"The Prophetical Glory
of the Redeemer" by Octavius Winslow
These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and
spake of him. John 12:41
Isaiah said this because he saw Jesus' glory and spoke
about him. John 12:41
Isaiah was referring to Jesus when he made this
prediction, because he was given a vision of the Messiah's glory. John 12:41
How true is it that "the testimony of Jesus is the spirit
of prophecy!" "To Him gave all the prophets witness." Of Him, as of one only
glorious person, they delighted to testify- of Him, as of one only precious
subject, they delighted to speak. Never did the Divine Spirit rest upon them
with greater power- never did they strike their prophetic harps to strains
so high, so rich, so sweet, as when Emmanuel was their theme. And is it too
much to say, that magnificent as is the drapery in which their writings are
clothed- gorgeous as is the imagery, and sublime the doctrines, in which
these announcements are invested, they would possess no beauty, glory, or
sweetness, but for- Jesus?
The confidence and the joy of the Church has ever been the prospective view
she has had of the coming Messiah. Through the long vista of ages she saw
Him advancing; and though the vision was distant and dim, yet, persuaded of
the promise, she embraced it, and rested in it, believing that God was able
as He was willing to make good all that He had in covenant mercy pledged to
do. The incarnate God was her hope, her joy, her trust; and living or dying,
the "Consolation of Israel" was the pole-star on which the eye of her faith
was ever and immovably fixed. It pleased God to raise up a school of
prophets, whom He endowed with extraordinary powers of inspiration, filling
them with the Holy Spirit, whose especial office it was to feed this desire,
to animate this hope, and to strengthen this expectation of faith, by
keeping the glorious truth of the approaching Savior constantly and
prominently before the eye of the Church. "Of which salvation the prophets
have inquired and searched diligently, who prophesied of the grace that
should come unto you: searching what person, or what period of time the
Spirit of Christ who was in them did signify, when He testified beforehand
the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should follow."
That we are justified in looking into the prophetical Scriptures for
peculiar revelations of the glory of Christ will appear clear from a
reference to a few passages bearing upon this subject. Our Lord's
conversation with the two disciples journeying to Emmaus is strikingly in
point. In the first place, Jesus gently chides them for their lack of faith
in the prophetical writings relating to Himself. "O fools, and slow of heart
to believe all that the prophets have spoken." He then passes to the great
subject before Him, "And beginning at Moses, and all the prophets, He
expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself."
The same day, and on another occasion, appearing in their assembled midst,
"He said unto them, These are the words which I spoke unto you while I was
yet with you, that all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the
law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the Psalms concerning me. Then
opened He their understanding, that they might understand the Scriptures."
In a conversation He held with the Jews, how pointedly did He refer to His
glory as beaming from beneath the veil of the Mosaic writings! "Do not think
that I will accuse you to the Father: there is one that accuses you, even
Moses, in whom you trust. For had you believed Moses, you would have
believed me, for he wrote of me." And well did He exhort them to "search the
Scriptures; for in them you think you have eternal life: and they are they
which testify of me." Thus invited and encouraged, let us address ourselves
to the pleasing task of drawing aside the prophetical veil, thus revealing
the hidden glories of our Emmanuel. The unfolding of this subject will be
found to present a brief exposition of those striking words of the
evangelist: "These things said Elijah, when he saw His glory, and spoke of
Him."
We commence with the testimony which the prophetical Scriptures bring to the
doctrine of our Lord's Deity. Clearer intimations of the Divinity of Christ
are nowhere found than in the Old Testament writings. "In the year that king
Uzziah died, I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up,
and His train filled the temple. Above it stood the seraphim: each one had
six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his
feet, and with twain he did fly. And one cried unto another, and said, Holy,
holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts: the whole earth is full of His glory. And
the posts of the door moved at the voice of Him that cried, and the house
was filled with smoke. Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am
a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips:
for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts." What an august
revelation of the glory of Christ's Godhead was this which broke upon the
view of the lowly prophet! How instructive is each particular of his
beatific vision! Mark the profound humility of the seraphim- they veiled
with their wings their faces and their feet. They were in the presence of
Jesus. They saw the King in His beauty, and covered themselves.
Bat the effect of this view of our Lord's Divine glory upon the mind of the
prophet, is still more impressive: "Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone;
because I am a man of unclean lips ... for my eyes have seen the King, the
Lord of hosts." What prostrated his soul thus low in the dust? What filled
him with this self-abasement? What overwhelmed him with this keen sense of
his vileness? Oh, it was the unclouded view he had of the essential glory of
the Son of God! And thus will it ever be. The beaming forth of Christ's
glory in the soul, reveals its hidden evil; the knowledge of this evil lays
the believer low before God with the confession, "I abhor myself. Woe is me,
for I am undone!" Beloved, let this truth be ever present to your mind, that
as we increasingly see glory in Jesus, we shall increasingly see that there
is no glory in ourselves. Jesus is the Sun which reveals the pollutions and
defilements that are within. The chambers of abomination are all closed
until Christ shines in upon the soul. Oh, then it is these deep-seated and
long-veiled deformities are revealed; and we, no longer gazing with a
complaisant eye upon self, sink in the dust before God, overwhelmed with
shame, and covered with confusion of face. Holy posture! Blessed spectacle!
A soul prostrate before the glory of the incarnate God! All high and lofty
views of its own false glory annihilated by clear and close views of the
true glory of Jesus. As when the sun appears, all the less lights vanish
into darkness, so when Jesus rises in noontide glory upon the soul, all
other glory retires, and He alone fixes the eye, and fills the mind. "With
twain they covered their faces, and with twain they covered their feet."
Their own perfections and beauty were not to be seen in the presence of the
glory of the Lord. How much more profound should be the humility and
self-abasement of man! Have we covered ourselves- not with the pure wings of
the holy cherubim- but with sackcloth and ashes, before the Lord? Have we
sought to veil- not our beauties, for beauties we have none; but our
innumerable and flagrant deformities, even the "spots upon our feasts of
love," the sins of our best and holiest things; and, renouncing all
self-glory, have we sunk, as into nothing, before God? Oh, we are yet
strangers to the vision of Christ's glory, if we have not! If the
constellations of human gifts and attainments, distinctions and usefulness,
on which unsanctified and unmortified self so delights to gaze, have not
retired into oblivion, the Sun of Righteousness has yet to rise upon our
souls with healing in His wings.
His glory as the God-man is reflected with equal clearness from the
prophetical page. Thus was it predicted that the eternal Son of God should
assume an inferior and a human form. "Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and
bear a son, and shall call His name Emmanuel." "Unto us a child is born,
unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon His shoulder: and
His name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, The mighty God, The
everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace." Could any truth be more
emphatically or distinctly stated? Oh, what love in the Father does it
unfold, that not only He should have promised His dear Son, but that He
should have held out that promise at so distant a period, and in such terms,
as would lay an unequivocal foundation for the faith, hope, and joy of the
saints, in all ages of the world!
His Divine anointing, constituting an important feature of His official
glory, and opening a channel of the most costly blessing to the Church,
forms a distinct and sacred theme of the prophetical writings. "The Spirit
of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord has anointed me." "And there
shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out
of his roots: and the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him." This
anointing was upon the Redeemer, in infinite richness and fragrance. "God
gives not the Spirit by measure unto him." As essentially Jehovah, He needed
it not; but as the great High Priest, and the mediatorial Head of His
"Church, which is His body, the fulness of Him that fills all in all," it
was necessary that the anointing oil should be upon Him in its utmost
plenitude. As one with Him, all the members alike participate. "It is like
the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down upon the beard, even
Aaron's beard: that went to the skirts of his garment;" even to the lowest
believer- Ah! and he that lies the lowest, obtains the most of this
"precious ointment," as it descends from Jesus: the hand of faith that
touches but the hem of His garment, receives from Him who was "anointed with
the oil of gladness above His fellows." Dear reader, are you professedly one
with Jesus and His saints? then seek, oh diligently seek, a large and still
larger degree of this holy and fragrant anointing. Rest not short of it. Do
not be satisfied to proceed another step without it. Do not be content with
a mere profession, having a name to live, yet lacking all the essential
evidences of real life, while discovering many of the fearful attributes of
actual death.
The possession of this anointing of the Holy Spirit will decide the
momentous, and perhaps with you doubtful, question of your union with
Christ. Men will take knowledge of you that you have been with Jesus, and
learned from Him. Your life will be a reflection, faint at best, yet a
reflection of His holy life. You will bear some resemblance to the
"altogether lovely" one; your spirit will breathe His meekness; your
demeanor will be stamped with His gentleness; your whole conversation will
be seasoned with His grace; all your "garments will smell of myrrh, and
aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces;" an unction will pervade your
prayers, a power irresistible will accompany your labors, and in every place
you will be a sweet savor of Christ, blessed and a blessing.
Christ, the foundation of the Church, was a truth, the great glory of which
the evangelical prophet also saw and spoke of. "Thus says the Lord God,
Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious
corner-stone, a sure foundation." How identical of the Redeemer is this
splendid prophecy! Every word in the passage, and every quality of the
figure, is expressive of some essential part of His character and work.
Jesus is fitly compared to a "stone" for strength and durability. He is a
"Savior, and a great one" "mighty to save." "I have laid help upon one that
is mighty." If it were probable that the fact of His Deity should be
announced in a voice of thunder from the eternal throne, can we suppose it
would be uttered in terms more decided and explicit than those which fell
upon the ear of the exiled evangelist from the lips of Christ Himself? "I am
the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the ending, says the Lord, who
is, and who was, and who is to come, the Almighty." And what a needed truth
is this! None but an Almighty ransom could have saved from going down to the
pit. Jesus is our ransom, and Jesus is the Almighty.
The Redeemer is not only a stone, but a "tried stone." The grand experiment
has been made- the great test has been applied, and, to answer all the ends
for which the Lord God laid it in Zion, it has proved completely adequate.
Never was a foundation tried as this. In the eternal purpose of Redemption,
Omnipotence tried it. In the Divine mind there existed no lurking suspicion,
no embarrassing uncertainty, as to the result. The Father knew all that this
foundation was to sustain, and well He knew, too, that it was capable of
sustaining all. Stupendous were the consequences. His own glory and the
honor of His government were involved; the salvation of His elect was to be
secured; death, with all its horrors, was to be abolished; life, with all
its immortal, untold glories, was to be revealed; hell was to be closed, and
heaven opened to all believers. With such momentous realities pending- with
such mighty and glorious results
at stake, the Eternal mind, in its purpose of grace and glory, would lay for
a foundation a "tried stone." Blessed Emmanuel! how effulgently does your
glory beam from beneath Your prophetical veil! You are that "tried stone,"-
tried by the Father when He laid upon You all His people's sins and
transgressions, bruised You and put You to grief. Tried by the law, when it
exacted and received from You Your utmost obedience to its precepts. Tried
by Divine justice, when it kindled around You its fiercest flame, yet
consumed You not. Tried by the Church, built upon You so securely that the
gates of hell shall never prevail against her. Tried by poor sinners, who
have brought their burdens of guilt to Your blood, and have found pardon and
peace. Tried by believers, who have taken their trials to Your sympathy,
their sorrows to Your love, their wounds to Your healing, their weakness to
your strength, their emptiness to Your fulness, their petitions to Your ear,
and have never, never been disappointed. Oh yes, You are that "tried stone,"
to whom I would come moment by moment.
"A precious corner stone." Of whom does the prophet speak this, but of
Jesus, compared with whom nothing is precious? He alone is worthy of the
term, who alone can smooth life's rugged path, sweeten life's bitter trials,
lighten life's heavy burdens, and this by daily and hourly emanations of His
own life, grace, and preciousness. Oh, how precious- what language can
express it? Is this precious stone to him who, conscious of his vileness,
poverty, and nothingness, or with a spirit oppressed with deep trial, or
bleeding from painful bereavement, wades to it through the billows,
exclaiming, "When my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the Rock that is
higher than I." Precious in His all-atoning blood; precious in His
all-justifying righteousness; precious in His infinite fulness; precious in
every office that He fills; in every work that He performs; in every promise
that He makes; is Christ to him who, finding all other foundations but as
sliding sand, builds his hope of glory upon the incarnate God. "To you,
therefore, that believe, He is precious."
A "corner stone," too, is our glorious Redeemer. The important position
which this occupies in the spiritual building- its essential relation to the
compactness, strength, and durability of the whole fabric, we fear, is not
duly considered by many who are professedly "living stones in the spiritual
house." And yet how momentous and how holy is the instruction it conveys!
The corner stone is that which unites the parts of the edifice: it is to the
building what the key stone is to the arch; it imparts unity, symmetry, and
strength. The Lord Jesus has been the uniting stone of the Church in all
ages. The saints of the Patriarchal, Levitical, and Christian Churches, all
meet and form, in Him, one glorious temple of the living God. "No longer
strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the
household of God:" they are "built upon the foundation of the apostles and
prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief Corner Stone; in whom all the
building, fitly framed together, grows unto a holy temple in the Lord," and
thus becomes "a habitation of God through the Spirit."
To allude to another figure employed by the Holy Spirit to illustrate and
enforce the same blessed truth- the unity of the Church- the Lord Jesus is
declared to be the one spiritual HEAD of His "Church, who is His body, the
fulness of Him that fills all in all." Thus in itself one by its oneness
with Him, it is represented as "growing up into Him in all things, who is
the Head, even Christ: from whom the whole body, fitly joined together, and
compacted by that which every joint supplies, according to the effectual
working in the measure of every part, makes increase of the body unto the
edifying of itself in love." "There" (in Christ)- "is neither Jew nor Greek,
there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female, for you
are all one in Christ Jesus," and "Christ is all and in all." To the
consideration of this holy and precious theme- THE UNITY OF THE CHURCH- let
us for a few moments turn our attention.
That there are divisions in the Church of God, visible and painful; that the
one body is sadly dismembered, the seamless robe rudely torn and disfigured,
is a truth too glaring to conceal, and almost too painful and humiliating to
acknowledge. Alas that it should be so! Oh, how much is the unity of the
Church lost sight of in the din of religious controversy, and in the heat of
party zeal! How does brother look coldly upon brother, and minister glance
suspiciously at minister, and church stand aloof from church! Ought this so
to be?
And to what may it in a great degree be traced? We believe, to a
forgetfulness of the truth, that all true believers are "one in Christ
Jesus;" that the blood of the Lamb is the bond of union of the saints; that
He is the "corner stone," uniting all the parts of the one edifice; and
that, if built upon Him, we are one with that Church, and that Church is one
with Christ.
The unity of the mystical Church of God consists not in a unity of creed. A
higher, a diviner, and a more endearing principle unites her than this.
Ardently as it should be desired, and fervently as it should be prayed for,
that the promised day of millennial blessedness may speedily come, when the
"watchmen shall see eye to eye," when from every battlement in Zion the
silver trumpets shall emit one sweet harmonious sound; yet, even then, not
more essentially will the Church of God be one than she is now. True, her
unity will be more visible, her divisions will be healed, her bleeding
wounds will be stanched, her internal conflicts will have ceased; "Ephraim
shall not envy Judah, and Judah shall not vex Ephraim any more;" and the
harsh sounds of strife, now so loud and discordant, be lost in the sweet
strains of peace and love floating from every lip; yet is the Church at this
moment essentially one and indivisible. Not, then, in a unity of creed, or
of ecclesiastical polity, does the real unity of the Church consist, but in
the "unity of the Spirit," that unity sustained by the "bond of peace." She
has been baptized, not into one form of church government, or into one
system of doctrinal truth, but "by one Spirit we are all baptized into one
body, whether we are Jews or Gentiles, whether we are bond or free; and have
all been made to drink into the same Spirit." The "one Spirit" regenerating
all the children of God, fashioning their hearts alike, uniting them by a
living faith to the Head, equally dwelling in, teaching and guiding,
comforting and sanctifying them, demonstrates the perfect oneness of
Christ's body. And thus, then, when an individual crosses our path in whom
the spirit of Jesus breathes, who manifests a union to the Head, and who
speaks the language and bears the image of the Father, and a resemblance to
the one family, be his climate and color, be his name and minor points of
creed, what they may, it becomes our solemn duty, as it is our great
privilege, to extend to him the recognition, and to greet him with the
tender and holy affection of the one brotherhood. In the Lord's eye he is a
member of His body, and he should be so in ours. And if, refusing to own the
relationship, we withdraw the hand of Christian love, we render our own
regeneration doubtful, we wound and grieve and deny the Spirit in him. It is
written, yes, it is written by the pen of the Holy Spirit, "Whoever believes
that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God; and every one that loves Him that
begat, loves Him also that is begotten by Him."
I would recur to what may be considered one of the most fruitful and painful
causes of the defective Christian union which so much mars the beauty and
impairs the moral power of the Church of God in our day. I allude to the
great distance from Christ which characterizes the spiritual walk of so many
believers. The effect of this upon the operation of Christian love is
obvious. A distance in spirit from the Head, leads to a distance in spirit
from the members of the body. As with the beams of the sun, the further they
recede from their center, the wider are they separated from each other; so
it is with the "children of the light." Each believer is a solar beam- an
emanation from the Sun of Righteousness. The more remote he lives from
Christ- the center of the soul- the wider will he be alienated in affection
and in spirit from the members of Christ. His eye less simply and constantly
looking unto Jesus, his sense of union to, and communion with, Him weakened,
love waning, faith declining, there will of necessity be a lessening
attachment to the Church of Christ. But the converse, oh, how precious! The
rays of light reflected back to the sun, meeting and rejoicing in their
center, meet and rejoice in themselves. So with the saints. Drawn closer to
Jesus- our wandering steps retraced- restored by those sanctifying
unfoldings of the cross, which the Spirit delights to impart, the eye of
penitence and faith, swimming though it be in tears, once more turned on
Christ, love rekindled in the heart, oh, how will the affections, in their
fondest and holiest power, go forth towards "all them who love our Lord
Jesus Christ in sincerity!" His image will be their passport to our hearts;
His name will secure their welcome to our homes.
Have you felt, dear reader, the sanctifying, cementing power of the
Redeemer's love in your heart? Then, with all affectionate fidelity is the
question proposed- how far do you deem yourself justified in regarding with
frigid affection and distance of spirit any believer in Jesus, or in
declining communion at the throne of grace, or alliance and confederation in
the cause of our common Lord, with any portion of the Church of God, on the
plea of a lack of ecclesiastical uniformity, or unity of doctrinal creed as
a basis of union? Is this the unity of the Church spoken of in the word of
God? Are you prepared for the result to which this plea for separation will
lead you? Are you willing to defend it on a dying-bed, and go with it to the
judgment-seat of Christ? Examine it in the light of God's word, and see
where it springs, what is its nature, and what are its tendencies. Remember
the words of our Lord, in His reply to the disciple who frowned upon an
expression of zeal for the glory of Christ, because it was not from one of
their own party- "And Jesus said, Forbid him not; for there is no man who
shall do a miracle in my name that can lightly speak evil of me." And is it
not a solemn thought, that in turning our back upon any holy, consistent
member of Christ, we turn our back upon Christ Himself; and that in standing
aloof from any holy confederation or Christian enterprise for the
advancement of His truth and kingdom, because its promoters follow not with
us, our very neutrality may be justly interpreted as criminal indifference,
and our refusal to lend our cooperation, an act of hostility to Him whose
subjects we profess to be! Oh that for the "divisions of Reuben there were
great searchings of heart!" Yes, Jesus is the "corner stone" of the one
Church, and the more firmly we build on, and the more closely we adhere to
Him, the more tenderly and closely will the hearts of all the saints be
"knit together in love." Precious Jesus! draw us nearer to Yourself; then
shall we be drawn nearer to Your one family, redeemed by Your most precious
blood!
"A sure foundation," is the last quality of excellence specified concerning
this precious Stone. As if, in so momentous a matter as the salvation of the
soul, to remove all lingering doubt from the mind, to annihilate all
imaginary and shadowy conceptions of Jesus, Jehovah, the great Builder of
the Church, declares the foundation thus laid to be a real and substantial
one. Confidently here may the weary rest, and the sinner build his hope of
heaven. All is sure. Sure that the word he credits is true- sure that the
invitation that woos him is sincere- sure that the welcome extended to him
is cordial. Sure, in coming to Jesus, of free forgiveness, of full
justification, of complete and eternal acceptance with the reconciled God.
Sure that, in renouncing all self-dependence, and building high his hope of
glory on this foundation, he "shall not be ashamed nor confounded, world
without end." All, too, is sure to the believer in the covenant of grace, of
which Jesus is the Surety and Mediator. Every promise is sure- the full
supply of all our needs- the daily efficacy of the atoning blood- the answer
to our prayers, though long delayed- the hope of being forever with Jesus-
all, all is certain and sure, because based on Jesus, and springing from the
heart of the unchangeable God, and confirmed by the oath of Him who has
said, "Once have I sworn by my holiness, that I will not lie unto David."
There is yet another prophecy of our glorious Redeemer, as remarkable for
its literal fulfilment as for its affecting nature and solemn instruction.
It is that He should be a "stone of stumbling and a rock of offence," and
that Jew and Gentile should be confederated against Him. "And He shall be .
. . . for a stone of stumbling, and for a rock of offence to both the houses
of Israel." "Israel, who followed after the law of righteousness, have not
attained to the law of righteousness. Why? Because they sought it not by
faith, but as it were by the works of the law: for they stumbled at that
stumbling stone; as it is written, Behold, I lay in Zion a stumbling stone
and rock of offence." What a literal fulfilment has this prophecy received!
To the Jews, once God's favorite people; now a "nation scattered and
peeled," wandering over the face of the earth- for where have human
footsteps trodden that the Israelite has not penetrated? "without a king,
and without a prince, and without a sacrifice, and without an image, and
without an ephod, and without teraphim," but in whose history promises of
mercy and restoration are strangely blended with predictions of their
apostasy and dispersion; even to them has the Messiah ever been, as He now
is, a "stone of stumbling and a rock of offence."
But not Jews only- Jews and Gentiles confederated together against the Son
of God, form a gloomy portion of prophetic announcement, containing a yet
more mournful shadow- a large portion of the Gospel record. "The kings of
the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together against the
Lord, and against His anointed." "And the same day Pilate and Herod were
made friends together, for before they were at enmity between themselves."
Compare these passages with Acts 4. 8-11. How striking and solemn the
instruction conveyed in this incident! Pilate and Herod, standing in the
attitude of the deadliest hate to each other, are now made friends!
And what strange, but mighty power has thus suddenly subdued their
animosity, and turned their hatred into love? What mystic chain has drawn
and bound together these hostile rulers? Their mutual and deep enmity
against Jesus! Believers in Christ! are the enemies of our glorious
Redeemer, inspired by a natural and kindred feeling of hatred, induced to
forget their private quarrels, and merge their differences in one common
confederation to crush the Son of God, the object of their mutual hostility-
and shall not the friends of the Redeemer, constrained by that Divine
principle of love which dwells in the hearts of all who are born of God,
quench their heart-burnings, bury their antipathies, and draw more closely
together, in one holy, vigorous, and determined alliance to exalt the Son of
God, the glorious and precious Object of their mutual affection? Oh, if
Jesus is the bond of union to those who hate Him, how much more should He be
the bond of union to those who love Him! Beneath His cross how should all
unholy jealousy, and bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and
uncharitableness, be mourned over, confessed, abhorred, and renounced by the
children of the one family; and how should all who love the Lord Jesus
Christ in sincerity, be unhesitatingly and cordially recognized as such,
thus "endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace!"
What a distinct prophetical view bad Isaiah also of the NATURE AND GLORY OF
THE REDEEMER'S WORK! He thus foretells it: "Behold, the Lord has proclaimed
unto the end of the world, Say you to the daughter of Zion, Behold, your
salvation comes; behold, His reward is with Him, and His work before Him."
And he thus describes it: "The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because
the Lord has anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek: He has sent
me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and
the opening of the prison to those who are bound." We can with difficulty
realize, as the eye traces this evangelical declaration, that we are reading
the prophecy, and not its fulfilment; the shadowy writings of the Old, and
not the noontide revelation of the New Testament, so luminous with the
Gospel, so fragrant with the name, so replete with the work, of Jesus is it.
Oh, what tidings of joy and gladness are here to the heart-broken, burdened
captive! Could announcements be more suited to his case, more appropriate to
his circumstances, more soothing to his heart? Here, from the very heart of
the Bible, Jesus Himself speaks. And never, in the days of His flesh, when
preaching from the mountain, or in the synagogue, were sweeter sounds
uttered from His lips than these. This was the work that was before Him, to
seek and to save lost sinners, to save them as sinners, to rend asunder
their chains, to deliver them from their captivity, and to introduce them
into the glorious liberty of the sons of God.
THE QUIET, LOWLY, UNOSTENTATIOUS CHARACTER OF JESUS, blending with the most
exquisite tenderness of heart, the pen of the evangelical prophet with equal
vividness and beauty portrays. "He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause His
voice to be heard in the street. A bruised reed shall He not break, and the
smoking flax shall He not quench." Compare this beautiful prophecy with
Matt. 12. 15-20. Could the fulfilment be more perfect? Was not the entire
life of our Lord in exact harmony with this prophetical portrait? Did not
the glory of His lowly life, which Isaiah saw with a prophet's far-reaching
eye, illumine, as with a living light, every step and every act of His
history! Verily it did! Truly might He say, "Learn from me, for I am meek
and lowly in heart." The most sublime miracles, the most stupendous
exertions of power, and the most brilliant displays of philanthropy, on
which a self-aggrandizing man would have established successfully his claims
to profound and universal homage, He only referred to as sustaining the
glory of His Father in His Divine mission; while all earthly honor and
temporal power that might have accrued separately to Himself He utterly
rejected, veiling His own person in the deep folds of that humility which
clothed Him as a garment. Shrinking from the intense gaze of a delighted
multitude, and from the murmuring breath of popular applause, He would
vanish as in a moment from the scene of His benevolence, either to lavish
His boundless compassion on other and more wretched objects of suffering and
woe, or to hide Himself amid the gloom and solitude of the desert. Never was
humility like Yours, meek and lowly Lamb of God! Subdue this hated self in
us- lay low this pride- suppress these inward risings, and draw, in fairer
and deeper lines, Your own image on our souls!
The limits of this chapter will not permit us any further to linger amid
these delightful twilight unfoldings of the Redeemer's glory; else it would
be easy, and perhaps profitable, to show how distinctly were foretold, and
how literally were fulfilled, all the events and circumstances associated
with His mysterious humiliation, sufferings, and death. There are, however,
two points connected with Isaiah's unfolding of the prophetical glory of the
Redeemer, too instructive in the spiritual and important truth which they
convey to be entirely overlooked.
It will be observed, that John observes of Isaiah that he saw the glory of
Christ. "These things said Elijah, when he saw His glory." The glory of the
Redeemer has ever been an object visible to the spiritual eye. What the
evangelist here records of the prophet, he also avers of himself and his
fellow disciples. "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we
beheld His glory." Here is a point of vital moment, entering deeply into the
very soul of experimental Christianity. May the Spirit of all truth give us
a clear and solemn perception of it!
If a man sees not the glory of Christ, we hesitate not to say of him, that
with regard to all other spiritual objects he is totally blind- he is yet a
stranger to the illuminating grace of the Holy Spirit. To see the Redeemer's
glory, the eye must be spiritual; a spiritual object being only discerned by
a spiritual organ. Hence the apostle prays in behalf of the Ephesian
Christians, "That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may
give unto you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him:
that the eyes of your understanding being enlightened." So self-evident is
this truth, that a lengthened argument to establish it would seem
unnecessary. As an intellectual mind alone can grapple with an abstruse
problem in science, and as a mechanical genius alone is fitted to comprehend
the movements of a complicated piece of mechanism, so, in revealed truth
there must be an adaptation of the mind to the nature of the truth
investigated. The eyes of the understanding must be enlightened; the soul
must be brought into harmony with Divine truth, or rather into harmony with
the God of truth.
We are willing to concede, that to a man of intellect and taste, there is
much of the Scriptures of truth peculiarly and powerfully attractive. The
literature of the Bible, confessedly of the loftiest character, is
especially alluring to such a mind. The beauty of its diction- the boldness
of its conception- the richness of its imagery- the profoundness of its
philosophy- the sublimity of its poetry- the antiquity of its history,
conspire to throw around it an interest and a charm peculiarly fascinating
to a man of profound thought, to the philosopher, the poet, and the
historian. It is just possible enough for an individual to study the Bible
as he would study any branch of human science, or investigate the
authenticity of any historical document: he may perceive the beauty of its
evidence, and feel the power of its demonstration, and this shall be the
utmost limit of his knowledge of the word of God! The "sword of the Spirit"
maybe so sheathed in the intellect, or wreathed with the flowers of a poetic
fancy, that the heart may never have felt the keenness of its double edge,
piercing and separating it from its sinful and idolatrous self. "For the
word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints
and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intentions of the heart."
We will venture a step further. As a natural man, I may, on certain
indisputable evidence, admit the Bible to be a record from God. I may give
to its sublime revelations my firm credence, to its Divine character my
profound reverence, to its pure ethics my warmest admiration, and to its
holy doctrines my strongest adherence and most zealous advocacy. I may
believe Jesus to be no impostor, and His religion no cunningly devised
fable, and His name the only name given under heaven whereby we may be
saved, and yet remain totally blind to the true glory of the Redeemer! All
the while that I am thus examining the outworks of Christianity, or
traversing the outer courts of the great sanctuary of truth, I have not yet
taken a single step within the sanctuary of my own bosom, exploring its
hidden plague, and searching out that direst of all evils that ever tainted
and ruined a finite creature- the heart's natural, deep, and deadly enmity
against God! Blind to my own guilt, wretchedness, and woe, is it a thing
incredible that I should be blind to the true glory of the Savior; and that
to me His obedience, sufferings, and death- facts of transcendent magnitude
and importance, interwoven with my dearest interests, and kindling an
undying light around my every step to eternity- should be to me but as the
dreams of my boyhood? So true is it, "the natural man receives not the
things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him: neither can
he know them, because they are spiritually discerned."
But, enlightened by the Spirit of God, the believer beholds the glory of
Jesus. Brought to see no glory in himself, yes, nothing but deformity in
that on which the eye once so complacently rested; the glory of the
Redeemer, as it is reflected in His person, in His atoning blood and
justifying righteousness, His infinite fulness of grace to pardon and to
sanctify, fills now the entire scope of his moral vision, and lifts his soul
in admiring and adoring thoughts of the holiness and love of God!
More than this, such is its transforming influence, he comes to be a
partaker, in a degree, of that very glory which has arrested his eye and
ravished his heart. On him the glory of the Lord has shined, the Sun of
Righteousness has risen, he rises from the dust, and shines arrayed in
garments of light from Christ's reflecting light. A sight of Jesus
assimilates the soul to His Spirit: a contemplation of His beauty transforms
the believer more and more into the "child of the light;" and thus
perpetually "looking unto Jesus," the path he treads kindles and glows with
an increasing effulgence, until its luster expands into perfect, cloudless
day. "We all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord,
are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit
of the Lord."
The medium through which the spiritual eye beholds the glory of Christ, is
faith. It is a hidden glory until the Eternal Spirit imparts this mighty
principle to the soul. The eye of reason cannot discern it, the eye of
intellect and of sense cannot behold it- it remains a veiled thing, 'dark
with excessive brightness,' until God the Holy Spirit utters His voice, "Let
there be light." "Abraham," says Christ, "rejoiced to see my day: and he saw
it, and was glad." At that remote period, how did he see it? -by faith.
Through the long and dreary vista of advancing ages he saw the day dawning,
the sun rising. By faith he beheld Jesus approaching. He saw His blood, His
righteousness, and his own interest there, "and he was glad." The beamy
prospect dilated the patriarch's heart with joy. Oh yes, a sight of Jesus by
faith, be it distant and dim, be it shadowy and imperfect, fills the soul
with ineffable gladness, lights up its onward way, sweetens its solitude;
enlivens its loneliness, and soothes it amid its deepest sorrows.
Isaiah not only beheld the glory of Christ, but he also "spoke of it." While
he mused upon the wondrous sight, "the fire burned, then spoke he with his
tongue." He could not but speak of that which he saw and felt. And who can
behold the glory of the Redeemer, and not speak of it? Who can see His
beauty and not extol it- who can taste His love and not laud it? "Come,"
will be the invitation, "see a man who told me all things that ever I did:
is not this the Christ?" The Church of old, as her eye wandered over the
beauties of her Lord, broke forth in expressions of wonder and praise; and,
after particularizing and extolling these beauties, she then exclaims, as if
all language were exhausted, "Yes, He is altogether lovely. This is my
beloved, and this is my
friend." "In His temple does every one speak of His glory." So did the sweet
singer of Israel. "I will speak of the glorious honor of Your majesty, and
of Your wondrous works. And men shall speak of the might of Your terrible
acts: and I will declare Your greatness. They shall abundantly utter the
memory of Your great goodness, and shall sing of Your righteousness. They
shall speak of the glory of Your kingdom, and talk of Your power; to make
known to the sons of men His mighty acts, and the glorious majesty of His
kingdom." "We beheld His glory," is the testimony of John. And in his
preface to his First Epistle he could testify, "That which we have seen and
heard (of the Word of life) declare we unto you." Yes, the saints of the
Most High must speak of the King in His beauty. They are constrained to show
forth His praise, and tell of His love and loveliness, who is to them more
precious than the gold of Ophir; yes, dearer than life itself. The Pharisee
may murmur, the worldling may scorn, and the cold-hearted professor may
rebuke; yet, "if these should hold their peace," who have been redeemed by
His most precious blood, and who are looking forward to His second
appearing, as an event which will fully introduce them to His glory, and
conform them to His likeness, "the stones would immediately cry out."
Some important CONCLUSIONS flow from the subject which it has been the
attempt of this chapter to unfold. The first that it suggests to the mind
is, the perfect harmony of the Old and the New Testaments, thus confirming
our faith in the Divine authenticity of the Scriptures of truth. Upon what
other ground can we account for this singular agreement of the Word with
itself, and for this exact and literal fulfilment of its predictions, but on
that of its divinity? "Your word is truth," is the glorious and triumphant
inference fairly deducible from a fact so striking and self-evident as this.
And in what particular is this beautiful harmony especially seen? -in
exalting the Lamb of God. The Old and the New Testament Scriptures of truth
do for Christ, what Pilate and Herod did against Him- they confederate
together. They unite in a holy alliance, in a sublime unity of purpose, to
show forth the glory of the incarnate God. Divine book! Precious volume!
Behold an illustration of what the Church of the living God should be, a
transparent body, illumined with the glory of Immanuel, and scattering its
beams of light and beauty over the surface of a lost and benighted world.
How much does a perfect representation of the glory of the Redeemer by the
Church depend upon her visible union! A mirror broken into a thousand
fragments, cannot reflect the glory of the sun with the same brilliancy,
power, and effect, as if a perfect whole. Nor can the Church of God,
dismembered, divided, and broken, present to the world the same harmonious,
convincing, and effective testimony to the glory of Jesus, as when, in her
unimpaired oneness, she is seen "looking forth as the morning, fair as the
moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners." Oh then, by
all that is fragrant in the name of Jesus, by all that is sanctifying in His
glory and attractive in Isis cross, by all that is sweet and persuasive in
Christian love, by all that is solemn in the near approach of death and
eternity, and by all that is blissful in the hope of eternal life, springing
from the one atonement, reader, seek to promote the visible unity of
Christ's Church. Resolve, beneath the cross, and by the grace of God, that
you will not be a hindrance to the accomplishment of so blessed, so holy an
end. Hold the faith with a firm hand, but hold it in righteousness. Speak
the truth with all boldness, but speak it in love. Concede to others what
you claim for yourself- the right of private judgment, and the free exercise
of an enlightened conscience. And where you see the image of Jesus
reflected, the love of Jesus influencing, and the glory of Jesus simply and
solely sought, there extend your hand, offer your heart, breathe your
blessing and your prayer. Oh, this were to be like Christ; and to be like
Christ is grace below, and glory above!
This subject, of momentous importance, admits of an individual application.
Reader, what do you think of Christ? What are your apprehensions of His
glory, as it has thus far been placed before you? Do you see beauty,
surpassing beauty, in Emmanuel? Has His glory broken upon your view? Has it
beamed in upon your mind? Has a sight of Jesus, seen by faith, cast you in
the dust, exclaiming, "I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear: but
now my eye sees You. Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and
ashes"? Your honest reply to these searching questions will decide the
nature and the ground of your present hope for eternity. On the confines of
that eternity you are now standing. Solemn consideration! It is of infinite
moment, then, that your views of the Son of God should be thoroughly
examined, sifted, and compared with the inspired word. A crown now lowered
on your brow, a kingdom stretched at your feet, a world gained and grasped,
were as infants' baubles, compared with the tremendous interest involved in
the question, "What do you think of Christ?" And what do you think of Him?
Is He all your salvation and all your desire? Have you laid sinful self and
righteous self beneath His cross? and in all your poverty, nakedness, and
vileness, have you received Him as made of God unto you, "wisdom and
righteousness, sanctification and redemption"? Does His glory dim all other
glory; and does His beauty eclipse all other beauty in your eye? Can you
point to Him and say, in the humble confidence of faith and joy of love,
"This is my Beloved, and this is my Friend"? Eternal God! but for the
righteousness of Your Son, I sink in all my pollution! but for the atoning
blood of Emmanuel, I perish in all my guilt! Holy Father, look not on me,
but behold my Shield, and look upon the face of your Anointed! And when Your
glory passes by- the glory of Your majesty, Your holiness, and Your justice-
then put me in the cleft of the rock, and cover me with Your hand while You
pass by.
Cultivate frequent and devout contemplations of the glory of Christ. Immense
will be the benefit accruing to your soul. The mind thus preoccupied,
filled, and expanded, will be enabled to present a stronger resistance to
the ever advancing and insidious encroachments of the world without. No
place will be found for vain thoughts, and no desire or time for carnal
enjoyments. Oh, how crucifying and sanctifying are clear views of the glory
of Emmanuel! How emptying, humbling, and abasing! With the patriarch, we
then exclaim, "I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes." And with the
prophet, "Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips . .
. My eyes have seen the King." And with the apostle, "God forbid that I
should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world
is crucified unto me, and I unto the world." Oh, then, aim to get your mind
filled with enlarged and yet expanding views of the glory of the Redeemer.
Let it, in all the discoveries it affords of the Divine mind and majesty, be
the one subject of your thoughts, the one theme of your conversation. Place
no limit to your knowledge of Christ. Ever consider that you have but read
the preface to the volume, you have but touched the margin of the sea.
Stretching far away beyond you, are undiscovered beauties, and precious
views, and sparkling glories, each encouraging your advance, inviting your
research, and asking the homage of your faith, the tribute of your love, and
the dedication of your life. Go forward, then! The glories that yet must be
revealed to you in a growing knowledge of Jesus, what imagination can
conceive, what pen can describe them? "You shall see greater things than
these," is the promise that bids you advance. Jesus stands ready to unveil
all the beauties of His person- and to admit you into the very arcade of His
love. There is not a chamber of His heart that He will not throw open to
you; not a blessing that He will not bestow upon you; not a glory that He
will not show to you. You shall see greater things than you have yet seen:
greater depths of sin in your fallen nature shall be revealed; deeper sense
of the cleansing efficacy of the atoning blood shall be felt; clearer views
of your acceptance in the Beloved; greater discoveries of God's love; and
greater depths of grace and glory in Jesus shall be enjoyed. Your communion
with God shall be closer, and more the fruit of adopting love in your heart;
your feet shall be as hinds' feet, and you shall walk on your high places.
Your "peace shall flow as a river, and your righteousness as the waves of
the sea." Sorrow shall wound you less deeply; affliction shall press you
less heavily; tribulation shall affect you less keenly; all this, and
infinitely more, will result from your deeper knowledge of Jesus. Ah, wonder
not that the heaving, panting, thirsting soul of the apostle exclaimed,
"Doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord. That I may know Him,
and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings,
being made conformable unto His death." "Then shall we know, if we follow on
to know the Lord."
Let your life be a clear reflection of the glory of the Redeemer. The saints
of God are the only witnesses to this glory- the only reflectors the Lord
has in this dark and Christ-denying world. HOLINESS, springing from the
fount of the Spirit's indwelling grace, cherished and matured by close views
of the cross, and imparting a character of sanctity and beauty to every act
of your life, will be the highest testimony you can bear to the Redeemer's
glory. That glory is intrusted to your hands. It is committed to your
guardianship. Seeing, then, that it is so, "what manner of people ought you
to be in all holy conversation and godliness"! How exact in principles, and
upright in conduct- how watchful over temper, and how vigilant where most
assailed, how broad awake to the wiles of the devil, and how watchful
against the encroachments of sin- how strict in all transactions with the
world; and how tender, and charitable, and meek, and forgiving, in all our
conduct with the saints! Alas! we are at best but dim reflectors of this
great glory of our Lord. We are unworthy and unfaithful depositories of so
rich a treasure! How much of clinging infirmity, of unmortified sin, of
carelessness of spirit, of unsanctified temper, of tampering with
temptation, of a lack of strict integrity and uprightness, dims our light,
neutralizes our testimony for God, and weakens, if not entirely destroys,
our spiritual influence! We are not more eminently useful, because we are
not more eminently holy. We bring so little glory to Christ, because we seek
so much our own. We reflect so faint and flickering a beam, because our
posture is so seldom that of the apocalyptic angel, "standing in the sun."
We realize so imperfectly our oneness with, and standing in, Christ; and
this will ever foster a feeble, fruitless, and drooping profession of
Christianity. "As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in
the vine, no more can you, except you abide in me." Oh to know more of this
abiding in Christ! See how Jesus invites His saints to it. Are they fallen?
He bids them take hold of His strength. Are they burdened? He bids them cast
that burden on His arm. Are they wearied? He bids them recline on Him for
rest. Does the world persecute them, do the "daughters of Jerusalem" smite
them, does the watchman treat them unkindly? He bids them take refuge within
the hallowed sanctuary of His own pierced and loving heart. Do they need
grace? He bids them sink their empty vessel beneath the depths of His ocean
fulness, and draw freely "more grace." Whatever corruptions distress them,
whatever temptations assail them, whatever adversity grieves them, whatever
cloud darkens them, whatever necessity presses upon them; as the watchful
Shepherd, as the tender Brother, as the faithful Friend, as the great High
Priest, He bids His saints draw near, and repose in His love. Oh, He has a
capacious bosom: there is room, there is a chamber in that heart for you, my
Christian reader! Do not think your lot is desolate, and lonely, and
friendless. Do not think that all have forsaken you, and that in sadness and
in solitude you are threading your way through an intricate desert. There is
One that loves you, that thinks of you, that has His eye upon you, and is at
this moment guiding, upholding, and caring for you: that one is Jesus! Oh
that you could but look into His heart, and see how He loves you; oh that
you could but hear Him say, so gently, so earnestly, "Abide in my love!"
Cheer up; you are in Christ's heart, and Christ is in your heart. You are
not alone: your God, even your Father, is with you. Your Shepherd guides
you; the Comforter spreads around you His wings, and heaven is bright before
you. Soon you will be there. The pilgrim will repose his weary limbs; the
voyager will be moored in his harbor of rest; the warrior will put off his
armor, and shout his song of triumph. Then look up! Christ is yours, God is
yours, heaven is yours. If God is for you, who can be against you? And if
you find disappointment in created good, it will but endear Jesus; and if
you know more of the inward plague, it will but drive you to the atoning
blood; and if you have storms and tempests, they will but shorten the
voyage, and waft you the quicker to glory.
"Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift!"