable.
+
+But I think I hear you saying, "Where is all the Scripture we were to
+have had? where the many quotations from the Gospels and the Acts?"
+Well, I have gone on jotting down the thoughts which have for some
+considerable time occupied my mind; and now, space forbids my going
+further at present. But if you so desire, I shall write you a second
+letter on the subject. Meanwhile, may the Lord, by His Spirit, make us
+more earnest in seeking the salvation of immortal souls, by every
+legitimate agency. May our hearts be filled with genuine love for
+precious souls, and then we shall be sure to find ways and means of
+getting at them!
+
+Ever, believe me, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+There is one point in connection with our subject which has much
+occupied my mind; and that is, the immense importance of cultivating an
+earnest faith in the presence and action of the Holy Ghost. We want to
+remember, at all times, that we can do nothing, and that God the Holy
+Ghost can do all. It holds good in the great work of evangelization, as
+in all beside, that it is "not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit,
+saith the Lord of hosts." The abiding sense of this would keep us
+humble, and yet full of joyful confidence. Humble, because we can do
+nothing; full of joyful confidence, because God can do all. Moreover, it
+would have the effect of keeping us very sober and quiet in our
+work--not cold and indifferent, but calm and serious, which is a great
+matter just now. I was much struck with a remark lately made by an aged
+workman, in a letter to one who had just entered the field.
+"Excitement," says this writer, "is not power, but weakness. Earnestness
+and energy are of God."
+
+This is most true and most valuable. But I like the two sentences taken
+together. If we were to take either apart, I think you and I would
+prefer the latter; and for this reason: there are many, I fear, who
+would regard as "excitement" what you and I might really consider to be
+"earnestness and energy." Now I do confess, I love a deep-toned
+earnestness in the work. I do not see how a man can be otherwise than
+deeply and thoroughly in earnest, who realizes in any measure the
+awfulness of eternity, and the state of all those who die in their sins.
+How is it possible for any one to think of an immortal soul standing on
+the very brink of hell, and in danger at any moment of being dashed
+over, and not be serious and earnest?
+
+But this is not excitement. What I understand by excitement is the
+working up of mere nature, and the putting forth of such efforts of
+nature as are designed to work on the natural feelings--all high
+pressure--all that is merely sensational. This is all worthless. It is
+evanescent. And not only so, but it superinduces weakness. We never find
+aught of this in the ministry of our blessed Lord or His apostles: and
+yet what earnestness! what untiring energy! what tenderness! We see an
+earnestness which wore the appearance of being beside oneself; an energy
+which hardly afforded a moment for rest or refreshment; and a tenderness
+which could weep over impenitent sinners. All this we see; but no
+excitement. In a word, all was the fruit of the Eternal Spirit; and all
+was to the glory of God. Moreover, there was ever that calmness and
+solemnity which becomes the presence of God, and yet that deep
+earnestness which proved that man's serious condition was fully
+realized.
+
+Now, dear brother, this is precisely what we want, and what we ought
+diligently to cultivate. It is a signal mercy to be kept from all
+merely natural excitement; and, at the same time, to be duly impressed
+with the magnitude and solemnity of the work. Thus the mind will be kept
+properly balanced, and we shall be preserved from the tendency to be
+occupied with _our_ work merely because it is ours. We shall rejoice
+that Christ is magnified, and souls are saved, whoever be the instrument
+used.
+
+I have been thinking a good deal lately of that memorable time, now
+exactly ten years ago, when the Spirit of God wrought so marvelously in
+the province of Ulster. I think I gathered up some valuable instruction
+from what then came under my notice. That was a time never to be
+forgotten by those who were privileged to be eyewitnesses of the
+magnificent wave of blessing which rolled over the land. But I now refer
+to it in connection with the subject of the Spirit's action. I have no
+doubt whatever that the Holy Ghost was grieved and hindered in the year
+1859, by man's interference. You remember how that work began. You
+remember the little school-house by the road side, where two or three
+men met, week after week, to pour out their hearts in prayer to God,
+that He would be pleased to break in upon the death and darkness which
+reigned around: and that He would revive His work, and send out His
+light and His truth in converting power. You know how these prayers were
+heard and answered. You and I were privileged to move through these
+soul-stirring scenes in the province of Ulster; and I doubt not the
+memory of them is fresh with you, as it is with me, this day.
+
+Well, what was the special character of that work in its earlier stages?
+Was it not most manifestly a work of God's Spirit? Did not He take up
+and use instruments the most unfit and unfurnished, according to human
+thinking, for the accomplishment of His gracious purpose? Do we not
+remember the style and character of the agents who were chiefly used in
+the conversion of souls? Were they not for the most part "unlearned and
+ignorant men?" And further, can we not distinctly recall the fact that
+there was a most decided setting aside of all human arrangement and
+official routine? Working men came from the field, the factory, and the
+workshop, to address crowded audiences; and we have seen hundreds
+hanging in breathless interest upon the lips of men who could not speak
+five words of good grammar. In short, the mighty tide of spiritual life
+and power rolled in upon us, and swept away for the time being a
+quantity of human machinery, and ignored all question of man's authority
+in the things of God and the service of Christ.
+
+Now we can well remember, that just in so far as the Holy Ghost was
+owned and honored, did the glorious work progress; and, on the other
+hand, in proportion as man intruded himself, in bustling
+self-importance, upon the domain of the Eternal Spirit, was the work
+hindered and quashed. I saw the truth of this illustrated in numberless
+cases. There was a vigorous effort made to cause the living water to
+flow in official and denominational channels, and this the Holy Ghost
+would not sanction. Moreover, there was a strong desire manifested, in
+many quarters, to make sectarian capital out of the blessed movement;
+and this the Holy Ghost resented.
+
+Nor was this all. The work and the workman were _lionized_ in all
+directions. Cases of conversion which were judged to be "striking" were
+blazed abroad and paraded in the public prints. Travellers and tourists
+from all parts visited these persons, took notes of their words and
+ways, and wafted the report of them to the ends of the earth. Many poor
+creatures, who had up to that time lived in obscurity, unknown and
+unnoticed, found themselves, all of a sudden, objects of interest to the
+wealthy, the noble, and the public at large. The pulpit and the press
+proclaimed their sayings and doings; and, as might be expected, they
+completely lost their balance. Knaves and hypocrites abounded on all
+hands. It became a grand point to have some strange and extravagant
+experience to tell; some remarkable dream or vision to relate. And even
+where this ill-advised line of action did not issue in producing knavery
+and hypocrisy, the young converts became heady and high-minded, and
+looked with a measure of contempt upon old established Christians, or
+those who did not happen to be converted after their peculiar
+fashion--"stricken," as it was termed.
+
+In addition to this, some very remarkable characters--men of desperate
+notoriety, who seemed to be converted, were conveyed from place to
+place, and placarded about the various streets, and crowds gathered to
+see them and hear them recount their history; which history was very
+frequently a disgusting detail of immoralities and excesses which ought
+never to have been named. Several of these remarkable men afterwards
+broke down, and returned with increased ardor to their former practices.
+
+These things, dearest A., I witnessed in various places. I believe the
+Holy Ghost was grieved and hindered, and the work marred thereby. I am
+thoroughly convinced of this: and hence it is that I think we should
+earnestly seek to honor the blessed Spirit; to lean upon Him in all our
+work; to follow where He leads, not run before Him. His work will stand:
+"Whatsoever God doeth it shall be forever." "The works that are done
+upon the earth, He is the doer of them." The remembrance of this will
+ever keep the mind well balanced. There is great danger of young workmen
+getting so excited about _their_ work, _their_ preaching, _their_ gifts,
+as to lose sight of the blessed Master Himself. Moreover, they are apt
+to make preaching the _end_ instead of the _means_. This works badly in
+every way. It injures themselves, and it mars their work. The moment I
+make preaching my end, I am out of the current of the mind of God, whose
+end is to glorify Christ; and I am out of the current of the heart of
+Christ, whose end is the salvation of souls and the full blessing of His
+Church. But where the Holy Ghost gets His proper place, where He is duly
+owned and trusted, there all will be right. There will be no exaltation
+of man; no bustling self-importance; no parading of the fruits of our
+work; no excitement. All will be calm, quiet, real, and unpretending.
+There will be the simple, earnest, believing, patient waiting upon God.
+Self will be in the shade; Christ will be exalted.
+
+I often recall a sentence of yours. I remember your once saying to me,
+"Heaven will be the best and safest place to hear the results of our
+work." This is a wholesome word for all workmen. I shudder when I see
+the names of Christ's servants paraded in the public journals, with
+flattering allusion to their work and its fruits. Surely those who pen
+such articles ought to reflect upon what they are doing: they should
+consider that they may be ministering to the very thing which they ought
+to desire to see mortified and subdued. I am most fully persuaded that
+the quiet, shady, retired path is the best and safest for the Christian
+workman. It will not make him less earnest but the contrary. It will not
+cramp his energy, but increase and intensify it. God forbid that you or
+I should pen a line or utter a sentence which might in the most remote
+way tend to discourage or hinder a single worker in all the vineyard of
+Christ. No, no, this is not the moment for aught of this kind. We want
+to see the Lord's laborers thoroughly in earnest; but we believe, most
+assuredly, that true earnestness will ever result from the most absolute
+dependence upon God the Holy Ghost.
+
+But only see how I have run on! And yet I have not referred to those
+passages of Scripture of which I spoke in my last. Well, dearly beloved
+in the Lord, I am addressing one who is happily familiar with the
+Gospels and Acts, and who therefore knows that the great Workman
+Himself, and all those who sought to tread in His blessed footsteps,
+owned and honored the Eternal Spirit as the One by whom all their works
+were to be wrought.
+
+I must now close for the present, my much loved brother and
+fellow-laborer; and I do so with a full heart, commending you, in spirit
+and soul and body, to Him who has loved us, and washed us from our sins
+in His own blood, and called us to the honored post of workers in His
+gospel field. May He bless you and yours, most abundantly, and increase
+your usefulness a thousandfold!
+
+As ever, and for ever, Your deeply affectionate work-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+There is another point which stands intimately connected with the
+subject of my last letter, and that is, the place the word of God
+occupies in the work of evangelization. In my last letter, as you will
+remember, I referred to the work of the Holy Ghost, and the immense
+importance of giving Him His proper place. How clearly the precious word
+of God is connected with the action of the Holy Spirit, I need not say.
+Both are inseparably linked in those memorable words of our Lord to
+Nicodemus--words so little understood--so sadly misapplied: "Except a
+man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
+of God" (John iii).
+
+Now, you and I, dearest A., fully believe that in the above passage the
+Word is presented under the figure of "water." Thank God, we are not
+disposed to give any credit to the ritualistic absurdity of baptismal
+regeneration. We are, I believe, most thoroughly convinced that no one
+ever did, ever will, or ever could, get life by water baptism. That all
+who believe in Christ ought to be baptized we fully admit; but this is a
+totally different thing from the fatal error that substitutes an
+ordinance for the atoning death of Christ, the regenerating power of the
+Holy Ghost, and the life-giving virtues of the word of God. I shall not
+waste your time or my own in combating this error, but at once assume
+that you agree with me in thinking that when our Lord speaks of being
+"born of water and of the Spirit," He refers to the Word and the Holy
+Ghost.
+
+Thus, then, the Word is the grand instrument to be used in the work of
+evangelization. Many passages of holy Scripture establish this point
+with such clearness and decision as to leave no room whatever for
+dispute. In the first chapter of James, ver. 18, we read, "Of His own
+will begat He us _with the word of truth_." Again, in I Pet. i. 23, we
+read, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible,
+_by the word of God_, which liveth and abideth forever." I must quote
+the whole passage because of its immense importance in connection with
+our subject: "For all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the
+flower of grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth
+away; but the word of the Lord endureth forever. _And this is the word
+which by the gospel is preached unto you._"
+
+This last clause is of unspeakable value to the evangelist. It binds
+him, in the most distinct manner, to the word of God as the
+instrument--the only instrument--the all-sufficient instrument, to be
+used in his glorious work. He is to give the Word to the people; and the
+more simply he gives it the better. The pure water should be allowed to
+flow from the heart of God to the heart of the sinner, without receiving
+a tinge from the channel through which it flows. The evangelist is to
+preach the Word; and he is to preach it in simple dependence upon the
+power of the Holy Ghost. This is the true secret of success in
+preaching.
+
+But while I urge this great cardinal point in the work of preaching--and
+I believe it cannot be too strongly urged--I am very far indeed from
+thinking that the evangelist should give his hearers a quantity of
+truth. So far from this, I consider it a very great mistake. He ought to
+leave this to the teacher, lecturer, or pastor. I often fear that very
+much of our preaching shoots over the heads of the people, owing to the
+fact of our seeking rather to unfold truth than to reach souls. We rest
+satisfied, it may be, with having delivered a very clear and forcible
+lecture, a very interesting and instructive exposition of Scripture,
+something very valuable for the people of God; but the unconverted
+hearer has sat unmoved, unreached, unimpressed. There has been nothing
+for him. The lecturer has been more occupied with his lecture than with
+the sinner--more taken up with his subject than with the soul.
+
+Now I am thoroughly convinced that this is a serious mistake, and one
+into which we all--at least I am--very apt to fall. I deplore it deeply,
+and I earnestly desire to correct it. I question if this very mistake
+may not be viewed as the true secret of our lack of success. But,
+dearest A., I should not perhaps say "_our_ lack" but _my_ lack. I do
+not think--so far as I know aught of your ministry--that you are exactly
+chargeable with the defect to which I am now just referring. Of this,
+however, you will be the best judge yourself; but of one thing I am
+certain, namely, that the most successful evangelist is the one who
+keeps his eye fixed on the sinner, who has his heart bent on the
+salvation of souls, yea, the one with whom the love for precious souls
+amounts almost to a passion. It is not the man who unfolds the most
+truth, but the man who longs most after souls, that will have the most
+seals to his ministry.
+
+I assert all this, mark you, in the full and clear recognition of the
+fact with which I commenced this letter, namely, that the Word is the
+grand instrument in the work of conversion. This fact must never be lost
+sight of, never weakened. It matters not what agency may be used to make
+the furrow, or in what form the Word may clothe itself, or by what
+vehicle it may be conveyed; it is only by "the Word of truth" that souls
+are begotten.
+
+All this is divinely true, and we would ever bear it in mind. But do we
+not often find that persons who undertake to preach the gospel
+(particularly if they continue long in one place) are very apt to leave
+the domain of the evangelist--most blessed domain!--and travel into that
+of the teacher and lecturer? This is what I deprecate and deeply
+deplore. I know I have erred in this way myself, and I mourn over the
+error. I write in all loving freedom to you--the Lord has of late
+deepened immensely in my soul the sense of the vast importance of
+earnest gospel preaching. I do not--God forbid that I should--think the
+less of the work of a teacher or pastor. I believe that wherever there
+is a heart that loves Christ, it will delight to feed and tend the
+precious lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ, that flock which He
+purchased with His own blood.
+
+But the sheep must be gathered before they can be fed; and how are they
+to be gathered but by the earnest preaching of the gospel? It is the
+grand business of the evangelist to go forth upon the dark mountains of
+sin and error, to sound the gospel trumpet and gather the sheep; and I
+feel convinced that he will best accomplish this work, not by elaborate
+exposition of truth; not by lectures however clear, valuable, and
+instructive; not by lovely unfoldings of prophetic, dispensational, or
+doctrinal truth--most precious and important in the right place--but by
+fervid, pointed, earnest dealing with immortal souls; the warning voice,
+the solemn appeal, the faithful reasoning of righteousness, temperance,
+and judgment to come--the awakening presentation of death and judgment,
+the dread realities of eternity, the lake of fire and the worm that
+never dies.
+
+In short, beloved, it strikes me we want awakening preachers. I fully
+admit that there is such a thing as _teaching_ the gospel, as well as
+_preaching_ it. For example, I find Paul teaching the gospel in Rom.
+i.-viii. just as I find him preaching the gospel in Acts xiii. or xvii.
+This is of the very last importance at all times, inasmuch as there are
+almost sure to be a number of what we call "exercised souls" at our
+public preachings, and these need an emancipating gospel--the full,
+clear, elevated, resurrection gospel.
+
+But admitting all this, I still believe that what is needed for
+successful evangelization is, not so much a great quantity of truth as
+an intense love for souls. Look at that eminent evangelist George
+Whitefield. What think you was the secret of his success? No doubt you
+have looked into his printed sermons. Have you found any great breadth
+of truth in them? I question it. Indeed I must say I have been struck
+with the contrary. But oh! there was that in Whitefield which you and I
+may well covet and long to cultivate. There was a burning love for
+souls--a thirst for their salvation--a mighty grappling with the
+conscience--a bold, earnest, face-to-face dealing with men about their
+past ways, their present state, their future destiny. These were the
+things that God owned and blessed; and He will own and bless them still.
+I am persuaded--I write as under the very eye of God--that if our hearts
+are bent upon the salvation of souls, God will use us in that divine and
+glorious work. But on the other hand, if we abandon ourselves to the
+withering influences of a cold, heartless, godless fatalism; if we
+content ourselves with a formal and official statement of the gospel--a
+very cheerless sort of thing; if, to use a vulgar phrase, our preaching
+is on the principle of "take it or leave it," need we wonder if we do
+not see conversions? The wonder would be if there were any to see.
+
+No, no; I believe we want to look seriously into this great practical
+subject. It demands the solemn and dispassionate consideration of all
+who are engaged in the work. There are dangers on all sides. There are
+conflicting opinions on all sides. But I cannot conceive how any
+Christian man can be satisfied to shirk the responsibility of looking
+after souls. A man may say, "I am not an evangelist; that is not my
+line; I am more of a teacher, or a pastor." Well, I understand this; but
+will any one tell me that a teacher or pastor may not go forth in
+earnest longing after souls? I cannot admit it for a moment. Nay more;
+it does not matter in the least what a man's gift is, or even though he
+should not possess any prominent gift at all, he can and ought,
+nevertheless, to cultivate a longing desire for the salvation of souls.
+Would it be right to pass a house on fire, without giving warning, even
+though one were not a member of the Fire Brigade? Should we not seek to
+save a drowning man, even though we could not command the use of a
+patent life-boat? Who in his senses would maintain aught so monstrous?
+So, in reference to souls, it is not so much a gift or knowledge of
+truth that is needed, as a deep and earnest longing for souls--a keen
+sense of their danger, and a desire for their rescue.
+
+Ever, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, * * *
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+When I took up my pen to address you in my first letter, I had no idea
+that I should have occasion to extend the series to a fourth. However,
+the subject is one of intense interest to me; and there are just two or
+three points further on which I desire very briefly to touch.
+
+And in the first place I deeply feel our lack of a prayerful spirit in
+carrying on the work of evangelization. I have referred to the subject
+of the Spirit's work; and also to the place which God's word ought ever
+to get; but it strikes me we are very deficient in reference to the
+matter of earnest, persevering, believing prayer. This is the true
+secret of power. "We," say the apostles, "will give ourselves
+continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word."
+
+Here is the order: "Prayer, and the ministry of the Word." Prayer brings
+in the power of God; and this is what we want. It is not the power of
+eloquence, but the power of God; and this can only be had by waiting
+upon Him. "He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might
+He increaseth strength. Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and
+the young men shall utterly fall: but they that wait upon the Lord shall
+renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they
+shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint" (Isa.
+xl. 29-31).
+
+It seems to me, dearest A., that we are far too mechanical, if I may so
+express myself, in the work. There is too much of what I may call going
+through a service. I greatly fear that some of us are more on our legs
+than on our knees; more in the railway carriage than in the closet; more
+on the road than in the sanctuary; more before men than before God. This
+will never do. It is impossible that our preaching can be marked by
+power and crowned with results, if we fail in waiting upon God. Look at
+the blessed Master Himself--that great Workman. See how often He was
+found in prayer. At His baptism; at His transfiguration; previous to the
+appointment and mission of the twelve. In short, again and again we find
+that blessed One in the attitude of prayer. At one time He rises up a
+great while before day, in order to give Himself to prayer. At another
+time He spends the whole night in prayer, because the day was given up
+to work.
+
+What an example for us! May we follow it! May we know a little better
+what it is to agonize in prayer. How little we know of this!--I speak
+for myself. It sometimes appears to me as if we were so much taken up
+with preaching engagements that we have no time for prayer--no time for
+closet work--no time to be alone with God. We get into a sort of whirl
+of public work; we rush from place to place, from meeting to meeting, in
+a prayerless, barren condition of soul. Need we wonder at the little
+result? How could it be otherwise when we so fail in waiting upon God?
+_We_ cannot convert souls--God alone can do this; and if we go on
+without waiting on Him, if we allow public preaching to displace private
+prayer, we may rest assured our preaching will prove barren and
+worthless. We really must "give ourselves to prayer" if we would succeed
+in the "ministry of the Word."
+
+Nor is this all. It is not merely that we are lacking in the holy and
+blessed practice of private prayer. This is, alas! too true, as I have
+said. But there is more than this. We fail in our public meetings for
+prayer. The great work of evangelization is not sufficiently remembered
+in our prayer-meetings. It is not definitely, earnestly, and constantly
+kept before God in our public reunions. It may occasionally be
+introduced in a cursory, formal manner, and then dismissed. Indeed, I
+feel there is a great lack of earnestness and perseverance in our
+prayer-meetings generally, not merely as to the work of the gospel, but
+as to other things as well. There is frequently great formality and
+feebleness. We do not seem like men in earnest. We lack the spirit of
+the widow in Luke xviii., who overcame the unjust judge by the bare
+force of her importunity. We seem to forget that God will be inquired
+of; and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.
+
+It is of no use for any one to say, "God can work without our earnest
+pleading; He will accomplish His purposes; He will gather out His own."
+We know all this; but we know also that He who has appointed the end
+has appointed the means; and if we fail in waiting on Him, He will get
+others to do His work. The work will be done, no doubt, but we shall
+lose the dignity, the privilege, and the reward of working. Is this
+nothing? Is it nothing to be deprived of the sweet privilege of being
+co-workers with God, of having fellowship with Him in the blessed work
+which He is carrying on? Alas! alas! that we prize it so little. Still
+we do prize it; and perhaps there are few things in which we can more
+fully taste this privilege than in united earnest prayer. Here every
+saint can join. Here all can add their cordial Amen. All may not be
+preachers; but all can pray--all join in prayer; all can have
+fellowship.
+
+And do you not find, beloved brother, that there is always a stream of
+deep and real blessing where _the assembly_ is drawn out in earnest
+prayer for the gospel, and for the salvation of souls? I have invariably
+seen it, and hence it is always a source of unspeakable comfort, joy,
+and encouragement to my heart when I see the assembly stirred up to
+pray, for then I am sure God is going to give copious showers of
+blessing.
+
+Moreover, when this is the case, when this most excellent spirit
+pervades the whole assembly, you may be sure there will be no trouble as
+to what is called "The responsibility of the preaching." It will be all
+the same who does the work, provided it is done as well as it can be. If
+the assembly is waiting upon God, in earnest intercession for the
+progress of the work, it will not be a question as to the one who is to
+take the preaching, provided Christ is preached and souls are blessed.
+
+Then there is another thing which has of late occupied my mind a good
+deal; and that is our method of dealing with young converts. Most surely
+there is immense need of care and caution, lest we be found accrediting
+what is not the genuine work of God's Spirit at all. There is very great
+danger here. The enemy is ever seeking to introduce spurious materials
+into the assembly, in order that he may mar the testimony and bring
+discredit upon the truth of God.
+
+All this is most true, and demands our serious consideration. But does
+it not seem to you, beloved, that we often err on the other side? Do we
+not often, by a stiff and peculiar style, cast a chill upon young
+converts? Is there not frequently something repulsive in our spirit and
+deportment? We expect young Christians to come up to a standard of
+intelligence which has taken us years to attain. Nor this only. We
+sometimes put them through a process of examination which only tends to
+harass and perplex.
+
+Now assuredly this is not right. The Spirit of God would never puzzle,
+perplex, or repulse a dear anxious inquirer--never, no never. It could
+never be according to the mind or heart of Christ to chill the spirit of
+the very feeblest lamb in all His blood-bought flock. He would have us
+seeking to lead them on gently and tenderly--to soothe, nourish, and
+cherish them, according to all the deep love of His heart. It is a great
+thing to lay ourselves out, and hold ourselves open to discern and
+appreciate the work of God in souls, and not to mar it by placing our
+own miserable crotchets as stumbling-blocks in their pathway. We need
+divine guidance and help in this as much as in any other department of
+our work. But, blessed be God, He is sufficient for this as for all
+beside. Let us only wait on Him: let us cling to Him, and draw upon His
+exhaustless treasury for each case as it arises, for exigence of every
+hour. He will never fail a trusting, expectant, dependent heart.
+
+I must now close this series of letters. I think I have touched most, if
+not all, of the points which I had in my mind. You will, I trust, bear
+in mind, beloved in the Lord, that I have, in all these letters, simply
+jotted down my thoughts in the utmost possible freedom, and in all the
+intimacy of true brotherly friendship. I have not been writing a formal
+treatise, but pouring out my heart to a beloved friend and yoke-fellow.
+This must be borne in mind by all who may read these letters.
+
+May God bless and keep you, dearest A. May He crown your labours with
+His richest and best blessing! May He keep you from every evil work, and
+preserve you unto His own everlasting kingdom!
+
+Ever believe me, My dearest A., Your deeply affectionate * * *
+
+
+LETTER V.
+
+It seems as though I must once more take up my pen to address you on
+certain matters connected with the work of evangelization, which have
+forced themselves upon my attention for some time past. There are three
+distinct branches of the work which I long to see occupying a far more
+definite and prominent place among us; and these are, the Tract depot,
+the Gospel preaching, and the Sunday-school.
+
+It strikes me that the Lord is awakening attention to the importance of
+the Tract depot as a valuable agency in the work of evangelization; but
+I question if we, on this side of the Atlantic, are thoroughly in
+earnest on the subject. How is this? Have books and tracts lost their
+interest and value in our eyes? Or does the fault lie in the mode of
+conducting our Tract depots? To my mind there seems to be something
+lacking in reference to this matter.
+
+I would fain see a well-conducted depot in every important town; by
+"well-conducted" I mean one taken up and carried on as a direct service
+to the Lord, in true love for souls, deep interest in the spread of the
+truth, and at the same time in a sound business way. I have known
+several depots fall to the ground through lack of business habits on the
+part of the conductors. They seemed very earnest, sincere persons, but
+quite unfit to conduct a business. In short, they were persons in whose
+hands any business would have fallen through. Then in many places there
+is the most deplorable failure as to the valuable and interesting work
+of conducting a depot.
+
+And how can we best reach the people, for whom the tracts and books are
+prepared? I believe by having the books and tracts exposed for sale in a
+shop window, where that is possible, so that people may see them as they
+pass, and step in and purchase what they want. Many a soul has been laid
+hold of in this way. Many, I doubt not, have been saved and blessed by
+means of tracts, seen for the first time in a shop window or arranged on
+a counter. But where there is no such opportunity, the assembly's
+meeting-room is the Tract depot's natural home.
+
+There is, manifestly, a real want of a Tract depot in every large town,
+conducted by some one of intelligence and sound business habits, who
+would be able to speak to persons about the tracts, and to recommend
+such as might prove helpful to anxious inquirers after truth. In this
+way, I feel persuaded, much good might be done. The Christians in the
+town would know where to go for tracts, not only for their own personal
+reading, but also for general distribution. Surely if a thing is worth
+doing at all, it is worth doing well; and if the Tract depot be not
+worth attending to, we know not what is.
+
+The Tract depot must be taken up in direct service to Christ. And I feel
+assured that where it is so taken up and so carried on, in energy,
+zeal, and integrity, the Lord will own it and He will make it a
+blessing. Is there no one who will take up this valuable work for
+Christ's sake and not for the sake of remuneration? Is there no one who
+will enter upon it in simple faith, looking to the living God?
+
+Here lies the root of the matter, dearest A. For this branch of the
+work, as for every other branch, we need those who trust God and deny
+themselves. It seems to me that a grand point would be gained if the
+Tract depot were placed on its proper footing, and viewed as an integral
+part of the evangelistic work, to be taken up in responsibility to the
+Lord, and carried on in the energy of faith in the living God. Every
+branch of gospel work--the Depot, the Preaching, the Sunday-school--must
+be carried on in this way. It is all well and most valuable to have
+fellowship--full cordial fellowship, in all our service; but if we wait
+for fellowship and co-operation in the starting of work which comes
+within the range of personal, as well as collective, responsibility, we
+shall find ourselves very much behind--or the work may not be done at
+all.
+
+I shall have occasion to refer more particularly to this point, when I
+come to treat of the Preaching and the Sunday-school. All I want now, is
+to establish the fact that the Tract depot is a branch, and a most
+important and efficient branch, of evangelistic work. If this be
+thoroughly grasped by our friends, a great point is gained. I must
+confess to you, dearest A., that my moral sense has often been
+grievously offended by the cold, commercial style in which the
+publishing and sale of books and tracts are spoken of--a style befitting
+perhaps a mere commercial business, but most offensive when adopted in
+reference to the precious work of God. I admit in the fullest way--nay,
+I actually contend for it--that the proper management of the depot
+demands good sound business habits, and upright business principles. But
+at the same time I am persuaded that the Tract depot will never occupy
+its true ground--never realize the true idea, never reach the desired
+end--until it is firmly fixed on its holy basis, and viewed as an
+integral part of that most glorious work to which we are called--even
+the work of active, earnest, persevering evangelization.
+
+And this work must be taken up in the sense of responsibility to Christ,
+and in the energy of faith in the living God. It will not do for an
+assembly of Christians, or some wealthy individual, to take up an
+inefficient protege, and commit to such an one the management of the
+affair in order to afford a means of living. It is most blessed for all
+to have fellowship in the work; but I am thoroughly convinced that the
+work must be taken up in direct service to Christ, to be carried on in
+love for souls, and real interest in the spread of the truth.
+
+I hope to address you again on the other two branches of my theme.
+
+Meanwhile, I remain, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate yoke-fellow, *
+* *
+
+
+LETTER VI.
+
+I have, in some of the earlier letters of this series, dwelt upon the
+unspeakable importance of keeping up with zeal and constancy, a faithful
+preaching of the gospel--a distinct work of evangelization, carried on
+in the energy of love to precious souls, and with direct reference to
+the glory of Christ--a work bearing entirely upon the unconverted, and
+therefore quite distinct from the work of teaching, lecturing, or
+exhorting, in the bosom of the assembly; which latter is, I need not
+say, of equal importance in the mind of our Lord Christ.
+
+My object in referring again to this subject is to call your attention
+to a point in connection with it, respecting which, it seems to me,
+there is a great want of clearness amongst some of our friends. I
+question if we are, as a rule, thoroughly clear as to the question of
+individual responsibility in the work of the gospel. I admit, of course,
+that the teacher or lecturer is called to exercise his gift, to a very
+great extent, on the same principle as the evangelist; that is, on his
+own personal responsibility to Christ; and that the assembly is not
+responsible for his individual services; unless indeed he teach unsound
+doctrine, in which case the assembly is bound to take it up.
+
+But my business is with the work of the evangelist; and he is to carry
+on his work outside of the assembly. His sphere of action is the wide,
+wide world. "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
+creature." Here is the sphere and here the object of the
+evangelist--"_All_ the world"--"_Every_ creature." He may go forth from
+the bosom of the assembly, and return thither again laden with his
+golden sheaves; nevertheless he goes forth in the energy of personal
+faith in the living God, and on the ground of personal responsibility to
+Christ; nor is the assembly responsible for the peculiar _mode_ in which
+he may carry on his work. No doubt the assembly is called into action
+when the evangelist introduces the _fruit_ of his work in the shape of
+souls professing to be converted, and desiring to be received into
+fellowship at the Lord's table. But this is another thing altogether,
+and must be kept distinct. The evangelist must be left free: this is
+what I contend for. He must not be tied down to certain rules or
+regulations, nor cramped by special conventionalities. There are many
+things which a large-hearted evangelist will feel perfectly free to do
+which might not commend themselves to the spiritual judgment and
+feelings of some in the assembly; but, provided he does not traverse any
+vital or fundamental principle, such persons have no right to interfere
+with him.
+
+And be it remembered, dearest A., that when I use the expression,
+"spiritual judgment and feelings," I am taking the very highest possible
+view of the case, and treating the objector with the highest respect. I
+feel this is but right and proper. Every true man has a right to have
+his feelings and judgment--not to speak of conscience--treated with all
+due respect. There are, alas! everywhere, men of narrow mind, who object
+to everything that does not square with their own notions--men who would
+fain tie the evangelist down to the exact line of things and mode of
+acting which according to their thinking would suit the assembly of
+God's people when gathered for worship at the table of the Lord.
+
+All this is a thorough mistake. The evangelist should pursue the even
+tenor of his way, regardless of all such narrowness and meddling. Take,
+for example, the matter of singing hymns. The evangelist may feel
+perfectly free to use a class of hymns or gospel songs which would be
+wholly unsuitable for the assembly. The fact is, he _sings_ the gospel
+for the same object that he _preaches_ it, namely, to reach the sinner's
+heart. He is just as ready to sing "Come" as to preach it.
+
+Such, dearest A., is the judgment which I have had on this subject for
+many years, though I am not quite sure if it will fully commend itself
+to your spiritual mind. It strikes me we are in danger of slipping into
+Christendom's false notion of "establishing a cause," and "organizing a
+body." Hence it is that the four walls in which the assembly meets are
+regarded by many as a "chapel," and the evangelist who happens to preach
+there is looked upon as "the minister of the chapel."
+
+All this has to be carefully guarded against: but my object in referring
+to it now is to clear up the point with respect to the gospel preaching.
+The true evangelist is not the minister of any chapel; or the organ of
+any congregation; or the representative of a body; or the paid agent of
+any society. No; he is the ambassador of Christ--the messenger of a God
+of love--the herald of glad tidings. His heart is filled with love to
+souls; his lips anointed by the Holy Ghost; his words clothed with
+heavenly power. Let him alone! Fetter him not by your rules and
+regulations! Leave him to his work and to his Master! And further, bear
+in mind that the Church of God can afford a platform broad enough for
+all sorts of workmen and every possible style of work, _provided only_
+that foundation truth be not disturbed. It is a fatal mistake to seek to
+reduce every one and every thing to a dead level. Christianity is a
+living, a divine reality. Christ's servants are sent by Him, and to Him
+they are responsible. "Who art thou that judgest another man's servant?
+To his own master he standeth or falleth" (Rom. xiv.).
+
+We may depend upon it, dearest A., these things demand our serious
+consideration, if we do not want to have the blessed work of
+evangelization marred in our hands.
+
+I have just one other point that I would refer to before closing my
+letter, as it has been rather a vexed question in certain places--I
+allude to what has been termed "the responsibility of the preaching."
+
+How many of our friends have been and are harassed about this question!
+And why? I am persuaded that it is from not understanding the true
+nature, character, and sphere of the work of evangelization. Hence we
+have had some persons contending for it that the Sunday evening
+preaching should be left open. "Open to what?" That is the question. In
+too many cases it has proved to be "open" to a character of speaking
+altogether unsuited to many who had come there, or who had been brought
+by friends, expecting to hear a full, clear, earnest gospel. On such
+occasions our friends have been disappointed, and the unconverted
+perfectly unable to understand the meaning of the service. Surely such
+things ought not to be; nor would they be if men would only discern the
+simplest thing possible, namely, the distinction between all meetings in
+which Christ's servants exercise their ministry on their own personal
+responsibility, and all meetings which are purely reunions of the
+assembly, whether for the Lord's Supper, for prayer, or for any other
+purpose whatsoever.
+
+Your deeply affectionate, * * *
+
+
+LETTER VII.
+
+Through want of space I was obliged to close my last letter without even
+touching upon the subject of the Sunday-school: I must, however, devote
+a page or two to a branch of work which has occupied a very large place
+in my heart for thirty years. I should deem my series incomplete were
+this subject left untouched.
+
+Some may question how far the Sunday-school can be viewed as an integral
+part of the work of evangelization. I can only say it is mainly in this
+light I regard it. I look upon it as one great and most interesting
+branch of gospel work. The superintendent of the Sunday-school and the
+teacher of the Sunday-school class are workers in the wide gospel field,
+just as distinctly as the evangelist or preacher of the gospel.
+
+I am fully aware that a Sunday-school differs materially from an
+ordinary gospel preaching. It is not convened in the same way, or
+conducted in the same manner. There is, if I may so express myself, a
+union of the parent, the teacher, and the evangelist, in the person of
+the Sunday-school worker. For the time being he takes the place of the
+parent: he seeks to do the duty of a teacher; but he aims at the object
+of the evangelist--that priceless object, the salvation of the souls of
+the precious little ones committed to his charge. As to the mode in
+which he gains his end--as to the details of his work--as to the varied
+agencies which he may bring to bear, he alone is responsible.
+
+I am aware that exception is taken to the Sunday-school on the ground
+that its tendency is to interfere with parental or domestic training.
+Now I must confess, dearest A., that I cannot see any force whatever in
+this objection. The true object of the Sunday-school is, not to
+supersede parental training, but to help it where it exists, or to
+supply its lack where it does not exist. There are, as you and I well
+know, hundreds of thousands of dear children who have no parental
+training at all. Thousands have no parents, and thousands more have
+parents who are far worse than none. Look at the multitudes that throng
+the lanes, alleys, and courtyards of our large cities and towns, who
+seem hardly a degree above mere animal existence--yea, many of them like
+little incarnate demons.
+
+Who can think upon all these precious souls without wishing a hearty
+God-speed to all _true_ Sunday-school workers, and earnestly longing for
+more thorough earnestness and energy in that most blessed work?
+
+I say "_true_" Sunday-school workers, because I fear that many engage in
+the work who are not true, not real, not fit. Many, I fear, take it up
+as a little bit of fashionable religious work, suited to the younger
+members of religious communities. Many, too, view it as a kind of
+set-off to a week of self-indulgence, folly, and worldliness. All such
+persons are an actual hindrance rather than a help to this sacred
+service.
+
+Then again, there are many who sincerely love Christ, and long to serve
+Him in the Sunday-school, but who are not really fitted for the work.
+They are deficient in tact, energy, order, and rule. They lack that
+power to adapt themselves to the children, and to engage their young
+hearts, which is so essential to the Sunday-school worker. It is a great
+mistake to suppose that every one who stands idle in the market-place is
+fit to turn into this particular branch of Christian labor. On the
+contrary, it needs a person thoroughly fitted of God for it; and if it
+be asked, "How are we ever to be supplied with suited agents for this
+branch of evangelistic service?" I reply, Just in the same way as you
+are to be supplied in any other department--by earnest, persevering,
+believing prayer. I am most thoroughly persuaded that if Christians were
+more stirred up by God's Spirit to feel the importance of the
+Sunday-school--if they could only seize the idea that it is, like the
+Tract depot and the preaching, part and parcel of that most glorious
+work to which we are called in these closing days of Christendom's
+history--if they were more permeated by the idea of the evangelistic
+nature and object of Sunday-school work, they would be more instant and
+earnest in prayer, both in the closet and in the public assembly, that
+the Lord would raise up in our midst a band of earnest, devoted,
+whole-hearted Sunday-school workers.
+
+This is the lack, dearest A.; and may God, in His abounding mercy,
+supply it! He is able, and surely He is willing. But then He will be
+waited on and inquired of; and "He is the rewarder of them that
+_diligently_ seek Him." I think we have much cause for thankfulness and
+praise for what has been done in the way of Sunday-schools during the
+last few years. I well remember the time when many of our friends seemed
+to overlook this branch of work altogether. Even now many treat it with
+indifference, thus weakening the hand and discouraging the hearts of
+those engaged in it.
+
+But I shall not dwell upon this, inasmuch as my theme is the
+Sunday-school, and not those who neglect or oppose it. I bless God for
+what I see in the way of encouragement. I have often been exceedingly
+refreshed and delighted by seeing some of our very oldest friends rising
+from the table of their Lord, and proceeding to arrange the benches on
+which the dear little ones were soon to be ranged to hear the sweet
+story of a Saviour's love. And what could be more lovely, more touching,
+or more morally suited, than for those who had just been remembering the
+Saviour's dying love to seek, even by the arrangement of the benches, to
+carry out His living words, "Suffer the little children to come unto
+Me?"
+
+There is very much I should like to add as to the mode of working the
+Sunday-school; but perhaps it is just as well that each worker should be
+wholly cast upon the living God for counsel and help as to details. We
+must ever remember that the Sunday-school, like the Tract depot and the
+preaching, is entirely a work of individual responsibility. This is a
+grand point; and where it is fully understood, and where there is real
+earnestness of heart and singleness of eye, I believe there will be no
+great difficulty as to the particular mode of working. A large heart,
+and a fixed purpose to carry on the great work and fulfil the glorious
+mission committed to us, will effectually deliver us from the withering
+influence of crotchets and prejudices--those miserable obstructions to
+all that is lovely and of good report.
+
+May God pour out His blessing on all Sunday-schools, upon the pupils,
+the teachers, and the superintendents! May He also bless all who are
+engaged, in any way, in the instruction of the young! May He cheer and
+refresh their spirits by giving them to reap many golden sheaves in
+their special corner of the one great and glorious gospel field!
+
+Ever believe me, dearest A., Your deeply affectionate * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE LIVING GOD AND A LIVING FAITH
+
+
+There is one great substantial fact standing prominently forth on every
+page of the volume of God, and illustrated in every stage of the history
+of God's people--a fact of immense weight and moral power at all times,
+but specially in seasons of darkness, difficulty, and discouragement,
+occasioned by the low condition of things among those who profess to be
+on the Lord's side. The fact is this, _That faith can always count on
+God, and God will always answer faith_.
+
+Such is our fact, such our thesis; and if the reader will turn with us,
+for a few moments, to 2 Chron xx., he will find a very beautiful and
+very striking illustration.
+
+This chapter shows us the good king Jehoshaphat under very heavy
+pressure indeed--it records a dark moment in his history. "It came to
+pass after this also, that the children of Moab, and the children of
+Ammon, and with them other besides the Ammonites, came against
+Jehoshaphat to battle. Then" (for people are ever quick to run with evil
+tidings) "there came some that told Jehoshaphat, saying, There cometh a
+great multitude against thee from beyond the sea, on this side Syria."
+Here was a difficulty of no ordinary nature. This invading host was made
+up of the descendants of Lot and of Esau; and this fact might give rise
+to a thousand conflicting thoughts and distracting questions in the mind
+of Jehoshaphat. They were not Egyptians or Assyrians, concerning whom
+there could be no question whatever; but both Esau and Lot stood in
+certain relations to Israel, and a question might suggest itself as to
+how far such relations were to be recognized.
+
+Not this only. The practical state of the entire nation of Israel--the
+actual condition of God's people, was such as to give rise to the most
+serious misgivings. Israel no longer presented an unbroken front to the
+invading foe. Their visible unity was gone. A grievous breach had been
+made in their battlements. The ten tribes and the two were rent asunder,
+the one from the other. The condition of the former was terrible, and
+that of the latter, shaky enough.
+
+Thus the circumstances of king Jehoshaphat were dark and discouraging in
+the extreme; and, even as regards himself and his practical course, he
+was but just emerging from the consequences of a very humiliating fall,
+so that his reminiscences would be quite as cheerless as his
+surroundings.
+
+But it is just here that our grand substantial fact presents itself to
+the vision of faith, and flings a mantle of light over the whole scene.
+Things looked gloomy, no doubt; but God was to be counted upon by faith,
+and faith could count upon Him. God is a never failing resource--a great
+reality, at all times, and under all circumstances.
+
+"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.
+Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the
+mountains be carried into the midst of the sea. Though the waters
+thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the
+swelling thereof. There is a river, the stream whereof shall make glad
+the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the Most High. God
+is in the midst of her, she shall not be moved: God shall help her, and
+that right early. The heathen raged, the kingdoms were moved: He uttered
+His voice, the earth melted. The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of
+Jacob is our refuge" (Psa. xlvi. I-7).
+
+Here, then, was Jehoshaphat's resource in the day of his trouble; and to
+it he at once betook himself, in that earnest faith which never fails to
+draw down power and blessing from the living and true God, to meet every
+exigency of the way. "And Jehoshaphat feared, and set himself to seek
+the Lord, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah. And Judah gathered
+themselves together, to ask help of the Lord; even out of all the cities
+of Judah they came to seek the Lord. And Jehoshaphat stood in the
+congregation of Judah and Jerusalem, in the house of the Lord, before
+the new court, and said, O Lord God of our fathers, art not Thou God in
+heaven? and rulest not Thou over all the kingdoms of the heathen? and in
+Thy hand is there not power and might, so that none is able to withstand
+Thee? Art not Thou our God, who didst drive out the inhabitants of this
+land before Thy people Israel, and gavest it to _the seed of Abraham Thy
+friend for ever_?"
+
+These are the breathings of faith--faith that enables the soul to take
+the very highest possible ground. It mattered not what unsettled
+questions there might be between Esau and Jacob; there were none between
+Abraham and the Almighty God. Now, God had given the land to Abraham,
+His friend. For how long? _For ever._ This was enough. "The gifts and
+calling of God are without repentance." God will never cancel His call,
+or take back a gift. This is a fixed foundation principle; and on this
+faith always takes its stand with firm decision. The enemy might throw
+in a thousand suggestions; and the poor heart might throw up a thousand
+reasonings. It might seem like presumption and empty conceit, on the
+part of Jehoshaphat, to plant his foot on such lofty ground. It was all
+well enough in the days of David, or of Solomon, or of Joshua, when the
+unity of the nation was unbroken, and the banner of Jehovah floated in
+triumph over the twelve tribes of Israel. But things were sadly changed;
+and it ill became one in Jehoshaphat's circumstances to use such lofty
+language or assume to occupy such a high position.
+
+What is faith's reply to all this? A very simple, but a very powerful
+one--God never changes. He is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever.
+Had He not made Abraham a present of the land of Canaan? Had He not
+bestowed it upon his seed forever? Had He not ratified the gift by His
+word and His oath--these two immutable things in which it was impossible
+for Him to lie? Unquestionably. But then what of the law? Did not that
+make some difference? None whatever, as regards God's gift and promise.
+Four centuries previous to the giving of the law, was the great
+transaction settled and stablished between the Almighty God and Abraham
+His friend--and settled and stablished forever. Hence nothing can
+possibly touch this. There were no legal conditions proposed to Abraham.
+All was pure and absolute grace. God gave the land to Abraham by
+promise, and not by law, in any shape or form.
+
+Now, it was on this original ground that Jehoshaphat took his stand; and
+he was right. It was the only thing for him to do. He had not one hair's
+breadth of solid standing ground, short of these golden words, "Thou
+gavest it to the seed of Abraham Thy friend forever." It was either this
+or nothing. _A living faith always lays hold on the living God._ It
+cannot stop short of Him. It looks not at men or their circumstances. It
+takes no account of the changes and chances of this mortal life. It
+lives and moves and has its being in the presence of the living God; it
+rejoices in the cloudless sunlight of His blessed countenance. It
+carries on all its artless reasonings in the sanctuary, and draws all
+its happy conclusions from the facts discovered there. It does not lower
+the standard according to the condition of things around, but boldly
+and decidedly takes up its position on the very highest ground.
+
+Now, these actings of faith are always most grateful to the heart of
+God. The living God delights in a living faith. We may be quite sure
+that the bolder the grasp of faith, the more welcome it is to God. We
+need never suppose that the blessed One is either gratified or glorified
+by the workings of a legal mind. No, no; He delights to be trusted
+without a shadow of reserve or misgiving. He delights to be fully
+counted upon and largely used; and the deeper the need, and the darker
+the surrounding gloom, the more is He glorified by the faith that draws
+upon Him.
+
+Hence, we may assert with perfect confidence, that the attitude and the
+utterances of Jehoshaphat, in the scene before us, were in full
+accordance with the mind of God. There is something perfectly beautiful
+to see him, as it were, opening the original lease, and laying his
+finger on that clause in virtue of which Israel held as tenants forever
+under God. Nothing could cancel that clause or break that lease. No flaw
+there. All was ordered and sure. "Thou _gavest_ it to the seed of
+Abraham Thy friend _forever_."
+
+This was solid ground--the ground of God--the ground of faith, which no
+power of the enemy can ever shake. True, the enemy might remind
+Jehoshaphat of sin and folly, failure and unfaithfulness. Nay, he might
+suggest to him that the very fact of the threatened invasion proved
+that Israel had fallen, for had they not done so, there would be neither
+enemy nor evil.
+
+But for this, too, grace had provided an answer--an answer which faith
+knew well how to appropriate. Jehoshaphat reminds Jehovah of the house
+which Solomon had built to His name. "They have built Thee a sanctuary
+therein for Thy name, saying, If, when evil cometh upon us, as a sword,
+judgment, or pestilence, or famine, we stand before this house, and in
+Thy presence (for Thy name is in this house), and cry unto Thee in our
+affliction, then Thou will hear and help. And now, behold, the children
+of Ammon, and Moab, and Mount Seir, whom Thou wouldest not let Israel
+invade, when they came out of the land of Egypt, but they turned from
+them, and distroyed them not. Behold, I say, how they reward us, to come
+to cast us out of _Thy possession, which Thou hast given us to inherit_.
+O our God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have no might against this
+great company that cometh against us; neither know we what to do, but
+_our eyes are upon Thee_" (vers. 8-12).
+
+Here, truly, is a living faith dealing with the living God. It is no
+mere empty profession--no lifeless creed--no cold uninfluential theory.
+It is not a man "saying he has faith." Such things will never stand in
+the day of battle. They may do well enough when all is calm, smooth, and
+bright; but when difficulties have to be grappled with--when the enemy
+has to be met face to face, all merely nominal faith, all mere lip
+profession, will prove like autumn leaves before the blast. Nothing will
+stand the test of actual conflict but a living personal faith in a
+living personal Saviour-God. This is what is needed. It is this which
+alone can sustain the heart, come what may. Faith brings God into the
+scene, and all is strength, victory, and perfect peace.
+
+Thus it was with the king of Judah, in the days of 2 Chron. xx. "We have
+no might; neither know we what to do; but our eyes are upon Thee." This
+is the way to occupy God's ground, even with the eyes fixed on God
+Himself. This is the true secret of stability and peace. The devil will
+leave no stone unturned to drive us off the true ground which, as
+Christians, we ought to occupy in these last days; and we, in ourselves,
+have no might whatever against him. Our only resource is in the living
+God. If our eyes are upon Him, nothing can harm us. "Thou wilt keep him
+in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee, because he trusteth in
+Thee."
+
+Reader, art thou on God's ground? Canst thou give a "Thus saith the
+Lord" for the position which thou occupiest, at this moment? Art thou
+consciously standing on the solid ground of holy Scripture? Is there
+anything questionable in thy surroundings and associations? We beseech
+thee to weigh these questions solemnly as in the divine presence. Be
+assured they are of moment just now. We are passing through critical
+moments.
+
+Men are taking sides; principles are working and coming to a head. Never
+was it more needful to be thoroughly and unmistakably on the Lord's
+side. Jehoshaphat never could have met the Ammonites, Moabites, and
+Edomites, had he not been persuaded that his feet were on the very
+ground which God had given to Abraham. If the enemy could have shaken
+his confidence as to this, he would have had an easy victory. But
+Jehoshaphat knew where he was; he knew his ground. He understood his
+bearings; and therefore he could fix his eyes with confidence upon the
+living God. He had no misgivings as to his position. He did not say, as
+many do, now-a-days, "I am not quite sure. I hope I am; but sometimes
+clouds come over my soul, and make me hesitate as to whether I am really
+on divine ground." Ah! no, reader, the king of Judah would not have
+understood such language at all. All was clear to him. His eye rested on
+the original grant. He felt sure he was on the true ground of the Israel
+of God; and albeit all Israel were not there with him, yet God was with
+him, and that was enough. His was a living faith in the living God--the
+only thing that will stand in the day of trial.
+
+There is something in the attitude and utterance of the king of Judah,
+on that memorable occasion, well worthy of the reader's profound
+attention. His feet were firmly fixed on God's ground, and his eyes as
+firmly fixed on God Himself; and in addition to this, there was the deep
+sense of his own thorough nothingness. He had not so much as a shadow
+of a doubt as to the fact of his being in possession of the very
+inheritance which God had given him. He knew that he was in his right
+place. He did not _hope_ it; still less did he doubt it; no, he knew it.
+He could say, "I believe and am sure."
+
+This is all-important. It is impossible to stand against the enemy, if
+there is anything equivocal in our position. If there be any secret
+misgiving as to our being in our right place--if we cannot give a "Thus
+saith the Lord" for the position which we occupy, the path we tread, the
+associations in which we stand, the work in which we are engaged, there
+will, most assuredly, be weakness in the hour of conflict. Satan is sure
+to avail himself of the smallest misgiving in the soul. All must be
+settled as to our positive standing, if we would make any headway
+against the enemy. There must be an unclouded confidence as to our real
+position before God, else the foe will have an easy victory.
+
+Now, it is precisely here that there is so much weakness apparent among
+the children of God. Very few, comparatively, are clear, sound, and
+settled as to their foundation--very few are able, without any reserve,
+to take the blessed ground of being washed in the blood of Jesus, and
+sealed with the Holy Spirit. At times they hope it. When things go well
+with them; when they have had a good time in the closet; when they have
+enjoyed nearness to God in prayer, or over the Word; while they are
+sitting under a clear, fervent, forcible ministry--at such moments,
+perhaps, they can venture to speak hopefully about themselves. But, very
+soon, dark clouds gather; they feel the workings of indwelling sin; they
+are afflicted with wandering thoughts; or it may be, they have been
+betrayed into some levity of spirit, or irritability of temper; then
+they begin to _reason_ about themselves, and to question whether they
+are, in reality, the children of God. And from reasonings and
+questionings, they very speedily slip into positive unbelief, and then
+plunge into the thick gloom of a despondency bordering on despair.
+
+All this is most sad. It is, at once, dishonoring to God, and
+destructive to the soul's peace; and as to progress, in such a
+condition, it is wholly out of the question. How can any one run a race,
+if he has not cleared the starting post? How can he erect a building, if
+he has not laid the foundation? And, on the same principle, how can a
+soul grow in the divine life, if he is always liable to doubt whether he
+has that life or not?
+
+But it may be that some of our readers are disposed to put such a
+question as the following, "How can I be sure that I am on God's
+ground?--that I am washed in the blood of Jesus and sealed with the Holy
+Spirit?" We reply, How do you know that you are a lost sinner? Is it
+because you feel it? Is mere feeling the ground of your faith? If so, it
+is not a divine faith at all. True faith rests _only_ on the testimony
+of holy Scripture. No doubt, it is by the gracious energy of the Holy
+Ghost that any one can exercise this living faith; but we are speaking
+now of the true ground of faith--the authority--the basis on which it
+rests, and that is simply the holy Scriptures which, as the inspired
+apostle tells us, are able to make us wise unto salvation, and which
+even a child could know, without the church, the clergy, the fathers,
+the doctors, the councils, the colleges, or any other human intervention
+whatsoever.
+
+"Abraham believed God." Here was divine faith. It was not a question of
+feeling. Indeed, if Abraham had been influenced by his feelings, he
+would have been a doubter instead of a believer. For what had he to
+build upon in himself? "His own body now dead." A poor ground surely on
+which to build his faith in the promise of an innumerable seed. But, we
+are told, "He considered not his own body now dead" (Rom. iv.). What,
+then, did he consider? He considered the word of the living God, and on
+that he rested. Now this is faith. And mark what the apostle says: "He
+staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief" (for unbelief is
+always a staggerer), "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."
+
+"Ah! but," the anxious reader may say, "what has all this to say to my
+case? I am not an Abraham--I cannot expect a special revelation from
+God. How am I to know that God has spoken to me? How can I possess this
+precious faith?" Well, dear friend, mark the apostle's further
+statement. "Now," he adds, "it was not written for his (Abraham's) sake
+alone, that it was imputed to him; but for us also, to whom it shall be
+imputed, if"--if what?--if we feel, realize, or experience aught in
+ourselves? Nay, but "if we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord
+from the dead; who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again
+for our justification."
+
+All this is full of solid comfort and richest consolation. It assures
+the anxious inquirer that he has the self-same ground and authority to
+rest upon that Abraham had, with an immensely higher measure of light
+thrown on that ground, inasmuch as Abraham was called to believe in a
+promise, whereas we are privileged to believe in an accomplished fact.
+He was called to look forward to something which was to be done; we look
+back at something that is done, even an accomplished redemption,
+attested by the fact of a risen and glorified Saviour, at the right hand
+of the Majesty in the heavens.
+
+But as to the ground or authority on which we are called to rest our
+souls, it is the same in our case as in Abraham's and all true
+believers' in all ages--it is the word of God--the holy Scriptures.
+There is no other foundation of faith but this; and the faith that rests
+on any other is not true faith at all. A faith resting on human
+tradition--on the authority of the Church--on the authority of so-called
+general councils--on the clergy--or on learned men, is not divine
+faith, but mere superstition; it is a faith which "stands in the wisdom
+of men," and "not in the power of God" (I Cor. ii. 5).
+
+Now, it is utterly impossible for any human pen or mortal tongue to
+overstate the value or importance of this grand principle--this
+principle of a living faith. Its value at the present moment is
+positively unspeakable. We believe it to be the divine antidote against
+most, if not all, the leading errors, evils, and hostile influences of
+the day in which our lot is cast. There is a tremendous shaking going on
+around us. Minds are agitated. Disturbing forces are abroad. There is a
+loosening of the foundations. Old institutions, to which the human mind
+clings, as the ivy to the oak, are tottering on every side; and many are
+actually fallen: and thousands of souls that have been finding shelter
+in them are dislodged and scared, and know not whither to turn. Some are
+saying, "The bricks are thrown down, but we will build with hewn stone."
+Many are at their wit's end, and most are ill at ease.
+
+Nor is this all; there is a numerous class, for the most part, of those
+who are not so much concerned about the condition and destiny of
+religious institutions and ecclesiastical systems, as about the
+condition and destiny of their own precious souls--of those who are not
+so much agitated by questions about "Broad Church," "High Church," "Low
+Church," "State Church," or "Free Church," as about this one great
+question, "What must I do to be saved?" What have we to say to these
+latter? What is the real want of their souls? Simply this, "A living
+faith in the living God." This is what is needed for all who are
+disturbed by what they see without, or feel within. Our unfailing
+resource is in the living God and in His Son Jesus Christ, as revealed
+by the Holy Spirit in the holy Scriptures.
+
+Here is the true resting-place of faith, and to this we do, most
+earnestly, most urgently and solemnly, invite the anxious reader. In one
+word, we entreat him to stay his whole soul on the word of God--the holy
+Scriptures. Here we have authority for all that we need to know, to
+believe, or to do.
+
+Is it a question of anxiety about my eternal salvation? Hear the
+following words, "Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in
+Zion _for a foundation_, a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner
+stone, _a sure foundation_: he that believeth shall not make haste"
+(Isa. xxviii. 16). These precious words, so pregnant with tranquilizing
+power, are quoted by the inspired apostle in the New Testament
+Scriptures: "Wherefore also it is contained in the scripture, Behold, I
+lay in Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and _he that
+believeth on Him shall not be confounded_" (I Peter ii. 6).
+
+What solid comfort--what deep and settled repose for the anxious soul is
+here! God has laid the foundation, and that foundation is nothing less
+than His own eternal and co-equal Son, the Son who had dwelt from all
+eternity in His bosom.
+
+This foundation is, in every respect, adequate to sustain the whole
+weight of the counsels and purposes of the eternal THREE IN ONE--to meet
+all the claims of the nature, the character, and the throne of God.
+
+Being all this, it must needs be fully adequate to meet all the need of
+the anxious soul, of what kind soever that need may be. If Christ is
+enough for God He must of necessity be enough for man--for any man--for
+the reader; and that He is enough is proved by the very passage just
+quoted. He is God's own foundation, laid by His own hand, the foundation
+and centre of that glorious system of royal and victorious grace set
+forth in the word "Zion." (See Heb. xii. 22-24.) He is God's own
+precious, tried, chief corner stone--that blessed One who went down into
+death's dark waters--bore the heavy judgment and wrath of God against
+sin--robbed death of its sting, and the grave of its victory--destroyed
+him that had the power of death--wrested from the enemy's grasp that
+terrible weapon with which sin had armed him, and made it the very
+instrument of his eternal defeat and confusion. Having done all this, He
+was received up into glory, and seated at the right hand of the Majesty
+in the heavens.
+
+Such is God's foundation, to which He graciously calls the attention of
+every one who really feels the need of something divinely solid on which
+to build, in view of the hollow and shadowy scenes of this world, and in
+prospect of the stern realities of eternity.
+
+Dear reader, you are now invited to build upon this foundation. Be
+assured it is for you as positively and distinctly as though you heard a
+voice from heaven speaking to your own very self. The word of the living
+God is addressed "to every creature under heaven"--"Whosoever will" is
+invited to come. The inspired volume has been placed in your hand and
+laid open before your eyes; and for what think you? Is it to mock or to
+tantalize you by presenting before you what was never intended for you?
+Ah! no, reader; such is not God's way. Does He send His sunlight and
+showers to mock and to tantalize, or to gladden and refresh? Do you ever
+think of calling in question your own very personal welcome to study the
+book of Creation? Never; and yet there might be some show of foundation
+of such a question, inasmuch as, since that wondrous volume was thrown
+open, sin has entered and thrown its dark blots over the pages thereof.
+But, spite of sin and all its forms and all its consequences, spite of
+Satan's power and malice, God has spoken. He has caused His voice to be
+heard in this dark and sinful world. And what has He said? "Behold, I
+lay in Zion a foundation." This is something entirely new. It is as
+though our blessed, loving, and ever gracious God had said to us, "Here,
+I have begun on the new. I have laid a foundation, on the ground of
+redemption, which nothing can ever touch, neither sin, or Satan, or
+aught else. I _lay_ the foundation, and pledge My word that whosoever
+believes--whosoever commits himself, in childlike, unquestioning
+confidence, to My foundation--whosoever rests in My Christ--whosoever is
+satisfied with My precious, tried, chief corner stone, shall never--no,
+never--no, never be confounded--never be put to shame--never be
+disappointed--shall never perish, world without end."
+
+Beloved reader, dost thou still hesitate? We solemnly avow we cannot see
+even the shadow of a foundation of a reason why thou shouldest. If there
+were any question raised, or any condition proposed, or any barrier
+erected, reason would that thou mightest hesitate. If there were so much
+as a single preliminary to be settled by thee--if it were made a
+question of feeling or of experience, or of aught else that thou couldst
+do, or feel, or be, then verily thou mightest justly pause. But there is
+absolutely nothing of the sort. There is the Christ of God and the word
+of God, and--what then? "He that believeth shall not be confounded." In
+short it is simply "A living faith in the living God." It is taking God
+at His word. It is believing what He says because He says it. It is
+committing your soul to the word of Him who cannot lie. It is doing what
+Abraham did when he believed God and was counted righteous. It is doing
+what Jehoshaphat did when he planted his foot firmly on those immortal
+words, "Thou gavest it to the seed of Abraham Thy friend, forever." It
+is doing what the patriarchs, the prophets, the apostles, the saints in
+all ages have done, when they rested their souls for time and eternity
+upon that Word which "is settled forever in heaven," and thus lived in
+peace and died in hope of a glorious resurrection. It is resting calmly
+and sweetly on the immovable rock of holy Scripture, and thus proving
+the divine and sustaining virtue of that which has never failed any who
+who trusted it, and never will, and never can.
+
+Oh! the unspeakable blessedness of having such a foundation in a world
+like this where death, decay, and change are stamped upon all; where
+friendship's fondest links are snapped in the twinkling of an eye by
+death's rude hand; where all that seems, to nature's view, most stable,
+is liable to be swept away in a moment by the rushing tide of popular
+revolution; where there is absolutely nothing on which the heart can
+lean, and say, "I have now found permanent repose." What a mercy, in
+such a scene, to have "A living faith in the living God."
+
+"They shall not be ashamed that wait for Me." Such is the veritable
+record of the living God--a record made good in the experience of all
+those who have been enabled, through grace, to exercise a living faith.
+But then we must remember how much is involved in those three words,
+"_wait for Me_." The waiting must be a real thing. It will not do to
+_say_ we are waiting on God, when, in reality, our eye is askance upon
+some human prop or creature confidence. We must be absolutely "shut up"
+to God. We must be brought to the end of self, and to the bottom of
+circumstances, in order fully to prove what the life of faith is, and
+what God's resources are. God and the creature can never occupy the
+same platform. It must be God alone. "My soul, wait thou _only_ upon
+God; for my expectation is from Him. He _only_ is my rock and my
+salvation" (Psa. lxii. 5, 6).
+
+Thus it was with Jehoshaphat, in that scene recorded in 2 Chron. xx. He
+was wholly cast upon God. It was either God or nothing. "We have no
+might." But what then? "Our eyes are upon Thee." This was enough. It was
+well for Jehoshaphat not to have so much as a single atom of might--a
+single ray of knowledge. He was in the very best possible attitude and
+condition to prove what God was. It would have been an incalculable loss
+to him to have been possessed of the very smallest particle of creature
+strength or creature wisdom, inasmuch as it could only have proved a
+hindrance to him in leaning exclusively upon the arm and the counsel of
+the Almighty God. If the eye of faith rests upon the living God--if He
+fills the entire range of the soul's vision, then what do we want with
+might or knowledge of our own? Who would think of resting in that which
+is human when he can have that which is divine? Who would lean on an arm
+of flesh, when he can lean on the arm of the living God?
+
+Reader, art thou, at this moment in any pressure, in any trial, need, or
+difficulty? If so, let us entreat thee to look simply and solely to the
+living God. Turn away thine eyes completely from the creature: "Cease
+from man, whose breath is in his nostrils."
+
+Let thy faith take hold now on the strength of God Himself. Put thy
+whole case into His omnipotent hand. Cast thy burden, whatever it is,
+upon Him. Let there be no reserve. He is as willing as He is able, and
+as able as He is willing, to bear all. Only trust Him fully. He loves to
+be trusted--loves to be used. It is His joy, blessed be His name, to
+yield a ready and a full response to the appeal of faith. It is worth
+having a burden, to know the blessedness of rolling it over upon Him. So
+the king of Judah found it in the day of his trial, and so shall the
+reader find it now. God never fails a trusting heart. "They shall not be
+ashamed that wait for Me." Precious words! Let us mark how they are
+illustrated in the narrative before us.
+
+No sooner had Jehoshaphat cast himself completely upon the Lord, than
+the divine response fell, with clearness and power, upon his ear.
+"Harken ye, all Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem, and thou king
+Jehoshaphat; thus saith the Lord unto you, Be not afraid or dismayed by
+reason of this great multitude; for the battle is not yours, but
+God's ... ye shall not need to fight in this battle. Set yourselves,
+stand ye still, and see the salvation of the Lord with you, O Judah and
+Jerusalem: fear not, nor be dismayed; to-morrow go out against them; for
+the Lord will be with you."
+
+What an answer! "The battle is not yours, but God's." Only think of
+God's having a battle with people! Assuredly there could be little
+question as to the issue of such a battle. Jehoshaphat had put the
+whole matter into God's hands, and God took it up and made it entirely
+His own. It is always thus. Faith puts the difficulty, the trial, and
+the burden into God's hands, and leaves Him to act. This is enough. God
+never refuses to respond to the appeal of faith; nay, it is His delight
+to answer it. Jehoshaphat had made it a question between God and the
+enemy. He had said, "They have come to cast us out of _Thy_ possession,
+which Thou hast given us to inherit." Nothing could be simpler. God had
+given Israel the land, and He could keep them in it, spite of ten
+thousand foes. Thus faith would reason. The self-same Hand that had
+placed them in the land could keep them there. It was simply a question
+of divine power. "O our God, wilt Thou not judge them? for we have no
+might against this great company that cometh against us; neither know we
+what to do; but our eyes are upon Thee."
+
+It is a wonderful point in the history of any soul, to be brought to
+say, "I have no might." It is the sure precursor of divine deliverance.
+The moment a man is brought to the discovery of his utter powerlessness,
+the divine word is, "Stand still, and see the salvation of God." One
+does not want "might" to "stand still." It needs no effort to "see the
+salvation of God." This holds good in reference to the sinner in coming
+to Christ, at the first; and it holds equally good in reference to the
+Christian in his whole career from first to last. The great difficulty
+is to get to the end of our own strength.
+
+Once there, the whole thing is settled. There may be a vast amount of
+struggle and exercise ere we are brought to say "without strength!" But,
+the moment we take that ground, the word is, "Stand still, and see the
+salvation of God." Human effort, in every shape and form, can but raise
+a barrier between our souls and God's salvation. If God has undertaken
+for us, we may well be still. And has He not? Yes, blessed be His holy
+name, He has charged Himself with all that concerns us, for time and
+eternity; and hence we have only to let Him act for us, in all things.
+It is our happy privilege to let Him go before us, while we follow on
+"in wonder, love, and praise."
+
+Thus it was in that interesting and instructive scene on which we have
+been dwelling. "Jehoshaphat bowed his head, with his face to the ground:
+and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell before the Lord,
+worshiping the Lord. And the Levites, of the children of the Kohathites,
+and of the children of the Korhites, stood up to praise the Lord God of
+Israel with a loud voice on high."
+
+Here we have the true attitude and the proper occupation of the
+believer. Jehoshaphat withdrew his eyes from "that great company that
+had come against him," and fixed them upon the living God. Jehovah had
+come right in and placed Himself between His people and the enemy, just
+as He had done in the day of the exodus, at the Red Sea, so that instead
+of looking at the difficulties, they might look at Him.
+
+This, beloved reader, is the secret of victory at all times, and under
+all circumstances. This it is which fills the heart with praise and
+thanksgiving, and bows the head in wondering worship. There is something
+perfectly beautiful in the entire bearing of Jehoshaphat and the
+congregation, on the occasion before us. They were evidently impressed
+with the thought that they had nothing to do but to praise God. And they
+were right. Had He not said to them, "Ye shall not need to fight"? What
+then had they to do? What remained for them? Nothing but praise. Jehovah
+was going out before them to fight; and they had but to follow after Him
+in adoring worship.
+
+"And they rose early in the morning, and went forth in the wilderness of
+Tekoa: and as they went forth, Jehoshaphat stood and said, Hear me, O
+Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem; believe in the Lord your God, so
+shall ye be established; believe His prophets, so shall ye prosper" (2
+Chron. xx. 20).
+
+It is of the very last importance that God's word should ever have its
+own supreme place in the heart of the Christian. God has spoken. He has
+given us His Word; and it is for us to lean unshaken thereon. We want
+nothing more. The divine Word is amply sufficient to give confidence,
+peace, and stability to the soul. We do not need evidences from man to
+prove the truth of God's word. That Word carries its own powerful
+evidences with it. To suppose that we require human testimony to prove
+that God's word is true, is to imply that man's word is more valid, more
+trustworthy, more authoritative, than the word of God. If we need a
+human voice to interpret, to ratify, to make God's revelation available,
+then we are virtually deprived of that revelation altogether.
+
+We call the special attention of the reader to this point. It concerns
+the integrity of Holy Scripture. The grand question is this, Is God's
+word sufficient or not? Do we really want man's authority to make us
+sure that God has spoken? Far be the thought! This would be placing
+man's word above God's word, and thus depriving us of the _only_ solid
+ground on which our souls can lean. This is precisely what the devil has
+been aiming at from the very beginning, and it is what he is aiming at
+now. He wants to remove from beneath our feet the solid rock of divine
+revelation, and to give us instead the sandy foundation of human
+authority. Hence it is that we do so earnestly press upon our readers
+the urgent need of keeping close to God's word, in simple unquestioning
+faith. It is really the true secret of stability and peace. If God's
+word be not enough for us, without man's interference, we are positively
+left without any sure basis of our soul's confidence; yea, we are cast
+adrift on the wild watery waste of skepticism, we are plunged in doubt
+and dark uncertainty: we are most miserable.
+
+But, thanks and praise be to God, it is not so. "_Believe in the Lord
+your God, so shall ye be established: believe His prophets, so shall ye
+prosper._"
+
+Here is the resting-place of faith in all ages. God's eternal Word,
+which is settled forever in heaven, which He has magnified according to
+all His name, and which stands forth in its own divine dignity and
+sufficiency before the eye of faith. We must utterly reject the idea
+that aught in the way of human authority, human evidences, or human
+feelings, is needful to make the testimony of God full weight in the
+balances of the soul. Grant us but this, that God has spoken, and we
+argue with bold decision that nothing more is needed as a foundation for
+genuine faith. In a word, if we want to be established and to prosper,
+we have simply to "Believe in the Lord our God." It was this that
+enabled Jehoshaphat to bow his head in holy worship. It was this that
+enabled him to praise God for victory ere a single blow was struck. It
+was this that conducted him into "the valley of Berachah" (_blessing_)
+and surrounded him with spoil more than he could carry away.
+
+And now we have the soul-stirring record: "And when he had consulted
+with the people, he appointed _singers unto the Lord_, and that should
+praise the beauty of holiness, as they went out before the army, and to
+say, Praise the Lord: for His mercy endureth forever." What a strange
+advance guard for an army! A company of singers! Such is faith's way of
+ordering the battle.
+
+"And when they began to sing and to praise, the Lord set ambushments
+against the children of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir, which were come
+against Judah, and they were smitten." Only think of the Lord setting
+ambushments! Think of His engaging in the business of military tactics!
+How wonderful! God will do any thing that His people need, if only His
+people will confide in Him, and leave themselves and their affairs
+absolutely in His hand.
+
+"And when Judah came toward the watch-tower in the wilderness, they
+looked unto the multitude, and, behold, they were dead bodies fallen to
+the earth, and none escaped." Such was the end of "that great
+company"--that formidable host--that terrible foe. All vanished away
+before the presence of the God of Israel. Yes, and had they been a
+million times more numerous, and more formidable, the issue would have
+been the same, for circumstances are nothing to the living God, and
+nothing to a living faith. When God fills the vision of the soul,
+difficulties fade away, and songs of praise break forth from joyful
+lips.
+
+"And when Jehoshaphat and his people came to take away the spoil of
+them" (for that was all they had to do) "they found among them in
+abundance both riches with the dead bodies, and precious jewels, which
+they stripped off for themselves, more than they could carry away; and
+they were three days in gathering of the spoil, it was so much. And on
+the fourth day, they assembled themselves in the valley of Berachah; for
+there they blessed the Lord."
+
+Such, beloved reader, must ever be the result of a living faith in the
+living God. More than two thousand five hundred years have rolled away
+since the occurrence of the event on which we have been dwelling; but
+the record is as fresh as ever. No change has come over the living God,
+or over the living faith which ever takes hold of His strength, and
+counts on His faithfulness. It is as true to-day as it was in the day of
+Jehoshaphat, that those who believe in the Lord our God shall be
+established, and shall prosper. They shall be endowed with strength,
+crowned with victory, clothed with spoils, and filled with songs of
+praise. May we, then through the gracious energy of the Holy Spirit,
+ever be enabled to exercise "A LIVING FAITH IN THE LIVING GOD!"
+
+
+
+
+A SCRIPTURAL INQUIRY
+
+AS TO THE TRUE NATURE OF
+
+THE SABBATH, THE LAW, AND CHRISTIAN MINISTRY
+
+
+THE SABBATH.
+
+If it were merely a question of the observance or non-observance of a
+day, it might be easily disposed of, inasmuch as the apostle teaches us
+in Rom. xiv. 5, 6, and also in Col. ii. 16, that such things are not to
+be made a ground of judgment. But seeing there is a great principle
+involved in the Sabbath question, we deem it to be of the very last
+importance to place it upon a clear and Scriptural basis. We shall quote
+the Fourth Commandment at full length: "Remember the sabbath day, to
+keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work; but the
+seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do
+any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy
+maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:
+for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in
+them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the
+sabbath day, and hallowed it" (Ex. xx. 8-11). This same law is repeated
+in Exodus xxxi. 12-17. And in pursuance thereof we find in Numbers xv. a
+man stoned for gathering sticks on the sabbath day. All this is plain
+and absolute enough. Man has no right to alter God's law in reference to
+the sabbath; no more than he has to alter it in reference to murder,
+adultery, or theft. This, we presume, will not be called in question.
+The entire body of old Testament Scripture fixes the seventh day as the
+sabbath; and the Fourth Commandment lays down the mode in which that
+sabbath was to be observed. Now where, we ask, is this precedent
+followed? Where is this command obeyed? Is it not plain that the
+professing Church neither keeps the right day as the sabbath, nor does
+she keep it after the Scripture mode? The commandments of God are made
+of none effect by human traditions, and the glorious truths which hang
+around "the Lord's day" are lost sight of. The Jew is robbed of his
+distinctive day and all the privileges therewith connected, which are
+only suspended for the present, while judicial blindness hangs over that
+loved and interesting, though now judged and scattered, people. And
+furthermore, the Church is robbed of her distinctive day and all the
+glories therewith connected, which if really understood would have the
+effect of lifting her above earthly things into the sphere which
+properly belongs to her, as linked by faith to her glorified Head in
+heaven. In result, we have neither pure Judaism nor pure Christianity,
+but an anomalous system arising out of an utterly unscriptural
+combination of the two.
+
+However, we desire to refrain from all attempt at developing the deeply
+spiritual doctrine involved in this great question, and confine
+ourselves to the plain teaching of Scripture on the subject; and in so
+doing we maintain that if the professing Church quotes the Fourth
+Commandment and parallel scriptures in defense of keeping the sabbath,
+then it is evident that in almost every case the law is entirely set
+aside. Observe, the word is, "Thou shalt not do any work." This ought to
+be perfectly binding on all who take the Jewish ground. There is no room
+here for introducing what we deem to be "works of necessity." We may
+think it necessary to kindle fires, to make servants harness our horses
+and drive us hither and thither. But the law is stern and absolute,
+severe and unbending. It will not, it can not, lower its standard to
+suit our convenience or accommodate itself to our thoughts. The mandate
+is, "Thou shalt not do _any_ work," and that, moreover, on "the seventh
+day," which answers to our Saturday. We ask for a single passage of
+Scripture in which the day is changed, or in which the strict observance
+of the day is in the smallest degree relaxed.
+
+We request the reader of these lines to pause and search out this matter
+thoroughly in the light of Scripture. Let him not be scared as by some
+terrible bugbear, but let him, in true Berean nobility of spirit,
+"search the Scriptures." By so doing he will find that from the second
+chapter of Genesis down to the very last passage in which the sabbath is
+named, it means the _seventh_ day and none other; and further, that
+there is not so much as a shadow of divine authority for altering the
+mode of observing that day. Law is law, and if we are under the law we
+are bound to keep it or else be cursed; for "it is written, Cursed is
+every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the
+book of the law to do them" (Deut. xxvii. 26; Gal. iii. 10).
+
+But it will be said, "We are not under the Mosaic law; we are the
+subjects of the Christian economy." Granted; most fully, freely and
+thankfully granted. All true Christians are, according to the teaching
+of Romans vii. and viii. and Galatians iii. and iv., the happy and
+privileged subjects of the Christian dispensation. But if so, what is
+the day which specially characterizes that dispensation? Not "the
+seventh day," but "the first day of the week"--"THE LORD'S DAY." This is
+pre-eminently the Christian's day. Let him observe this day with all the
+sanctity, the sacred reverence, the hallowed retirement, the elevated
+tone, of which his new nature is capable. We believe the Christian's
+retirement from all secular things cannot possibly be too profound on
+the Lord's day. The idea of any one, calling himself a Christian, making
+the Lord's day a season of what is popularly called recreation,
+unnecessary traveling, personal convenience, or profit in temporal
+things, is perfectly shocking. We are of opinion that such acting could
+not be too severely censured. We can safely assert that we never yet
+came in contact with a godly, intelligent, right-minded Christian person
+who did not love and reverence the Lord's day; nor could we have any
+sympathy with any one who could deliberately desecrate that holy and
+happy day.
+
+We are aware, alas, that some persons have through ignorance or
+misguided feelings said things in reference to the Lord's day which we
+utterly repudiate, and that they have done things on the Lord's day of
+which we wholly disapprove. We believe that there is a body of New
+Testament teaching on the important subject of the Lord's day quite
+sufficient to give that day its proper place in every well-regulated
+mind. The Lord Jesus rose from the dead on that day (Matt, xxviii. I-6;
+Mark xvi. I, 2; Luke xxiv. I; John xx. I). He met His disciples once and
+again on that day (John xx. 19, 26). The early disciples met to break
+bread on that day (Acts xx. 7). The apostle, by the Holy Ghost, directs
+the Corinthians to lay by their contributions for the poor on that day
+(I Cor. xvi. 2). And finally, the exiled apostle was in the Spirit and
+received visions of the future on that day (Rev. i. 10). The above
+scriptures are conclusive. They prove that the Lord's day occupies a
+place quite unique, quite heavenly, quite divine. But they as fully
+prove the entire distinctness of the Jewish sabbath and the Lord's day.
+The two days are spoken of throughout the New Testament with fully as
+much distinctness as we speak of Saturday and Sunday. The only
+difference is that the latter are heathen titles, and the former divine.
+(Comp. Matt. xxviii. I; Acts xiii. 14, xvii. 2, xx. 7; Col. ii. 16).
+
+Having said thus much as to the question of the Jewish sabbath and the
+Lord's day, we shall suggest the following questions to the reader,
+namely: Where in the word of God is the sabbath said to be changed to
+the first day of the week? Where is there any repeal of the law as to
+the sabbath? Where is the authority for altering the day or the mode of
+observing it? Where in Scripture have we such an expression as "the
+Christian sabbath"? Where is the Lord's day ever called the
+sabbath?[XXVII.]
+
+We would not yield to any of our dear brethren in the various
+denominations around us in the pious observance of the Lord's day. We
+love and honor it with all our hearts; and were it not that the gracious
+providence of God has so ordered it in these realms that we can enjoy
+the rest and retirement of the Lord's day without pecuniary loss, we
+should feel called upon to abstain from business, and give ourselves
+wholly up to the worship and service of God on that day--not as a matter
+of cold legality, but as a holy and happy privilege.
+
+It would be the deepest sorrow to our hearts to think that a true
+Christian should be found taking common ground with the ungodly, the
+profane, the thoughtless, and the pleasure-hunting multitude, in
+desecrating the Lord's day. It would be sad indeed if the children of
+the kingdom and the children of this world were to meet in an excursion
+train on the Lord's day. We feel persuaded that any who in any wise
+profane or treat with lightness the Lord's day act in direct opposition
+to the Word and Spirit of God.
+
+
+THE LAW.
+
+As regards the law, it is looked at in two ways; first, as a ground of
+justification; and secondly, as a rule of life. A passage or two of
+Scripture will suffice to settle both the one and the other: "Therefore
+by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight:
+for by the law is the knowledge of sin" (Rom. iii. 20). "Therefore we
+conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law"
+(ver. 28). Again: "Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of
+the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in
+Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not
+by the works of the law; for by the works of the law shall no flesh be
+justified" (Gal. ii. 16).
+
+Then, as to its being a rule of life, we read, "Wherefore, my brethren,
+ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should
+be married to another, even to Him that is raised from the dead, that we
+should bring forth fruit unto God" (Rom. vii. 4). "But now are we
+delivered from the law, being dead to that (see margin) wherein we were
+held: that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness
+of the letter" (ver. 6). Observe in this last-quoted passage two
+things: first, "we are delivered from the law;" second, not that we may
+do nature's pleasure, but "that we should _serve_ in newness of spirit."
+Being delivered from bondage, it is our privilege to "serve" in liberty.
+Again we read, further on in the chapter, "And the commandment which was
+ordained to life, I found to be _unto death_" (ver. 10). It evidently
+did not prove as a rule of _life_ to him. "I was _alive without the law_
+once; but _when the commandment came_, sin revived, and _I died_" (ver.
+9). Whoever "I" represents in this chapter was alive until the law came,
+and then he died. Hence, therefore, the law could not have been a rule
+of life to him; yea, it was the very opposite, even a rule of death.
+
+In a word, then, it is evident that a sinner cannot be justified by the
+works of the law; and it is equally evident that the law is not the rule
+of the believer's life. "For as many as are of the works of the law are
+under the curse" (Gal. iii. 10). The law knows no such thing as a
+distinction between a regenerated and an unregenerated man: it curses
+all who attempt to stand before it. It rules and curses a man so long as
+he lives; nor is there any one who will so fully acknowledge that he
+cannot keep it as the true believer, and hence no one would be more
+thoroughly under the curse.
+
+What, therefore, is the ground of our justification? and what is our
+rule of life? The word of God answers, "We are justified by the faith of
+Christ," and Christ is our rule of life. He bore all our sins in His
+own body on the tree; He was made a curse for us; He drained on our
+behalf the cup of God's righteous wrath; He deprived death of its sting,
+and the grave of its victory; He gave up His life for us; He went down
+into death, where we lay, in order that He might bring us up in eternal
+association with Himself in life, righteousness, favor and glory, before
+our God and His God, our Father and His Father. (See carefully the
+following scriptures: John xx. 17; Rom. iv. 25; v. I-10; vi. I-11; vii.
+_passim_, viii. I-4; I Cor. i. 30, 31; vi. 11; xv. 55-57; 2 Cor. v.
+17-21; Gal. iii. 13, 25-29; iv. 31; Eph. i. 19-23; ii. I-6; Col. ii.
+10-15; Heb. ii. 14, 15; I Peter i. 23.) If the reader will prayerfully
+ponder all these passages of Scripture he will see clearly that we are
+not justified by the works of the law; and not only so, but he will see
+how we are justified. He will see the deep and solid foundations of the
+Christian's life, righteousness and peace planned in God's eternal
+counsels, laid in the finished atonement of Christ, developed by God the
+Holy Ghost in the Word, and made good in the happy experience of all
+true believers.
+
+Then, as to the believer's rule of life, the apostle does not say, To me
+to live is the law; but, "To me to live is Christ" (Phil. i. 21). Christ
+is our rule, our model, our touchstone, our all. The continual inquiry
+of the Christian should be, not is this or that according to law? but is
+it like Christ? The law never could teach me to love, bless and pray for
+my enemies; but this is exactly what the gospel teaches me to do, and
+what the divine nature leads me to do. "Love is the fulfilling of the
+law;" and yet, were I to seek justification by the law, I should be
+lost; and were I to make the law my standard of action, I should fall
+far short of my proper mark. We are predestinated to be conformed, not
+to the law, but to the image of God's Son. We are to be like Him. (See
+Matt. v. 21-48; Rom. viii. 29; I Cor. xiii. 4-8; Rom. xiii. 8-10; Gal.
+v. 14-26; Eph. i. 3-5; Phil. iii. 20, 21; ii. 5; iv. 8; Col. iii. I-17.)
+
+It may seem a paradox to some to be told that "the righteousness of the
+law is fulfilled in us" (Rom. viii. 4), and yet that we cannot be
+justified by the law, nor make the law our rule of life. Nevertheless,
+thus it is if we are to form our convictions by the word of God. Nor is
+there any difficulty to the renewed mind in understanding this blessed
+doctrine. We are by nature "dead in trespasses and sins," and what can a
+dead man do? How can a man get life by keeping that which requires life
+to keep it--a life which he has not? And how do we get life? Christ is
+our life. We live in Him who died for us; we are blessed in Him who
+became a curse for us by hanging on a tree; we are righteous in Him who
+was made sin for us; we are brought nigh in Him who was cast out for us
+(Rom. v. 6-15; Eph. ii. 4-6; Gal. iii. 13). Having thus life and
+righteousness in Christ, we are called to walk as He walked, and not
+merely to walk as a Jew. We are called to purify ourselves even as He
+is pure; to walk in His footsteps; to show forth His virtues; to
+manifest His spirit (John xiii. 14, 15; xvii. 14-19; I Peter ii. 21; I
+John ii. 6, 29; iii. 3).
+
+We shall close our remarks on this head by suggesting two questions to
+the reader, namely, Would the Ten Commandments without the New Testament
+be a sufficient rule of life for the believer? Is not the New Testament
+a sufficient rule without the Ten Commandments? Surely that which is
+insufficient cannot be our rule of life.
+
+We receive the Ten Commandments as part of the canon of inspiration; and
+moreover, we believe that the law remains in full force to rule and
+curse a man as long as he liveth. Let a sinner only try to get life by
+it, and see where it will put him; and let a believer only shape his way
+according to it, and see what it will make of him. We are fully
+convinced that if a man is walking according to the spirit of the
+gospel, he will not commit murder nor steal; but we are also convinced
+that a man, confining himself to the standard of the law of Moses would
+fall very far short of the spirit of the gospel.
+
+The subject of "the law" would demand much more elaborate exposition,
+but the limits of this paper do not admit of it, and we therefore
+entreat of the reader to look out the various passages of Scripture
+referred to and ponder them carefully. In this way we feel assured he
+will arrive at a sound conclusion, and be independent of all human
+teaching and influence. He will see how that a man is justified freely
+by the grace of God through faith in a crucified and risen Christ; that
+he is made a partaker of divine life, and introduced into a condition of
+divine and everlasting righteousness, and consequent exemption from all
+condemnation; that in this holy and elevated position Christ is his
+object, his theme, his model, his rule, his hope, his joy, his strength,
+his all; that the hope which is set before him is to be with Jesus where
+He is, and to be like Him forever. And he will also see that if as a
+lost sinner he has found pardon and peace at the foot of the cross, he
+is not, as an accepted and adopted son, sent back to the foot of Mount
+Sinai, there to be terrified and repulsed by the terrible anathemas of a
+broken law. The Father could not think of ruling with an iron law the
+prodigal whom He had received to His bosom in purest, deepest, richest
+grace. Oh no! "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God through
+our Lord Jesus Christ; by whom also we have access by faith into this
+grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God" (Rom.
+v. I, 2). The believer is justified not by works, but by _faith_; he
+stands not in law, but in _grace_; and he waits not for judgment, but
+for _glory_.
+
+We come now, in the third place, to treat of the subject of
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY;
+
+in reference to which we have only to say, that we hold it to be a
+divine institution: its source, its power, its characteristics, are all
+divine and heavenly. We believe that the great Head of the Church
+received in resurrection gifts for His body. He, and not the Church, or
+any section of the Church, is the reservoir of the gifts. They are
+vested in Him, and not in the Church. He imparts them as, and to whom,
+He will. No man, nor body of men, can impart gifts. This is Christ's
+prerogative, and His alone; and we believe that when He imparts a gift,
+the man who receives that gift is responsible to exercise the same,
+whether as an evangelist, a pastor or a teacher, quite independently of
+all human authority.
+
+We do not by any means believe that all are endowed with the above
+gifts, though all have some ministry to fulfil. All are not evangelists,
+pastors, and teachers. Such precious gifts are only administered
+according to the sovereign will of the divine Head of the Church. Man
+has no right to interfere with them. Wherever they really exist, it is
+the place of the assembly to recognize them with devout thankfulness.
+Christians are exhorted to remember them that are over them in the Lord,
+to know them that guide them, and those who addict themselves to the
+ministry of the saints, and those who have spoken to them the word of
+life. Were they to refuse to do so, they would only be forsaking and
+rejecting their own mercies, for all things are theirs. (See Rom. xii.
+3-8; I Cor. iii. 21-23; xii., xiv., xvi. 15; Gal. i. 11-17; Eph. iv.
+7-16; I Thess. v. 12, 13; Heb. xiii. 7, 17; I Peter iv. 10, 11.)
+
+All this is simple enough. We can easily see where a man is divinely
+qualified for any department of ministry. It is not if a man _say_ he
+has a gift, but if he in reality has it. A man may say he has a gift on
+the same principle as he may say he has faith (James ii. 14), and it may
+only be, after all, an empty conceit of his own ill-adjusted mind, which
+a spiritual assembly could not recognize for a moment. God deals in
+realities. A divinely-gifted evangelist is a reality; a teacher is a
+reality; a pastor is a reality; and such will be duly recognized,
+thankfully received, and counted worthy of all esteem and honor for
+their work's sake.
+
+Now we hold that unless a man has a _bona fide_ gift imparted to him by
+the Head of the Church, all the instruction, all the education, and all
+the training that men could impart to him would not constitute him a
+Christian minister. If a man has a gift, he is responsible to exercise,
+to cultivate, and to wait upon his gift.
+
+But unless a man has a direct gift from Christ, though he had all the
+learning of a Newton, all the philosophy of a Bacon, all the eloquence
+of a Demosthenes, he is not a Christian minister. He may be a very
+gifted and efficient minister of religion, so called; but a minister of
+religion and a minister of Christ are two different things. And further,
+we believe that where the Lord Christ has bestowed a gift, that gift
+makes the possessor thereof a Christian minister, whom all true
+Christians are bound to own and receive, quite apart from all human
+appointment: whereas, though a man had all the human qualifications,
+human titles and human authority which it is possible to possess, and
+yet lacked that one grand reality, namely, Christ's gift, he is not a
+minister of Christ.
+
+We thank God for Christian ministry; and we feel assured that there are
+many truly gifted servants of Christ in the various denominations around
+us; but they are ministers of Christ on the ground of possessing His
+gift, and not, by any means, on the ground of man's ordination. Man
+cannot add aught to a heaven-bestowed gift. As well might he attempt to
+add a shade to the rainbow, a tint to the violet, motion to the waves,
+height to the snow-capped mountains, or daub with a painter's brush the
+peacock's plumage, as attempt to render more efficient by his puny
+authority the gift which has come down from the risen and glorified Head
+of the Church. Ah no! the vine, the olive and the fig-tree, in Jotham's
+parable (Judges ix.) needed not the appointment of the other trees. God
+had implanted in each its specific virtue. It was only the worthless
+bramble which hailed with delight an appointment that raised it from the
+position of _a real nothing_ to be _an official something_. Thus it is
+with a divinely-gifted man. He has what God has given him: he wants, he
+asks no more. He rises above the narrow enclosure which man's authority
+would erect around him, and plants his foot upon that elevated ground
+where prophets and apostles have stood. He feels that it lies not within
+the range of the schools and colleges of this world to open to him his
+proper sphere of action. It appertains not to them to provide a setting
+for the precious gem which sovereign grace has imparted. The hand which
+has bestowed the gem can alone provide the proper setting. The grace
+which has implanted the gift can alone throw open a proper sphere for
+its exercise. What! can it be possible that those gifts which emanate
+from the Church's triumphant and glorious Lord are not available for her
+edification until they are dragged through the mire of a heathen
+mythology? Alas for the heart that can think so! As well might we say
+that the fatness of the olive and the pure blood of the grape must be
+mingled with the contents of a quagmire to render them available for
+human use.
+
+But it will be asked, "Were there not elders and deacons in the early
+Church, and ought we not to have such likewise?" Unquestionably there
+were elders and deacons in the early Church. They were appointed by the
+apostles, or those whom the apostles deputed: that is to say, they were
+appointed by the Holy Ghost--the only One who could then, or can now,
+appoint them. We believe that none but God can make or appoint an elder,
+and therefore for man to set about such work is but a powerless form, an
+empty name. Men may, and do, point us to the shadows of their own
+creation, and call upon us to recognize in those shadows divine
+realities; but alas! when we examine them in the light of Holy
+Scripture, we cannot even trace the outline, to say nothing of the
+living, speaking features of the divine original. We see
+divinely-appointed elders in the New Testament, and we see
+humanly-appointed elders in the professing Church; but we can by no
+means accept the latter as a substitute for the former. We cannot accept
+a mere shadow in lieu of the substance. Neither do we believe that men
+have any divine authority for their act when they set about making and
+appointing elders. We believe that when Paul, or Timothy, or Titus,
+ordained elders, they did so as acting by the power and under the direct
+authority of the Holy Ghost; but we deny that any man, or body of men,
+can so act now. We believe it was the Holy Ghost then, and it must be
+the Holy Ghost now. Human assumption is perfectly contemptible. If God
+raises up an elder or a pastor we thankfully own him. He both can and
+does raise up such. He does raise up men fitted by His Spirit to take
+the oversight of His flock, and to feed His lambs and sheep. His hand is
+not shortened that He cannot provide those blessings for His Church even
+amid its humiliating ruins. The reservoir of spiritual gift in Christ
+the Head is not so exhausted that He cannot shed forth upon His body all
+that is needed for the edification thereof. We are of opinion that were
+it not for our impatient attempts to provide for ourselves by making
+pastors and elders of our own, we should be far more richly endowed with
+pastors and teachers after God's own heart. We need not marvel that He
+leaves us to our own resources when by our unbelief we limit Him in
+His.
+
+Instead of "proving" Him, we "limit" Him, and therefore we are shorn of
+our strength and left in barrenness and desolation; or, what is worse,
+we betake ourselves to the miserable provisions of human expediency.
+However, we believe it is far better, if we have not God's reality, to
+remain in the position of real, felt, confessed weakness than to put
+forth the hollow assumption of strength; we believe it is better to be
+real in our poverty than to put on the appearance of wealth. It is
+infinitely better to wait on God for whatever He may be pleased to
+bestow, than to limit His grace by our unbelief, or hinder His provision
+for us by making provision for ourselves.
+
+We ask, where is the Church's warrant for calling, making or appointing
+pastors? Where have we an instance in the New Testament of a Church
+electing its own pastor? Acts i. 23-26 has been adduced in proof. But
+the very wording of the passage is sufficient to prove that it furnishes
+no warrant whatever. Even the eleven apostles could not elect a brother
+apostle, but had to commit it to higher authority. Their words are,
+"THOU, LORD, _which knowest the hearts of all_, show whether of these
+two _Thou hast chosen_." This is very plain. They did not attempt to
+choose. God knew the heart. He had formed the vessel. He had put the
+treasure therein, and He alone could appoint it to its proper place.
+
+It is very evident, therefore, that the case of the eleven apostles
+calling upon the Lord to choose a man to fill up their number affords
+no precedent whatever for a congregation electing a pastor: it is
+entirely against any such practice. God alone can make or appoint an
+apostle or an elder, an evangelist or a pastor. This is our firm belief,
+and we ask for Scripture proof of its unsoundness. Human opinion will
+not avail; tradition will not avail; expediency will not avail. Are we
+taught from the word of God that the early Church ever elected its own
+pastors or teachers? We positively affirm that there is not so much as a
+single line of Scripture in proof of any such custom. If we could only
+find direction in the word of God to make and appoint pastors, we should
+at once seek to carry such direction into effect; but in the absence of
+any divine warrant we could only regard it as a mimicry on our part to
+attempt any such a thing. Why was not the church at Ephesus, or why were
+not the churches at Crete, directed to elect or appoint elders? Why was
+the direction given to Timothy and Titus without the slightest reference
+to the Church, or to any part of the Church? Because, as we believe,
+Timothy and Titus acted by the direct power and under the direct
+authority of God the Holy Ghost, and hence their appointment was to be
+regarded by the Church as divine.[XXVIII.]
+
+But where have we anything like this now? Where is the Timothy or the
+Titus now? Where is there the least intimation in the New Testament that
+there should be a succession of men invested with the power to ordain
+elders or pastors? True, the apostle Paul, in his second epistle to
+Timothy, says, "The things which thou hast heard of me among many
+witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to
+teach others also" (2 Tim. ii. 2). But there is not a word here about a
+succession of men having power to ordain elders and pastors. Assuredly
+teaching is not ordination; still less is it imparting the power to
+ordain. If the inspired apostle had meant to convey to the mind of
+Timothy that he was to commit to others authority to ordain, and that
+such authority was to descend by a regular chain of succession, he could
+and would have done so; and in that case the passage would have run
+thus: "The power which has been vested in you, the same do thou vest in
+faithful men, that they may be able also to ordain others." Such,
+however, is not the case; and we deny that there is any man or body of
+men now upon earth possessing power to ordain elders, nor was that power
+or authority ever committed to the Church. We hold it to be absolutely
+divine; and therefore, when God sends an elder or a pastor, an
+evangelist or a teacher, we thankfully hail the heaven-bestowed
+gift;[XXIX.] but we desire to be delivered from all empty pretension. We
+will have God's reality or nothing. We will have heaven's genuine coin,
+not earth's counterfeit. Like the Tirshatha of old, who said "that they
+should not eat of the most holy things till there stood up a priest
+with Urim and Thummim" (Ezra ii.63), so would we say, let us rather, if
+it must be so, remain without office-bearers than substitute for God's
+realities the shadows of our own creation. Ezra could not accept the
+pretensions of men. Men might _say_ they were priests; but if they could
+not produce the divine warrant and the divine qualifications, they were
+utterly rejected. In order for a man to be entitled to approach the
+altar of the God of Israel, he should not only be descended from Aaron,
+but also be free from every bodily blemish. (See Lev. xxi. 16-23.) So
+now, in order for any man to minister in the Church of God, he must be a
+regenerated man, and he must have the necessary spiritual
+qualifications. Even St. Paul, in his powerful appeal to the conscience
+and judgment of the church at Corinth, refers to his spiritual gifts and
+the fruits of his labor as the indisputable evidences of his
+apostleship. (See 2 Cor. x., xii.)
+
+Before dismissing the subject of the Christian Ministry, we would offer
+a remark upon the practise of laying on of hands, which is presented in
+the New Testament in two ways. First, we find it connected with the
+communication of a positive gift. "Neglect not the gift that is in thee,
+which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the hands of the
+presbytery" (I Tim. iv. 14). This is again referred to in the second
+epistle: "Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift
+of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands" (2 Tim. i. 6).
+This latter passage fixes the import of the expression "presbytery," as
+used in the first epistle. Both passages prove that the act of laying on
+of hands in Timothy's case was connected with the imparting of a gift.
+But secondly, we find the laying on of hands adopted simply for the
+purpose of expressing full fellowship and identification, as in Acts
+xiii. 3. It could not possibly mean ordination in this passage, inasmuch
+as Paul and Barnabas had been in the ministry long before. It simply
+gave beautiful expression to the full identification of their brethren
+in that work unto which the Holy Ghost had called them, and to which He
+alone could send them forth.
+
+Now we believe that the laying on of hands as expressing ordination, if
+there be not the power to impart a gift, is worth nothing, if indeed it
+be not mere assumption; but if it be merely adopted as the expression of
+full fellowship in any special work or mission, we should quite rejoice
+in it. For example, if two or three brethren felt themselves called of
+God to go on an evangelistic mission to some foreign land, and that
+those with whom they were in communion perceived in them the needed gift
+and grace for such a work, we should deem it exceedingly happy were they
+to set forth their unqualified approval and their brotherly fellowship
+by the act of laying on of hands. Beyond this we can see no value
+whatever in that act.
+
+Having thus, so far as our limits would permit, treated of the questions
+of the Sabbath, the Law, and the Christian Ministry; having shown that
+we honor and observe the Lord's day, that we give the Law its divinely
+appointed place, and finally, that we hold the sacred and precious
+institution of the Christian Ministry, we might close this paper, did we
+not feel called upon to present a few other points. In our general
+teaching and preaching we seek to set forth the fundamental truths of
+the gospel, such as the doctrine of the Trinity; the eternal Sonship;
+the personality of the Holy Ghost; the plenary inspiration of Holy
+Scripture; the eternal counsels of God in reference to His elect; the
+fullest and freest presentation of His love to a lost world; the solemn
+responsibility of every one who hears the glad tidings of salvation to
+accept the same; man's total ruin by nature and by practice; his
+inability to help himself in thought, word, or deed; the utter
+corruption of his will; Christ's incarnation, death, and resurrection;
+His absolute deity and perfect humanity in one person; the perfect
+efficacy of His blood to cleanse from all sin; perfect justification and
+sanctification by faith in Christ, through the operation of God the Holy
+Ghost; the eternal security of all true believers; the entire separation
+of the Church in calling, standing and hope from this present world.
+
+Then, again, we hold, in common with many of our brethren in the
+denominations, that the hope of the believer is set forth in these words
+of Christ: "I will come again and receive you unto myself; that where I
+am, there ye may be also" (John xiv.3). We believe that the early
+Christians were converted to "that blessed hope"--that it was the common
+hope of Christians in apostolic times. To adduce proofs would swell this
+paper into a volume.
+
+Furthermore, we believe that all disciples should meet on the first day
+of the week to break bread (Acts xx. 7); and when so met, they should
+look to the Head of the Church to furnish the needed gifts, and to the
+Holy Ghost to guide in the due administration of these gifts.
+
+As to the Scriptural ordinance of baptism, we look upon it as a
+beautiful exhibition of the truth of the believer's identification with
+Christ in death. (See Matt. xxviii. 19; Mark xvi. 16; Acts ii. 38, 41;
+viii. 38; x. 47, 48; xvi. 33; Rom. vi. 3, 4.)
+
+As regards the precious institution of the Lord's Supper, we believe
+that Christians should celebrate it on every Lord's day, and that in so
+doing they commemorate the Lord's death until He come. We believe that
+as baptism sets forth our death with Christ, so the Lord's Supper sets
+forth Christ's death for us. We do not see any authority in the word of
+God for regarding the Lord's Supper as "a sacrifice," "a sacrament," or
+"a covenant." The word is, "This do in remembrance of Me." (See Matt.
+xxvi. 26-28; Mark xiv. 22-24; Luke xxii. 19, 20; I Cor. xi. 23-26.)
+
+The above is a very brief but explicit statement of what we hold, and
+preach and practise. We meet in public: our worship meetings, our prayer
+meetings, our reading meetings, our lectures, our gospel preachings,
+are all open to the public.
+
+But we have done. We would in this closing line entreat the reader to
+"search the Scriptures." Let him try everything by that standard. Let
+him see to it that he has plain Scripture for everything with which he
+stands connected. "To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not
+according to this word, it is because there is no light in them" (Isa.
+viii. 20.).
+
+We can honestly say we love with all our hearts all those who love our
+Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity; and wherever there is one who preaches a
+full, free and an everlasting salvation to perishing sinners, through
+the blood of the Lamb, we wish him godspeed in the name of the Lord.
+
+We now commend the reader to the blessing of the Father, and of the Son,
+and of the Holy Ghost. If he be a true believer, we pray that in his
+course down here he may be a bright and faithful witness for his absent
+Lord. But if he be one who has not yet found peace in Jesus, we would
+say to him, with solemn emphasis and earnest affection, "BEHOLD THE LAMB
+OF GOD, WHICH TAKETH AWAY THE SIN OF THE WORLD!" (John i. 29).
+
+C. H. M.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXVII.] For a fuller exposition of the doctrine of the sabbath, see
+"Notes on Genesis" (chap. ii.); also, "Notes on Exodus" (chaps. xvi. and
+xxxi.).
+
+[XXVIII.] We would here offer a remark in reference to the appointment
+of deacons in Acts vi. This case has been adduced in proof of the
+rightness of a congregation electing its own pastor; but the proof fails
+in every particular. In the first place, the business of those deacons
+was "to serve tables." Their functions as deacons were temporal, not
+spiritual. They might possess spiritual gift independently altogether of
+their deaconship. Stephen did possess such.
+
+But more than this. Although the disciples were called upon to look out
+for men competent to take charge of their temporal affairs, yet the
+apostles alone could appoint them. Their words are, "Whom _we_ may
+appoint over this business." In other words, although there is a vast
+difference between a deacon and a pastor, between taking charge of money
+and taking the oversight of souls, yet even in the matter of a deacon
+the appointment in Acts vi. was entirely divine; and hence it affords no
+warrant for a church electing its own pastor.
+
+We might further add that _office_ and _gift_ are clearly distinguished
+in the word of God. There might be, and were, many elders and deacons in
+any given church, and yet the fullest and freest exercise of gift when
+the whole church came together into one place. Elders and deacons might
+or might not have the gift of teaching or exhortation. Such gift was
+quite independent of their special office. In I Cor. xiv., where it is
+said, "Ye may all prophesy one by one," and where we have a full view of
+the public assembly, there is not a word about an elder or a president
+of any kind whatever.
+
+[XXIX.] Let the reader carefully note that _gifts_, as evangelists,
+pastors, teachers, prophets, being given directly by the Head of the
+Church for the edification of His people on earth (see Eph. iv. 8-13)
+were never appointed or "licensed" by apostolic hands or any others.
+Elders and deacons were to act as guides and to serve in the assemblies
+in which they had their place. To this position or _office_ they were
+appointed by an apostle, or one sent by him. [ED.]
+
+
+
+
+THE MINISTRY OF CHRIST
+
+PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE
+
+(Scriptures read before lecture, Exodus xxi. I-6; John xiii. I-10; Luke
+xii. 37.)
+
+"For even the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to
+minister, and to give His life a ransom for many." (Mark x. 45.)
+
+
+It is very necessary, beloved friends, to retire from all thoughts about
+our service to the Lord, and our work for Him, and to have our hearts
+occupied with His service toward us. And when I say this, you will not
+suppose for a moment that it is my desire or thought to weaken in any
+heart in this assembly, in the smallest degree, the desire to work for
+Christ, whatever sphere He may open for you, or according to whatever
+gift He may have bestowed upon you. Quite the reverse; indeed, I would
+seek in every way to strengthen and intensify that desire. But then one
+knows, both from experience and observation, that we may be so occupied
+with _our_ work and _our_ services that our hearts may lose the sense of
+what Christ is toward us in His marvelous character as a servant.
+
+And here let me say that my immediate thesis to-night is the Lord Jesus
+as the servant of His people's necessities. That is the field into which
+we are introduced by those scriptures which have been read in your
+hearing. The Lord Jesus is the servant of the soul's necessities in
+every stage of its history, from first to last,--from the depths of your
+ruin and degradation as sinners, in all your weakness and failure as
+saints from day to day, until He plants you in the joys of His own
+kingdom. And His services will not end there; for, as we read in Luke
+xii. 37, He will gird Himself, and serve us in the glory. Thus His work
+as a servant overlaps the whole of the soul's history, past, present,
+and future. He has served us in the past, He is serving us now, and He
+will serve us forever.
+
+And here allow me to say that the line of truth which I have to bring
+before you to-night is of a directly individual character. We were
+speaking, on this night week, of the truth with respect to our corporate
+condition and character, and therefore I feel all the more free on this
+occasion to enter upon what is more directly personal--to speak of truth
+which bears directly on the soul's individual condition and wants. And I
+would ask you, my beloved hearers, to place yourselves, so far as
+through grace you can, in all simplicity and reality, straight in view
+of this theme--Christ the servant of our necessities.
+
+It is possible there may be souls in this room who want to begin at the
+very beginning with this most precious theme. They want to know Christ
+as the One who came into this world to serve them in all their deep and
+varied need as lost, self-destroyed, guilty, hell-deserving sinners. If
+there be any such present to-night, I would ask them to ponder deeply
+that verse which I have read, "The Son of Man is come to serve and to
+give."
+
+This is a divine reality. Jesus came into this world to meet our need,
+to serve us in all that in which we need His precious service, and to
+give His life a ransom for many; to serve us by bearing our sins in His
+own body on the tree, and working out a full and an eternal salvation.
+He did not come to get--He did not come to take--He did not come to be
+ministered to--He did not come to be gazed at--He came to be used; and
+therefore, while the soul that is exercised may be raising this
+harassing question, "What can I do for the Lord?" the answer is, "You
+must pause and see and believe what the Lord has done for you. You must
+stand still and see the salvation of God." Remember those words of
+divine and evangelistic sweetness, "To him that _worketh not_, but
+believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
+righteousness." (Rom. iv. 5.) You can never intelligently or properly
+serve Christ until you know and believe how He has served you. You must
+cease your restless doings, and rest in a divinely accomplished work.
+Then, but not until then, will you be able to start on a career of
+Christian service. It is most necessary for all anxious souls to
+understand that all true Christian service begins with the possession of
+eternal life, and is rendered in the power of the Holy Ghost, the
+indwelling Spirit, in the light and on the authority of holy Scripture.
+This is the divine idea of Christian work and service.
+
+Now, though the primary object of this meeting, brethren, is for those
+who are saints of God, who have set out on their course, still I do not
+think it would be according to the heart and sympathies of Christ to
+overlook the fact that there may be some soul in this congregation that
+wants, as I said, just to begin at the very beginning with this precious
+mystery--Christ the servant. I say, there may be some here to-night that
+have never taken the attitude of simple repose in Christ's finished
+work. They have, it may be, begun to think of their soul's salvation, to
+think about eternity; but they are occupied with the thought that the
+Lord is claiming something from them: "I must do this, I must do that,
+and I must do the other." Now, my beloved friends, if such be here, I
+repeat, with deepest earnestness, you must cease altogether from your
+own doings, cease from your own reasonings, cease from your own
+feelings; because, be assured of it, it is neither feeling nor thinking
+nor reasoning nor doing at all, but it is pausing and gazing. It is
+hearing and believing. It is looking off from yourselves and your
+service to Christ and His service. It is ceasing from your restless and
+worthless doings, and reposing in full, unquestioning confidence in the
+one offering of Jesus Christ, which has perfectly satisfied and
+perfectly glorified God as to the great question of your sin and guilt.
+Here lies the divine secret of peace--peace in Jesus--peace with
+God--eternal peace. Nothing will ever be right till you get on this
+ground. If you are occupied with your doings for Christ, you will never
+get peace; but if you will only take God at His word, and rest in His
+Christ, you shall possess a peace which no power of earth or hell can
+ever disturb.
+
+Now, my beloved hearers, I ask you, before I proceed, this question, Is
+there a heart in this congregation that has not yet rested here? Is
+there a heart here to-night that will say, I am not satisfied with
+Christ's service: I cannot rest in His work? What! The Son of God has
+stooped to serve you. The One who made you, the One who gave you life
+and breath and all things, the One to whom all are responsible, He has
+stooped to become your servant. It is not a question of asking you to do
+any thing, or asking you to give any thing, because--mark those
+words--they are words which sweep all through the history of the Son of
+Man--they are words which, in all their length and breadth and fullness,
+you can take up and use as if you were the only object of this service
+in the world--"The Son of Man is come to serve and to give." He is not
+come to get; He is not come to ask. The legal mind leads you to think
+that God is an exactor--that He is making demands upon you--that He
+wants your services in one way or another. But oh remember, I pray you,
+that your first great business, your primary and all-important work, is
+to believe in Jesus--to rest sweetly in Him, and in what He has done for
+you on the cross, and in what He is doing for you on the throne. "This
+is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent." You
+remember the interesting question of the Psalmist--a question asked when
+his eye rested on the magnitude and multitude of Jehovah's
+benefits--"What shall I render unto the Lord for all His benefits?" What
+is the reply? "I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the name
+of the Lord."
+
+Is this the way to "render unto the Lord"? Yes, this is just the way
+that gratifies and glorifies Him. If you really want to _render_, you
+must _take_. Take what? "The cup of salvation"--a full and brimming cup,
+most surely; and as you drink of that cup, as the glories of God's
+salvation shine in the vision of your soul, then will streams of living
+praise flow from your grateful heart. And you know He says, "Whoso
+offereth praise, glorifieth Me."
+
+In a word, then, you must, first of all, allow your soul to dwell upon
+the marvelous mystery of Christ's service toward you in all the depth of
+your need; and the more you dwell upon that, the more will you be in the
+true attitude to serve Him.
+
+Take another striking illustration. When David, as you remember, in that
+remarkable passage in the second book of Samuel (chap. vii.), sat in his
+house of cedar, and looked around at all that God had done for him, he
+said, "I must rise and build a house." Immediately the prophet was
+despatched to David to correct him on this point: "You shall not build
+Me a house, but I will build you a house." You must reverse the matter.
+God wants you to sit down and gaze yet more fully and intently upon His
+actings on your behalf. He wants you to look, not only at the past and
+the present, but to look on into the bright future; to see your entire
+history overlapped by His own magnificent grace.
+
+And what, let me ask, was the effect of all this upon the heart of
+David? We have the answer in that one pithy statement: "Then went King
+David in, and sat before the Lord, and said, 'Who am I?'" Mark the
+attitude, and ponder the question. They are full of deep meaning. "_He
+sat._" This is rest and sweet repose. He wanted to go to work too soon.
+No, says God, you must sit down and look at my work, and trace my
+actings on your behalf in the past, the present, and the future.
+
+And then the question, "_Who am I?_" In this we see the blessed fact
+that self was for the moment lost sight of. It was flung into the shade
+by the lustre of divine revelation. Self and its poor little actings
+were set aside by the glory of God and the rich magnificence of His
+actings on behalf of His servant.
+
+Now, some might have thought that David was an active, useful man when
+he was rising to take the trowel to build the house; and they might have
+thought him a good-for-nothing man to be sitting still when there was
+work to be done. But, brethren, let us remember that God's thoughts are
+not as our thoughts. He prizes our worship much more highly than our
+work. Indeed, it is only the true and intelligent worshiper that can be
+a true and intelligent workman. No doubt God most graciously accepts our
+poor services, even stamped as they so often are with mistakes of all
+sorts. But when it becomes a question of the comparative value of
+service and worship, the former must give place to the latter; and we
+know that when our brief span of working time shall have expired, our
+eternity of worship shall begin. Sweet thought!
+
+And let me further remark, ere leaving this part of our subject, that no
+one need fear in the least that the practical effect of what I have been
+saying will be to cripple your service, or lead you to fold your arms in
+culpable idleness or cold indifference. The very reverse is the case, as
+you may see in the history of David himself. Study at your leisure, I
+Chronicles xxviii, xxix. There you have a splendid presentation of
+service--a most triumphant answer to all who would place work before
+worship. There you see, as it were, King David rising from the attitude
+of a worshiper into that of a workman, and making ample provision for
+the building of that very house of which he was not allowed to set one
+stone upon another. And not only does he make provision according to the
+claims of holiness, but, as he says, "Because I have set my affection to
+the house of my God, I have of mine own proper good, of gold and silver,
+which I have given to the house of my God, _over and above all_ that I
+have prepared for the holy house, even three thousand talents of gold,
+of the gold of Ophir, and seven thousand talents of refined silver, to
+overlay the walls of the house." In other words, as we should express
+it, out of his own private purse, he gave the princely sum of over
+sixteen millions as a free gift toward the house which was to be reared
+by the hand of another. This, as he informs us, was "over and above what
+he had prepared for the holy house," which latter greatly exceeded the
+amount of England's national debt.
+
+Thus we see that it is the true worshiper that makes the effective
+servant. It is when we have sat and gazed on the actings of Christ for
+us that we are enabled in any small degree to act for Him. And then,
+too, we shall be able to say with David, as he surveyed the untold
+wealth prepared for the house of God, "It is all Thine, and of Thine own
+have we given Thee."
+
+I. But we must now turn for a few moments to the opening paragraph of
+Exodus xxi--"If thou buy a Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve; and
+in the seventh, he shall go out free for nothing. If he came in by
+himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married, then his wife
+shall go out with him. If his master have given him a wife, and she
+have borne him sons or daughters; the wife and her children shall be
+her master's, and he shall go out by himself. And if the servant shall
+plainly say, I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go
+out free: then his master shall bring him unto the judges; he shall also
+bring him to the door, or unto the door-post; and his master shall bore
+his ear through with an awl; and he shall serve him forever."
+
+Here, then, we have one of the shadows of good things to come--a shadow
+or figure of the True Servant, the Lord Jesus Christ, that blessed One
+who loved the Church and gave Himself for it. The Hebrew servant, having
+served the legal time, was perfectly free to go out; but he loved his
+wife and his children, and that, too, with such a love as led him to
+surrender his own personal liberty for their sakes. He proved his love
+for them by sacrificing himself. He might have gone forth and enjoyed
+his freedom, but what of them? How could he leave them behind?
+Impossible. He loved them too well for that; and hence he deliberately
+walked to the door-post, and there, in the presence of the judges, had
+his ear bored in token of perpetual service.
+
+This was love indeed. There was no mistake about it. The wife and each
+child, as they gazed ever after on that bored ear, could read the
+touching and powerful proof of the love of that servant's heart.
+
+Here, beloved, is something for the heart to dwell upon--yea, something
+over which the heart may well break itself. We see in this Old-Testament
+type the everlasting Lover of our souls--Jesus, the true servant. You
+remember that remarkable occasion in our Lord's life when He was setting
+before His disciples the solemn fact of His approaching cross and
+passion. You will find it in the eighth chapter of the gospel of Mark:
+"And He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things,
+and be rejected of the elders, and of the chief priests, and scribes,
+and be killed, and after three days rise again. And He spake that saying
+openly. And Peter took Him, and began to rebuke Him." Peter would fain,
+though he knew it not, have interrupted the True Servant in His movement
+to the door-post. He would have Him pity Himself, and maintain His own
+personal freedom. But oh, brethren, hearken to the withering rebuke
+administered to the very man who just before had made such a fine
+confession of Christ! "But when He had turned about and looked on His
+disciples, He rebuked Peter, saying, 'Get thee behind Me, Satan; for
+thou savorest not the things that be of God, but the things that be of
+men.'"
+
+Mark the action. "He turned and looked on His disciples," as though He
+would say, If I hearken to your counsel, Peter--if I pity Myself--if I
+retreat from that cross which lies before Me, then what is to become of
+these? It is the Hebrew servant saying, "I love my wife, I love my
+children, I will not go out free."
+
+It is of the very last possible importance for us to see that there was
+no necessity whatever laid upon the Lord Jesus Christ to walk to the
+cross; there was no necessity whatever laid upon Him to leave the glory
+which He had with the Father from all eternity and come down here; and
+when He had come down into this world, and taken perfect humanity upon
+Him, there was no necessity laid upon Him that He should have gone to
+the cross; for at any moment during the whole of His blessed history,
+from the manger of Bethlehem to the cross of Calvary, He might have gone
+back to where He came from. Death had no claim upon Him. The prince of
+this world came and had nothing in Him. He could say, speaking of His
+life, "No man taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself." (John x.
+18.) And on His way from the garden to the cross we hear Him saying,
+"Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to My Father, and He shall
+presently give Me more than twelve legions of angels? But how then shall
+the Scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be?" And may we not say
+there was much more truth than the utterers were aware of in these
+accents of mockery which fell on the blessed Saviour's ear as He hung on
+the cross--"He saved others; Himself He cannot save"? But they might
+have said, Himself He will not save.
+
+Ah, no! blessed forever be His name! He did not pity or spare Himself,
+but He pitied us. He beheld us in our hopeless ruin, guilt, misery, and
+danger. He saw that there was no eye to pity, no arm to save; and--all
+praise to His matchless name!--He laid aside His glory, came down into
+this wretched world, became a man, that as a man He might, by the
+sacrifice of Himself, deliver us from the lake of fire, and associate us
+with Himself on the new and eternal ground of accomplished redemption,
+in the power of resurrection-life, according to the eternal counsels of
+God, and to the praise of His glory.
+
+Now, we cannot possibly overestimate the importance of dwelling upon the
+fact that there was no necessity whatever laid upon our blessed Lord
+Jesus Christ to die on the cross, and to endure the wrath of God.
+Neither in His person, in His nature, nor in His relations was He
+obnoxious to death. He was God over all, blessed forever. He was the
+Eternal Son of God. And in His human nature He was pure, spotless,
+sinless, perfect. He knew no sin. He did always and only the things that
+pleased God. He glorified Him, and finished His work; and He has saved
+us in such a way as to glorify God in the most wonderful manner. He was,
+to use the language of our type, free to go out by Himself; but ah,
+beloved, had He done so, your place and mine must inevitably have been
+the lake of fire forever.
+
+To all this the Holy Ghost delights to bear testimony, as one of our own
+poets has sweetly sung--
+
+ "And, Lord, Thy perfect fitness
+ To do a Saviour's part,
+ The Holy Ghost doth witness
+ To each believer's heart."
+
+Most true; and we might with equal truth say, "His fitness to do a
+servant's part," because it was the very height of His glory, the very
+dignity of His person; it was the glory whence He had descended, that
+enabled Him to stoop down to the very depths of His people's
+necessities. There is not a necessity--no, not one--in the deepest range
+of His people's history, or in the lowest depths of their condition,
+that He has not reached in His marvelous character and His divine
+ministry as the servant of His people's necessities.
+
+Brethren, let us never forget this. Nay, rather let us constantly
+cherish in our hearts the most grateful remembrance of it. The more we
+dwell upon the height of Christ's personal glory, the more fully we
+shall see the depths of His humiliation. The more profoundly we meditate
+upon the glory of what He _was_, the more we must be arrested by the
+grace of what He _became_. "Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor, that ye
+through His poverty might be rich."
+
+Who can measure the heights and the depths of those two words, "rich"
+and "poor," in their application to our adorable Lord and Saviour? No
+created intelligence can fathom them; but most assuredly we should
+cultivate the habit of dwelling upon the love that shines all along the
+pathway of the divine Servant as He walked to the cross for us. It is as
+we dwell upon His love to us that our hearts shall be drawn out by the
+Holy Ghost in the power of responsive love to Him. "The love of Christ
+constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if One died for all, then
+were all dead; and that He died for all, that they which live should not
+henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them, and
+rose again." (2 Cor. v. 14, 15.)
+
+II. Having thus glanced at our Lord's service toward us in the past, let
+us look for a few moments at His present service--at what He is now
+doing for us continually in the presence of God. This we have most
+blessedly presented to us in that part of John xiii. which I have read
+for you this evening. The same precious grace shines in this as in all
+that on which we have been dwelling. If we look back at the past, we
+behold the Perfect Servant nailed to the cross for us; if we look up to
+the throne now, we behold Him girded for us, not only according to our
+present need, but according to the perfect love of His heart--His love
+to the Father, His love to the Church, His love to each individual
+believer from the beginning to the end of time.
+
+"Now before the feast of the passover, when Jesus knew that His hour was
+come that He should depart out of this world unto the Father, having
+loved His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end. And
+during supper [see Greek], the devil having now put into the heart of
+Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, to betray Him; Jesus knowing that the
+Father had given all things into His hands, and that He was come from
+God, and went to God; He riseth from supper, and laid aside His
+garments; and took a towel, and girded Himself. After that He poureth
+water into a basin, and began to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe
+them with the towel wherewith He was girded."
+
+Here, then, we have a most marvelous presentation of Christ's present
+service toward "His own which are in the world." There is something
+peculiarly precious in the expression, "_His own_." It brings us so very
+near to the heart of Christ. It is so sweet to think that He can look at
+such poor, feeble, failing creatures as we are, and say, They are Mine.
+It matters not what others may think about them; they belong to Me, and
+I must have them in a condition worthy of the place whence I came, and
+whither I am going.
+
+This, brethren, is ineffably precious and edifying for our souls. It was
+in the sense of His personal glory, in the consciousness that He had
+come from God and was going to God, that He could stoop down and wash
+His people's feet. There was nothing, could be nothing, higher than the
+place whence Jesus had come; there was nothing, could be nothing, lower
+than the defiled feet of His disciples: but, blessed and praised forever
+be His name! He fills up in His own divine person and marvelous service
+every point between those two extremes. He can lay one hand on the
+throne of God, and the other on our feet, and be Himself the divine and
+eternal link between.
+
+Now, there are three things in this scripture which I am anxious to put
+clearly before you this evening. In the first place, we have the special
+action of our Lord toward His own in the world; secondly, the spring of
+that action; and thirdly, the measure of the action:--the action, its
+spring, and its measure.
+
+(I.) And first, the action itself. You will bear in mind, beloved in the
+Lord, that what we have presented here is not "the washing of
+regeneration." That pertains to the first stage of our Lord's service on
+our behalf. "His own which are in the world"--all who belong to that
+highly privileged class (and that is simply all who believe in His name)
+have passed through that great washing, in virtue of which Christ can
+pronounce them "clean every whit."
+
+There is not a spot or a stain upon the very feeblest of that blessed
+number whom He calls "His own." "He that is washed needeth not save to
+wash his feet, but _is clean every whit_: and _ye are clean_, but not
+all." If a single spot could be detected on one of Christ's own, it
+would be a dishonor cast upon Him, inasmuch as He has washed us from all
+our guilt according to the perfection of His work as the Servant of our
+need, and, far above all, the Servant of the eternal counsels, purposes,
+and glory of God. He found us clean never a whit, and He has made us
+"clean every whit."
+
+This is the washing of regeneration, which is never repeated. We have a
+figure of this in the case of the priests of the Mosaic economy. On the
+great day of their inauguration they were washed in water. This action
+was never repeated. But after this, from day to day, in order to fit
+them for the daily discharge of their priestly functions, they had to
+wash their hands and their feet in the brazen laver in the tabernacle,
+or the brazen sea in the temple. This daily washing is the figure of the
+action in John xiii. The two washings, being distinct, must never be
+confounded; and being intimately connected, must never be separated. The
+washing of regeneration is divinely and eternally complete: the washing
+of sanctification is being divinely and continually carried on. The
+former is never repeated; the latter is never interrupted. That gives us
+a part _in_ Christ, of which nothing can rob us; and this gives us a
+part _with_ Christ, of which any thing may deprive us. The one is the
+basis of our eternal life; the other is the ground of our daily
+communion.
+
+Beloved brethren, see that you understand the meaning of having your
+feet washed, moment by moment, by the hands of that blessed One who is
+girded as the divine Servant of your present need. It is utterly
+impossible for any one to overestimate the importance of this work; but
+we may at least gather something of its value from our Lord's words to
+Peter; for Peter, like ourselves, alas! was very far from seizing the
+full significance of what his Lord was doing. "Then cometh He to Simon
+Peter; and Peter saith unto Him, 'Lord, dost Thou wash my feet?' Jesus
+answered and said unto him, 'What I do thou knowest not now; but thou
+shalt know hereafter. Peter saith unto Him, 'Thou shalt never wash my
+feet.' Jesus answered him, 'If I wash thee not, thou hast no part _with_
+Me.'"
+
+Here is the grand point--"part with Me." The washing of regeneration
+gives us a part _in_ Christ: the daily washing of sanctification gives
+us a part _with_ Christ. In order to full, intelligent, happy communion,
+we must have a clean conscience, and clean feet. The blood of atonement
+secures the former; the water of purification maintains the other. But
+both the blood and the water flowed from a crucified Christ. The death
+of Christ is the necessary basis of every thing. He died to make us
+clean; He lives to keep us clean. We are made as clean as His death can
+make us; we are kept as clean as His life can keep us.
+
+And, be it remembered, this marvelous ministry of Christ on our behalf
+never ceases. He ever liveth to act _for_ us on high, and to act _on_ us
+and _in_ us by His Word and Spirit. He speaks to God for us, and He
+speaks to us for God. He came from God, and traveled down to the
+profoundest depths of our need. He has gone back to God, to bear us ever
+on His heart, to meet our daily need, and to maintain us in the
+integrity of the position and relationship into which He has introduced
+us.
+
+This is replete with solid comfort for the soul. We are passing through
+a defiling world, where we are constantly liable to contract evils of
+one kind or another which, though they cannot touch our eternal life,
+can very seriously affect our communion. It is impossible for us to
+tread the sanctuary of the divine presence with soiled feet; and hence
+the deep and unspeakable blessedness of having One ever in the presence
+of God for us--One who, having been in this scene, knows its true
+character; and One who, having come from God, and gone back to Him,
+knows the full extent of His claims, and all that is needful to fit us
+for fellowship with Him. The provision is divinely perfect. Sin or
+uncleanness can never be found in the presence of God. If we can make
+light of either the one or the other, God cannot and will not. The
+holiness that shines in the demand for purity is as bright as the grace
+that provides it. Grace has made the provision, but holiness demands the
+application thereof. The goodness of God provided a laver for the
+priests of old, but the holiness of God demanded that the priests should
+use that laver. The great washing of inauguration introduced them to the
+office of the priesthood; the washing in the laver fitted them for the
+duties of that office. How could acceptable priestly service be
+discharged with unclean hands? Impossible. And we may say it is as
+impossible that we can walk in the pathway of holiness if our feet are
+not washed and wiped by that blessed One who has girded Himself to serve
+us in this matter perpetually.
+
+All this is divinely simple. There are two links in Christianity;
+namely, the link of eternal life, which can never be snapped by any
+thing; and the link of personal communion, which can be snapped in a
+moment by the weight of a feather. Now, it is as our ways are cleansed
+by the holy action of the Word, through the Holy Ghost, that our
+communion is maintained in its unbroken integrity. But if I am afraid to
+face the Word of God, or if I am willfully refusing its action, how can
+I enjoy communion with God?
+
+I am not speaking now of ignorance of the Word of God. The Lord bears
+with a wonderful amount of ignorance in us--far more than we could bear
+with in one another. I do not now refer to the question of ignorance.
+But suppose a case. A young person entered these walls a few weeks ago,
+and took her seat on one of these benches. She was dressed out in all
+the fashion of this world--her head adorned with feathers and flowers,
+and her fingers with jewels. Her heart full of vanity and folly. Here
+the grace of God met her in all its fullness and freeness. The arrow of
+divine conviction entered her soul. She was broken down under the mighty
+power of the Word, in the hands of the Holy Ghost. She was brought to
+repentance toward God, and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. She was
+saved, there and then, and left the place rejoicing in a full salvation.
+This joy continued for many days. She was engrossed with her newly found
+treasure. She never thought about her feathers, her flowers, or her
+jewels. True, she continued to wear them, simply because she as yet saw
+nothing wrong in so doing. She knew not as yet that there was so much as
+a single sentence in the Word of God bearing upon such things.
+
+Brethren, let me just remind you that we should be prepared for such a
+case as this, and be prepared to meet it. Some of us, I fear, have but
+little wisdom or patience to deal with cases of this type. We are in
+undue haste to enter upon what I may call the stripping process. This is
+a mistake. We must allow time for the hidden virtues of the kingdom of
+God to develop themselves. We must not attempt to reduce the Christian
+assembly into a place in which a certain livery is adopted. This will
+never do. We really cannot reduce all to a dead level. We must allow the
+Word of God to act on the life which the Spirit of God has implanted. I
+do nothing but mischief to people if I get them to adopt a certain style
+of dress merely at my suggestion. The grand thing is to allow the
+kingdom of God to assert its holy sway over the entire character. This
+is to His glory and the soul's genuine progress.
+
+Let us pursue our case. Our young friend, in the course of her reading,
+is arrested by the following pointed passage: "In like manner also, that
+women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness and
+sobriety; not with broidered hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array;
+but (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works." (I
+Tim. ii. 9, 10.) And again, "Whose adorning let it not be that outward
+adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, or of putting on
+of apparel; but let it be the hidden man of the heart, in that which is
+not corruptible, even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is
+in the sight of God of great price." (I Pet. iii. 3, 4.)
+
+Now, here, brethren, we have illustrated for us the present ministry of
+Christ--the action of the Word upon the soul--the application of the
+basin to the feet--the washing of water by the Word. It is Jesus
+stooping down to wash the feet of this young disciple. The question is,
+How will she receive the action? Will she resist it, or yield to it?
+Will she push away the basin? Will she refuse the gracious ministry? "If
+I wash thee not, thou hast no part _with_ Me."
+
+This is very solemn, and it demands our most serious attention. Next in
+moral importance to having the conscience purged by the blood of Christ
+stands this cleansing of our ways by the action of the Word, through the
+power of the Holy Ghost. The former gives us a part _in_ Christ; the
+latter, a part _with_ Christ. That is never repeated; this must never be
+interrupted. If we really desire fellowship with Christ, we must allow
+Him to wash our feet moment by moment. We cannot tread the pure
+precincts of the sanctuary of God with defiled feet any more than we can
+enter them with a defiled conscience.
+
+Hence, therefore, dearly beloved in the Lord, let us look well to it
+that we have our ways continually submitted to the purifying action of
+the precious Word of God. Let us put away every thing which that Word
+condemns; let us abandon every position and every association and every
+practice which that Word condemns, that so our holy fellowship with
+Christ may be maintained in its freshness and integrity. Nothing is more
+dangerous than to trifle with evil in any shape or form. Ignorance God
+can and does most graciously bear with, but the willful resistance of
+His Word in any one point is sure to lead to disastrous results. The
+heart becomes hardened, the conscience seared, the moral sense blunted,
+and the whole moral being gets into a most deplorable condition. We get
+away from the Lord, and make shipwreck of faith and a good conscience.
+May the Lord keep us near to Himself, walking with Him in tenderness of
+conscience and uprightness of heart. May His Word ever tell in living
+formative power upon our souls, that so our way be cleansed according to
+the claims of the sanctuary of God.
+
+(2.) But let us now inquire for a moment into the spring of this action
+on which we have been dwelling. This is presented with touching
+sweetness and power in the first verse of John xiii.--"Having loved His
+own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end."
+
+Here, then, brethren, we have the mighty spring of Christ's present
+ministry. It is the changeless love of His heart--a love that was
+stronger than death, and which many waters could not quench. "Christ
+loved the Church, and gave Himself for it; that He might sanctify and
+cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word." (Eph. v. 25, 26.)
+This is the blessed basis and the motive-spring of that marvelous
+ministry which our Lord Jesus Christ is now carrying on for us and
+toward us. He knew what He was undertaking when He uttered those words
+in the fortieth Psalm, "Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God." He knew what
+it would cost Him when He took up our case. But His love was and is
+divinely equal to all. We need not be afraid of exhausting that love
+which triumphed over all the unutterable horrors of Calvary, and went
+down under the deep and dark waters of death and judgment. We may at
+times feel ashamed to have so often to bring our defiled feet to that
+blessed One to cleanse them; but His love is equal to all, and that love
+is the spring of His precious and indispensable ministry.
+
+It is a common saying that love is blind, but I look upon it as a libel
+upon love. Most certainly it does not and could not apply to the love of
+Christ. He knew all that was in us, and He knows now all our ways and
+all our weakness and all our follies; but He loves us notwithstanding
+all, and in the power of that love He acts toward us in order to deliver
+us from all that He sees in us and about us which would hinder our holy
+fellowship with the Father and with His Son.
+
+Brethren, of what use, may I ask you, would a blind love be to you or to
+me? Surely, none whatever. How could we ever repose in a love which only
+acted toward us in ignorance of our blots and blemishes! Impossible.
+What we want is a love superior to all our imperfections, and a love
+that can deliver us from them. This love we have in Christ, blessed be
+His name! It is a love that, however it may expose us to ourselves, will
+never expose us to another. It is a love that comes to us with the basin
+and towel, and stoops down in infinite tenderness and lowly, matchless
+grace to wash away every soil, and give us the comfortable sense of
+being "clean every whit." This, brethren, is the love which you and I
+need, and this is the love which we have found in divine fullness and
+power in the heart of that perfect Servant who is girded for us ever
+before the throne. "Having loved _His own_ which were in the world, He
+loved them"--how long? As long as they behaved themselves, and walked
+with unsoiled feet? Ah, no! this would never do for such as we. "He
+loved them _unto the end_." Precious, perfect, divine, everlasting love!
+a love that overlaps and underlies and outlives all our blots and
+blemishes, our failings and falterings, our wants and weaknesses, our
+wanderings and waywardness; a love that has come to us armed with all
+that our condition could possibly demand; a love that will never cease
+to act for us and toward us and in us, until it presents us in
+unblemished perfectness before the throne of God.
+
+(3.) And now one word as to the measure of Christ's present action for
+us and toward us. This is a point of unspeakable value and importance.
+It is essential for us to know that, whether it be a question of
+Christ's service for us in the past or His present service, the measure
+of both the one and the other is and can be nothing less than the claims
+of the sanctuary, the throne, and the nature of God. We might suppose
+that the measure would be our necessities, but this would never do. If
+we think of Christ's atoning work, we know, and rejoice to know, that
+precious work has done very much more than meet the deepest measure of
+our necessities as sinners. Blessed be God! the work of the cross has
+divinely met all the claims of God. It could never give solid peace to
+our souls merely to know that the very highest claims of human
+conscience had been met by the atoning death of Christ. We must be
+assured on divine authority that the highest claims of the government,
+the character, the nature, and the glory of God have all been perfectly
+met by the precious work of Christ.
+
+Thus it is through infinite grace, and here every divinely exercised
+soul can find settled and eternal peace. Nor is it otherwise in respect
+to Christ's present work for us. It could never satisfy our souls,
+brethren, to be told that that work is measured by our very deepest
+need. That need is met, no doubt; but it is because Christ's present
+ministry goes far beyond that need, and reaches to, and satisfies the
+claims of, the sanctuary of God.
+
+Unspeakable mercy! Here we may rest in perfect tranquillity. We have One
+on high undertaking for us, ever living in the presence of God for us;
+One who not only knows our necessities, but knows also the claims of
+God. He knows what this scene is through which we are passing, and He
+knows what that scene is into which He has entered; and, all praise to
+His name! He meets in His own perfect ministry both the one and the
+other. He must needs meet all our claims since He meets all God's
+claims, for the less must ever be included in the greater.
+
+What solid comfort is here! What unruffled repose! We have One in the
+presence of God for us, in whose hands all our affairs are perfectly,
+because divinely, safe. They can never fall through, never go wrong. We
+may say that ere ever the very weakest of those whom Christ calls "His
+own in the world" can fail, Christ Himself must fail, and that can be
+_never_. His own are as safe as Himself.
+
+What a grand reality! With what perfect confidence may we refer every
+objector, every accuser, every opposer, to this blessed manager! And
+what folly, on our part, to attempt to answer such ourselves! Oh,
+beloved brethren, may we learn to lean more confidently on that blessed
+One who thus presents Himself before our souls as the girded servant of
+our deep and manifold necessities. May we prize His precious ministry
+more and more--His ministry for us, His ministry to us. May we repose
+more sweetly in the assurance that He is speaking to the Father for us,
+in all our failures, in all our shortcomings, in all our sins. May we
+remember, for our exceeding comfort, that even before we slip, He has
+been pleading for us, as He pleaded for Peter. "I have prayed for thee,"
+said the loving One, "that thy faith fail not." Oh, the matchless grace
+of these words! He did not pray that Peter might not fall, but that,
+having fallen, his confidence might not give way, his faith might not
+fail. Thus, too, He pleads for us, and thus we are sustained, and thus
+we are restored when we fall, else we should very speedily go from bad
+to worse, and make shipwreck altogether. "He ever liveth to make
+intercession for us." We are sustained by His precious and powerful
+ministry every moment. We could not stand for a single hour without Him.
+Things are continually turning up which would prove destructive of our
+fellowship, if we had not that blessed One acting for us, whose
+intervention on our behalf never ceases. He knows not only our need, but
+He knows what the sanctuary demands; and not only does He know it, but
+He provides for it, according to His own infinite perfectness and
+acceptance before God, meeting His people's necessities.
+
+Now, there are some people--I do not know whether there are any here
+to-night--but there are some people who have got such a one-sided notion
+of the standing of the believer, that they throw the Lord's priestly
+ministry overboard altogether. I say it is one-sided, and there is
+nothing more dangerous than one-sided truth--nothing. I would far rather
+see a man going through the length and breadth of London publishing
+palpable error, such as the simplest mind could detect. I would have far
+less apprehension of the mischievous result of his ministry than of the
+teaching of a man who takes up one side of a truth, and presses it in
+such a way as to interfere with some other truth.
+
+Now, there is an adjusting power in the truth of God--an adjusting power
+in Scripture that constitutes one of its brightest moral glories; and
+hence we find that while the Word of God most fully and blessedly
+establishes the truth that the believer stands complete in Christ,
+justified from all things, accepted in the Beloved, "clean every whit,"
+it, at the same time, with equal clearness and fullness, sets forth the
+fact that the believer is, in himself, a poor feeble creature, exposed
+to manifold snares, temptations, and hostile influences; liable at any
+moment to fall into error and evil; utterly unable to keep himself, or
+to grapple with the difficulties and dangers which surround him; liable
+at any moment to contract defilement, which would unfit him for the holy
+fellowship and worship of the sanctuary.
+
+How, then, are all those things to be met? How is the Christian to be
+kept in the face of such things? Having an evil nature, a crafty foe,
+and a hostile world to cope with, how is he to get on? How is he to be
+kept? How is he to be restored if he wanders? How is he to be lifted up
+if he falls? The answer to all these questions is found in that
+ever-precious sentence of inspiration, "He ever liveth to make
+intercession for us;" and again, "He is able to save to the uttermost;"
+and again, "We shall be saved by His life;" and again, "Because I live,
+ye shall live also;" and again, "We have an advocate with the Father."
+
+Brethren, how the heart delights to give forth and to ponder over such
+utterances as these! They are marrow and fatness to the soul. How can
+any one, in the face of such passages--to say nothing of his own
+necessary experiences as to himself and his surroundings--think of
+calling in question the grand foundation-truth of the priesthood of
+Christ, in its application to believers now? I can only say, I know not.
+But alas! alas! there is no accounting for the depths of error into
+which we may fall, if we allow our minds to work, and get away from the
+direct authority of holy Scripture. And we may truly say that a most
+palpable proof of our need of the intercession of Christ is to be found
+in the sad fact that any of His servants should be found to deny it.
+
+I shall add no more on this point, save to warn all the Lord's dear
+people against the terrible error of denying our continual need of the
+priestly ministry, the precious intercession and all-prevailing
+advocacy of our Lord Jesus Christ--an error second only to the denial of
+His atoning work. For most surely our need of His priesthood is second
+only to our need of His atoning blood.
+
+III. Having then briefly, and, alas! imperfectly, glanced at our Lord's
+ministry in the past and in the present, we cannot close without a
+reference to His ministry in the future. Some may feel disposed to say,
+I do not understand how our Lord can ever be found serving us in the
+future. I can understand His serving us now on the throne, but how He is
+to serve us in the kingdom is, I confess, beyond me.
+
+No doubt it is most marvelous, and had we not His own veritable words
+for it, we might well hesitate in our statement of the fact that our
+Lord Christ shall serve His people in the very brightness of the glory.
+But let us hear what He Himself saith to us. Turn for a moment to Luke
+xii. 35: "Let your loins be girded about, and your lights burning; and
+ye yourselves like unto men that wait for their lord, when he will
+return from the wedding; that when he cometh and knocketh, they may open
+unto him immediately. Blessed are those servants, whom the lord when he
+cometh shall find watching: verily I say unto you, that _he shall gird
+himself, and make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and
+serve them_."
+
+This is distinct and unmistakable. Most marvelous, no doubt, but as
+plain as it is marvelous. Christ will serve us in the kingdom. He will
+serve us forever. His ministry overlaps our entire history. It reaches
+down to the very deepest depths of our need as sinners, and up to the
+very loftiest heights of the glory. It goes back to the past, it covers
+the present, and it stretches away into the boundless future. Blessed be
+His name! He loves to serve us, and He gives us the assurance that the
+very moment, as it were, that He enters upon the glory of name! has
+given us a whole heart, and nothing can satisfy Him in return but a
+whole heart from us. His entire service--past, present, and future--is
+the fruit of His perfect love; and nothing can meet His desire, with
+respect to us, save a heart responsive in its affections to Him. And
+where there is this, it will express itself in an anxious, earnest
+longing for His coming. "Blessed are those servants, whom their lord
+when he cometh shall find watching."
+
+May the eternal Spirit fill our hearts with genuine love to the Person
+of our own adorable Lord and Saviour; that so our one grand and
+undivided purpose may be to live for Him in this scene from which He has
+been cast out, and to wait for that moment when we shall see Him as He
+is, and be like Him and with Him forever.
+
+_C. H. M._
+
+
+
+
+PRAYER AND THE PRAYER-MEETING
+
+
+In considering the deeply important subject of prayer, two things claim
+our attention; first, the moral basis of prayer; secondly, its moral
+conditions.
+
+I. The basis of prayer is set forth in such words as the following: "_If
+ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you_, ye shall ask what ye will,
+and it shall be done unto you." (John xv. 7.) Again, "Beloved, _if our
+heart condemn us not_, then have we confidence toward God. And
+whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, _because we keep His
+commandments_, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight." (I
+John iii. 21, 22.) So also, when the blessed apostle seeks an interest
+in the prayers of the saints, he sets forth the moral basis of his
+appeal--"Pray for us; _for we trust we have a good conscience_, in all
+things willing to live honestly." (Heb. xiii. 18.)
+
+From these passages, and many more of like import, we learn that, in
+order to effectual prayer, there must be an obedient heart, an upright
+mind, a good conscience. If the soul be not in communion with God--if it
+be not abiding in Christ--if it be not ruled by His holy
+commandments--if the eye be not single, how could we possibly look for
+answers to our prayers? We should, as the apostle James says, be "asking
+amiss, that we may consume it upon our lusts." How could God, as a holy
+Father, grant such petitions? Impossible.
+
+How very needful, therefore, it is to give earnest heed to the moral
+basis on which our prayers are presented. How could the apostle have
+asked the brethren to pray for him, if he had not a good conscience, a
+single eye, an upright mind--the moral persuasion that in all things he
+really wished to live honestly? We may safely assert, he could do no
+such thing.
+
+But may we not often detect ourselves in the habit of lightly and
+formally asking others to pray for us? It is a very common formulary
+amongst us--"Remember me in your prayers," and most surely nothing can
+be more blessed or precious than to be borne upon the hearts of God's
+dear people in their approaches to the mercy-seat; but do we
+sufficiently attend to the moral basis? When we say, "Brethren pray for
+us," can we add, as in the presence of the Searcher of hearts, "For we
+trust we have a good conscience, in all things willing to live
+honestly"? and when we ourselves bow before the throne of grace, is it
+with an uncondemning heart--an upright mind--a single eye--a soul really
+abiding in Christ, and keeping His commandments?
+
+These, beloved reader, are searching questions. They go right to the
+very centre of the heart--down to the very roots and moral springs of
+our being. But it is well to be thoroughly searched--searched in
+reference to every thing, but especially in reference to prayer. There
+is a terrible amount of unreality in our prayers--a sad lack of the
+moral basis--a vast amount of "asking amiss."
+
+Hence, the want of power and efficacy in our prayers--hence, the
+formality--the routine--yea, the positive hypocrisy. The Psalmist says,
+"If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me." How
+solemn this is! Our God will have reality; He desireth truth in the
+inward parts. He, blessed be His name, is real with us, and He will have
+us real with Him. He will have us coming before Him as we really are,
+and with what we really want.
+
+How often, alas! it is otherwise, both in private and in public! How
+often are our prayers more like orations than petitions--more like
+statements of doctrine than utterances of need! It seems, at times, as
+though we meant to explain principles to God, and give Him a large
+amount of information.
+
+These are the things which cast a withering influence over our
+prayer-meetings, robbing them of their freshness, their interest, and
+their value. Those who really know what prayer is--who feel its value,
+and are conscious of their need of it, attend the prayer-meeting in
+order to pray, not to hear orations, lectures, and expositions from men
+on their knees. If they want lectures, they can attend at the
+lecture-hall or the preaching-room; but when they go to the
+prayer-meeting, it is to pray. To them, the prayer-meeting is the place
+of expressed need and expected blessing--the place of expressed weakness
+and expected power. Such is their idea of "the place where prayer is
+wont to be made;" and therefore when they flock thither, they are not
+disposed or prepared to listen to long preaching prayers, which would be
+deemed barely tolerable if delivered from the desk, but which are
+absolutely insufferable in the shape of prayer.
+
+We write plainly, because we feel the need of great plainness of speech.
+We deeply feel our want of reality, sincerity, and truth in our prayers
+and prayer-meetings. Not unfrequently it happens that what we call
+prayer is not prayer at all, but the fluent utterance of certain known
+and acknowledged truths and principles, to which one has listened so
+often that the reiteration becomes tiresome in the extreme. What can be
+more painful than to hear a man on his knees explaining principles and
+unfolding doctrines? The question forces itself upon us, "Is the man
+speaking to God, or to us?" If to God, surely nothing can be more
+irreverent or profane than to attempt to explain things to Him; but if
+to us, then it is not prayer at all, and the sooner we rise from the
+attitude of prayer the better, inasmuch as the speaker will do better on
+his legs and we in our seats.
+
+And, having referred to the subject of attitude, we would very lovingly
+call attention to a matter which, in our judgment, demands a little
+serious consideration; we allude to the habit of sitting during the holy
+and solemn exercise of prayer. We are fully aware, of course, that the
+grand question in prayer is, to have the _heart_ in a right attitude.
+And further, we know, and would ever bear in mind, that many who attend
+our prayer-meetings are aged, infirm, and delicate people, who could not
+possibly kneel for any length of time--perhaps not at all. Then again,
+it often happens that, even where there is not physical weakness, and
+where there would be real desire to kneel down, as feeling it to be the
+proper attitude, yet, from actual want of space, it is impossible to
+change one's position.
+
+All these things must be taken into account; but, allowing as broad a
+margin as possible in which to insert these modifying clauses, we must
+still hold to it that there is a very deplorable lack of reverence in
+many of our public reunions for prayer. We frequently observe young men,
+who can neither plead physical weakness nor want of space, sitting
+through an entire prayer-meeting. This, we confess, is offensive, and we
+cannot but believe it grieves the Spirit of the Lord. We ought to kneel
+down when we can; it expresses reverence and prostration. The blessed
+Master "kneeled down and prayed." (Luke xxii. 41.) His apostle did the
+same, as we read in Acts xx. 36, "When he had thus spoken, he kneeled
+down and prayed with them all."
+
+And is it not comely and right so to do? Assuredly it is. And can aught
+be more unseemly than to see a number of people sitting, lolling,
+lounging, and gaping about while prayer is being offered? We consider it
+perfectly shocking, and we do here most earnestly beseech all the Lord's
+people to give this matter their solemn consideration, and to endeavor,
+in every possible way, both by precept and example, to promote the godly
+habit of kneeling at our prayer-meetings. No doubt those who take part
+in the meeting would greatly aid in this matter by short and fervent
+prayers; but of this, more hereafter.
+
+
+PART II.
+
+We shall now proceed to consider, in the light of holy Scripture, the
+moral conditions or attributes of prayer. There is nothing like having
+the authority of the divine Word for every thing in the entire range of
+our practical Christian life. Scripture must be our one grand and
+conclusive referee in all our questions. Let us never forget this.
+
+What, then, saith the Scripture as to the necessary moral conditions of
+prayer? Turn to Matthew xviii. 19--"Again I say unto you, that _if two
+of you shall agree_ on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask,
+it shall be done for them of My Father which is in heaven."
+
+Here we learn that one necessary condition of our prayers is,
+_unanimity_--cordial agreement--thorough oneness of mind. The true force
+of the words is, "If two of you shall symphonize"--shall make one common
+sound. There must be no jarring note, no discordant element.
+
+If, for example, we come together to pray about the progress of the
+gospel--the conversion of souls, we must be of one mind in the
+matter--we must make one common sound before our God. It will not do for
+each to have some special thought of his own to carry out. We must come
+before the throne of grace in holy harmony of mind and spirit, else we
+cannot claim an answer, on the ground of Matthew xviii. 19.
+
+Now, this is a point of immense moral weight. Its importance, as bearing
+upon the tone and character of our prayer-meetings, cannot possibly be
+overestimated. It is very questionable indeed whether any of us have
+given sufficient attention to it. Have we not to deplore the objectless
+character of our prayer-meetings? Ought we not to come together more
+with some definite object on our hearts, as to which we are going to
+wait together upon God? We read in the first chapter of Acts, in
+reference to the early disciples, "These all continued _with one accord_
+in prayer and supplication, with the women, and Mary the mother of
+Jesus, and with His brethren."[XXX.] And again, in the second chapter,
+we read, "When the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were _all with
+one accord in one place_."
+
+They were waiting, according to our Lord's instructions, for the promise
+of the Father--the gift of the Holy Ghost. They had the sure word of
+promise. The Comforter was, without fail, to come; but this, so far from
+dispensing with prayer, was the very ground of its blessed exercise.
+They prayed; they prayed in one place; they prayed with one accord. They
+were thoroughly agreed. They all, without exception, had one definite
+object before their hearts. They were waiting for the promised Spirit;
+they continued to wait; and they waited with one accord, until He came.
+Men and women, absorbed with one object, waited in holy concord, in
+happy symphony--waited on, day after day, earnestly, fervently,
+harmoniously waited until they were indued with the promised power from
+on high.
+
+Should not we go and do likewise? Is there not a sad lack of this "one
+accord," "one place" principle in our midst? True it is, blessed be God,
+we have not to ask for the Holy Ghost to come,--He has come; we have not
+to ask for the outpouring of the Spirit,--He has been poured out: but we
+have to ask for the display of His blessed power in our midst. Supposing
+our lot is cast in a place where spiritual death and darkness reign.
+There is not so much as a single breath of life--not a leaf stirring.
+The heaven above seems like brass; the earth beneath, iron. Such a thing
+as a conversion is never heard of. A withering formalism seems to have
+settled down upon the entire place. Powerless profession, dead routine,
+stupefying mechanical religiousness, are the order of the day. What is
+to be done? Are we to allow ourselves to fall under the fatal influence
+of the surrounding malaria? are we to yield to the paralyzing power of
+the atmosphere that inwraps the place? Assuredly not.
+
+If not, what then? Let us, even if there be but two who really feel the
+condition of things, get together, with one accord, and pour out our
+hearts to God. Let us wait on Him, in holy concord, with united, firm
+purpose, until He send a copious shower of blessing upon the barren
+spot. Let us not fold our arms and vainly say, "The time is not come."
+Let us not yield to that pernicious offshoot of a one-sided theology,
+which is rightly called fatalism, and say, "God is sovereign, and He
+works according to His own will. We must wait His time. Human effort is
+in vain. We cannot get up a revival. We must beware of mere
+excitement."
+
+All this seems very plausible; and the more so because there is a
+measure of truth in it; indeed it is all true, so far as it goes: but it
+is only one side of the truth. It is truth, and nothing but the truth;
+but it is not _the whole truth_. Hence its mischievous tendency. There
+is nothing more to be dreaded than one-sided truth; it is far more
+dangerous than positive, palpable error. Many an earnest soul has been
+stumbled and turned completely out of the way by one-sided or misapplied
+truth. Many a true-hearted and useful workman has been chilled,
+repulsed, and driven out of the harvest-field by the injudicious
+enforcement of certain doctrines having a measure of truth, but not
+_the_ full truth of God.
+
+Nothing, however, can touch the truth, or weaken the force of Matthew
+xviii. 19. It stands in all its blessed fullness, freeness, and
+preciousness before the eye of faith; its terms are clear and
+unmistakable. "If two of you shall agree upon earth, as touching _any
+thing_ that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of My Father which
+is in heaven." Here is our warrant for coming together to pray for any
+thing that may be laid on our hearts. Do we mourn over the coldness,
+barrenness, and death around us? Are we discouraged by the little
+apparent fruit from the preaching of the gospel--the lack of power in
+the preaching itself, and the total absence of practical result? Are our
+souls cast down by the barrenness, dullness, heaviness, and low tone of
+all our reunions, whether at the table of our Lord, before the
+mercy-seat, or around the fountain of holy Scripture?
+
+What are we to do? Fold our arms in cold indifference? give up in
+despair? or give vent to complaining, murmuring, fretfulness, or
+irritation? God forbid! What then? Come together, "with one accord in
+one place;" get down on our faces before our God, and pour out our
+hearts, as the heart of one man, pleading Matthew xviii. 19.
+
+This, we may rest assured, is the grand remedy--the unfailing resource.
+It is perfectly true that "God is sovereign," and this is the very
+reason why we should wait on Him; perfectly true that "human effort is
+in vain," and that is the very reason for seeking divine power;
+perfectly true that "we cannot get up a revival," and that is the very
+reason for seeking to get it _down_; perfectly true that "we must beware
+of mere excitement;" equally true that we must beware of coldness,
+deadness, and selfish indifference.
+
+The simple fact is, there is no excuse whatever--so long as Christ is at
+the right hand of God--so long as God the Holy Ghost is in our midst and
+in our hearts--so long as we have the Word of God in our hands--so long
+as Matthew xviii. 19 shines before our eyes--there is, we repeat, no
+excuse whatever for barrenness, deadness, coldness, and indifference--no
+excuse for heavy and unprofitable meetings--no excuse whatever for lack
+of freshness in our reunions or of fruitfulness in our service. Let us
+wait on God, in holy concord, and the blessing is sure to come.
+
+
+PART III.
+
+If we turn to Matthew xxi. 22, we shall find another of the essential
+conditions of effectual prayer. "And all things whatsoever ye shall ask
+in prayer, _believing_, ye shall receive." This is a truly marvelous
+statement. It opens the very treasury of heaven to faith. There is
+absolutely no limit. Our blessed Lord assures us that we shall receive
+whatsoever we ask in simple faith.
+
+The apostle James, under the inspiration of the
+
+Holy Ghost, gives us a similar assurance in reference to the matter of
+asking for wisdom. "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that
+_giveth to all liberally_, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
+him. But"--here is the moral condition--"let him ask _in faith, nothing
+wavering_. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with
+the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall obtain any
+thing of the Lord."
+
+From both these passages we learn that if our prayers are to have an
+answer, they must be prayers of faith. It is one thing to utter words in
+the form of prayer, and another thing altogether to pray in simple
+faith, in the full, clear, and settled assurance that we shall have what
+we are asking for. It is greatly to be feared that many of our so-called
+prayers never go beyond the ceiling of the room. In order to reach the
+throne of God, they must be borne on the wings of faith, and proceed
+from hearts united and minds agreed, in holy purpose, to wait on our God
+for the things which we really require.
+
+Now, the question is, are not our prayers and prayer-meetings sadly
+deficient on this point? Is not the deficiency manifest from the fact
+that we see so little result from our prayers? Ought we not to examine
+ourselves as to how far we really understand these two conditions of
+prayer, namely, unanimity and confidence? If it be true--and it is true,
+for Christ has said it--that two persons agreed to ask in faith can have
+whatsoever they ask, why do we not see more abundant answers to our
+prayers? Must not the fault be in us?--are we not deficient in concord
+and confidence?
+
+Our Lord, in Matthew xviii. 19, comes down, as we say, to the very
+smallest plurality--the smallest congregation--even to "two;" but of
+course the promise applies to dozens, scores, or hundreds. The grand
+point is, to be thoroughly agreed and fully persuaded that we shall get
+what we are asking for. This would give a different tone and character
+altogether to our reunions for prayer. It would make them very much more
+real than our ordinary prayer-meeting, which, alas! alas! is often poor,
+cold, dead, objectless, and desultory, exhibiting any thing but cordial
+agreement and unwavering faith.
+
+How vastly different it would be if our prayer-meetings were the result
+of a cordial agreement on the part of two or more believing souls, to
+come together and wait upon God for a certain thing, and to persevere in
+prayer until they receive an answer! How little we see of this! We
+attend the prayer-meeting from week to week--and very right we
+should--but ought we not to be exercised before God as to how far we are
+agreed in reference to the object or objects which are to be laid before
+the throne? The answer to this question links itself on to another of
+the moral conditions of prayer.
+
+Let us turn to Luke xi. "And He said unto them, 'Which of you shall have
+a friend, and shall go unto him at midnight, and say unto him, Friend,
+lend me three loaves; for a friend of mine in his journey is come to me,
+and I have nothing to set before him? And he from within shall answer
+and say, Trouble me not; the door is now shut, and my children are with
+me in bed; I cannot rise and give thee. I say unto you, though he will
+not rise and give him because he is his friend, yet because of his
+_importunity_ he will rise and give him as many as he needeth. And I say
+unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find;
+knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that asketh
+receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it
+shall be opened.'" (Ver. 5-10.)
+
+These words are of the very highest possible importance, inasmuch as
+they contain part of our Lord's reply to the request of His disciples,
+"Lord, teach us to pray." Let no one imagine for a moment that we would
+dare to take it upon ourselves to teach people how to pray. God forbid!
+Nothing is further from our thoughts. We are merely seeking to bring the
+souls of our readers into direct contact with the Word of God--the
+veritable sayings of our blessed Lord and Master--so that, in the light
+of those sayings, they may judge for themselves as to how far our
+prayers and our prayer-meetings come up to the divine standard.
+
+What, then, do we learn from Luke xi? what are the moral conditions
+which it sets before us? In the first place, it teaches us to be
+_definite_ in our prayers. "Friend, lend me three loaves." There is a
+positive need felt and expressed; there is the one thing before the mind
+and on the heart, and to this one thing he confines himself. It is not a
+long, rambling, desultory statement about all sorts of things: it is
+distinct, direct, and pointed,--I want three loaves, I cannot do without
+them, I must have them, I am shut up, the case is urgent, the time of
+night--all the circumstances give definiteness and earnestness to the
+appeal. He cannot wander from the one point, "Friend, lend me three
+loaves."
+
+No doubt it seems a very untoward time to come--"midnight." Every thing
+looks discouraging. The friend has retired for the night, the door is
+shut, his children are with him in bed, he cannot rise. All this is very
+depressing; but still the definite need is pressed: he must have the
+three loaves.
+
+Now, we cannot but judge that there is a great practical lesson here
+which may be applied, with immense profit, to our prayers and our
+prayer-meetings. Must we not admit that our reunions for prayer suffer
+sadly from long, rambling, desultory prayers? Do we not frequently give
+utterance to a whole host of things of which we do not really feel the
+need, and which we have no notion of waiting for at all? Should we not
+sometimes be taken very much aback were the Lord to appear to us at the
+close of our prayer-meeting and ask us, What do you really want Me to
+give or to do?
+
+We feel most thoroughly persuaded that all this demands our serious
+consideration. We believe it would impart great earnestness, freshness,
+glow, depth, reality, and power to our prayer-meetings were we to attend
+with something definite on our hearts, as to which we could invite the
+fellowship of our brethren. Some of us seem to think it necessary to
+make one long prayer about all sorts of things--many of them very right
+and very good, no doubt--but the mind gets bewildered by the
+multiplicity of subjects. How much better to bring some one object
+before the throne, earnestly urge it, and pause, so that the Holy Spirit
+may lead out others, in like manner, either for the same thing or
+something else equally definite.
+
+Long prayers are often wearisome; indeed, in many cases, they are a
+positive infliction. It will perhaps be said that we must not prescribe
+any time to the Holy Spirit. True indeed;--away from us be the thought!
+Who would venture upon such a piece of daring blasphemy? We are simply
+comparing what we find in Scripture (where their brief pointedness is
+characteristic--see Matt. vi, John xvii., Acts iv. 24-30, Eph. i, iii,
+etc.) with what we too often--not always, thank God!--find in our
+prayer-meetings.
+
+Let it, then, be distinctly borne in mind that "long prayers" are not
+the rule in Scripture. They are referred to in Mark xii. 40, etc., in
+terms of withering disapproval. Brief, fervent, pointed prayers impart
+great freshness and interest to the prayer-meeting; but on the other
+hand, as a general rule, long and desultory prayers exert a most
+depressing influence upon all.
+
+But there is another very important moral condition set forth in our
+Lord's teaching in Luke xi, and that is, "_importunity_." He tells us
+that the man succeeds in gaining his object simply by his importunate
+earnestness. He is not to be put off; he must get the three loaves.
+Importunity prevails even where the claims of friendship prove
+inoperative. The man is bent on his object; he has no alternative. There
+is a demand, and he has nothing to meet it--"I have nothing to set
+before my traveling friend." In short, he will not take a refusal.
+
+Now, the question is, how far do we understand this great lesson? It is
+not, blessed be God, that He will ever answer us "from within." He will
+never say to us, "Trouble me not"--"I cannot rise and give thee." He is
+ever our true and ready "Friend"--"a cheerful, liberal, and unupbraiding
+Giver." All praise to His holy name! Still, He encourages importunity,
+and we need to ponder His teaching. There is a sad lack of it in our
+prayer-meetings. Indeed, it will be found that in proportion to the lack
+of definiteness is the lack of importunity. The two go very much
+together. Where the thing sought is as definite as the "three loaves,"
+there will generally be the importunate asking for it, and the firm
+purpose to get it.
+
+The simple fact is, we are too vague and, as a consequence, too
+indifferent in our prayers and prayer-meetings. We do not seem like
+people _asking for what they want, and waiting for what they ask_. This
+is what destroys our prayer-meetings, rendering them pithless,
+pointless, powerless; turning them into teaching or talking-meetings,
+rather than deep-toned, earnest prayer-meetings. We feel convinced that
+the whole Church of God needs to be thoroughly aroused in reference to
+this great question; and this conviction it is which compels us to offer
+these hints and suggestions, with which we are not yet done.
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+The more deeply we ponder the subject which has been for some time
+engaging our attention, and the more we consider the state of the entire
+Church of God, the more convinced we are of the urgent need of a
+thorough awakening every where in reference to the question of prayer.
+We cannot--nor do we desire to--shut our eyes to the fact that deadness,
+coldness, and barrenness seem, as a rule, to characterize our
+prayer-meetings. No doubt we may find here and there a pleasing
+exception, but speaking generally, we do not believe that any sober,
+spiritual person will call in question the truth of what we state,
+namely, that the tone of our prayer-meetings is fearfully low, and that
+it is absolutely imperative upon us to inquire seriously as to the
+cause.
+
+In the papers already put forth on this great, all-important, and deeply
+practical subject, we have ventured to offer to our readers a few hints
+and suggestions. We have briefly glanced at our lack of confidence, our
+failure in cordial unanimity, the absence of definiteness and
+importunity. We have referred in plain terms--and we must speak plainly
+if we are to speak at all--to many things which are felt by all the
+truly spiritual amongst us to be not only trying and painful, but
+thoroughly subversive of the real power and blessing of our reunions for
+prayer. We have spoken of the long, tiresome, desultory, preaching
+prayers which, in some cases, have become so perfectly intolerable, that
+the Lord's dear people are scared away from the prayer-meetings
+altogether. They feel that they are only wearied, grieved, and
+irritated, instead of being refreshed, comforted, and strengthened; and
+hence they deem it better to stay away. They judge it to be more
+profitable, if they have an hour to spare, to spend it in the privacy of
+their closet, where they can pour out their hearts to God in earnest
+prayer and supplication, than to attend a so-called prayer-meeting,
+where they are absolutely wearied out with incessant, powerless,
+hymn-singing, or long preaching prayers.
+
+Now, we more than question the rightness of such a course. We seriously
+doubt if this be at all the way to remedy the evils of which we
+complain. Indeed, we are thoroughly persuaded it is not. If it be right
+to come together for prayer and supplication--and who will question the
+rightness?--then surely it is not right for any one to stay away merely
+because of the feebleness, failure, or even the folly of some who may
+take part in the meeting. If all the really spiritual members were to
+stay away on such a ground, what would become of the prayer-meeting? We
+have very little idea of how much is involved in the elements which
+compose a meeting. Even though we may not take part audibly in the
+action, yet if we are there in a right spirit--there really to wait upon
+God, we marvelously help the tone of a meeting.
+
+Besides, we must remember that we have something more to do in attending
+a meeting than to think of our own comfort, profit, and blessing. We
+must think of the Lord's glory; we must seek to do His blessed will, and
+try to promote the good of others in every possible way; and neither of
+these ends, we may rest assured, can be attained by our deliberately
+absenting ourselves from the place where prayer is wont to be made.
+
+We repeat, and with emphasis, the words, "_deliberately_ absenting
+ourselves"--staying away because we are not profited by what takes place
+there. Many things may crop up to hinder our being present--ill-health,
+domestic duties, lawful claims upon our time if we are in the employment
+of others,--all these things have to be taken into account; but we may
+set it down as a fixed principle that _the one who can designedly absent
+himself from the prayer-meeting is in a bad state of soul_. The healthy,
+happy, earnest, diligent soul will be sure to be found at the
+prayer-meeting.
+
+But all this conducts us, naturally and simply, to another of those
+moral conditions at which we have been glancing in this series of
+papers. Let us turn for a moment to the opening lines of Luke xviii.
+"And He spake a parable unto them to this end, _that men ought always to
+pray, and not to faint_: saying, 'There was in a city a judge, which
+feared not God, neither regarded man. And there was a widow in that
+city, and she came unto him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary. And he
+would not for a while; but afterward he said within himself, Though I
+fear not God, nor regard man, yet, because this widow troubleth me, I
+will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary me.' And the
+Lord said, 'Hear what the unjust judge saith. And shall not God avenge
+His own elect, which cry day and night unto Him, though He bear long
+with them? I tell you that He will avenge them speedily.'" (Ver. I-8.)
+
+Here, then, we have pressed upon our attention the important moral
+condition of _perseverance_. "Men ought _always_ to pray, and _not to
+faint_." This is intimately connected with the definiteness and
+importunity to which we have already referred. We want a certain thing;
+we cannot do without it. We importunately, unitedly, believingly, and
+perseveringly wait on our God until He graciously send an answer, as He
+most assuredly will, if the moral basis and the moral conditions be duly
+maintained.
+
+_But we must persevere._ We must not faint, and give up, though the
+answer does not come as speedily as we might expect. It may please God
+to exercise our souls by keeping us waiting on Him for days, months, or
+perhaps years. The exercise is good. It is morally healthful; it tends
+to make us real; it brings us down to the roots of things. Look, for
+example, at Daniel. He was kept for "three full weeks" waiting on God,
+in profound exercise of soul. "In those days I Daniel was mourning three
+full weeks. I ate no pleasant bread, neither came flesh nor wine in my
+mouth, neither did I anoint myself at all, till three full weeks were
+fulfilled."
+
+All this was good for Daniel. There was deep blessing in the spiritual
+exercises through which this beloved and honored servant of God was
+called to pass during those three weeks. And what is specially worthy of
+note is, that the answer to Daniel's cry had been despatched from the
+throne of God at the very beginning of his exercise, as we read at verse
+12, "Then said he unto me, 'Fear not Daniel; for _from the first day
+that thou didst set thine heart to understand, and to chasten thyself
+before thy God, thy words were heard, and I am come for thy words_.
+But"--how marvelous and mysterious is this!--"the prince of the kingdom
+of Persia withstood me one and twenty days; but, lo, Michael, one of the
+chief princes, came to help me; and I remained there with the kings of
+Persia. Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall thy
+people in the latter days."
+
+All this is full of interest. Here was the beloved servant of God
+mourning, chastening himself, and waiting upon God. The angelic
+messenger was on his way with the answer. The enemy was permitted to
+hinder; but Daniel continued to wait: he prayed, and fainted not; and in
+due time the answer came.
+
+Is there no lesson here for us? Most assuredly there is. We, too, may
+have to wait long in the holy attitude of expectancy, and in the spirit
+of prayer; but we shall find the time of waiting most profitable for
+our souls. Very often our God, in His wise and faithful dealing with us,
+sees fit to withhold the answer, simply to prove us as to the reality of
+our prayers. The grand point for us is, to have an object laid upon our
+hearts by the Holy Ghost--an object as to which we can lay the finger of
+faith upon some distinct promise in the Word, and to persevere in prayer
+until we get what we want. "Praying _always_ with all prayer and
+supplication in the Spirit, and _watching_ thereunto _with all
+perseverance_ and supplication for all saints." (Eph. vi. 18.)
+
+All this demands our serious consideration. We are as sadly deficient in
+perseverance as we are in definiteness and importunity. Hence the
+feebleness of our prayers and the coldness of our prayer-meetings. We do
+not come together with a definite object, and hence we are not
+importunate, and we do not persevere. In short, our prayer-meetings are
+often nothing but a dull routine--a cold, mechanical service--something
+to be gone through--a wearisome alternation of hymn and prayer, hymn and
+prayer, causing the spirit to groan beneath the heavy burden of mere
+profitless bodily exercise.
+
+We speak plainly and strongly: we speak as we feel. We must be permitted
+to speak without reserve. We call upon the whole Church of God, far and
+wide, to look this great question straight in the face--to look to God
+about it--to judge themselves about it. Do we not feel the lack of power
+in all our public reunions? Why those barren seasons at the Lord's
+table? Why the dullness and feebleness in the celebration of that
+precious feast which ought to stir the very deepest depths of our
+renewed being? Why the lack of unction, power, and edification in our
+public readings--the foolish speculations and the silly questions which
+have been advanced and answered for the last forty years? Why those
+varied evils on which we have been dwelling, and which are being mourned
+over almost every where by the truly spiritual? Why the barrenness of
+our gospel services? Why are souls not smitten down under the Word? Why
+is there so little gathering-power?
+
+Brethren, beloved in the Lord, let us rouse ourselves to the solemn
+consideration of these weighty matters. Let us not be satisfied to go on
+with the present condition of things. We call upon all those who admit
+the truth of what we have been putting forth in these pages on "Prayer
+and the Prayer-Meeting," to unite in cordial, earnest, united prayer and
+supplication. Let us seek to get together according to God; to come as
+one man and prostrate ourselves before the mercy-seat, and perseveringly
+wait upon our God for the revival of His work, the progress of His
+gospel, the ingathering and upbuilding of His beloved people. Let our
+prayer-meetings be really prayer-meetings, and not occasions for giving
+out our favorite hymns, and starting our fancy tunes. The prayer-meeting
+ought to be the place of expressed heed and expected blessing--the place
+of expressed weakness and expected power--the place where God's people
+assemble with one accord, to take hold of the very throne of God, to get
+into the very treasury of heaven, and draw thence all we want for
+ourselves, for our households, for the Whole Church of God, and for the
+vineyard of Christ.
+
+Such is the true idea of a prayer-meeting, if we are to be taught by
+Scripture. May it be more fully realized amongst the Lord's people every
+where. May the Holy Spirit stir us all up, and press upon our souls the
+value, importance, and urgent necessity of unanimity, confidence,
+definiteness, importunity, and perseverance in all our prayers and
+prayer-meetings.
+
+ Yes, there's a power which man can wield,
+ When mortal aid is vain;
+ That eye, that arm, that love to reach,
+ That list'ning ear to gain.
+
+ That power is prayer, which soars on high,
+ Through Jesus, to the throne,
+ And moves the hand which moves the world
+ To bring deliverance down.
+
+_C. H. M._
+
+NOTE.--It may perhaps be useful to notice that in the foregoing most
+needful pages, the beloved author has been speaking of the
+_prayer-meeting_, and the moral basis and conditions of prayer in
+general, not of personal, secret prayer. The importance of it can hardly
+be overestimated. The lack or neglect of this soon tells in the
+spiritual life of the Christian. Is not the lack of this the explanation
+of much leanness of soul, from which knowledge alone is not able to lift
+us up? It is, as it were, the spiritual gauge of our soul's condition.
+There, in the secret of the closet, the godly soul ever loves to pour
+out in its Father's ear its trials, its fears, its desires, its wants,
+its thanksgivings, in all their details. And what comfort, what joy,
+what godly strength and purpose, the soul carries from thence! what
+preparation to go through the daily toil, and testings of the day!
+Beloved of the Lord, let us wait on God, that we may know more of this
+secret power, gotten in our closet with Him.
+
+[Ed.]
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[XXX.] How interesting to find "Mary the mother of Jesus" named here, as
+being at the prayer-meeting! What would she have said if any one had
+told her that millions of professing Christians would yet be praying to
+her?
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber Notes:
+
+Common puctuation errors repaired obvious typos repaired
+
+Page 3-07-03 an "a" added" I shall only prove a hindrance, "a" weight,
+a cause of weakness.
+
+Page 3-01-012 heavy laden changed to heavy-laden
+
+Page 3-01-018 "thradom" misspelled "thralldom"
+
+Page 3-03-004 "diciples" misspelled "disciples" page 3-01-027 true
+hearted changed to true-hearted page 3-01-001 well regulated changed to
+well-regulated
+
+Page 3-04-004 "O death, where is thy sing" changed to "O death, where is
+thy sting.
+
+Page 3-06-043 "The breaking of break" changed to "The breaking
+of bread".
+
+Page 3-05-004 "decalogue" should be a proper noun (Ten
+Commandments), changed to "Decalogue".
+
+Page 3-05-012 "compentency" misspelled "competency".
+
+Page 3-06-003 "eucharist" is a proper noun, changed to "Eucharist".
+
+Page 3-10-011 "paraylzed" misspelled, changed to "paralyzed".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Assembly of God, by
+C. (Charles) H. (Henry) Mackintosh
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