THE LADDER
"Jacob had a dream in which he saw a ladder resting on
the earth, with its top reaching to heaven, and the angels of God were
ascending and descending on it." Genesis 28:12
The voice which cannot err, denounces, "Be sure your sin
will find you out." Thus, by eternal law, misery stalks in transgression's
rear. Out of the Gospel-path, our feet are in furrows sown with woe.
Godliness is a quiet haven. Departure from it is a sea of trouble. This
truth is darkly written on many a sigh and many a tear. The case of Jacob
painfully attests it. Behold him a downcast and a lonely wanderer. He treads
a cheerless, solitary way. A journey is before him—long and perilous. He
tenderly sorrows for delights behind him. He tremblingly forebodes the evils
of tomorrow. But his keenest anguish is an upbraiding conscience. He leaves
his home, because he first left his God.
O my soul, bear all things, suffer much, suffer long; but
never venture, by ungodly schemes and ungodly guile, to run before the
pillar and the cloud. The sin of man hastens not the set purposes of God.
No, it rather stays the hand upraised to bless, and arms it with a
chastening scourge. Perhaps the declining sun never withdrew its light from
one more deeply in gloom than Jacob when he paused at Luz. The canopy of
heaven was his only roof—the bare earth his couch—the rugged stone his
pillow. Instead of a tender mother's tender care, he had hardness in its
hardest form.
But Jacob was an heir, from everlasting ages, of an
everlasting portion which is never lost. Hence an unchanging Friend grieved
in his every grief, and marked with sympathy his every step. The Lord, whose
love is wisdom, and whose wisdom is love, leads His children into depths for
their good; but leaves them not in depths to their hurt. It was so with
Jacob. It will be so while saints on earth need to be brought low, that they
may more securely rise.
Sleep closes his eyes. But in the night-watches marvelous
teachings gladden the unclosed eye of faith. "Jacob had a dream in which he
saw a ladder resting on the earth, with its top reaching to heaven." Here
was no obscure sign of Him, who comforts most by revelations of Himself. The
seed of the Woman, the Blessing of the Earth, the Covenant of His people is
unfolded in clearer emblem. The Redeemer is displayed wondrous in His
person, His work, His grace. Thus the patriarch found, as many find, that
the absence of man is the nearness of God, and that the dark pages of
trial are inscribed with new lessons of love. He arises, and exclaims,
"Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not."
Reader! this image, so radiant in Gospel-truth, vanished
not when morning came. It has a power to teach in every age, and to make
each lonely spot a Bethel to the pilgrim's heart.
Ponder well this Ladder. Another like it, earth never
saw. Mark its extent. It unites the worlds of Deity and man. It
connects our sin-vile hovels with the abode of the Eternal. Resting on the
ground, which our feet defile, it rises and stretches upward, and pierces
the skies, and mounts to the very throne of God! As such it pictures Him,
who is at once the Highest of the high, and the Lowliest of the lowly—who,
while he thinks it not robbery to be Jehovah's fellow, counts it all joy to
be the poor man's kinsman. It shows Jesus, in the miracle of His person—man,
without ceasing to be God—God, without scorning to be man. These are blessed
tidings! Hold them fast, as the anchor of all hope—hold them up, as the
beacon of all salvation—hold them forth, as realities of grandest
significance.
Our Jesus is the mighty God! All that there is in the
Godhead of power, and might, and wisdom, and love, and dominion has been
His, and must be His forever. Eternity is His birth-place. Heaven is His
home. His strength is Omnipotence. His arm is Infinity. His eye is
All-seeing. His ear is All-hearing. His mind is Omniscience. He wills, and
it is done. He puts on glory for a crown; and the brightness of that diadem
is the redemption of souls. Think forever, and you reach not the threshold
of His vastness. Adore forever, and you touch not the skirts of His praises.
The SUMMIT of this Ladder is Jesus reigning, the ever living God.
Observe, too, that a Savior less than this, could have
been no Savior for a sin-stained soul. For what is sin? It is an infinite
evil, because it outrages every infinite attribute of God. Hence, it is
inseparably linked with infinite woe. Oh! who can tell the boundlessness of
its dread results. It scales the heavens, and awakens wrath. It goes down to
hell, and kindles inextinguishable flames. It rolls on, a ceaseless tide,
throughout eternity. A moment did it. But no ages can undo it. Who then can
bear it away? The touch of man makes it more sinful. Angels' efforts
are as a straw before a rock. But Jesus comes. His blood is sprinkled, and
it vanishes. He hurls it from Him, and it is no more found. Why? Because
Jesus is God. If the height of heaven were the pulpit; if the pealing
thunder were the voice; if the universe were the audience; no more worthy
utterance could sound, than that the blood of Jesus blots out sin, because
the blood of Jesus is the blood of God.
Hence the delights which Jesus gives to the awakened
heart. It is conscious of iniquities towering to the skies. But, in the
merits of a Savior-God, a grave is found to bury all. Hence, too, we learn
why many think so little of this great salvation, and are content with a
mock shelter of their own construction. They are dead as to what sin is. But
when the Spirit once strikes the conscience with its sin-discovering rod,
there can be no peace but in a divine refuge, no rest but under infinite
covert. Christ, and Christ only, is such refuge, and such covert. I fear,
that to many this is a hidden truth. If once men saw it, they might dare to
sport with the lightning, or to wrestle with the whirlwind; but they would
not dare to trample on a Savior-God.
This image proclaims Jesus as invested also with our
nature. The Ladder set up on the earth, is Jesus very man, as truly
as He is very God. Yes, our Creator is our brother, that He may redeem us.
Man must die. Jesus hangs on the cross—man, that He may represent;
God, that He may render a sufficient sacrifice for man's sin. His Deity
enables. His manhood qualifies. The one is all-sufficiency. The other is
all-fitness. Thus He cancels every debt, and makes all payment, and endures
all punishment, and exhausts the whole curse, and works a glorious
righteousness, and rescues all His sheep from the jaws of hell, and exalts
His spouse in spotless luster to the throne of His glory!
Next, the common uses of the Ladder instruct much in the
divine art of using Jesus for hourly help. By the Ladder we leave the
lower ground. By it we rise to things which are above. Just so, by Jesus
there is open passage for our souls and services from our lowest estate, to
Zion's heavenly heights. Sin not only left us prostrate, with no means to
soar: but it fixed an intervening gulf, which unaided man could never pass.
But Jesus interposes, and distance disappears. Believer, your heart's desire
is that your prayers and praises may speak to God. Place them on Jesus, and
they fly aloft. None can check their ascending speed. They are breathed
below, and instantly resound on high. You long that your tears of penitence
and sighs of shame may be heeded, where mercy reigns. There is no hindrance.
Mourn with godly sorrow, clinging unto Jesus, and you melt a heavenly
Father's heart! You strive in word and work to glorify His name. Labor
with every effort intermixed with Jesus, and nothing can be done in vain.
How sweet is it to the eye of faith, to see its every cry, and hope, and
deed, thus carried buoyant to the court of God!
Soon you must die. Be it so. Commit your departing spirit
to the care of Jesus, and, released from its cage of clay, it will mount
with eagle-wings, and tarry not until the portals of eternal day are passed.
But the Ladder also affords means of DESCENT. We need
supplies from above. Through what channel can they come? Jesus alone
presents an open course. Through Him the Spirit is outpoured. The light
which dispels our darkness—all views of saving love—strength to begin and
persevere on the heavenward race—the joys, which make this wilderness to
blossom as the rose, all wing their downward flight by this connecting
Ladder! The believer stands upon this Ladder, and voices run along it, each
assuring him that his iniquities are pardoned, his person accepted, his soul
saved. By this path the promises come down into his willing hand, and
answers tell him that his prayers are heard. By this way ministering angels
hasten to encamp around, and to beat back the host of unseen foes. O my
soul, can you enough bless Jesus, who thus unites a blessed people with a
blessing God?
Reader! this subject is personal and practical. Tell me,
then, have you found, do you duly prize, do you daily use these
heaven-wrought steps? The solemn significance of the solemn question is
this—Have you by faith grasped Jesus? Are you by faith cleaving unto Him?
Faith is the eye which sees the Ladder—the hand which touches
it—the strength which holds it—the feet which mount it. Has
the Holy Spirit opened to you this figure, which was new life to Jacob?
There is a ready test. Is the world beneath your tread? Do you trample on
its love, its fashions, its maxims, its principles? Feet set on a Ladder,
no more rest on earth! The man, who is in Christ is high above the
world. "You are not of the world, even as I am not of the world."
There is another test. Is yours an ascending life?
On the ladder there is upward movement. So the believer rises, step by step,
from grace to grace. As there is no progress while one foot cleaves to the
dust, so there is no growth in grace while lingering affections adhere to
mire. We must be wholly Christ's or none of His.
Again, are your days all effort? There is no
mounting without toil. Saints strain every nerve. They run an unwearied
race. They wrestle in prayer. Their praises are as the ceaseless rapture of
angelic chords. Their zeal flows, as the ocean's tide. They rest not—digging
in the mine of Truth, and scattering abroad the riches which they find. Thus
they take heaven by holy violence.
Reader! if you are some lazy loiterer, some
dreaming slumberer, I tremble for you. Christ worked on earth. Christ
works above. As is the Head, so are the members. As is the Lord, so are the
servants. Take heed, too, of false ladders. Satan has forged many.
Their form is specious. Their height seems heaven-high. But the summit
points hell-ward. The steps are rottenness, and soon they break. Salvation's
Ladder is only one—Christ Jesus.
Believer, you profess to be on this Ladder. Hold fast.
Watch and pray. Some, who seemed to climb well, have foully fallen. The most
perilous slip is from the highest round. Perhaps you are conscious that your
foot has slipped. If so, arise and adore God, that you live. Arise and pray
for grace, that you may re-ascend.
Unbeliever, you know nothing of this approach to God. You
are afar off now. How will you bear to be far off forever? Hear then; and
may the Spirit bless the concluding word! There is a Ladder from every
sin and every sorrow upon earth. But there is no ladder of escape
from hell's wages, and from hell's pains. There are no stairs, by which the
rich man may soar to Abraham's bosom. There is no stairway by which Judas
can leave "his own place."