"The Glory of the
Redeemer in His People" by Octavius Winslow
"I am glorified in them." John 17:10
Upborne on the pinion of faith, we have been soaring to
the third heaven, contemplating for awhile the glory of our Emmanuel within
the veil. Sweet and ravishing sight! Soon, oh! so soon to be seen without a
glass; and seen but to be transformed into the same glory! The further
consideration of our subject recalls us again to earth, to behold yet
another manifestation of the glory of the Redeemer- even His glory in His
saints. The unfolding of this truth will be found to confirm and illustrate
another equally important one; namely, the perfect oneness of Christ and His
Church, and the consequent reciprocity of interest and affection which
exists: thus showing, that while Christ represents the Church above, the
Church represents Christ below; while she is glorified with Him in heaven,
He is glorified in her on earth. Holy, blessed, and indissoluble unity!
The manifested glory of Christ in His Church is clearly and emphatically
stated in the sublime prayer of our dear Lord, to which we have already had
occasion more than once to allude. Addressing His Father, He claims with
Him- what no mere creature could do- a conjunction of interest in the
Church, based upon an essential unity of nature. "All mine are Yours, and
Your are mine, and I am glorified in them." What angel in heaven could adopt
this language, what creature on earth could present this claim- "All Yours
are mine!" It would be an act of the most daring presumption; it would be
the very inspissation of blasphemy: but when our Lord asserts it- asserts
it, too, in a solemn prayer, addressed on the eve of His death to His
Father- what does it prove, but that a unity of property in the Church
involves a unity of essence in being? There could be no perfect oneness of
the Father and the Son in any single object, but as it sprang from a oneness
of nature. We think this demonstratively true. Two things equal to a given
thing, must be equal to each other. The axiom will apply with equal force to
the truth before us. Convincing evidence of His Deity! Oh reject it not! He
that lives and dies in the disbelief of the absolute Godhead of Jesus is
lost forever. I assume not the office of his judge: I pronounce not the
sentence of his condemnation. He who shall judge him in the last day has
already foredoomed him- "If you believe not that I AM He, you shall die in
your sins."
The mutual interest, then, which Christ thus claims with His Father, refers,
in this instance, specifically to the Church of God. And it is delightful
here to trace the perfect equality of love towards the Church as of perfect
identity of interest in the Church. We are sometimes tempted to doubt the
perfect sameness, as to degree, of the Father's love with the Son's love;
that, because Jesus died and intercedes, the mind thus wont to familiarize
itself with Him more especially, associating Him with all its comforting,
soothing, hallowing views and enjoyments, we are liable to be beguiled into
the belief that His love must transcend in its strength and intensity the
love of the Father. But not so. The Father's love is of perfect equality in
degree, as it is in nature, with the Son's love; and this may with equal
truth be affirmed of the "love of the Spirit." "He that has seen me," says
Jesus, "has seen the Father." Then he that has seen the melting,
overpowering expressions of the Redeemer's love- he that has seen Him
pouring out His deep compassion over the miseries of a suffering world; he
that has seen His affectionate gentleness towards His disciples; he that has
seen Him weep at the grave of Lazarus; he that has followed Him to the
garden of Gethsemane, to the judgment-hall of Pilate, and from thence to the
cross of Calvary, has seen in every step which He trod, and in every act
which He performed, a type of the deep, deep love which the Father bears
towards His people. He that has thus seen the Son's love has seen the
Father's love. Oh, sweet to think, the love that travailed- the love that
toiled- the love that wept- the love that bled- the love that died, is the
same love, in its nature and intensity, which is deep-welled in the heart of
the triune God, and is pledged to secure the everlasting salvation of the
Church. "All mine are Yours, and Yours are mine, and I am glorified in
them."
We are now to show IN WHAT PARTICULARS THE REDEEMER IS GLORIFIED IN HIS
CHURCH.
He is glorified in being the covenant Head of all blessing to His people.
How distinctly has the Holy Spirit declared this precious truth- "Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all
spiritual blessings in heavenly places (things) in Christ." Here is our true
Joseph with all the treasures which a Father's love can bestow, or which the
covenant of grace provides, placed in His hands and at His disposal. It has
"pleased the Father" to constitute Him the Head of the Church, and that in
Him, as such, "all fullness should dwell." Here, too, is our true spiritual
Eliakim, of whom it is sweetly prophesied, "And they shall hang upon Him all
the glory of His Father's house, the offspring and the issue, all vessels of
small quantity, from the vessels of cups even to all the vessels of
flagons." Isa. xxii. 24. Who sustains, as 'a nail fastened in a sure place,'
all the glory of the Church, but Jesus? In Christ the Church is chosen. In
Christ it is preserved. In Christ it lives. In Christ it is pardoned. In
Christ it is justified. In Christ it is sanctified. In Christ it will be
glorified. Thus does all the glory of the spiritual house hang on Christ- He
is its foundation, He is its corner-stone; in Him; "fitly framed together,
it grows up a holy temple in the Lord;" and He will be the top-stone, which
shall be brought forth on the day of its completion, amid the shoutings of
"Grace, grace unto it!"
On Him, too, hang all the 'vessels' of the house, the 'vessels of cups and
the vessels of flagons;' the small and the great, the young and the old, the
feeble and the strong, all the saints hang on Jesus, and Jesus supports and
supplies all. See, how the 'vessels of cups, the vessels of small quantity,'
hang upon Him, and how He supplies them. "And, behold, there came a leper,
and worshiped Him, saying, Lord, if You will, You can make me clean. And
Jesus put forth His hand, and touched him, saying, I will; be clean. And
immediately his leprosy was cleansed." "And one of the multitude answered
and said, Master, I have brought unto You my son, who has a dumb spirit . .
. . and ofttimes it has cast him into the fire, and into the waters, to
destroy him: but if You can do anything, have compassion on us, and help us.
Jesus rebuked the foul spirit, saying unto him, You dumb and deaf spirit, I
charge you come out of him, and enter no more into him." "And, behold, a
woman, who was diseased with an issue of blood twelve years, came behind
Him, and touched
the hem of His garment: for she said within herself, If I may but touch His
garment I shall be whole. But Jesus turned Him about; and when He saw her,
He said, Daughter, be of good comfort; your faith has made you whole. And
the woman was made whole from that hour." "And He said unto Jesus, Lord,
remember me when You come into Your kingdom. And Jesus said unto him, Verily
I say unto you, Today shall you be with me in Paradise." "And, behold, a
woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto Him, saying,
Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed with
a devil. But He answered her not a word. . . . . Then came she and worshiped
Him, saying, Lord, help me. But He answered and said, It is not fit to take
the children's bread, and to cast it to dogs. And she said, Truth, Lord: yet
the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters' table. Then Jesus
answered and said unto her, O woman, great is your faith: be it unto you
even as you will."
Behold, how these 'vessels of small quantity' hang on Jesus; and behold, how
He sustains and fills them. They are but as 'vessels of cups'- their
knowledge is defective, their grace is limited, their experience but
shallow, their faith but small, and they themselves but little- oh! how
little, who can tell?- in their own eyes; yet, coming thus to Jesus' grace,
exclaiming-
"Other refuge have I none,
Hangs my helpless soul on You,"
He receives them, He welcomes them, He bears them up, He supplies them, He
fills them; He rejoices in their feeble grace, He despises not their little
strength, He crowns their weak faith, He grants them the utmost desires of
their hearts. Oh, what a Jesus is our Jesus! Were ever such gentleness,
tenderness, and skill manifested towards the "bruised reed and the smoking
flax? "
Dear reader, are you a 'vessel of small quantity?' It may be that, through
the infirmities that encompass you, the trials that oppress you, the
temptations that assail you, the clouds that surround you, you can receive
Christ's fullness but in a limited degree; truth is understood but
partially, there being doctrines, perhaps, hard to be understood, and
precepts still harder to be obeyed. Light beams in upon the mind but
faintly, the Scripture statement of the heart's deep subtlety and desperate
wickedness is but slowly, cautiously, doubtingly received; the daily cross
imposed by Christian discipleship, sometimes taken up, as often laid down;
the rough way wounding the feet, the strait way causing them to stumble.
Christ's grand atonement, His one, perfect obedience, His great and finished
work, the sprinkling of His blood upon the conscience, the completeness of a
believing soul in His righteousness, and the consequent "peace and joy in
the Holy Spirit," but little known. These, it may be, are some of the
features that mark your case. Yet, feeling your own vileness, and Christ's
sufficiency and preciousness, and constrained to hang on Him solely and
exclusively, as all your salvation and all your desire; though you can
receive but a 'small quantity' of knowledge, of grace, and of love, you are
yet a 'vessel of gold' in His house, and Jesus bears you on His heart, sets
you as a seal upon His arm, and presents you each moment before God complete
in Himself.
But there are also in this house "vessels of flagons," the larger vessels-
saints of a deep grace, of gigantic faith, of profound knowledge. Hear one
of them exclaim, "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless, I live; yet not
I, but Christ lives in me 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." Oh
how abundantly did this beloved apostle drink of "the river of God!" How
deeply did he sink into the ocean of Christ's fullness! How high did he soar
into the beatific presence of God, until sweeping the heavens with his
expanded pinions, all the treasures that sparkle there seemed gathered into
his soul. Yet, a large vessel though it was, in himself he was poor, vile,
and empty; counting himself as the "chief of sinners," esteeming himself
"less than the least of all saints," and ascribing all that he was as a
renewed man to "the grace of God." In this his poverty, vileness, and
emptiness, he hung with the small vessel, solely, entirely on Christ. The
thief saved at the last moment, and Paul, the great apostle of the Gentiles,
side by side hung on Jesus. "Of His fullness have all we received, and grace
for grace." Both were pardoned with the same blood, both were justified by
the same righteousness, both were filled from the same source, and both are
now in glory, chanting the same song, and together casting their crowns
before the throne. Thus is Jesus made the "Head over all things to His
Church;" and His Church becomes in all its members, be they small or great,
"the fullness of Him that fills all in all." Thus is Christ glorified in
them. And oh, what infinite mind can compute the revenue of glory thus
accruing to the Redeemer through His saints?
In the conversion of His people- their translation from nature to grace, the
Redeemer is glorified. This is the first step to a manifest glorifying of
Christ in His called saints. Conversion is the commencement of an endless
revenue of glory to Christ. To behold a poor sinner living a life of
practical enmity to God, hatred to Jesus, rebellion against the Divine
government, and willful and determined hostility to the one glorious plan of
salvation; perhaps a blasphemer, a persecutor, and injurious; now changed,
now conquered, now sitting at the feet of Jesus, "clothed and in his right
mind," oh, is there no glory thus brought to the grace of Christ Jesus? To
see him translated out of darkness into God's marvelous light; emancipated
from the power of sin and Satan, and made the Lord's free man; the
rebellious will
conquered, the hard heart subdued, the proud spirit humbled, the hatred
turned into love, and the long roving mind now finding its center of rest
and fountain of happiness in the reconciled God, oh! is there no crown of
glory placed on the head of Jesus in all this? Say, you angelic spirits,
bending over the mercy-seat in deep contemplation of its awful mysteries of
incarnate grace and dying love- whose eyes glisten and whose bosoms expand
with new effulgence and joy over one sinner that repents, do you see no
glory deepening around the Son of God, as each vessel of mercy is called in,
emptied of self, and filled with Jesus? Yet not to angels, but to saints
themselves, we appeal. Hear the testimony of one- "Afterwards I came into
the regions of Syria and Cilicia; and was unknown by face unto the churches
of Judea which were in Christ: but they had heard only, that he who
persecuted us in times past, now preached the faith which one he destroyed.
And they glorified God in me." Oh, how are the power, the wisdom, the grace,
the love of the Redeemer glorified, and God through Him, by every new
accession thus made to the number of the redeemed! Aim to be instrumental in
bringing one soul to receive the Lord Jesus as all its salvation, and you
bring more glory to His name than were a thousand worlds like this to start
into being at your fiat. "Those who are wise shall shine as the brightness
of the firmament; and those who turn many to righteousness, as the stars
forever and ever."
But how is He glorified in God's acceptance of His people through Him! Who
can entertain a doubt of this, that has any experimental knowledge of the
great work of the Lord Jesus? Look at this for one moment. God's
justification of the believing sinner through the righteousness of His Son,
is His seal to the perfection, and efficacy, and worth of Christ's obedience
and death. What glory, suppose you, would encircle the form of Gabriel, were
it possible for Jehovah to accept a poor sinner in his righteousness! How
high would this act advance him in dignity, and honor, and praise above all
celestial intelligences! But oh! we stand, beloved, in a better and a
diviner righteousness than that of angel or archangel; we stand in the
righteousness of the incarnate God! and that God, the holy Lord God, should
accept a poor sinner in the righteousness of His Son, places that Son in the
ascendant of all creatures, "dwelling in light," the full effulgence of
which "no man has seen, nor can see." This truth, unfolded to his soul by
the Holy Spirit, constrained an eminent saint of God to exclaim, "Had I all
the faith of the patriarchs, all the zeal of the prophets, all the good
works of the apostles, all the holy suffering of the martyrs, and all the
glowing devotion of the seraphs; I would disclaim the whole, in point of
dependence, and count all but dross and dung when compared with the
infinitely precious death and the infinitely meritorious righteousness of
Jesus Christ my Lord." But one yet more eminent for his deep experience of
this truth, has thus recorded his testimony: "What things were gain to me,
those I counted loss for Christ. Yes, doubtless, and I count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I
have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may
win Christ, and be found in Him, not having mine own righteousness which is
of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
which is of God by faith." Who can compute the glory brought to Jesus by
God's full justification of the poor believing sinner through the
righteousness of His beloved Son?
He is glorified in the progressive holiness of His people. "The kingdom of
God is within you," says Christ. The increase of this kingdom is just the
measure and extent of the believer's advance in sanctification. This is that
internal righteousness, the work of God the Holy Spirit, which consists in
the subjugation of the mind, the will, the affections, the desires, yes, the
whole soul, to the government and supremacy of Jesus, "bringing into
captivity," says the apostle, "every thought to the obedience of Christ."
Oh, you who are "striving against sin," longing to be "conformed to the
image of God's Son," panting to be more "pure in heart," "hungering and
thirsting for righteousness," think that in every step which you take in the
path of holiness, in every corruption subdued, in every besetting sin laid
aside, in every holy desire begotten, Christ is glorified in you! But you
perhaps reply, "the more I strive for the mastery, the more I seem to be
conquered. The more strongly I oppose my sins, the stronger my sins seem to
be." But what does this prove? it proves that "God is working in you both to
will and to do of His good pleasure," -that the kingdom of God is invading
the kingdom of Satan- that the Spirit dwelling in the heart is warring with
the flesh. It is truly remarked by Owen, that "if a believer lets his sins
alone, his sins will let him alone." But let him search them as with
candles, let him bring them to the light, oppose, mortify, and crucify them,
they will to the last, struggle for the victory. And this inward warfare, so
graphically and touchingly described in the seventh chapter of the Epistle
to the Romans, undeniably marks the inhabitation of God the Holy Spirit in
the soul.
But to see one advancing in holiness, thirsting for God, the heart fixed in
its solemn purpose of entire surrender; cultivating higher views, and aiming
for a loftier standard; to behold him, perhaps, carving his way to the
throne through mighty opposition, "fightings without; fears within;
"striving for the mastery of some besetting sin, sometimes foiling, and
sometimes foiled, sometimes with the shout of victory on the lip, and
sometimes with painful consciousness of defeat bowing the heart; yet still
onward- the needle of the soul, with slow and tremulous, but true and
certain, movement, still pointing to its glorious attraction, God- faith
that can never fail, and hope that can never die, and love that can never be
quenched; hanging amid their warfare and in all their weakness upon the
"nail fastened in a sure place." How is Christ, our sanctification,
glorified in such a saint!
Oh to be like Jesus! meek, and lowly, and gentle, and kind, and forgiving;
without craftiness, without deceit, without malice, without revenge; without
one temper, or thought, or feeling, or look, that is unlike Him! Beloved,
mistake not the nature and the evidence of growth in sanctification. In all
your self-denial in this great work, be cautious of grace-denial. You will
need much holy wisdom here, lest you overlook the work of the Spirit within
you. You have thought, it may be, of the glory that Christ receives from
brilliant genius, and profound talent, and splendid gifts, and glowing zeal,
and costly sacrifices, and even extensive usefulness. But have you ever
thought of the glory, the far greater, richer glory, that flows to Him from
the contrite spirit, the broken heart, the lowly mind, the humble walk; from
the tear of godly repentance that falls when seen by no human eye, and the
sigh of godly sorrow that is breathed when heard by no human ear; and the
sin abhorrence, and self loathing, and deep sense of vileness, and poverty,
and infirmity that takes you to Jesus with the prayer- "Lord, here I am; I
have brought to You my rebellious will, my wandering heart, my worldly
affections, my peculiar infirmity, my besetting and constantly overpowering
sin. Receive ,me graciously, put forth the mighty power of Your grace in my
soul, and subdue all, and rule all, and subjugate all to Yourself! Will it
not be for Your glory, the glory of Your great name, if this strong
corruption were subdued by Your grace, if this powerful sin were nailed to
Your cross, if this temper so sensitive, and this heart so impure, and these
affections so truant, and this mind so dark, and these desires so earthly,
and these pursuits so carnal, and these aims so selfish, were all entirely
renewed by Your Spirit, sanctified by Your grace, and made each to reflect
Your image? Yes, Lord, it would be for Your glory, through time and through
eternity."
Especially is the Lord Jesus glorified in the life of faith which His saints
live upon Him. The experience of every believer is, in a limited degree, the
experience of the great apostle of the Gentiles, the tip of whose soaring
wing, we, who so much skim the earth's surface, can scarcely touch- "The
life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God."
"Like precious faith" with his, dwells in the hearts of all the regenerate.
Along this royal highway it is ordained by God that all His people should
travel. It is the way their Lord traveled before them; it is the way they
are to follow after Him. The first step they take out of the path of
'sense', is into the path of 'faith'. And what a mighty grace do they
find it, as they journey on! Do they live? it is by faith. Do they
stand? it is by faith. Do they walk? it is by faith. Do they fight? it
is by faith. Do they overcome? it is by faith. Do they see what is
invisible? it is by faith. Do they receive what is incredible? it is by
faith. Do they achieve what is impossible? it is by faith. Glorious
achievements of faith!
And, oh, how eminently is Jesus thus glorified in His saints! Was it no
glory to Joseph that, having the riches of Egypt in His hands, all the
people were made, as it were, to live daily and hourly upon Him? Was no
fresh accession of dignity brought to His exaltation, by every fresh
acknowledgment of His authority, and every renewed application to His
wealth? And is not Jesus glorified in His exaltation, and in His fullness,
and in His love, and in His grace, by that faith, in the exercise of which,
"a poor and an afflicted people," the needy and the tried Church, are made
to travel to, and live upon, Him each moment? Ah, yes! every corruption
taken to His sanctifying grace; every burden taken to His omnipotent arm;
every sorrow taken to His sympathizing heart; every need taken to His
overflowing fullness; every wound taken to His healing hand; every sin taken
to His cleansing blood; and every deformity taken to His all-covering
righteousness, swells the revenue of glory, which each second of time
ascends to our adorable Redeemer from His Church.
You may have imagined- for I will now suppose myself as addressing the
seeking soul- that Christ has been more glorified by your hanging back from
Him- doubting the efficacy of His blood to cancel your guilt, and the power
of His grace to mortify your corruption, and the sufficiency of His fullness
to supply your need, and the sympathy of His nature to soothe your grief,
and the loving willingness of heart to receive and welcome you as you are,
empty, vile, and worthless; little thinking, on the contrary, how much He
has been grieved, and wounded, and dishonored, and robbed of His glory, by
this doubting of His love, and this distrusting of His grace, after all the
melting exhibitions of the one, and all that convincing evidence of the
other.
But, is it the desire of your inmost soul that Christ should be glorified by
you? then do not forget the grand, luminous truth of the Bible, that He is
the Savior of sinners, and of sinners as sinners- that in the great matter
of the soul's salvation, He recognizes nothing of worthiness in the
creature; and that whatever human merit is brought to Him with a view of
commending the case to His notice- whatever- be it even the incipient work
of His own Spirit in the heart- is appended to His finished work, as a
ground of acceptance with God, is so much detraction from His glory as a
Redeemer- than which, of nothing He is more jealous- and, consequently,
places the soul at a great remove from His grace. But like Bartimeus,
casting the garment from you- be that garment what it may- pride of merit-
pride of intellect- pride of learning- pride of family- pride of place- yes,
whatever hinders your entering the narrow way, and prevents your receiving
the kingdom of God "as a little child," and coming to Jesus to be saved by
Him alone, brings more real glory to Him, than imagination can conceive, or
words can describe.
If, then, Jesus is especially glorified in the faith of His people, let
yours be a life of faith in all its minute detail. Live upon Him for
spiritual supplies; live upon Him for temporal supplies. Go to Him in dark
providences, that you may be kept from sinking: go to Him in bright
providences, that you may be kept from falling. Go to Him when the path is
rough, that you may walk in it contentedly: go to Him when the path is
smooth, that you may walk in it surely. Let your daily history be a
traveling to Jesus empty, and a coming from Jesus filled. Keep the truth
constantly and prominently before your eye, "The just shall live by faith."
If this be so, do not expect that God will ever permit you to live by sight.
Bend your whole soul submissively to Him in this matter. Let His will and
yours be one. If, in the course of your wilderness journeyings, He has
brought you into a great strait, yes, to the very margin of the sea, still
at His bidding, 'go forward,' though it be into that sea. Trust Him to
cleave asunder its waters, making a dry passage for your feet, and causing
those very waves that threatened to engulf you, now to prove as a cloud
canopying you above, and as walls of strength, fencing you in on every side.
Remember, too, that it is one peculiar exercise and precious privilege of
faith, to "wait patiently for the Lord." The Divine exhortation is, "Commit
your way unto the Lord; trust also in Him; and He will bring it to pass."
"Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him." This patience of the soul is
the rest of faith, on the faithful God; it is a 'standing still, to see His
salvation.' And the Divine encouragement is, that in this posture will be
found the secret of your real power. "In quietness and in confidence shall
be your strength." "Their strength is to sit still." Be watchful against
everything that would mar the simplicity of your faith, and so dim the glory
of Jesus. Especially guard against the adoption of unlawful or doubtful
measures, with a view to disentanglement from present difficulties. Endure
the pressure, submit to the wrong, bear the suffering, rather than sin
against God, by seeking to forestall His mind, or to antedate His purpose,
or by transferring your interests from His hands to your own.
"Beware of desperate steps: the darkest day,
Wait but tomorrow, will have passed away."
Oh, the glory that is brought to Jesus by a life of faith! Who can fully
estimate it? Taking to Him the corruption, as it is discovered- the guilt,
as it rises- the grief, as it is felt- the cross, as it is experienced-
the wound, as it is received; yes, simply following the example of John's
disciples, who, when their master was slain, took up his headless body,
and buried it, and then went and poured their mournful intelligence into the
ear of Jesus, and laid their deep sorrow on His heart; this is to glorify
Christ! Truly is this "precious faith," and truly is the "trial of our faith
precious," for it renders more precious to the heart "His precious blood,"
who, in His person, is unutterably "precious to those who believe."
By a patient endurance of suffering for His sake, the Redeemer is greatly
glorified in His saints. The apostle- and few drank of the bitter cup more
deeply than He- presents suffering for Christ, in the soothing light of a
Christian privilege. "Unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only
to believe on Him, but also to safer for His sake." And how touchingly did
the experience of the disciples correspond with this: "They departed from
the presence of the council rejoicing that they were counted worthy to
suffer shame for His name." Has it pleased the Lord, dear reader, to place
you in a somewhat similar position? Ah! is it no suffering to stand up in
the midst of one's beloved family, surrounded by irreligion, and
worldliness, and a total disregard of the fear of God, a lone and a despised
witness for Jesus? Ah! is it no suffering to thread the intricate and narrow
way, or to run with you the Christian race, in the domestic circle- no eye
beaming with holy love, no voice responding in cheering accent, no hand to
guide, no arm to lean upon, no bosom to weep upon, no kindred spirit, no
second self; to see one's God denied, one's Savior rejected, one's religion
scoffed, one's principles trampled under foot, and one's privileges
curtailed; to have one's name cast out as evil, to be counted a fool, an
enthusiast, or mad; to endure the loss of temporal interest, and domestic
happiness, and earthly prospects, and in a sense to "forsake house, or
brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands,
for Christ's sake;" -is this no path of trial and suffering? "But if you be
reproached for the name of Christ, happy are you," for thereby is Christ
glorified in you. He is glorified in your patient endurance of suffering, in
your meek submission to reproach, in your overcoming evil with good, your
return of prayer for cursing, of blessing for railing, and of love for
hatred. Believer, suffering for Christ! rejoice, yes, rejoice that you are
counted worthy to suffer shame for His sake! What distinction is awarded
you! What honor is put upon you! What a favored opportunity have you now of
bringing glory to His name! -for illustrating His sustaining grace, and
upholding strength, and almighty power, and infinite wisdom, and comforting
love! By the firm, yet mild maintenance of your principles, by the
dignified, yet gentle spirit of forbearance, by the uncompromising, yet kind
resistance to allurement, let the Redeemer be glorified in you! In all your
persecution for righteousness' sake, let your eye be immovably fixed on
Jesus. In Him, and in this peculiar path, you have a bright example.
"Consider Him that endured such contradiction from sinners against Himself,
lest you be wearied and faint in your mind." Remember how, for your
redemption, He "endured the cross, despising the shame;" and for your
continual support, "is set down at the right hand of the throne of God."
"Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and strengthen the feeble
knees," "for the Spirit of glory and of God rests upon you."
Great, too, is the glory brought to our incarnate God by the sanctified
afflictions of His saints. How deep these often are, let many testify; and
yet the deeper the affliction, the deeper the glory. Behold the glory
brought to God by Daniel in the den of lions; by Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego, in the fiery furnace; and by Paul and Silas in the prison. And
what is their history, but a type of all the afflicted members of God's
family? The Lord will be glorified in His people- therefore does He afflict,
and try, and chasten them. "The Lord tries the righteous." He has His den,
His prison, His furnace. He has His own mode, His appointed way of proving
His work in their hearts; and whether by the lions' den, or the prison, or
the furnace, He is glorified in them. To see how Christ can shut the mouth
of the lion, and can temper the devouring flame, and can unbar the doors of
the prison-house, how glorious thus appears His power! To mark the resigned
will, the subdued spirit, the mute submission, the cheerful acquiescence in
the deepest affliction, how glorious thus appears His grace! To behold the
daily strength imparted, the precious promises applied, the soothing
consolation experienced, how glorious thus appears His love! To see the
chaff scattered, and the dross consumed, and the mind brought into perfect
harmony with God's will, to say with David, "My soul is even as a weaned
child," how glorious thus appears His wisdom! Oh, if these are the blessings
which blossom upon the rod, then welcome the rod! If this is the glory
brought to the name of Jesus by a process of sanctified affliction, then
welcome the affliction! Only see that He is truly glorified in you by it.
See that He is glorified while you are in the furnace, by your passive
graces; see that He is glorified when you have come forth from the furnace,
by your active graces. "Wherefore glorify you the Lord in the fires, even
the name of the Lord God of Israel." "When He has tried me, I shall come
forth as gold."
Nor must we overlook that path walking in which the Redeemer is so
manifestly glorified in His saints- even the way of a holy and cheerful
obedience to His commands. Were we to select a single word from the Bible
which we would desire to be distinctly, prominently, and constantly before
the eye of the believer, it would be- obedience. The stress which the Holy
Spirit has laid upon the duty is great, and the blessing and honor which the
Lord has attached to its observance, is immense and encouraging. It involves
every covenant mercy, and it is the great secret of all holiness, and
therefore of all happiness.
What the Lord once spoke to His ancient people, He speaks at the present to
all His spiritual Israel, "Now, therefore, if you will obey my voice indeed,
and keep my covenant, then you shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above
all people, for all the earth is mine. And you shall be unto me a kingdom of
priests, and a holy nation." And who does not trace the blessing which the
Lord has attached to obedience in the history of Abraham, when, at God's
command, be bound his son as a sacrifice upon the altar- "And in your seed
shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because you have obeyed my
voice." And see how the Lord confirmed the fact of his obedient walk, and
fulfilled the promise of blessing to his son Isaac, to whom He said,
"Sojourn in this land, and I will be with you, and will bless you; for unto
you, and unto your seed, I will give all these countries, and I will perform
the oath which I aware unto Abraham your father . . . because that Abraham
obeyed my voice, and kept my charge, my commandments, my statutes, and my
laws." Rich, too, is the blessing annexed to the promise, "If you be willing
and obedient, you shall eat of the good of the land." And solemn and
searching the word addressed by the holy prophet to the temporizing king,
"Has the Lord as great delight in burned offerings and sacrifices, as in
obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and
to hearken than the fat of rams."
As King in Zion, our adorable Lord Jesus delights to reign over a loving and
an obedient people. Thus He has made their obedience to His commands a test
of their love to His person- "If you love me, keep my commandments."
"Teaching them to observe all things whatever I have commanded you," was the
last charge given to His disciples. Now it is this keeping of His
commandments, this observance of what He has enjoined, that glorifies Him in
His saints. Coming to Him in our ignorance, glorifies Him as our Prophet;
coming to Him with our guilt, glorifies him as our Priest; and walking
obediently to His precepts, glorifies Him as our King. It places the crown
upon the head of His sovereignty, it recognizes the spiritual nature of His
kingdom, and it upholds the purity, majesty, and authority of His laws. It
becomes, then, the solemn and imperative duty of every believer to search
the will and testament of his dying, risen, and exalted Lord, to ascertain
all that He has enjoined upon his obedience in the way of precept and
command. For how can he be a good and an obedient subject, if be understands
not the laws of Christ's kingdom? Then, when the precept is clearly
revealed, and the command is distinctly made known, immediate, self-denying,
and cheerful obedience is to follow, as that path which, while it insures
the sweetest peace to the soul, brings the highest glory to Christ. Let
yours be an obedient walk, dear reader! Let your obedience be the fruit of
faith, the dictate of love. Permit no reserve in your obedience! let
it be full, honest, and complete. Search the New
Testament Scripture, and examine closely your own walk, and ascertain in
what particular your obedience to Christ is deficient. Be upright, honest,
and sincere in your inquiry. Let your fervent prayer be, "Lord, what will
You have me to do? Is there any precept of Your word slighted, any command
disobeyed, any cross not taken up? Is there any desire to withhold my neck
from Your yoke, or to withdraw my shoulder from Your burden, or to mark out
a smoother path than that which You have chosen and bid me walk in? Is there
any secret framing of excuse for my disobedience, any temporizing, any
carnal feeling, any worldly motive, any fear of man, any shrinking from
consequences? Lord, You know all things, You know that I love You. You are
precious to my soul, for You have borne my sins, endured my curse, carried
my cross; and in return do only ask, as an evidence of how much I owe, and
how much I love, that I should keep Your commandments, and follow Your
example. Now, Lord, take my poor heart, and let it be Yours, Yours only, and
Yours forever. Let Your sweet love constrain me to 'run in the way of Your
commandments,' for this will I do when You shall enlarge my heart." Then
will follow the precious fruits of obedience, even as the bud expands into
the blossom, and the blossom ripens into the fruit. There will be a growth,
a delightful expansion of the life of God in the soul! and with the increase
of the Divine life, there will be an increase of all the precious 'fruits of
the Spirit.' "Thus says the Lord, your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel! I
am the Lord your God, who teaches you to profit, who leads you by the way
that you should go. Oh that you had hearkened to my commandments! then had
your peace been as a river, and your righteousness as the waves of the sea."
See that your Redeemer is glorified in your obedience; that for the
happiness of your soul, and for the honor of Christ, you "stand complete in
all the will of God!"
The branch of our subject, thus imperfectly placed before the reader, is
deeply practical. In what a solemn and responsible position it places every
believer! "You are my witnesses, says the Lord." "I have created him for my
glory." "You are my servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified." Then,
how "very jealous for the Lord God of hosts" should we be! How vigilant,
lest in any degree, or in any way, we withhold from Christ the glory due
unto Him. There are many ways by which we may be betrayed into this grievous
sin- a careless walk- unmortified sin- self-indulgence- a light and volatile
spirit- a neglect of means- a distant walk with God- coldness of love
towards the saints. But especially mixing up with, and indulging in, a
sinful conformity to the world, its fashions, its pleasures, its literature,
its religion. Christian professor! can you rigidly conform to these
fashions- can you spend your hours over that novel- can you attend that
ball- can you move in that dance- can you embark in that enterprise, and
glorify Jesus by it? Put the question fairly, honestly, and closely to your
conscience, "Do I bring glory to Christ by this? Is my Redeemer thus
magnified in me before the world and the Church?" Oh, aim for a high
standard! Do not be a common-place professor. Do not be an ordinary
Christian. Shun not to be singular. Dare for the glory of Christ to come out
of the world, not to touch the unclean thing, and to be separate, set apart
for God alone. "Herein is my Father glorified, that you bear much fruit! so
shall you be my disciples." Thank God for the little, but, oh, aim for the
'much fruit!' -strong faith, ardent love, self-consuming zeal, unreserved
obedience, holy, and entire, and supreme surrender. "From me is your fruit
found." Your union with Christ, your living in Christ, your close adherence
to Christ, your constant drawing from Christ, will be found to involve the
happy secret of that great fruitfulness which brings most glory to the
Triune God. Come- drawn by grace, constrained by love, attracted by the
glory and the preciousness of Jesus- come now to that one' altar which
sanctifies both the giver and the gift,' and as you lay yourself upon it,
body, soul, and spirit, exclaim with the apostle, "Christ shall be magnified
in my body, whether it be by life or by death." The solemn vow is taken! The
holy surrender is made! It is seen, it is heard, it is ratified in heaven.
May you be so strengthened from above, "that the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ may be glorified in you, and you in Him, according to the grace of
God, even the Lord Jesus Christ," is the devout and fervent desire of one
who, with you, through time and through eternity, hopes to unite in the
grateful, adoring, and never ceasing hallelujah,
"Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable Gift!"