The great doctrine of justification AND what constitutes the righteousness of Christ in imputation, this should not simply be fodder for our theological bantering and debate, but these great truths of Scripture should be the cause for worship, joy, adoration, celebration, hope, victory, and exaltation in our Lord Jesus Christ. We should always study God's Word primarily "to know Him" as Paul said (Phil. 3:6-11).
This sermon is by Charles Spurgeon; and his words are not pomp and circumstance for the carefree Christian--far from it. This sermon was not conceived in the womb of ease, but in the kiln of trial and tragedy. If you are suffering or going through tremendous trials in your life today, I pray this message will be a fountain of grace, strength and encouragement to you.
I penned this new song after pondering on a portion of Scripture from Hebrews 7:26. My heart just burst in praise to our Lord for all He has done as The Crowned Servant, The Captain of Salvation, The Conqueror or Satan, and our Complete Sacrifice (Heb. 2:9-10, 14-18). As a prelude to our time with brother Spurgeon, I pray that it will encourage you to bring glory to the Lord Jesus Christ.
His Unworthy Servant in His Unfailing Love,
Steve
2 Cor. 4:5-7
By Steve Camp
3/28/06
You were tempted, yet without sin
You sympathized with our weaknesses
Separated, from sinners
You are holy, pure and innocent
You endured the cross; despised the shame
Redeemed us by Your blood and by no other name
O King of Righteousness, O Lamb of Glory
Our Faithful High Priest and Substitute
Jesus You’re able to save and make holy
All the sons of men the Father gave to You
You fulfilled the law; all righteous demands
As Son of God, as Son of Man
Clothed with our sin, dying in our place
You drained the cup of wrath by Your grace
You washed sin’s crimson stain white as snow
Praise to the Lamb slain, now and evermore
O King of Righteousness, O Lamb of Glory
Our Faithful High Priest and Substitute
Jesus You’re able to save and make holy
All the sons of men the Father gave to You
O Halleluiah to the King of kings
O Halleluiah to the Lord of lords
Our risen Savior, You reign forever
King of Righteousness, we worship and adore
O King of Righteousness, we worship and adore
(Words and Music by Steve Camp - Copyright by Nouthetic Music, 2006)
NOTE: This sermon was Spurgeon's first message following the great disaster at the Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens—in which seven people lost their lives when some miscreants purposely started a panic while Mr. Spurgeon was preaching.
"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him,
and given him a name which is above every name:
That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth;
And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father."
—Philippians 2:9-11.
I ALMOST regret this morning that I have ventured to occupy this pulpit, because I feel utterly unable to preach to you for your profit. I had thought that the quiet and repose of the last fortnight had removed the effects of that terrible catastrophe; but on coming back to the same spot again, and more especially, standing here to address you, I feel somewhat of those same painful emotions which well-nigh prostrated me before. You will therefore excuse me this morning, if I make no allusion to that solemn event, or scarcely any. I could not preach to you upon a subject that should be in the least allied to it. I should be obliged to be silent if I should bring to my remembrance that terrific scene in the midst of which it was my solemn lot to stand. God shall overrule it doubtless. It may not have been so much by the malice of men, as some have asserted; it was perhaps simple wickedness—an intention to disturb a congregation; but certainly with no thought of committing so terrible a crime as that of the murder of those unhappy creatures. God forgive those who were the instigators of that horrid act! They have my forgiveness from the depths of my soul. It shall not stop us, however; we are not in the least degree daunted by it. I shall preach there again yet; ay, and God shall give us souls there, and Satan's empire shall tremble more than ever. "God is with us; who is he that shall be against us?" The text I have selected is one that has comforted me, and in a great measure, enabled me to come here to-day—the single reflection upon it had such a power of comfort on my depressed spirit. It is this:—"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name: That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the earth; And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."—Philippians 2:9-11.
I shall not attempt to preach upon this text; I shall only make a few remarks that have occurred to my own mind; for I could not preach to-day; I have been utterly unable to study, but I thought that even a few words might be acceptable to you this morning, and I trust to your loving hearts to excuse them. Oh, Spirit of God, magnify thy strength in thy servant's weakness, and enable him to honour his Lord, even when his soul is cast down within him.
WHEN the mind is intensely set upon one object, however much it may by divers calamities be tossed to and fro, it invariably returns to the place which it had chosen to be its dwelling place. Ye have noticed in the case of David. When the battle had been won by his warriors, they returned flushed with victory. David's mind had doubtless suffered much perturbation in the mean time; he had dreaded alike the effects of victory and defeat; but have you not noticed how his mind in one moment returned to the darling object of his affections? "Is the young man Absalom safe?" said he, as if it mattered not what else had occurred, it his beloved son were but secure! So, beloved, it is with the Christian. In the midst of calamities, whether they be the wreck of nations, the crash of empires, the heaving of revolutions, or the scourge of war, the great question which he asks himself, and asks of others too, is this—Is Christ's kingdom safe? In his own personal afflictions his chief anxiety is,—Will God be glorified, and will his honour be increased by it? If it be so, says he, although I be but as smoking flax, yet if the sun is not dimmed I will rejoice; and though I be a bruised reed, if the pillars of the temple are unbroken, what matters it that my reed is bruised? He finds it sufficient consolation, in the midst of all the breaking in pieces which he endures, to think that Christ's throne stands fast and firm, and that though the earth hath rocked beneath his feet, yet Christ standeth on a rock which never can be moved. Some of these feelings, I think, have crossed our minds. Amidst much tumult and divers rushings to and fro of troublous thoughts our souls have returned to the darling object of our desires, and we have found it no small consolation after all to say, "It matters not what shall become of us: God hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name: That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow."
This text has afforded sweet consolation to every heir of heaven. Allow me, very briefly, to give you the consolations of it. To the true Christian there is much comfort in the very fact of Christ's exaltation. In the second place, there is no small degree of consolation in the reason of it. "Wherefore, also, God hath highly exalted him;" that is because of his previous humiliation. And thirdly, there is no small amount of really divine solace in the thought of the person who has exalted Christ. Wherefore God also"—although men despise him and cast him down—"God also hath highly exalted him."
1. First, then, IN THE VERY FACT OF CHRIST'S EXALTATION THERE IS TO EVERY TRUE CHRISTIAN A VERY LARGE DEGREE OF COMFORT.
Many of you who have no part nor lot in spiritual things, not having love to Christ, nor any desire for his glory, will but laugh when I say that this is a very bottle of cordial to the lip of the weary Christian, that Christ, after all, is glorified. To you it is no consolation, because you lack that condition of heart which makes this text sweet to the soul. To you there is nothing of joy in it; it does not stir your bosom; it gives no sweetness to your life; for this very reason, that you are not joined to Christ's cause, nor do you devoutly seek to honour him. But the true Christian's heart leapeth for joy, even when cast down by divers sorrows and temptations, at the remembrance that Christ is exalted, for in that he finds enough to cheer his own heart. Note here, beloved, that the Christian has certain features in his character which make the exaltation of Christ a matter of great joy to him. First, he has in his own opinion, and not in his own opinion only, but in reality, a relationship to Christ, and therefore he feels an interest in the success of his kinsman. Ye have watched the father's joy, when step by step his boy has climbed to opulence or fame; ye have marked the mother's eye, as it sparkled with delight when her daughter grew up to womanhood, and burst forth in all the grandeur of beauty. Ye have asked why they should feel such interest; and ye have been told, because the boy was his, or the girl was hers. They delighted in the advancement of their little ones, because of their relationship. Had there been no relationship, they might have been advanced to kings, emperors, or queens, and they would have felt but little delight. But from the fact of kindred, each step was invested with a deep and stirring interest. Now, it is so with this Christian. He feels that Jesus Christ, the glorified "Prince of the kings of the earth." is his brother. While he reverences him as God, he admires him as the man-Christ, bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh, and he delights, in his calm and placid moments of communion with Jesus, to say to him, "O Lord, thou art my brother." His song is, "My beloved is mine, and I am his." It is his joy to sing— "In the blood with sinners one,"
Christ Jesus is; for he is a man, even as we are: and he is no less and no more man than we are, save only sin. Surely, when we feel we are related to Christ, his exaltation is the source of the greatest joy to our spirits; we take a delight in it, seeing it is one of our family that is exalted. It is the Elder Brother of the great one family of God in heaven and earth; it is the Brother to whom all of us are related.
Unity in the honor of God
There is also in the Christian not only the feeling of relationship merely, but there is a feeling of unity in the cause. He feels that when Christ is exalted, it is himself exalted in some degree, seeing he has sympathy with his desire of promoting the great cause and honour of God in the world. I have no doubt that every common soldier who stood by the side of the Duke of Wellington felt honoured when the commander was applauded for the victory; for, said he, "I helped him, I assisted him; it was but a mean part that I played; I did but maintain my rank; I did but sustain the enemy's fire; but now the victory is gained. I feel an honour in it, for I helped, in some degree, to gain it." So the Christian, when he sees his Lord exalted, says, "It is the Captain that is exalted, and in his exaltation all his soldiers share. Have I not stood by his side? Little was the work I did, and poor the strength which I possessed to serve him; but still I aided in the labour;" and the commonest soldier in the spiritual ranks feels that he himself is in some degree exalted when he reads this—"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name:" a renown above every name—"that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow."
Moreover, the Christian knows not only that there is this unity in design, but that there is a real union between Christ and all his people. It is a doctrine of revelation seldom descanted upon, but never too much thought of—the doctrine that Christ and his members are all one. Know ye not, beloved, that every member of Christ's church is a member of Christ himself? We are "of his flesh and of his bones," parts of his great mystical body; and when we read that our head is crowned, O rejoice, ye members of his, his feet or his hands, though the crown is not on you, yet being on your Head, you share the glory, for you are one with him. See Christ yonder, sitting at his Father's right hand! Believer! he is the pledge of thy glorification; he is the surety of thine acceptance; and, moreover, he is thy representative. The seat which Christ possesses in heaven he has not only by his own right, as a person of the Deity, but he has it also as the representative of the whole church, for he is their forerunner, and he sits in glory as the representative of every one of them. O rejoice, believer, when thou seest thy Master exalted from the tomb, when thou beholdest him exalted up to heaven. Then, when thou seest him climb the steps of light, and sit upon his lofty throne, where angels' ken can scarcely reach him—when thou hearest the acclamations of a thousand seraphs—when thou dost note the loud pealing choral symphony of millions of the redeemed; think, when thou seest him crowned with light—think that thou art exalted too in him, seeing that thou art a part of himself. Happy art thou if thou knowest this, not only in doctrine, but in sweet experience too. Knit to Christ, wedded to him, grown into him, parts and portions of his very self, we throb with the heart of the body; when the head itself is glorified we share in the praise; we felt that his glorification bestows an honour upon us. Ah! beloved, have you ever felt that unity to Christ? Have you ever felt a unity of desire with him? If so, you will find this rich with comfort; but if not—if you know not Christ—it will be a source of grief rather than a pleasure to you that he is exalted, for you will have to reflect that he is exalted to crush you, exalted to judge you and condemn you, exalted to sweep this earth of its sins, and cut the curse up by the roots, and you with it, unless you repent and turn unto God with full purpose of heart.
Christ is Exalted
There is yet another feeling, which I think is extremely necessary to any very great enjoyment of this truth, that Christ is exalted. It is a feeling of entire surrender of one's whole being to the great work of seeking to honour him. Oh! I have striven for that: would to God I might attain unto it! I have now concentrated all my prayers into one, and that one prayer is this, that I may die to self, and live wholly to him. It seems to me to be the highest stage of man—to have no wish, no thought, no desire but Christ—to feel that to die were bliss, if it were for Christ—that to live in penury and woe, and scorn, and contempt, and misery, were sweet for Christ—to feel that it did not matter what became of one's self, so that one's Master was but exalted—to feel that though, like a sear leaf, you are blown in the blast, you are quite careless whither you are going, so long as you feel that the Master's hand is guiding you according to his will. Or rather to feel that though like the diamond you must be cut, that you care not how sharply you may be cut, so that you may be made fit to be a brilliant in his crown; that you care little what may be done to you, if you may but honour him. If any of you have attained to that sweet feeling of self-annihilation, you will look up to Christ as if he were the sun, and you will say of yourself, "O Lord, I see thy beams; I feel myself to be not a beam from thee—but darkness, swallowed up in thy light. The most I ask is, that thou wouldst live in me, that the life I live in the flesh may not be my life, but thy life in me, that I may say with emphasis, as Paul did, 'For me to live is Christ.'" A man that has attained to this, never need care what is the opinion of this world. He may say, "Do you praise me? Do you flatter me? Take back your flatteries: I ask them not at your hands; I sought to praise my Master; ye have laid the praises at my door; go, lay them at his, and not at mine. Do ye scorn me? Do ye despise me? Thrice happy am I to bear it. If ye will not scorn and despise him!" And if ye will, yet know this, that he is beyond your scorn; and, therefore, smite the soldier for his Captain's sake; ay, strike, strike; but the King ye cannot touch—he is highly exalted—and thou ye think ye have gotten the victory, ye may have routed one soldier of the army, but the main body is triumphant. One soldier seems to be smitten to the dust, but the Captain is coming on with his victorious cohorts, and shall trample you, flushed with your false victory, beneath his conquering feet. As long as there is a particle of selfishness remaining in us, it will mar our sweet rejoicing in Christ; till we get rid of it, we shall never feel constant joy. I do think that the root of sorrow is self. If we once got rid of that, sorrow would be sweet, sickness would be health, sadness would be joy, penury would be wealth, so far as our feelings with regard to them are concerned. They might not be changed, but our feelings under them would be vastly different. If you would seek happiness, seek it at the roots of your selfishness; cut up your selfishness, and you will be happy. I have found that whenever I have yielded to the least joy when I have been prepared to feel acutely the arrows of the enemy; but when I have said of the praises of men, "Yes, what are ye? worthless things!"—then I could also say of their contempt—"Come on! come on! I'll send you all where I sent the praises; you may go together, and fight your battles with one another; but as for me, let your arrows rattle on my mail—they must not, and they shall not, reach my flesh." But if you give way to one you will to another. You must seek and learn to live wholly in Christ—to sorrow when you see Christ maligned and dishonoured, to rejoice when you see him exalted, and then you will have constant cause for joy. Sit down now, O reviled one, poor, despised, and tempted one; sit down, lift up thine eyes, see him on his throne, and say within thyself, "Little though I be, I know I am united to him; he is my love, my life, my joy; I care not what happens so long as it is written, 'The Lord reigneth.'"
2. Now, briefly upon the second point. Here also is the very fountain and well-spring of joy, in THE REASON OF CHRIST'S EXALTATION.
"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him." Why? Because, "he being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and because obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him." This of course relates to the manhood of our Lord Jesus Christ. As God, Christ needed no exaltation; he was higher than the highest, "God over all, blessed for ever." But the symbols of his glory having been for a while obscured, having wrapped his Godhead in mortal flesh, his flesh with his Godhead ascended up on high, and the man-God, Christ Jesus, who had stooped to shame, and sorrow, and degradation, was highly exalted, "far above all principalities and powers," that he might reign Prince-regent over all worlds, yea, over heaven itself. Let us consider, for a moment, that depth of degradation to which Christ descended; and then, my beloved, it will give you joy to think, that for that very reason his manhood was highly exalted. Do you see that man— "The humble Man before his foes, The weary Man and full of woes?"
Do you mark him as he speaks? Note the marvelous eloquence which pours from his lips, and see how the crowds attend him? But do you hear, in the distance, the growling of the thunders of calumny and scorn? Listen to the words of his accusers. They say he is "a gluttonous man and a wine-bibber, a friend of publicans and sinners;" "he has a devil, and is mad." All the whole vocabulary of abuse is exhausted by vituperation upon him. He is slandered, abused, persecuted! Stop! Do you think that he is by this cast down, by this degraded? No, for this very reason: "God hath highly exalted him." Mark the shame and spitting that have come upon the cheek of yonder man of sorrows! See his hair plucked with cruel hands; mark ye how they torture him and how they mock him. Do you think that this is all dishonourable to Christ? It is apparently so; but list to this: "He became obedient," and therefore "God hath highly exalted him." Ah! there is a marvellous connection between that shame, and spitting, and the bending of the knee of seraphs; there is a strange yet mystic link which unites the calumny and the slander with the choral sympathies of adoring angels. The one was, as it were, the seed of the other. Strange that it should be, but the black, the bitter seed brought forth a sweet and glorious flower which blooms for ever. He suffered and he reigned; he stopped to conquer, and he conquered for he stooped, and was exalted for he conquered.
God is Groaning on the Cross
Consider him further still. Do you mark him in your imagination nailed to yonder cross! O eyes! ye are full of pity, with tears standing thick! Oh! how I mark the floods gushing down his checks! Do you see his hands bleeding, and his feet too, gushing gore? Behold him! The bulls of Bashan gird him round, and the dogs are hounding him to death! Hear him! "Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?" The earth startles with affright. A God is groaning on a cross! What! Does not this dishonour Christ? No; it honours him! Each of the thorns becomes a brilliant in his diadem of glory; the nails are forged into his sceptre, and his wounds do clothe him with the purple of empire. The treading of the wine-press hath stained his garments, but not with stains of scorn and dishonour. The stains are embroideries upon his royal robes for ever. The treading of that wine-press hath made his garments purple with the empire of a world; and he is the Master of a universe for ever. O Christian! sit down and consider that thy Master did not mount from earth's mountains into heaven, but from her valleys. It was not from heights of bliss on earth that he strode to bliss eternal, but from depths of woe he mounted up to glory. Oh! what a stride was that, when, at one mighty step from the grave to the throne of The Highest, the man Christ, the God, did gloriously ascend.
And yet reflect! He in some way, mysterious yet true, was exalted because he suffered. "Being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name." Believer, there is comfort for thee here, if thou wilt take it. If Christ was exalted through his degradation, so shalt thou be. Count not thy steps to triumph by thy steps upward, but by those which are seemingly downward. The way to heaven is down-hill. he who would be honoured for ever must sink in his own esteem, and often in that of his fellow-men. Oh! think not of yon fool who is mounting to heaven by his own light opinions of himself and by the flatteries of his fellows, that he shall safely reach Paradise; nay, that shall burst on which he rests, and he shall fall and be broken in pieces. But he who descends into the mines of suffering, shall find unbounded riches there; and he who dives into the depths of grief, shall find the pearl of everlasting life within tis caverns. Recollect, Christian, that thou art exalted when thou art disgraced; read the slanders of thine enemies as the plaudits of the just; count that the scoff and jeer of wicked men are equal to the praise and honour of the godly; their blame is censure, and their censure praise. Reckon too, if thy body should ever be exposed to persecution, that it is no shame to thee, but the reverse; and if thou shouldst be privileged, (and thou mayest) to wear the blood-red crown of martyrdom, count it no disgrace to die. Remember, the most honourable in the church are "the noble army of martyrs." Reckon that the greater the sufferings they endured, so much the greater is their "eternal weight of glory;" and so do thou, if thou standest in the brunt and thick of the fight, remember that thou shalt stand in the midst of glory. If thou hast the hardest to bear, thou shalt have the sweetest to enjoy. On with thee, then—through floods, through fire, through death, through hell, if it should lie in thy path. Fear not. He who glorified Christ because he stooped shall glorify thee; for after he has caused thee to endure awhile, he will give thee "a crown of life which fadeth now away."
3. And now, in the last place, beloved, here is yet another comfort for you. THE PERSON who exalted Christ is to be noticed.
"GOD also hath highly exalted him." The emperor of all the Russians crowns himself: he is an autocrat, and puts the crown upon his own head: but Christ hath no such foolish pride. Christ did not crown himself. "GOD also hath highly exalted him." The crown was put upon the head of Christ by God; and there is to me a very sweet reflection in this,—that the hand that put the crown on Christ's head, will one day put the crown on ours;—that the same Mighty One who crowned Christ, "King of kings, and Lord of lords," will crown us, when he shall make us "Kings and priests unto him for ever." "I know," said Paul, "there is laid up for me a crown of glory which fadeth not away, which God, the righteous judge, shall give me in that day."
Christ did not Crown Himself
Now, just pause over this thought—that Christ did not crown himself, but that his Father crowned him; that he did not elevate himself to the throne of majesty, but that his Father lifted him there, and placed him on his throne. Why, reflect thus: Man never highly exalted Christ. Put this then in opposition to it—"God also hath highly exalted him." Man hissed him, mocked him, hooted him. Words were not hard enough—they would use stones. "They took up stones again to stone him." And stones failed; nails must be used, and he must be crucified. And then there comes the taunt, the jeer, the mockery, whilst he hangs languishing on the death-cross. Man did not exalt him. Set the black picture there. Now put this, with this glorious, this bright scene, side by side with it, and one shall be a foil to the other. Man dishonoured him; "God also exalted him." Believer, if all men speak ill of thee, lift up thy head, and say, "Man exalted not my Master; I thank him that he exalts not me. The servant should not be above his master, nor the servant above his lord, nor he that is sent greater than he that sent him."
Shame and reproach shall be;
I'll hail reproach and welcome shame,
For he'll remember me."
God will remember me, and highly exalt me after all, though man casts me down.
Put it, again, in opposition to the fact, that Christ did not exalt himself. Poor Christian! you feel that you cannot exalt yourself. Sometimes you cannot raise your poor depressed spirits. Some say to you, "Oh! you should not feel like this." They tell you, "Oh! you should not speak such words, nor think such thoughts." Ah! "the heart knoweth its own bitterness, and a stranger intermeddleth not therewith,"—ay, and I will improve upon it, "nor a friend either." It is not easy to tell how another ought to feel and how another ought to act. Our minds are differently made, each in its own mould, which mould is broken afterwards, and there shall never be another like it. We are all different, each one of us; but I am sure there is one thing in which we are all brought to unite in times of deep sorrow, namely, in a sense of helplessness. We feel that we cannot exalt ourselves. Now remember, our Master felt just like it. In the 22nd Psalm, which, if I read it rightly, is a beautiful soliloquy of Christ upon the cross, he says to himself, "I am a worm, and no man." As if he felt himself so broken, so cast down, that instead of being more than a man, as he was, he felt for awhile less than man. And yet, when he could not lift finger to crown himself, when he could scarce heave a thought of victory, when his eye could not flash with even a distant glimpse of triumph,—then his God was crowning him. Art thou so broken in pieces, Christian? Think not that thou art cast away for ever; for "God also hath highly exalted him" who did not exalt himself; and this is a picture and prophecy of what he will do for thee.
Do you see Him?
And now, beloved, I can say little more upon this text, save that I bid you now for a minutes meditate and think upon it. Oh! let your eyes be lifted up; bid heaven's blue veil divide; ask power of God—I mean spiritual power from on high, to look within the veil. I bid you not look to the streets of gold, nor to the walls of jasper, nor to the pearly-gated city. I do not ask you to turn your eyes to the white-robed hosts, who for ever sing loud hallelujahs; but yonder, my friends, turn your eyes,
The God, how bright he shines;
And scatters infinite delight
on all the happy minds."
Do you see him?
Is crowned with glory now;
A royal diadem adorns
that mighty Victor's brow.
No more the bloody crown,
The cross and nails no more:
For hell itself shakes at his frown,
and all the heavens adore."
Look at him! Can your imagination picture him? Behold his transcendent glory! The majesty of kings is swallowed up; the pomp of empires dissolves like the white mist of the morning before the sun; the brightness of assembled armies is eclipsed. He in himself is brighter than the sun, more terrible than armies with banners. See him! See him! O! hide your heads, ye monarchs; put away your gaudy pageantry, ye lords of this poor narrow earth! His kingdom knows no bounds; without a limit his vast empire stretches out itself. Above him all is his; beneath him many a step are angels, and they are his; and they cast their crowns before his feet. With them stand his elect and ransomed, and their crowns too are his. And here upon this lower earth stand his saints, and they are his, and they adore him; and under the earth, among the infernals, where devils growl their malice, even there is trembling and adoration; and where lost spirits, with wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever lament their being, even there, there is the acknowledgment of his Godhead, even though the confession helps to make the fire of their torments. In heaven, in earth, in hell, all knees bend before him, and every tongue confesses that he is God. If not now, yet in the time that is to come this shall be carried out, that ever creature of God's making shall acknowledge his Son to be "God over all, blessed for ever. Amen." Oh! my soul anticipates that blessed day, when this whole earth shall bend its knee before its God willingly! I do believe there is a happy era coming, when there shall not be one knee unbent before my Lord and Master. I look for that time, that latter-day glory, when kings shall bring presents, when queens shall be the nursing mothers of the church, when the gold of Sheba and the ships of Tarshish, and the dromedaries of Arabia shall alike be his, when nations and tribes of every tongue shall "Dwell on his name with sweetest song, and infant voices shall proclaim Their early blessings on his name."
Sometimes I hope to live to see that all-auspicious era—that halcyon age of this world, so much oppressed with grief and sorrow by the tyranny of its own habitants. I hope to see the time, when it shall be said, "Shout, for the great Shepherd reigns, and his unsuffering kingdom now is come"—when earth shall be one great orchestra of praise, and every man shall sing the glorious hallelujah anthem of the King of kings. But even now, while waiting for that era, my soul rejoices in the fact, that every knee does virtually bow, though not willingly, yet really. Does the scoffer, when he mouths high heaven, think that he insults God? He thinks so, but his insult dies long ere it reaches half-way to the stars. Does he conceive, when in his malice he forges a sword against Christ, that his weapon shall prosper? If he does, I can well conceive the derision of God, when he sees the wildest rebel, the most abandoned despiser, still working out his great decrees, still doing that which God hath eternally ordained, and in the midst of his wild rebellion still running in the very track which in some mysterious way before all eternity had been marked as the track in which that being should certainly move. "The wild steeds of earth have broken their bridles, the reins are out of the hands of the charioteer"—so some say; but they are not, or if they are, the steeds run the same round as they would have done had the Almighty grasped the reins still. The world has not gone to confusion; chance is not God; God is still Master, and let men do what they will, and hate the truth we now prize, they shall after all do what God wills, and their direst rebellion shall prove but a species of obedience, though they know it not.
But thou wilt say, "Why dost thou yet find fault; for who hath resisted such a will as that?" "Nay, but O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, why hast thou made me thus? Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour? What if God, willing to show his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction: and that he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which he had afore prepared unto glory." Who is he that shall blame him? Woe unto him that striveth with his Maker! He is God—know that, ye inhabitants of the land; and all things, after all, shall serve his will. I like what Luther says in his bold hymn, where, notwithstanding all that those who are haters of predestination choose to affirm, he knew and boldly declared, "He everywhere hath sway, and all things serve his might." Notwithstanding all they do, there is God's sway, after all. Go on, reviler! God knoweth how to make all thy revilings into songs! Go on, thou warrior against God, if thou wilt; know this, thy sword shall help to magnify God, and carve out glory for Christ, when thou thoughtest the slaughter of his church. It shall come to pass that all thou dost shall be frustrated; for God maketh the diviners mad, and saith, "Where is the wisdom of the scribe? Where is the wisdom of the wise?" Surely, "Him hath God exalted, and given him a name which is above every name."
Kiss the Son
And now, lastly, beloved, if it be true, as it is, that Christ is so exalted that he is to have a name above every name, and every knee is to bow to him, will we not bow our knees this morning before his Majesty? You must, whether you will or no, one day bow your knee. O iron-sinewed sinner, bow thy knee now! Thou wilt have to bow it, man, in that day when the lightnings shall be loosed, and the thunders shall roll in wild fury: thou wilt have to bow thy knee then. Oh! bow it now! "Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled but a little." O Lord of hosts! bend the knees of men! Make us all the willing subjects of thy grace, lest afterward, we should be the unwilling slaves of thy terror; dragged with chains of vengeance down to hell. O that now those that are on earth might willingly bend their knees lest in hell it should be fulfilled, "Things under the earth shall bow the knee before him."
God bless you, my friends, I can say no more but that. God bless you, for Jesus' sake! Amen.
31 comments:
Beautiful song. Past experience says the melody will be equally beautiful.
Blessings,
Terry
Wonderful, heart rending...
My heart's desire it is to be with my savior...can't wait to express my love to Him face to face.
When are going to get to hear this song Steve?
Father, thank You for giving us Your Son. Thank You Lord Jesus for laying down Your precious life for the Father.
O Lord help us to be rooted and grounded in Your love, and strengthened with Your might as You dwell in our hearts by faith. Grant us a greater knowledge of Your divine love, which is beyond knowing, and to be filled with all the fulness of God, so that Your holy name will be exhalted and glorified in all the earth, throughout all ages, world without end. Amen.
Thanks for such an inspiring post. God is too good.
Amen, beautiful song indeed. You guys are a blessing as is Steve Camp. What a tremendous blessing Spurgeon is. So many things we can all relate to in our life as his life was an open book. I am so thankful for his witness.
Great lyrics. I can only imagine the perfect timing... which must be on Lamu... far away. :-)
So Joseph, are you saying that our justification is synergistic rather than monergistic?
I guess I need to slow down and type slower.
What I meant to ask Joseph was, "Are you saying that our Salvation, our Justification, results from a Synergistic process or a Monergistic process?"
Hey joe,
You make a lot of assumptions. And that's fine. But you may be wrong.
We agree that Scripture is the authority. I know not where else to go, but the Bible. As did so many brothers and sisters before us, whose shoe-laces I feel unworthy to tie. I don't think i need to name these marvelous saints of God. I do , for sure, look to them as well as Scripture, but never above Scripture. I look to the Westminster Larger Catechism. I believe it's a tremendous blessing from our Lord, and an essential study for the Church really, especially in our day of postmodernism.
Having said all this, which you disagree with, I have a question.
You said, "Christ's life of obedience is not coefficient and equivalent as regards salvation's actual accomplishments."
What was the real reason that our Lord lived a life of obedience? Bottom line.
Joseph,
I really appreciate your posts on this subject, including that last one on the development and foundation of the New Covenant. It was truly a good analysis, bringing praise to the Lord, and making a solid case for our justification in the one act of righteousness at the Cross.
Regarding your point #10 and following, however, I would respectfully disagree with you if you are implying that those who hold to "active obedience" imputation are necessarily preaching "another gospel" and should be accursed. (If you're not implying that, my apologies.)
"Another gospel", in the context of Galatians, is clearly one in which our obedience to law is made a prerequisite for salvation or for retaining salvation.
"Soteriology" is different from "The Gospel".
Soteriology, or the theology of salvation, is somewhat complicated, with room for quite a bit of disagreement.
For example:
-- 5 Points of Calvinism vs. 1,2,3, or 4 Points
-- regeneration preceding faith vs. faith preceding regeneration
-- active and passive obedience imputation vs. eternal righteousness imputation
etc.
But whereas Soteriology may be complicated, the Gospel is not. The Gospel is simple enough for all believers to proclaim it to others:
"Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died for sins, was buried and rose again, so that all who will believe in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life, by grace, through faith in Christ, not of works. Whosoever will may come."
The words may vary somewhat, but the Gospel itself is simple, and can be proclaimed as much by our "active obedience" friends as by us.
In seeking to preserve the "purity" of the Gospel, many have expanded it, to the confusion of many.
The Gospel itself is shockingly simple, yet is, of course, the power of God for salvation to those who believe.
Blessings,
Terry
My question about your doctrine being synergistic or monergistic is this, "Do you believe that YOUR salvation was the result of a synergistic process with you doing some of the work and God doing the rest or is it monergistic in that it was God's work alone?"
Steve Camp and the rest, I guess that includes me, do not add anything to the gospel such as works or keeping the law. Where did you get that?
For Brother Joseph,
I have written an article entitled "There is only one Gospel." It is on my blog. I would really like to read your comment on it. Here is the link:
http://mikeratliff.wordpress.com/2006/03/02/there-is-only-one-gospel/#more-48
Joseph,
After all the excellent exegesis you've done on the imputation subject, I believe you are moving away from exegesis to eisegesis, in this matter of "another gospel".
This has the ability to discredit all the good work you've done on this subject (though it shoudn't...each exegetical endeavor should stand on its own).
I repeat, nowhere in Galatians does Paul refer to anything but OUR law-keeping mixed with grace as "another gospel". To imply beyond that is to apply eisegesis, or "putting in" what's not there.
You're correct that Soteriology and the Gospel are not unrelated, but neither are they the same thing. Soteriology is complicated, the Gospel is simple.
God forbid that we preach our Soteriological system to the lost. They surely would walk away before half of the three-hour-long presentation was done, scratching their heads and wondering "Wha-a-a?"
Thus God has graciously allowed the simplicity of "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you shall be saved." (I believe the Bible teaches that regeneration precedes faith, and thus the faith is as irresistable as the grace. But that's part of my Soteriological system, not the Gospel.)
Though men sometimes incorrectly call their Soteriology "the Gospel", as in the 1999 Affirmation, it's actually just symantics. I know for a fact that when they proclaim the Gospel to the lost, they certainly don't lay out the 1999.
They preach Jesus and Him crucified, more or less in its glorious simplicity. And some lost get saved, yes, through the preaching of those who's Soteriology includes the "active obedience" imputation that you and I agree is in error.
Again, when you go beyond what Galatians teaches, and call for the "active obedience" guys to be accursed, you risk discrediting all the good groundwork you've laid.
I'll give you the last word --- do they have The O'Reilly Factor in Montenegro? :)
-- Warning...Bill O'Reilly doesn't alway mean it when he says, "I'll give you the last word." ;)
Blessings dear brother,
Terry
Hi Terry,
I fully concur with your sediments:
"Soteriology" is different from "The Gospel".
"Soteriology, or the theology of salvation, is somewhat complicated, with room for quite a bit of disagreement.
For example:
-- 5 Points of Calvinism vs. 1,2,3, or 4 Points
-- regeneration preceding faith vs. faith preceding regeneration
-- active and passive obedience imputation vs. eternal righteousness imputation."
However, from what I see in the "reformed blogesphere", that certainly would never be agreed to, further more, much of the "spot the heretic" posting seen here and elsewhere, centers on the very things you mention in this post.
{{{Candleman}}}
Candleman,
You said,
However, from what I see in the "reformed blogesphere", that certainly would never be agreed to, further more, much of the "spot the heretic" posting seen here and elsewhere, centers on the very things you mention in this post.
I do believe that that is an assertion, nothing more. If you are going to be calling people heretics then you are going to have to do better than that.
mike, I may be mistaken, but I believe candleman was referring to others playing "spot the heretic". The way I read his comment, he was not calling people a heretic.
Maybe I'm wrong, though.
Steve S.,
Thanks for you interpretation. Yes, I apologize Candleman. The word heretic is not something to throw around lightly.
The "spot the heretic" statement seems to be applied to questions that I and Don and others have asked Joseph about his theolgoy because of his multitude of statements without telling us what his view is on the atonement.
We ARE supposed to attempt to understand these things when people preach and teach. If not then we give creadance to any and all theolgies. These questions are part of our exercising discernment.
Joe,
"He [Jesus] lived a life of obedience because He could do no other."
I disagree with this answer. It's too simplistic, though the truth of Christ being innately righteous is beyond question.
Could He have called 6,000 angels to come to His aid? He surely could have, but He didn't. And we are forever blessed beyond belief, because He loved the Father so much, and His greater desire was to glorify the divine grace of God.
I guess we're back to square one. And that's alright. I understand why you see it the way you do.
I would encourage you, if you haven't already, read John Piper's teaching on the imputation of Christ's righteousness. It is quite biblical, and he is a fine scholar of the Word, and has served the Lord with integrity and humility. I agree with him. You will most likely disagree, as I would if I read some one who teaches there is no imputation of Christ's righteousness.
That's alright. Like Terry says, "The words may vary a bit, but the Gospel is simple".
Have blessed day In His grace and peace.
I believe I may go back and reread this marvelous Sermon by the prince of preachers.
Joseph, I used the word atonement in the general sense. You have used a great deal of space using a lot of scriptures, but you have not, til now, stated your theology completly.
You have got to be kidding. Jesus had to become the acceptable sacrifice for our sins by keeping the entire law. That is why He is worthy as a Man. As God, of course He is perfectly Righteous. Always has been. Always will be. As a Man, however, He could not be our substitute in the atonement unless He fulfilled the role of the suffering Messiah. His death on the cross started ghe blood covenant. His ressurection was as the forerunner for all who partake of that covenant. Partakers of the covenant must die as well. Salvation is the death and rebirth of the saint.
You are dividing the work Jesus did in His life from the work He did on the cross. I've read all of your posts and all of the scripture you have used, but I don't see where you have proved your point.
Joe,
I don't disagree with Jesus.
The statements I made are abbreviated. I was trying to use less words, knowing that we both already know where we both stand.
Seems I'm no match for you in this debate. I suggest you read Pastor John Pipers book, and then perhaps write him, and see what he thinks of your interpretation of the Bible. Or someone of his caliber: James White, R. C. Sproul, Philip Ryken, John MacArthur, etc. They will be more qualified to debate you on this subject.
Blessings to you and your family.
Joseph,
I am going to think much on what you are implicating here. I am not quite ready to go that far as Terry is right...the gospel call is simple. Now where I do think you have a point is this "active obediance" may be the loophole that some use to teach the law along with the gospel, but I don't think all are inclined to do this.
If you ever listen to Dr Lutzer, he makes it abundantly clear that you must trust in the promise of God and rest in Him in grace. In fact some from the Lordship camp have written him many emails and accused him of preaching "cheap grace", however if you listen to him he sounds kinda like Steve Camp on this particular subject. He admits active obediance, but weighs the more heavily on the inherent righteousness of Christ. Today he said the active obediance of a perfect man would atone for one other man legally, but that it takes the holiness of God to atone for millions. He even made Campi's favorite phrase, "God died for God."
I would rather say "God died in our place, and received the wrath of God from God to pay our debt." The earlier quote slightly implies God owing for his own sin...in which Lutzer actually said today that Jesus became the wickedest of men on the cross. Ironically Chad Bresson,(Steve Camps friend) warned me not to even imply this as the fire passed between the two sacrifices. I don't know where Bresson stands here.
All in all we need to leave room for struggle on this from our brethren as I heard Lutzer speak of Luther being totaly in awe of it. It is an awesome subject.
I agree with so much of your groundwork as Terry says and I do think it incumbent that both of you do see this as a loophole by legalists to bind us to the law. Clearly I see that potential is there, but as in Lutzers case, I heartily disagree.
Also I found some stuff from Spurgeon, and I don't think it is an open and shut case with him. The more I research this, the more I see that men were still at odds as they are today over this, so I do think it is wrong when they say Church history is on their side.
Here's a quote that leads me to think that Spurgeon would have not agreed with article 13 on that 1999 confession.
The subject here is over fruit coming because of believing in Grace(which I agree with) so it is not really speaking to this subject, but this statement he makes kinda makes me wonder where he stood on this issue as what he is implying here would not bode well with those who takes issue with any breath or hint of "so callled" infusy talk. What think ye?
"It may be possible that we put the precept in such a way that we countenance the suspicion that we are legal in spirit; this we must carefully avoid. We would preach Christ as the perfect pattern, that saints may long to be conformed to Him. Men must have the spirit of Christ, or they are lost. There is no Heaven to be found in a mere forensic justification, apart from a spiritual work within the soul, - a change of heart, and a renewel of mind." CH Spurgeon-All Round Ministry
Hey Terry,
how do you like this quote?
"Do you notice, at the present moment, the way the gospel is put? I am putting no criticism upon anyone in particular, but I continually read the exhortation, "Give your heart to Christ." The exhortation is good, but do not suffer it to cover over the gospel word: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved." In the Sunday School, the teaching often is, "Dear Children, love Jesus." Now, this is not the gospel. The love of Jesus comes as a fruit, but the gospel is, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved." If we think that we shall do more good by substituting another exhortation for the gospel command, we shall find ourselves landed in serious difficulties. If, for a moment, our improvements seem to produce a larger result than the old gospel, it will be the growth of mushrooms, it may even be the growth of toadstools; but it is not the growth of the trees of the Lord." CH Spurgeon - All Round Ministry
Wouldn't it be great if we all just trusted the Lord with his own message and then let God cultivate, instead of us trying to help him out? Hey its his promise...I don't want to be the one who hid it come judgment seat of Christ day.
Spurgeon was controversial. He considered himself puritan, but he took some pot shots at them.
You all need to take the time to read his message "The Warrant of Faith!" over there on Phil Johnsons archives.
http://www.spurgeon.org/sermons/0531.htm
Read this sermon. This in the end is the only thing that matters for eternity...to obey this sweet command Spurgeon calls us to..Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved. Thats a promise. A promise from God who cannot lie.
Fitmedic,
Well at least we all safely made it out of here without being called Brian MacLaren:-)
fitmedic,
I appreciate your comments very much and enjoy hearing from you.
It's not usually like this! But this is a difficult subject to discuss. I, too, think that something like this should be discussed one on one, eye to eye, or preferably, not at all, if it's going to cause divisions in the body of Christ.
I do think that 99% of true Christians have never even considered the things being talked about here. And if it were ever presented to them, they would probably be evenly divided, or just walk away scratching their heads.
Since you are new to this blog, I wonder if you read the first article posted on this subject from March 21 called "The Active and Passive Obedience of Christ", and the articles that followed.
Let me be the first to say "Welcome to Camponthis!" : )
(We really all love each other here. Right, guys?)
In His Love,
Michele
Brother Joseph and Fitmedic,
When either one of us struggles with a most profound truth, remember Martha struggling by Lazarus' tomb and be patient. Please consider her struggle with the resurrection life. The text says..."Jesus loved her."
I can think of no preacher who is standing for Faith alone right now than Erwin Lutzer. Please pray for him and all preachers...that they commit not any Pulpit Crimes. We must all reverance the Word...even the ones holding others to not commiting Pulpit Crimes. Again Joseph, I believe what you do and I know it hurts to be infered as a heretic...but we gotta let it go and love instead. I love Steve Camp and sometimes I have found myself weeping in prayer for him at the trials he has gone through and shared with us. O let us pray for one another in these trials. Remember Abraham was on a Journey and he sought to manipulate the promise via Sarah's bondwoman and it was not until he was brought through all of that did he finally rest on the God of promise and believe, but God's hand was leading him still up until that point.
To all? We become clean by one way and one way only. The word spoken to us. Jesus Christ the eternal living word Himself. Oh brethren, rest in him as a little child and know that He is the resurrection and the life and He that believeth in Him...though he were dead, yet shall he live. I expect to go out into eternity on this truth and this Word alone.
Bhedr(Brian Hedrick)
P.s- Joseph, Thanks for your prayer for safety on the road. Joseph you are a masked avenger, but be careful to not use to many bullets. I love you brother. You kinda remind me of another masked avenger that Helped me rest in this truth that I was mean to in the past...I praise God for all of the tools he uses. May we carefully listen and follow his lead. I do feel there are words of wisdom here by Terry to be had.
"There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the *Law of the Spirit of life* has set you free from the law of sin and death."Romans 8:1
Yes the Law is righteoss, but is a lesser glory that Christ Himself and only brings death to us. Only Christs Zoe life brings life.
"Now if the ministry of death, carved in letters on stone, came with such glory that the Isrealites could not gaze at Moses' face because of its glory, which was being *brought to an end*, will not the ministry of the Spirit have even more glory? For if their was glory in the ministry of condemnation, the ministry of righteousness must far exceed it in glory." 2 Corinthians 3:7-9
"For the Law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ." John 1:17
"Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life, Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live." John 11:25
This is a wonderful truth. Let it be in your heart. I wish you peace.
Dear brother Joseph,
Please forgive me for being short with you and giving you the impression that I wasn't listening (or reading).
This venue is not the best for learning what one really believes or whatever, is it? I don't think we are too far apart on our Theologies. :-)
If you wish to discuss offline I guess you could follow my profile back to my blog(s). But that is up to you brother. In any case, I would welcome some one on one in a less antagonistic venue. :-)
In Christ
Mike Ratliff
"WE GRIEVE WITH HOPE; WE SORROW WITH HOPE; WE MOURN WITH HOPE; WE ACHE WITH HOPE..."
"For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees?"
(Romans 8:22-24,ESV)
littlegal
Perfect verses for this article. Thank you!
Post a Comment