LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. C jjnp Copijrirtfti 5ft» Shelf J5&66ZFZ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. EARTHLY SUFFERING AND HEAVENLY GLORY: WITH OTHER SERMONS. • EARTHLY SUFFERING AND HEAVENLY GLORY: WITH OTHER SERMONS. BY HENRY A. BOARDMAN, D.D. -7 ikh .«-■ PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 1878 > OF CONG* Egg [WAtHlWOTOMJ / 8 . Mu Z j Copyright, 1878, by J. B. LirpiNCOTT & Co. PREFACE. With a single exception, these sermons were prepared and preached in the ordinary routine of the Author's Pastoral ministrations. The closing discourse of the series was delivered before the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church at the opening of its Annual Sessions in Nashville, Tennessee, May 17, 1855. It was printed by order of the General Assembly, and is still issued from the press of the Presbyterian Board of Publication. It has seemed proper to include it in this volume, by reason of the persistent and increasing efforts put forth, alike in England and in our own country, to revive the noxious heresy of an Official Human Priesthood in the Christian Church. 131 1 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, April, 1878. 1* 5 CONTENTS. SERMON I. Cartel) &ufmstj) arib ijciwenlt) t&ioxr). 1 1 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be conipared with the glory which shall be revealed in us, ' ' — Romans v i i i . i 8 1 1 SERMON II. tltyat ttjtnk pc of Cljmt? " What think ye of Christ? 11 — Matthew xxii. 42 . 36 SERMON III. &\)c illpstcrp of Tpvoxnocnce. "Zo, these are parts of His ways. 11 — Job xxvi. 14 . 62 SERMON IV. Ztyc Cljurcl): Knitp in jDtocwttp; jDkicrsttt) in Kmtt). "For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is Christ. 11 — I. Corinthians xii. 12 . . . . -83 7 S Contents. S ERMON V. t&cbcmpttmtj a Jfrtufcu to tijc 3Utgtlf. PAGE u ] Which things the angels desire to look into" — I. Peter i. 12 108 SERMON VI. (Christ, tljc jPcsirc of all llatioiw. 11 And the Desire of all nations shall come." — Haggai ii. 7 132 SERMON VII. (Sod tbc onli; adequate Portion of tljc £oul. lt Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is none upon, earth that I desire beside Thee." — Psalm lxxiii. 25 ..... 156 SERMON VIII. £l)c Scripture jDoctrinc of tUumroa. "He that reeeiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet, shall receive a prophet 1 s reward ; and he that reeeiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man, shall receive a righteous man 1 s reward." — Matthew x. 41 • . 180 SERMON IX. £lK &tsl(htfl of tl)c tempest. >d when lie was entered into a ship, His disci- ples followed Him. And, behold, there arose u great tempest in the sea, insomuch that the ship ~ < red with the waves : but He was Contents. g asleep. And His disciples came to Him, and awoke Him, saving, Lord, save ns : we perish. And He saith unto them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith ? Then He arose, and re- buked the winds and the sea ; and there was a great calm. But the ?nen marvelled, saying, What manner of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey Sim!" — Matthew viii. 23-27 ....... 203 SERMON X. t\)c ^xvoQimcc anfc d when he penned the text. But what does he mean by "the glory that shall be / in us" — that glory which is to eclipse and turn to nought all the sufferings of earth? It is not Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 1 9 given us to answer this question, except in a very imperfect way. This glory is future; it is yet to be revealed. We cannot therefore describe it now. The venerable John, in affirming this, has neverthe- less given us a hint of it: " Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be ; but we know that when He shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is." This may aid our conceptions somewhat. And it may further aid us to consider that the design of the present economy is to undo the effects of the apostasy, and restore man to his primeval image. Could we frame an adequate conception of the first man, as he came from his Maker's hands, while it would not at all exhaust the meaning of the phrase, "the glory that shall be revealed in us," it would supply some ideas not unworthy of the subject. One of our eminent New England theologians refers to Adam in these eloquent terms : " His mind could trace the skill and glory of the Creator in the works of His hands ; and from the nature of the work, could understand, admire, and adore the Workman. His thoughts could rise to God and wander through eternity. The universe was to him a mirror, by which he saw reflected every moment, in every place, and in every form, the beauty, greatness, and excellence of Jehovah. To Him his affections and his praises rose, more sweet 20 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. than the incense of the morning, and made no un- happy harmony with the loftier music of heaven. He was the Priest of tin's great world, and offered the morning and evening sacrifice of thanksgiving for the whole earthh' creation. Of this creation he was also the Lord, not the Tyrant; but the rightful, just, benevolent Sovereign. The subjection of the inferior creatures to him was voluntary, and produc- tive of nothing but order, peace, and happiness. With these endowments and privileges he was placed in Paradise, — no unhappy resemblance of heaven itself, — and surrounded by everything which was good for food, or pleasant to the eye, or fragrant to the smell. In an atmosphere impregnated with life; amid streams in which life flowed ; amid fruits in which life bloomed and ripened; encircled by ever-living beauty and magnificence; peaceful within, safe without; and conscious of immortality; he was destined to labor only that he might be useful and happy, and to contemplate the wonders of the uni- verse, and worship its glorious Author, as his prime and professional employment. He was an image of the invisible God, created to be like Him in knowledge, righteousness, holiness, His most illus- trious attributes ; and like Him, to exercise dominion r the works of his hands."* ' : Rev. Timothy Dwight, D.D. Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 2 1 Cancelling such of the relations and powers here ascribed to Adam as were peculiar to him in virtue of his federal headship of the race, we may accept this beautiful portraiture as bearing a near resem- blance to the saints in glory. Whereinsoever the two may be unequal, the advantage lies with the ransomed. In our first parent we behold a perfect man. The same perfection, only of a loftier type, will attach to every one of the redeemed. I say, of a loftier type; for this will be true even of their physical organization. Although Adam was not mortal, or subject to death, until he sinned, yet his body was adapted to the world he was to inhabit. We may not deny the materialism of the " new heavens and the new earth ;" but we are given to understand that it will be less gross in its forms than the matter which surrounds us here ; and this will call for a corresponding adaptation in the bodies of the redeemed. Nor is this mere conjecture. In a passage quoted a moment ago, we are taught that at the resurrection the saints will be like Christ : 11 we shall be like Him!' We read elsewhere that they will be raised " with bodies like unto Christ's glorious body." Once only before His ascension did He put on this u glorious body." In that wonder- ful scene, " His face did shine as the sun, and His raiment was white as the light." Moses and Elias, it is probable, were robed in similar splendors. 22 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. Brief as the description is, it seems to warrant the presumption that the bodies of the righteous will wear something of the glory which ravished the eyes of the three favored disciples as they gazed upon the transfigured person of their Lord. The posses- sion oi~ a body like this may well be taken as a part of u the glory that shall be revealed in us.'* Hut " the King's daughter is all glorious within" also. And if this be true of the Church as a whole, it must be true of each of its members. Renewed in the image of God, they will be freed from the weak- nesses, the impurity, and the discord which sin has entailed upon them. All their powers will be so balanced and adjusted, that none will be in excess, none in defect. The understanding will no more mislead the affections; the heart will no more tyran- nize over the reason; the will and the conscience will blend in matchless harmony. There will be no 11 law in the members warring against the law of the mind ;" no u lusting of the flesh against the Spirit;" no self-reproaches, no remorse, no confessions, no repentings. Very much of the conflict and trouble we experience here arises from the perversion or ill- working of affections in themselves innocent. These affections beguile us into attachments which at least menace the fealty we owe to God. They fasten upon irthly object with a strength and a fervor which, unless checked, might rob the Lord of Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 23 Hosts of the paramount homage which is His due; and it is not easy to check them. " The fondness of a creature's love, How strong it strikes the sense ! Thither the warm affections move, Nor can we call them thence." Often it becomes needful to employ some painful chastisement as a means of dissolving the spell of these too ardent attachments ; and then it is left us to gather up the torn and scattered tendrils of our affections, and lead them back to Him from whom they should never have been severed. This trial will not be repeated in heaven. The ransomed will be in no danger of refusing to their Lord the reigning place in their hearts. Allied to each other, they will be with a love which is but dimly shadowed forth in the purest ties of earth; but this love will recruit itself perpetually from the still purer, nobler, more absorbing devotion with which every soul will cherish the image and the honor of" Him that sitteth upon the throne." In this particular not only, but in all others, there will be no danger of erring, since there will be no temptation even to go astray. There are few thoughts connected with the future glory more de- lightful than this, the absence of all temptation to sin. To spend age after age, cycle after cycle, yea, eternity itself, without being obliged to repel a single 4 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory* enticement to evil, this passes our comprehension. It seems a reach of blessedness almost too exalted even for a people redeemed by the blood of the Lamb. Yet it belongs essentially to the scriptural conception .of the " glory that shall be revealed" in the saints; and we must believe it true. It will meet with your ready response if knowl- edge be mentioned as another part of this glory. Reverence for intellect and knowledge is of the essence of our being. We bow before intellectual greatness with an unquestioning and willing homage. This universal instinct points to the destiny that awaits man hereafter, and the Bible confirms the mute prophecy. The disadvantages which wait upon the pursuit of knowledge here are too obvious to re- quire specific mention. Look at the long and toil- some process that we call " education ;" the time that must be spent in mastering the mere rudiments of learning; the score or so of years consumed in simply disciplining the faculties sufficiently to em- ploy them to any good purpose in the search after truth. And then what hinderances and drawbacks from every quarter to the prosecution of this work ! And how narrow a part of the vast field which invites attention is it given to the most successful scholars to explore before death steps in and arrests their labors! Perhaps there is no occasion upon which we feel more keenly the vanity and nothingness of Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 25 earth, than when we stand by the bier of a great scholar, and see all that was mortal of such a man committed to the grave. It is a sad memento of the vanity of man as mortal, and we must needs lament that he could not transmit to some survivor the in- tellectual treasures he has spent a life in gathering. But let it not be assumed that these treasures perish with the clay tabernacle. Pervaded with the sanc- tifying principle of the new life, it is reasonable to presume that they share in the soul's immor- tality, and may serve as a foundation for that loftier culture which is to be carried forward in the life to come. Whether the methods of acquiring knowledge in that realm will bear any analogy to the processes we observe here is not apparent. We may be certain that study will bring neither perplexity nor fatigue. And it seems a rational presumption that intuition will largely supersede the slow and patient investi- gations which truth now exacts of her votaries. It will be something to be endowed with faculties of body and mind which are insusceptible of decay or weariness ; never to feel jaded and worn ; never to long to sit down and rest, or to find yourself invok- ing " balmy sleep" to come and refresh you. And no less auspicious will it be to have a place so near the great Source of knowledge, close by the throne of God. There, as here, the believer will see " but 3 jo Earthly Suffering and Heavenly (i/ory. parts of I lis ways;" for how shall any creature com- pass the Creator? But how wide the survey, as compared with the broadest sweep of vision accorded to the most favored of the race in this life! If we feel our amplest toil rewarded by the discoveries we make in the three great volumes of truth in this life, what will it be to turn over the august leaves under the cloudless light of the heaven of heavens ! to study the mysteries of creation, providence, and re- demption, in the beatific presence of Him from whom they all proceed, and in whom they find their con- summation ! These studies, too, will borrow an aug- mented interest from the companionship in which they are conducted. In this, as in many other as- pects, it is most interesting to reflect that the re- deemed will have the presence and sympathy of the angels. It may bring this home to our experience, to consider how much we should any of us prize the opportunity of meeting daily, as a friend, a man like Plato, or Newton, or Milton. What, then, must it be to be introduced into the society of those exalted beings who stand at the head of the intelligent crea- tion, and who have been observing the course of events throughout the universe for several thousand years ? Who shall compute the progress of the soul in knowledge, and the ever-growing enlargement of its faculties, when placed in circumstances like these? Surely we cannot err in specifying this as one of the Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory, 2 7 elements of that " glory" which our apostle affirms is to be revealed in the saints. The form of expression here must be noted : " which shall be revealed in us." We have indicated knowledge and holiness as pertaining strictly to this conception. And it were easy to specify other per- sonal characteristics of the righteous ; but St. Paul has in view something too grand and imposing to be reached in this way. As in explanation of the text he adds : " For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God." And he goes on with singular sublimity and power to describe the whole creation as groaning and trav- ailing in pain together, in anxious and longing ex- pectation of the great epiphany of the redeemed, when they shall be seen as they are. All nature waits for this " manifestation [Gr., apocalypse~\ of the sons of God." Then all nature — all worlds — are concerned in it. The "sons of God" he styles them. And still more significantly in the verse preceding the text, u heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ." These expressions baffle us. We cannot take them in. But this we know : they savor of a glory which " passeth knowledge." They point to the glory of the uncreated One: to "the glory which the Son had with the Father before the world was," augmented by the splendors of His Mediatorial throne. In this glory the ransomed are to share; for they, too, are 28 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. sons of God and joint-heirs with Christ. This glory is to be put upon them. And here is what is meant by the u manifestation of the sons of God," — their being arrayed in the glory of their Lord and Saviour, in the presence of the universe. It is not merely the inherent glory of their perfected humanity; nor the glory of their final triumph over death and hell ; nor the glory of the bright abode and the blessed fellow- ship into which they will have been introduced ; but with and above all these glories, the yet more efful- gent glory reflected upon them from their glorified Head and Prince, Himself " the Brightness of the Father's glory." This is to be their " manifestation." And that, because He has purposes to accomplish by it reaching far beyond themselves. Redemption has cost Him an infinite sum; and while He will account no blessedness too great for a people ransomed at such a price, He will also make the love and the mercy and the wisdom and the glory He lavishes upon them, subservient to His own glory throughout the universe. We have a hint of this in that saying of the apostle, "to the intent that now unto the prin- cipalities and powers in heavenly places might be known [made known] by the Church the manifold wisdom of God." (Kph. iii. 10.) Not earth and hell only, but all heaven, shall come to the "manifestation of the sons of (iod." Cherubim and Seraphim shall find their grandeur paled before the glory in which Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 29 He clothes the blood-washed company. From dis- tant spheres and systems, possibly, the tribes of holy, happy denizens shall hasten to behold the strange, surpassing glory of these redeemed sinners ; and to learn from them lessons excelling all that they had gathered in a sinless life of ages, concerning the wis- dom, and the might, the love, and the mercy, of the Deity. Nor is this to pass away as a mere coronation pageant. The honor shown them in their resplendent " manifestation" will be perpetuated. The visions of the apocalypse reveal them as having their perma- nent abode in heaven, in the immediate presence of their exalted and reigning Lord. The lustre in which they shine is not like the transitory splendors with which the western horizon is often aglow as the sun goes to his rest ; nor like the pomp and state which wait upon an earthly prince through life, and then disappear with him in the tomb. It is the glory emanating from personal qualities impressed with the highest conceivable moral excellence, enhanced by the possession of a happiness absolutely complete and perfect, and transfused and heightened by the reflected glory of their King which covers them as with a robe of immortal light and beauty. We are dealing with themes beyond our reach. But even the faint conceptions we are able to form of that world may suffice to illustrate the judgment of the apostle : " I reckon that the sufferings of this 3* 30 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us." This avowal becomes still more significant when he supplies, as he has elsewhere done, the link which unites the suf- fering and the glory. It is not as though they were independent of each other; as though out of His mere pleasure God had assigned to His people an allotment of sorrow here and an allotment of joy there, with no recognized relation between the two. " For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." (2 Cor. iv. 17.) The affliction is in order to the glory : it has (as sanctified) a positive and most important agency in preparing believers for their future triumph. This is everywhere the doc- trine of the Bible. It is too large a subject to be discussed here; nor can this be necessary. For who does not know that "whom the Lord loveth He chas- teneth ;" and that the troubles of life are the crucible in which He purges His people of their dross and refines their graces? It is by this needful discipline lie teaches them their frailty and dependence, hum- bles their pride, lays open the corruption of their hearts, exposes to them the vanity of the world, warns them against temptation, makes them prize the tenderness and constancy of their Redeemer, inspires them with a ready sympathy in the trials of others, weans them from earth and sense, brings them Earthly Stiff ering and Heavenly Glory. 3 1 nearer and nearer to Himself, and thus gradually prepares them for their rest. It is in this view, as hinted in the opening of the present discourse, and in this alone, that a man who had passed through the accumulated sufferings of the apostle, could speak of the whole as " a light affliction" lasting only " for a moment." What is any affliction when balanced against "an exceeding and eternal weight of glory?" This was Paul's judgment. It should be ours. Are you ready, my brethren, to accept it ? There are not a few here for whom this question will have a peculiar significance. It is because suf- fering and sorrow are all around us that I have brought the subject before you. Many of these afflictions are open and visible. There are others which prey upon the heart in secret, too sad to invite the partnership and sympathy of any human bosom. But to one and all of these sufferers, however varied, however severe, however protracted your sorrows, the apostle addresses his consolatory, triumphant language, " I reckon that the sufferings of this pres- ent time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us." Let the thought come home to you, " What is the suffering to the glory?" Let it dwell upon your minds. Recall it in your seasons of despondency, when you are pressed with the corroding cares of poverty; when you have to struggle with some subtle disease which 32 Earthly Suffering and Heave7ily Glory. sets upon you like a strong man armed; when you are stung with ingratitude; when you encounter the indifference and rudeness of the selfish great; when the sense of your bereavements comes over you with the might and the desolation of a spring torrent : — "What is the suffering to the glory?" Turn away from earth to heaven. Send your thoughts onward and upward to the bright " manifestation of the sons of God," in which you hope to have a share; to that effulgent glory which infolds the pious dead, and will, in due time, infold you. What think they now of the sorrows which cheq- uered their earthly lot? Are they counting the weary steps of their pilgrimage? Are they descant- ing upon the thorns that pierced their feet, and the rocks over which they stumbled, and the storms that beat upon their heads, and the hunger and thirst that beset them, as they slowly wended their way toward the holy city? Do they recall the priva- tions and losses, the disappointments and tears, of this life with the feeling that their sufferings here were something vast, appalling, overwhelming? Oh, no. Could you bring down the very martyrs who were hunted like wild beasts, and tortured with the most refined and protracted cruelties, they would tell you, with one accord, that these were " light afflictions," not worthy of a moment's thought amidst the ineffable glory to which they conducted Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 33 them. And just in proportion as your faith and hope can lift you up to the contemplation of this glory as a sublime reality, will you feel that your sufferings are " not worthy to be compared" with it. " For a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations." But consider the end your Father designs by it : " that the trial of your faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honor and glory at the appear- ing of Jesus Christ." " Rejoice," then, " inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings, that when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy." It was " for the joy set before Him He endured the cross, despising the shame;" and if His people " suffer, they shall also reign with Him." His joy is their joy; His glory, their glory. And all the more will this meet your case, because it will fully satisfy that inward craving after your Saviour's love which you felt so keenly, and with such painful misgivings, in the days of your exile. I have spoken of knowledge and holiness as essen- tial elements of the glory to be revealed in the saints, and of that Divine glory in which they are to be arrayed, reserving for this place a closing reference to one other ingredient in that cup of bliss. Were it unchastened language to say that even this tri- fold glory would not have been complete without 34 Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. the presence of still another element? I hope not. For it is the nature God has given us: — we cannot live without love. There is no human heart that does not yearn after love. If it were a possible thing that heaven should be heaven without love, what would all its glories be to creatures formed as we are? Pure intellect might live upon simple, abstract truth; but the heart, never. We love before we know. The affections are through life the chief sources and inlets of pleasure (as of pain also) ; and we are not left in doubt as to the point, that we carry this same nature with us into eternity, as our Master did be- fore us. Blessed be God, He has made ample pro- vision for this law of our being in the future world. The glory to be revealed in His people is like the sun : it warms as well as shines. Redemption itself began in love, the infinite love of the Father. It achieved its crowning triumph in the boundless love of the Son. It is carried forward in our world by the unwearied love of the Spirit. The first emotion it enkindles in the renewed heart is love to its Deliv- erer. This love it enthrones as the dominant power of the soul. It burns with an inconstant but un- quenched flame through life, and burns on with a purer fervor after death, there, as here, pointing ever to Him by whose love it was enkindled. Yes, and there far more than here, assured of His love not only, but loving and being loved by all with whom Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. 35 it shared the hopes and fears of the Christian conflict on earth. We may not say that the " family" will re-appear in heaven, and our earthly friendships be renewed precisely as they exist here. But are these ties to be ruptured forever? Are these sacred at- tachments to be finally dissolved ? Are the moulds in which the whole form and structure of our being has been cast to be so shivered by the stroke of the destroyer, that the fragments can never be gathered up and re-fashioned in some loftier type hereafter ? No, my brethren, it cannot be. The voice of nature — of the new nature — on this point is confirmed by numerous intimations of the inspired writers ; and we feel warranted in saying that the coming glory will bring you not only the perfect love of your Re- deemer, but the tender, quenchless love of those who are one in Christ with you here. And beyond this hallowed circle — wherever there are ransomed sinners or rapt seraphs — you will love and be loved with a fervor and a constancy known only to those who have received their crowns. Let this reflection assuage your grief as you dwell upon your sainted dead. Let it inflame your gratitude to Him who has admitted them, and will admit you to His love. And let it impress the con- viction deeply upon your hearts, that " the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us." WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST? Matthew xxii. 42. " What think ye of Christ?" Our Saviour had shown His skill in answering questions; now He displays His sagacity in asking one. First the Pharisees and Herodians had tried to ensnare Him by the insidious question : " Master, is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar, or not?" Then the Sadducees, by inquiring concerning the woman with the seven husbands: "Whose wife shall she be in the resurrection ?" And then a " lawyer," put for- ward by the Pharisees again, by asking: "Which is the great commandment in the law ?" All were con- founded and silenced by His replies, and then He in turn puts a test question to His inquisitors: " What think ye of Christ? whose Son is He?" They an- swered correctly, "The Son of David;" not antici- pating the question which this answer would invite: 11 How then doth David in spirit call Him Lord, say- ing, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou on my 36 U licit think ye of Christ ? $j right hand, till I make thine enemies thy footstool. If David then call Him Lord, how is He his Son?" They saw, perhaps, where this was likely to carry them, and made no reply. It cured them of asking Him questions. Every one sees how pregnant a question this was with the Jews: "What think ye of Christ?" It is no less significant with us. There is far more in- volved in it than meets the eye. If we were properly alive to its importance, it would be as much can- vassed and talked about in all circles as the alleged Messiahship of Jesus was during His public ministry throughout the towns and villages of Judea. It is of as much moment to us to have right thoughts of Christ as it was to the Hebrews to know whether or not He was their predicted deliverer, whose kingdom should break in pieces and consume all other king- doms, and stand forever. Nor is this a matter which affects a few individuals only, or which pertains merely to Churches and Christian professors. It concerns us all. The individual cannot be found who has not a deeper stake in the question, " What thinkest thou of Christ?" than he has in any and all questions pertaining to his business, his family, his country, and all other earthly interests combined. On this topic I propose to enlarge. It is my purpose to illustrate the pre-eminent importance of the ques- tion, " What think ye of Christ?" by way of inciting 4 38 // r hat think ye of Christ? those who may listen to this discourse to compare their views of Christ with the teachings of Holy Scripture, and to examine into the practical influence these views exert upon their hearts and lives. I. Your entire theological creed must, logically, be determined by the answer you give to this question. It is no isolated or subordinate topic to which the inquiry points, but one that touches the very founda- tions of religion. Our religion takes its designation from Christ. We ourselves bear His name. And it is His name which divides off the nations that have received the Bible from those which have not received it. Whatever importance, therefore, may attach to an inquiry into the nature of Christianity must attach to the question, " What think ye of Christ ?" So far from being a mere incident in a theological sys- tem, the position assigned to Christ will be decisive of the whole scheme. So implicated is this doctrine with the other essential truths of revelation, that they uniformly and necessarily derive their coloring from the views which are entertained respecting the Medi- ator. This will not appear surprising when it is con- sidered that it is a controverted question concerning Christ whether He is God or man; the Creator and Lord of all, or a mere creature. It is unavoidable that a scheme of faith shall receive a positive and controlling impress, according as one or the other of two elements so infinitely dissimilar is infused into it. What think ye of Christ f 39 A system which recognizes the self-existent and un- searchable Deity as pervading every part of it, dis- charging its chief functions, and administering all its affairs, cannot blend with a system in which these offices are devolved upon a creature. Nor is jt material what may be the rank and endowments of that creature. The difficulty is not obviated by mak- ing Christ an angelic or super-angelic being; unless you could simultaneously abridge the attributes of the Infinite One and bring the amplitude of His na- ture within the compass of our conceptions. While God remains God, you do absolutely nothing towards lessening the disparity between Him and His " only- begotten Son," by exalting the latter to a precedence, indefinite if you will (so it does not overpass the limits of created nature), above the Seraphim. The approximation you effect of the creature to the Crea- tor, by this arrangement, is less than the measure of assimilation to the intelligence and wisdom of an angel, involved in a single day's progress of a new- born infant. For here there is some conceivable pro- portion between the terms of the comparison; which there cannot be where one term is finite and the other infinite. The resolution of this question concerning the proper rank and authority of Christ, I have said, must tell upon every leading point of theology ; pre- cisely (for the illustration is not too strong) as the 40 / / r hat think ye of Christ ? position assigned to the sun must rule any planetary theory. Its connection with the conceptions we form of the nature of the Godhead is too palpable to re- quire comment. According as we hold to one or another belief respecting the person of Christ, do we admit or deny a Trinity in unity in the Supreme Being. And a thorough analysis of the conflicting views on this point will lead us out, by a logical necessity, into one or the other of two incompatible systems covering the whole ground of man's moral character and condition, the design and efficacy of the crucifixion, the offices of the Holy Spirit, the mode of reconciliation to God, the nature of true worship, and, in fine, the entire Gospel economy. 2. It is only giving this general observation a specific direction to remark, that your answer to the question, " What think ye of Christ?" must deter- mine your views of the way of salvation. Wherever the Gospel is known, the profound and solemn in- quiry, "What must I do to be saved?" affiliates itself in every breast with another inquiry: " What was the nature and design of Christ's mission to our world?" And on this point there is an endless diversity of sentiment. There are those, as already hinted, who see in Jesus of Nazareth simply a man of prc-emi- nent purity and benevolence, an incarnation of all the virtues, who, having instructed the world by His wisdom and improved it by His piety, consummated What think ye of Christ ? 41 a life radiant with goodness by a death of corre- spondent meekness and resignation; and thus taught us in the most touching of all methods the two most important and difficult of all lessons, how to live and how to die. Others go quite beyond this, in that they yield a speculative assent to the orthodox formulas of faith, and recognize the fact of an atonement. But why, precisely, an atonement was necessary, or what the atonement was, are points concerning which they have no definite ideas. Indeed, they do not much concern themselves about the subject. Scrip- tural views of the atonement are inseparable from certain impressions respecting human nature, which this class of persons find somewhat irksome. By depreciating the evil to be removed by the death of Christ, they of course lower the significance of His sacrifice, and open the way for perverting it to very mischievous purposes. " Jesus Christ is regarded rather as having added to our moral advantages, than as having conferred that without which all the rest were in vain ; rather as having made the passage to a happy futurity somewhat more commodious, than as having formed the passage itself over what had else been an impassable gulf." If He is in terms acknowledged as a Saviour, it is really in the illusive and irreverent sense of His having put us in a situ- ation where we may save ourselves ; or of supple- menting our imperfect righteousness by the merit of 4* 42 / / T hat think ye of C % hrist f 1 lis own obedience. Christ is not to them " wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption." They are very little in sympathy with the spirit of a passage like this : " I count all things but loss that I may win Christ and be found in Him, not having mine own righteousness which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteous- ness which is of God by faith." Christ occupies no such place as this in their scheme. They are, in fact, essaying to get to heaven by the abrogated covenant of works; by a refined legalism which, though pre- tending to honor Christ, impugns all His offices. This is a very common and very dangerous error. It has been in the Church from the days of the apos- tles until now. It marred their work, as it continues to mar the work of those who preach the same glori- ous Gospel. " O foolish Galatians, . . . this only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? Are ye so foolish ? having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh ?" " If righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain." If salvation be " by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it be of works, then is it no more grace : otherwise work is no more work." These two schemes can no more coalesce than fire and water. We must be saved wholly by Christ's merits or wholly by our own. He will have TJ licit think ye of Christ ? 43 the entire glory of our salvation, or He will have none. He came into the world "to save sinners;" not to make it practicable for them to save them- selves ; not to impress a saving efficacy upon their services or upon their prayers ; not to transfer His own merit to His church and make that a Saviour in His stead; not to act any subordinate part in the deliverance of the race from sin, but to "save" them. And those who decline receiving Him as a Saviour, in the plenary import of this term, must not hope to make His intervention subservient to their salvation through some scheme which will exempt them from the humiliation of confessing that they are in them- selves miserable sinners, too polluted even to think a good thought and too impotent to perform a single righteous act. There is still another error, tending to the same pernicious result, in respect to the design of Christ's incarnation. Those who have embraced it, if asked, "What think ye of Christ?" would reply: "We think that He came into the world to save sinners, but not by enduring the penalty of the law in their stead. The object of punishment under the Divine government is to prevent crime and promote the good of the universe. The ground of Christ's suf- ferings lies neither in the inherent ill-desert of sin, nor in the inflexibility of the moral law, nor yet in the essential repugnance of the Divine holiness to all 44 What think ye of Christ? sin. There is nothing in the character or the law of God to forbid the suspension of the penalty and the pardon of the sinner, provided only that some expe- dient can be devised to exhibit to the universe His abhorrence of sin, and to deter others from rebellion. This was what Christ came to accomplish. He did not stand in the ' law-place' of His people. His sufferings were not in any sense legal : they consti- tuted no part of that curse which was threatened against the transgressor. The whole legal system has been suspended, at least for the present, in order to make way for the operation of one of a different character. In introducing this system of mercy, which involves a suspension of the penal curse, God has required a satisfaction to the principles of general or public justice ; a satisfaction which will effectually secure all the good to the universe which is intended to be accomplished by the penalty of the law when inflicted, and at the same time prevent all that prac- tical mischief which would result from arresting the hand of primitive justice without the intervention of an atonement. In this way it has become practi- cable for the sinner to be saved without jeoparding the great moral interests of the universe. We do not say that his salvation is secured by this arrange- ment. All that the atonement has effected for the sinner is to place him within the reach of pardon. The door is open. Mercy can now operate." What think ye of Christ ? 45 This ingenious speculation cannot stand. Un- doubtedly one end of the death of Christ was to exhibit God's abhorrence of sin, and to deter others from sinning. But these ends can be accomplished only in subserviency to that which the Scriptures make the great design of this transaction, viz., to satisfy the claims of Divine justice against sinners by a strictly vicarious and adequate atonement. If the Bible teaches any doctrine, it is that Christ Jesus died as an expiatory sacrifice for the sins of His people ; that He stood in their place, bore their sins, endured the curse for them, and thus secured their salvation. He was " made the Surety of a better testament/' He "bore our sins in His own body on the tree." He was "made sin for us." " In whom we have redemption through His blood." " Thou hast redeemed us to God by Thy blood." " Who gave Himself a ransom for all." " Christ hath re- deemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us." "The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all sin." This is the current phraseology of the Scriptures. It is the burden of prophecy. It pervades and vitalizes the whole Le- vitical ritual. It is the constant teaching of the Re- deemer Himself. It is the harmonious, joyful testi- mony of the apostles. It is the sublime song of the redeemed in heaven. All, all concur in declaring, not that Christ died for the good of the universe in 46 What think ye of Chris/ f general, but to redeem His people from the curse of the law, and make them kings and priests unto God and I lis Father. That the good of the universe will be promoted by His intervention in various ways, in many, doubtless, of which we can form no con- ception, will be readily admitted. That it must, in particular, impress all intelligent creatures with God's holiness and justice, and His determination to punish sin, is no less evident on the true view of Christ's sufferings. But how is this result to follow, if His sufferings were not legal; if the iniquities of His people were not visited upon Him; if His death was simply an imposing pageant, "a satisfaction to the principles of general or public justice," in which the victim was no representative or substitute of trans- gressors, and His sufferings had no specific reference to individuals ? If He voluntarily assumed the legal responsibilities of sinners, and, with a perfect right to dispose of His own life, offered Himself as their Surety, it is easy to see how His death might illus- trate the Divine justice and the evil of sin. But where is the justice of consigning Him to the cross, if, being spotless and innocent Himself, He had no legal liabilities for the offences of others? How lid His death exhibit God's abhorrence of sin, and repress disobedience in others, when He did not, in any intelligible sense of the terms, bear the penalty of sin ? And if the principles upon which the Di- What think ye of Christ ? 47 vine government had been administered were to be " suspended," and an amnesty published to our race, why could not this be done without subjecting the Son of God to the humiliation and agony of the cross ? How could this transaction guard the Divine clemency from abuse, or make it safe to exercise it ? With the views of the atonement which you, Chris- tian brethren, find on every page of the Bible, these questions are easily answered ; but they admit of no rational solution on the scheme I am examining. Nor is it a trivial objection to this scheme, that it leaves the salvation of men in a most precarious and uncertain state. All that it does is " to place the sinner within the reach of pardon !" You have not so learned Christ. It is your comfort to know that His people will certainly be saved; that in the same covenant which stipulated for His substitution their coming to Christ was guaranteed ; that as He was " made sin" for them, so they shall be u made the righteousness of God in Him;" that, "having made His soul an offering for sin," He shall, without fail, u see of the travail of His soul and be satisfied." But I have no disposition to enlarge upon this topic. It has simply been adduced as one of the popular errors of the day, which go to disparage the sacer- dotal work of the Redeemer, and to beguile the unstable into perilous paths. It is apposite to my present purpose, as exhibiting another of the ways 48 / / licit think ye of Christ ? in which even serious-minded persons may entertain unworthy thoughts of Christ, and as showing that the views we take of His mission must be decisive in moulding our conceptions of the method of sal- vation. 3. Restricted as I am by the magnitude of this subject to mere hints, I observe, in the third place, that the importance of the question, " What think ye of Christ?" may be seen in the fact that your anszver to it will decide your w/iole character and experience. There are two very different types of virtue or u goodness" current in every Christian community. One is the good man of the world, the other is the good man of the Bible. Both have some amiable qualities in common, but an analysis of the two re- spectively would show that they are made up of very dissimilar materials. Not to go into this analysis beyond the exigencies of the present argument, there is no point in respect to which these two typical men will be found to differ more widely than in their feel- ings towards the Son of God. The good man of the world, whom we meet with so constantly in our po- lite literature, " never talks with affectionate devotion of Christ as the Great High Priest of his profession, as the exalted Friend, whose injunctions are the laws of his virtues, whose work and sacrifice are the basis of his hopes, whose doctrines guide and awe his reasonings, and whose example is the pattern which What think ye of Christ ? 49 he is earnestly aspiring to resemble. The last intel- lectual and moral designations in the world by which it would occur to you to describe him, would be those by which the apostles so much exulted to be recog- nized—a disciple, and a servant, of Jesus Christ; nor would he (I am supposing this character to become a real person) be at all gratified by being so described. You do not hear him avowing that he deems the habitual remembrance of Christ essential to the na- ture of that excellence which he is cultivating. He rather seems, with the utmost coolness of choice, adopting virtue as according with the dignity of a rational agent, than to be in the least degree impelled to it by any relations with the Saviour of the world."* On the other hand, nothing is more observable in the character of an enlightened and earnest Christian than the prominence which Christ has in his whole interior life. So far from shunning the mention of His name or referring in an occasional and formal manner merely to the assistance he has received from the contemplation of so rare an " example" of virtue, he is bold to confess that he derives from Christ his very spiritual life. The life which he lives, he lives by the faith of the Son of God; nay, it is not he that lives, but Christ lives in him. The sentiment which sways his entire being is the constraining love * Foster : Essay iv. 5 50 / / r hat think ye of C lirist f of Christ The end for which he lives is not himself, not his own ease, honor, or aggrandizement, but Christ : it is Christ for him to live. To be taught of Christ; to bear the yoke of Christ; to bring others to Christ; to extend the empire of Christ; if need be, to suffer for Christ, — this constitutes his life. To the blood of Christ he looks for pardon. On the righteousness of Christ he rests his hope of heaven. The commands of Christ are his rule of duty. The arm of Christ is his defence in danger. The sym- pathy of Christ is his comfort in affliction. The in- tercession of Christ is his reliance under conscious ill-desert and backsliding. The reign of Christ is his confidence amidst all changes. In a word, he has no higher aim or aspiration than to bear the image, and do the will, of Christ here, and to dwell with Christ hereafter. Nor is there anything mysterious in this. It re- sults from the very nature of the case that where Christ is fully received into the heart, He must assume the chief place, and subordinate all its powers and passions to himself. I am not speak- ing of a mere nominal piety ; nor of a faith which, however genuine, is enervated by error and sin; but of that cordial and thorough reception of the Saviour which the word of God enjoins and so many of its illustrious personages exemplify. It is impossible that such a faith in Christ should be other than a What think ye of Christ ? 5 1 dominant principle in the heart. That Divine Spirit who implanted it has interwoven all its sister graces with it. The admission of the Gospel doctrine re- specting the Redeemer necessarily draws the whole body of revealed truth with it — history and prophecy, dogma and precept, threatening and promise. You cannot, i.e., you cannot consistently, receive Christ as a Saviour without receiving Him as a King : you cannot give Him your heart without dedicating to Him your property, your talents, your children, and whatever you may esteem as of peculiar value : you cannot honor Him in His person without honoring His word and ordinances : you can have no union with Him which will not identify you with Him in sympathy and in interest, and make His glory your aim, and the prosperity of His kingdom your chief joy. This will exhibit the importance of the question, " What think ye of Christ?" as supplying a key-note to the whole character and life. Where a man thinks of Christ as the apostles thought of Him, he will be like the apostles in his principles, aims, and conduct. Where one has no sympathy with them in their estimate of the Saviour, there will be a corresponding difference in the motives by which he is impelled to action and in the sources from which he draws his happiness. He may, in this latter case, be an up- right and benevolent man, in an important sense, a 5 2 What think ye of Christ ? good man ; but it is not the style of goodness which flows from faith in Christ. It is not the goodness which puts a man in communion with the spirit that pervades the apostolic writings. Those writings, on the contrary, will be likely to strike him as mystical and repulsive. He will not appreciate the allusions with which they abound to the Saviour and the cross. And the authors will appear to him to in- dulge in a vein approaching the fanciful or the ex- travagant in the language they use respecting the love of Christ. This discrepance is significant and monitory. It not only shows that the character formed on the basis of that system usually denominated " evangel- ical" is radically unlike the character formed on any other basis, but it suggests the inquiry, how far the virtue which is dissevered from faith in Christ, " the goodness which is without godliness," will bear to be tried by the law and the testimony. The mere hint of any distrust on this point is apt to evoke a protest against " uncharitableness." But there is no uncharitableness in the case. It is a simple question of fact, whether the morality, like the theology, of the New Testament, derives its life and power from the cross ; and whether the goodness which rejects a suffering and reigning Saviour, or acknowledges Him only in some casual or secondary manner, can be that " holiness without which no man shall see What think ye of Christ ? 53 the Lord." The more this point is looked into, the more manifest will it become that we have not ex- aggerated the gravity of the question, " What think ye of Christ ?" 4. I observe once more, that upon the answers given to this question will depend (in so far as the nominally Christian world is concerned) the awards of the last day. This announcement may at first seem to you to be in conflict with the only detailed account of the judgment contained in the New Testament (Matt. xxv. 31-46). But if you examine that account, you will perceive that the various offices of humanity and benevolence of which the Saviour speaks, are offices rendered or refused to His disciples, and of which He Himself therefore was the real object. 11 Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me" " Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me" Kindnesses bestowed upon His afflicted disciples — the sick, the hungry, the naked, the imprisoned — are proofs and tokens of love to their Master; and the withholding of these kindnesses is an evidence of want of love to Him. So that the real question at the Great Assize will still be, "What think ye of Christ?" "Are your faith and love fastened upon Christ; and has this appeared in your treatment of His disciples?" 5* 54 What think ye of Chris/ f By this test are we to stand or fall. The inquest will not be as to our social position, our wealth, learning, rank, or occupation. It will not be, " Were you upright in your dealings, and charitable to the poor?" It will not be, "Were you baptized, and had you a place at the Lord's table?'' Nor, "Were you zealous in making proselytes, and bold in assert- ing the prerogatives of the Church?" But, "What think ye of Christ?" And according as we answer this question shall we rise and reign with Christ in glory, or be banished from His presence. If this be a Scriptural representation, it throws around the inquiry we are dealing with an aspect of solemnity which nothing could enhance. For whatever of happiness and of woe may be bound up in the in- terminable issues of the judgment, in the felicity of the ransomed and the misery of the lost, is involved in the question, " What think ye of Christ?" Let Christian professors, then, bring home this question to their hearts with the force of a per- sonal application. My brethren, " What think ye of Christ?" What think ye of His Person? Is He to you the second Person of the adorable Trinity, co-eternal and coequal with the Father and the Spirit; the Creator and Mediatorial Governor of the universe; and as such worthy the homage of all creatures? What think ye of His cross? Do you behold Him What think ye of Christ ? 55 there as the Surety and Substitute of lost sinners ; assuming our law-place ; enduring the penalty of our sins ; " made a curse for us ;" satisfying on our be- half the claims of Divine justice ; and in the plenary fulness of His atonement magnifying the law and, if that were possible, investing the moral perfections of the Godhead with a more exceeding and eternal weight of glory? What think ye of His righteous- ness ? Have you renounced all reliance upon your own precarious and insufficient virtue, upon your honesty and your almsgiving, your prayers and your sacraments, and made it your one great concern to win Christ and be clothed with His righteousness as the only foundation of your hope of heaven? What think ye of His sovereignty? Do you rejoice in His universal dominion, commit your interests into His hands, serve Him with a generous and inflexible loy- alty, and do all you can to bring others to submit to His benign sceptre ? What think ye of His love ? Does it inspire your praises, restrain your passions, inflame your zeal, and draw you heavenward with a constancy that suffers no abatement and an ardor that never droops ? What think ye of His worship? Do you love the habitation of His house, the place where His honor dwelleth ; and do you know what it is to come daily to His feet and say, with a grate- ful and confiding heart, " My Lord ! and my God !" Such were Paul's thoughts of Christ. So the mar- 56 J I r hat think ye of Christ f tyrs of all ages have thought of Him. So multitudes in our own day think of Him. And if you are par- takers of this grace with them, God has dealt most mercifully with you, and has a large claim upon your gratitude. This you will best manifest by keeping your thoughts fixed upon Christ, by striving after a clearer insight into the great mystery of Godliness, and a more comprehensive knowledge of the Re- deemer's character and offices. There are wonders here the angels desire to look into, and which may well employ their exalted powers. It is a science of which even the devout student of fourscore has mas- tered only the rudiments. We stand where the wave breaks upon the shore, and look abroad upon an ocean which stretches off into the infinite and loses itself in the depths of eternity. We can never know the incarnate Deity so completely that the fulness of His nature and the effects of His mediation will not offer to our contemplation the same affluent and boundless expanse which they do to-day. And if at some distant period, after you shall have spent millions of ages in the study of these sublime and animating themes amidst the radiant splendors of the throne itself, the question should be again pro- pounded, " What think ye of Christ?" you will be as read)- as you are at this hour to confess that you have only begun to explore the glories of redemp- tion, and are as far as ever from comprehending the What think ye of Christ ? 57 height and depth and breadth and length of the love of Christ which passeth knowledge. Passing by other classes, I may be allowed a clos- ing word to those who are addicted to liberal studies, to the men of culture and of science, who may, per- adventure, be quite out of sympathy with a discussion like that we have been engaged in, and who are more likely to be repelled than attracted by a specific ap- plication to themselves of the question, " What think ye of Christ?" It is a supposable case that this question might awaken in some of your breasts emotions bordering upon disdain, so uncongenial is it with those sedate philosophical views on religion which you are fond of indulging. Or if this be not the precise ground you stand upon, you may candidly acknowledge that the subject is one on which you have bestowed but little careful reflection, so that you are scarcely prepared to say what you " think of Christ." Now without venturing far into a field which, under other circumstances, it might be very profitable to traverse, will you indulge me in the suggestion that indifference to this subject — still more, contempt for it — seems wholly incongruous to the reputation to which you aspire? As educated men, you claim to be lovers of truth, and eager for the acquisition of knowledge. You delight in exploring the arcana of nature. You range through the vegetable world 58 J J licit think ye of Christ f from the hyssop on the wall to the cedar of Leba- non. Your cabinets are filled with the spoils of the mines and the sea. You soar aloft and follow the stars in their courses with a rapture which belongs rather to the joyousness of childhood than to the gravity of age. You exult over the acquisition of an unchronicled worm or butterfly. Or, employing your powers in other fields, you are rifling of their treasures the rich depositories of history and archae- ology. You are pushing your researches with an honorable professional pride into the labyrinths of jurisprudence or the more subtle mysteries of medi- cine. You are absorbed with theories of social reform ; with discussions on government and politics ; or with schemes of education. And when we break in upon you in your eager search after truth with the ques- tion, "What think ye of Christ?" you well-nigh re- gard it as an intrusion. You at least feel for the time that it is an ungracious interruption ; an attempt to divert you from studies of real interest and im- portance, to an investigation which may better than not be postponed to some undefined future. Gen- uine philosophy, let me assure you, without offence, has as little to do with this feeling as piety. For Who WAS IT that created and replenished our globe, and impressed upon its inanimate furniture the laws you are SO fond of tracing and recording? Whose pencil embellished the lily of the field, and painted What think ye of Christ? 59 the iris upon the insect's wing, and tinted with such wondrous beauty the shell which tempestuous waves have wafted you from the unfathomed caves of the ocean? Whose hand hung Arcturus and Orion, Canopus and Sirius, in their orbits, and wheels them onward in their viewless air-paths from one majestic cycle to another, " without variableness or shadow of turning"? Whose mechanism is this human frame, " so fearfully and wonderfully made" ? Whose agency has from the beginning shaped the destinies of na- tions and empires? Who is the source of all law and of all government, the true Power Plenipoten- tiary, to whom all creatures in ail worlds owe alle- giance; whose smile would make a heaven of hell, whose frown would make a hell of heaven ? It is He who is this day preached unto you ; He whose name falls upon your ears with an unwelcome and repulsive sound when I ask you, " What think ye of Christ?" " For by Him were all things created that are in heaven and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers : all things were created by Him and for Him." And it is for you who chal- lenge to yourselves the dignity and the candor of cultivated and philosophic men to say, whether this flagrant disparagement of the Creator is in keeping with your devotion to His creatures. Is it philo- sophical, is it rational, is it less than an indignity to 6o / / liat think ye of Chris/ ? ^\c\\cc itself, to lavish such attentions upon the works of nature and withhold the homage of your hearts from nature's God? Are human laws everything to you, and the Divine law nothing? Are earthly governments worthy of your profoundest study, and is there nothing to invite your researches in that august government which has Jehovah for its Head, the universe for its domain, and eternity for its dura- tion ? But there is a still more serious aspect to this in- quiry. If you can waive the question of a Creator, you will certainly concede the infinite importance of the question of a Saviour. " What think ye of Christ?" Is He the Son of God incarnate? Has He made an atonement for sin? Has He opened heaven to the guilty and the lost? Does He offer to save ?ts ? May we come to Him for salvation now and just as we are? Is His name the only name by which we can be saved ? If we reject Him must we go down to a deeper hell than if He had never died ? And may any offer of pardon to which we listen be the last we shall ever receive? These questions, at least, are important, — as important to you as they can be to the most illiterate and servile of the race; so important, indeed, and so urgent, that no language can set forth their deep solemnity. Will you ponder them ? Will you turn your thoughts to Christ? Will you invoke the Spirit of God to What think ye of Christ ? 61 guide your inquiries, to take of the things of Christ and show them unto you, to lead you to His cross and cleanse you with His blood? This do, and when you stand before His bar you will be able to hear without dismay, nay, you will even hear with ecstasy, that question of questions, " What think ye of Christ? THE MYSTERY OF PROVIDENCE. Job xxvi. 14. "Lo, these are parts of His ways." This language occurs in one of the many very- eloquent passages of this remarkable book. The patriarch, extolling the majesty and might of Jeho- vah, adduces various exhibitions of His power in the natural world. " He stretcheth out the North over the empty place, and hangeth the earth upon noth- ing. He bindeth up the waters in His thick clouds; and the cloud is not rent under them. He holdeth back the face of His throne, and spreadeth His cloud upon it. He hath compassed the waters with bounds, until the day and night come to an end. The pillars of heaven tremble and are astonished at His reproof. He divideth the sea with His power, and by His un- derstanding lie smiteth through the proud. By His Spirit 1 Ic hath garnished the heavens ; His hand hath formed the crooked serpent.* Lo, these are parts of *The constellation called the "Serpent" or "Dragon," 62 The Mystery of Providence. 63 His ways; but how little a portion is heard of Him ? but the thunder of His power who can understand?'' The meaning of the last verse appears to be this : " These manifestations of the Deity, grand and im- posing as they are, present but a very inadequate display of His character and works. They are, as it were, but a breathing of His power. Should He re- veal it in all its grandeur, what we now see would be but as a whisper to the crashing thunder; and who could comprehend or bear to look upon it?" It is the feeling of every devout philosopher en- gaged in the researches of natural science, " These are parts of His ways." He well knows that what he sees of the works of the Creator can bear no com- parison with what he does not see. When he meets with difficulties, therefore, which baffle his sagacity, he modestly refers them to his own ignorance, satis- fied that there must be principles or facts as yet un- discovered which will explain them. It is the sciolist who draws sweeping conclusions from scant prem- ises. And since the world just now abounds with sciolists, it should excite neither surprise nor appre- hension that such constant efforts are made to array science against Christianity. It seems to belong to the childhood of every new science to assume a threatening air towards the Bible. But it never lasts beyond its period of leading-strings. Astronomy set the example ; but it soon got ashamed of its 64 The Mystery of Providence. temerity, and has made what amends it could, by lending its aid to exalt the God of the Bible. Geol- ogy came next, and picked up the broken lance Astronomy had thrown away. But its eyes have been opened, and it finds most of its objections an- nulled by a more careful collation of its own facts and a true interpretation of the first chapter of Gen- esis. Another juvenile champion has since taken the field and proclaimed, with sound of trumpet, that the Bible is mistaken in asserting that " God hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on the face of the whole earth. " Up to this period, however, its chief expositors have neither settled their definitions, nor come to any satisfactory agree- ment as to the facts with which they have to deal. It is safe to predict that Ethnology, like its sister- sciences, will exchange a youth of skepticism for a manhood of vigorous and trustful faith. It will dis- cover, as they have, that its early conclusions were premature and unauthorized, founded upon a very partial induction, and animated by an arrogance equally offensive to sound philosophy and to gen- uine piety. It will do much to save science from repeating these mistakes indefinitely to keep in mind that, in its profoundest researches into the arcana of nature, it sees but "parts of His ways'* who made and governs all. The Mystery of Providence. 65 And what is here affirmed of creation is no less true of His Providence. In this view the text affirms a proposition which well deserves our serious con- sideration. The scientific students of nature are comparatively few in number. Providence comes home to us all. It has to do with every one's affairs at every moment of life. Not to feel inter- ested in ascertaining the principles upon which it is administered would argue a discreditable insensi- bility to our highest welfare. To overlook the facts which have their proper expression in the statement, " These are parts of His ways," is impossible. They crowd upon us in every direction. There is not a page of history, sacred or profane, to which they do not lend a coloring. They give every thoughtful man food for anxious reflection. For who does not feel that this whole dispensa- tion under which we live is a mystery ? We come into being the heirs of a depraved nature. The world, of which we are made the unconscious ten- ants, discloses itself to our opening faculties as a scene replete with temptation and filled with suffer- ing. We see that the frown of God is upon it. Sin, sorrow, and death range over every part of it. More than half its population are idolaters. Three-fourths of the remainder are toiling to support the other fourth. Man is doomed to a life of labor. The re- luctant earth refuses to sustain him except at the 6* 66 The Mystery of Providence. cost o( incessant and exhausting service. Ever and anon war breaks forth, and desolates cities and em- pires. Pestilence and famine sweep off their millions. The bad are exalted. The righteous are oppressed. Good men are cut off in the midst of their useful- ness, and the idle, the miserly, and the vicious are spared. The Gospel of Christ, God's own cure for the world's maladies, makes its way slowly and feebly through the earth. When we look at a group of Missionaries pursuing their tedious work in China or Hindostan, we are ready to ask, " Why was not the baptism of Pentecost made transmissive and per- petual in the Church, that so the miracle of three thousand conversions in a day might have been re- peated till all were saved?" And if these distant scenes affect us, much more are we impressed by what passes around and within us. Nowhere can virtue maintain itself without a struggle. We are conscious of a propensity to forsake God. Our purest affections become snares to us. Multitudes are overborne by the great current of evil, and swept away to appear no more. No one advances a step heavenward without having to contest every inch of the way. Travelling the narrow path is like stem- ming the current of a rapid river: if you stop your oars even for an instant you begin to drift with the tide. The very holiest men form no exception. In- dwelling sin is their scourge and burden to the end. The Mystery of Providence. 67 It was an eminent apostle who exclaimed, " When I would do good evil is present with me, so that the good which I would I do not, and the evil which I would not that I do." And every one who tries it finds that it is by no mere figure of speech that the Christian life is styled a warfare and a crucifixion. The mystery which enfolds this whole condition of things deepens when we consider the character of the Supreme Being. It seems, at first view, to be incompatible with His moral perfections. The Scriptures ascribe to Him infinite wisdom, boundless goodness, and immaculate holiness, as well as om- nipotence. How can it consort with these attri- butes that a state of things like that just described should be tolerated ? His omnipotence precludes the supposition that He has not power to rectify it. And reasoning from what we know of the other qualities as they exist among men, the presumption would be, that they must all unite in demanding an entire change. But this state of apparent disorder and turmoil continues. Good and evil are strangely intermixed. Sin and sorrow reign. And virtue makes its way to heaven through the fires. We are all pressed with these difficulties. It is a tangled web which we cannot unravel. Sometimes, in meditating upon it, our faith almost gives way. Though we may not murmur, we are tempted to re- pine that our condition here should be so unlike 6S The Mystery of Providence. what we feel it might have been. And we detect ourselves secretly asking, " Why has God made me thus? Why lias He appointed to me this or that allotment ? Why must I encounter this temptation ? Why drink of this cup of sorrow?" These are the moanings of our inner nature. They come up like mournful echoes from the deep caverns of the sea. And though no other ear may hear them, we hear them, and they make us sad. If there be any method of removing or mitigating these trials, we ought to know it. To resolve the enigma of our present state, and clear up every shadow that rests upon it, is of course impossible. But it should be an acceptable service, if we can throw upon the scene a single ray of light which may, by God's blessing, help to reconcile us for the time to what we cannot fully comprehend. Such a clew, if I mistake not, is furnished us by our text, — at least, in that aspect in which we are taking the words, by way of accommodation to our subject. It is a thoroughly scriptural sentiment, everywhere expressed or implied throughout the Bible: " Lo, these are parts of His ways." And we may be al- lowed to use this language as equivalent to that declaration of the apostle, "We know in part,." To take this world by itself, dissevered from its relations to the great scheme of Providence, and from its own past and future, is to consign ourselves to atheism The Mystery of Providence. 69 and despair. To contemplate it as only a part, an infinitesimal part, of a " stupendous whole," will re- lieve even its darkest features, and assist us in believ- ing that, although " clouds and darkness are round about Him, righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne." " These are parts of His ways." There is a prime truth presented in these last two words. We are not to escape from the perplexities of our position by denying that the Divine government extends to this moral chaos around us. All that we read of our past history, all that we see and feel, the events which most confound, and the facts which most ap- pall us, are " parts of His ways." Whatever is, is by His direction or permission. It might serve a pres- ent purpose to ascribe some of the calamities of our condition, or certain of the prominent evils which so inscrutably mix themselves up in our lot, to chance. But no evil could be so fearful, no calamity so over- whelming, as that of owing allegiance to a God who could allow anything to happen in any part of the universe except with His own consent or by His own command. The very suggestion would impeach the perfection and sovereignty of Jehovah, and degrade Him to a level with " the gods of the heathen, which are no gods." Were it possible for some apparently trivial incident to occur in the life of a child which was not comprised in the Divine purpose, it might The Mystery of Providence. ultimately disturb the entire course of His adminis- tration, precisely as an unexpected perturbation in the motion of one of the minor planetary orbs might affect the equipoise and harmony of the whole stellar system. Not only are all these inequalities of our condi- tion — the disappointments and hardships, the suffer- ing" and misery — of life " parts of His ways," but they proceed according to a purpose ; they belong to a plan which embraces as well the minutest as the most august events ; as well the fall of a tear as the fall of an empire. The state of things in our world was alluded to a moment since as a "moral chaos.'' But it is a " chaos" only to our limited and imperfect vision. " The events of Providence appear to us very much like the letters thrown into a post-bag. When we look into that repository, it may seem as if its contents were in inextricable confusion. But then every letter has its special address inscribed upon it; it has the name and residence of the party, and so it shall in due time fall into his hands, and bring its proper intelligence. And this intelligence it con- to the persons intended, regardless of the emo- tions that are excited. It is a kind of picture of the movements of Providence. What a crowd of events huddled together, and apparently confused, does it carry along with it! Very diverse are the objects bound up in that bundle, and very varied are the' The Mystery of Providence. 7 1 emotions which they are to excite when opened, and yet how coolly and systematically does the vehicle proceed on its way ! Neither the joy nor the sorrow which it produces causes it to linger an in- stant in its course. But meanwhile, every occur- rence, or bundle of occurrences, is let out at its proper place. Each has a name inscribed upon it, and a place to which it is addressed. Each, too, has a message to carry and a purpose to fulfil. Some of these inspire hope or joy, and others raise fear and sorrow. The events which are unfolded by the same course of things, and which fall out the same day, bring gladness to one, and land another in deepest distress. On the occurrence of the same event you perceive one weeping and another rejoicing. Some of the dispensations are observed to propagate pros- perity through a whole community. And these others, so black and dismal, and of which so many arrive at the same time, carry, as they are scattered, gloom into the abodes of thousands. But amid all this seeming confusion every separate event has its separate destination. It has a commission, and it will execute it ; but it cannot go beyond its com- mission."* It is something to be assured of this : to know that while our world has broken away from its allegiance * McCosh: Div. Gov., p. 206. 72 The Mystery of Providence. to God, His pervading and controlling agency is as really concerned in everything which occurs here as it is in directing the affairs of those orbs whose atmosphere no breath of sin has ever tainted. But we must not pause here. If it be so, that these events are "parts of His ways," both reason and religion forbid us to judge of them as though they were the whole of His ways. On all other subjects, in all other relations, we recog- nize the validity of the principle upon which this observation rests. No man is willing to have his work judged until it is completed. You cannot gauge the wisdom of the husbandman from his ploughing and seeding; nor the taste of the archi- tect from his foundations. The advocate bids you wait till his entire case is unfolded; and the physi- cian, till you have seen the effects of his treatment. The statesman insists that you shall test his policy by its fruits; and the warrior protests against an arraignment of his plans before the campaign is finished. We are bound to apply the same prin- ciple in judging of the ways of God to man. It may very well be that there are features in His providential government which we cannot now ex- plain ; mysteries which foil our penetration, and leave the wisest of the race, equally with the simplest, at a loss as to the true solution of them. Knowing, as we do, that these are but "parts of His ways," and The Mystery of Providence. 73 conscious that "here we see through a glass darkly," we have no right to assume that every arrangement will not be satisfactorily vindicated hereafter. The presumption is the other way : that the phenomena which yield us this perennial harvest of doubts and misgivings will be cleared up; that the manifold evils of the present economy will be redressed, and all its inequalities adjusted on principles which shall com- mand the assent of the intelligent universe. No one can read the Scriptures without observing how con- stantly they appeal from the present to the future, from the sufferings incident to this life, to the re- wards of the next. For example, one of the anoma- lies which embarrass our faith is, that God should allow T the wicked to persecute the righteous. But the Bible does not treat this as a marvel. It even turns the curse into a blessing. " Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake : for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." " Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you : but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings ; that, when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy." What will the righteous think of their wrongs and trials here when they inherit the kingdom of heaven and share in the glory of the Saviour? This is a familiar illustration of the prevalent tone of the 7 '4 The Mystery of Providence. sacred writers in treating of this subject. There is always a reference, expressed or implied, to a com- ing judgment and a final dispensation. This whole scheme of things, though impressed with infinite importance to us in its relations to what is invisible and future, is practically regarded as a preliminary and transient institution, — a mere scaffolding, which is to be taken down when its purposes are accom- plished. Is a building to be judged by the scaffold used in erecting it? But we proceed a step further. While the exist- ing state of things comprises " parts" only " of God's ways," we can so far understand it as to perceive that it is what it is because we are what zve are. It is the character of man which has determined the character of the dispensation under which he lives. The facts and arrangements about which we are arguing could have no place in a sphere consecrated to holiness, nor in one resigned to unrestrained de- pravity. They define a state of rebellion and an- archy ; but anarchy and rebellion held in check, — a state of moral ruin, but ruin not yet irretrievable. We may not attempt to penetrate the Divine counsels and inquire why this order of things was established in preference to some other. But since it is established, we cannot fail to see that it ex- presses in a most emphatic manner God's hatred of sin. Not to go into any elucidation of this point The Mystery of Providence. 75 beyond the exigencies of the present argument, there are two things which illustrate it, too con- spicuous in the phenomena with which we are dealing to be overlooked. One is the intimate connection between sin and suffering. Not only may all the suffering in the world be traced back to the one transgression of the first man; but, in the settled course of events, moral evil produces natural evil; the violation of the Divine law produces un- happiness, pain, and death. In every graveyard we may read what God thinks of sin. The other fact is, that the righteous experience such difficulties in the culture and practice of piety. These difficulties are from within and from without. They might have been exonerated from them. They might have been made perfectly holy in their regeneration, and the arm of Omnipotence might have kept both wicked men and devils from either assailing or tempting them. The Christian life, in that case, would have been no "warfare;" and our eyes would not have been pained, as they are now, by seeing the grievous wrongs so often inflicted upon the people of God because they are His people. Had it seemed good to Him, indeed, God might have exempted them from the various trials which they now share with the unbelieving world. But He has done none of these things. As if to mark His sense of the evil of sin in a manner not to be misunderstood, He The Mystery of Providence. Leaves His own children to taste its bitterness, even after they are freed from its penalty. Earth must still be to them a vale of tears. They must endure the common lot of change and disappointment, of sickness and decay. Like all others, they must en- counter ingratitude and unkindness, calumny and in- justice. They must see their fondest hopes blighted. They must follow their loved ones to the tomb. Nay, they must learn by painful experience that heaven is to be attained only as the result of an in- cessant conflict with their own vagrant passions and the enticements of a corrupt world. Do we mistake in this interpretation? Is not this very condition of things, which wears such an aspect of mystery to our eyes, eminently adapted to exhibit God's displeasure against sin? And while nothing can illustrate this like the cross, is it not an affecting confirmation of it that He should require even His redeemed ones, who wear His image, and bear His name, and would willingly die to honor Him, to make their way into the kingdom of heaven "through much tribulation"? If these "parts of His ways" upon which we are dilating seem to be shrouded in mystery, let it be considered whether any other course of events could exhibit so forcibly His estimate of moral evil. And of what ineffable importance He deems it, that due expression should be given to this sentiment, may be seen alike in The Mystery of Providence. yy man's ruin and his recovery ; in the awful conse- quences which were linked with the first offence, and in the priceless blood which was shed to atone for sin. The lesson written so vividly upon the prime- val garden, and upon the cross, may be traced no less in all the confusion and misery, the sicknesses and sorrows, the sufferings and wrongs, which spread their deadly savor over the whole habitable globe. Again, it must be apparent to a candid observer that the existing state of things, while it displays God's estimate of sin, is adapted to supply the very training which we need. It was just now remarked that things are as they are because we are what we are. The great contest of which our globe is the theatre is, whether God or man shall reign. The pride which, in the unrenewed heart, boldly defies the power of its Maker, still cleaves to the believer. He is too much disposed to lean upon his own strength, and to walk by the light of his own wisdom. The radical principle of the new nature is faith. The end which the Gospel con- templates is that of making man cease from himself and from all creatures, and trust in Jehovah alone. It requires him to do what the angels do, — find his happiness in God, and confide in Him, whether he can understand His dispensations or not. In this view, the mysteries of the present economy meet an urgent want of our nature. The lesson they incul- 7* ;S The Mystery of Providence. cate is that lesson of humility and faith which we are SO slow to receive. They demand of us an implicit confidence in the wisdom and benevolence of God, in the presence of arrangements which, to the mere eye of sense, look as though the world had escaped from His control. They bid us accept as just and needful, allotments which have their ground and reason hidden from our view. They impose silence where unbelief would make us murmur, and submis- sion where pride would stir us up to rebellion. To our unchastened speculations they oppose a barrier which has its height and depth in the infinite, and which is inscribed all over with the imperial edict, ''Thus far shalt thou come, and no further/' When we ask, " How could a just and good Being permit sin to in- vade the world? Why did He not arrest the conse- quences of their disobedience with the first pair? Why are the righteous oppressed and the wicked exalted?" we receive a two-fold answer. The first response is, " Be still, and know that I am God." The second is, " Lo, these are parts of His ways." The first addresses itself to our faith ; the second to our reason. Both arc suited to our moral training. But there is a discipline here, no less needful, which touches us more keenly: it is the discipline of temp- tation. Virtue is like the Alpine fir, which thrives amidst the storms. Not only in the inspired word, l)i it upon every feature of this scene of conflict and The Mystery of Providence. 79 trouble, is it written, " This is the will of God, even your sanctification." The believer finds himself set upon by fierce adversaries, clothed it may be as angels of light; and his own half-subdued passions, un- leashed, raise a turmoil in his breast. But it does not happen without a purpose. " Blessed is the man that endureth temptation ; for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love Him." God is training His people here for a glorious immortality. The salvation already begun in their hearts, and to be consummated hereafter, is a salvation from sin. The more they learn of the evil of sin, the more will they appreciate their deliverance from it, and the better will they be fitted for a sinless world. But there is no teacher like experience. And they are left, therefore, to drink for awhile of these bitter waters, that they may drink with a higher zest of the water of the river of life. It would be easy to pursue this train of thought, and point out numerous ways in which the present state of things is precisely adapted to that spiritual discipline of which we stand in need. But I must not exhaust your patience. We have taken a cursory survey of the anomalies and discordancies which mark the established order of things in the world. In reference to the doubts and difficulties of which these are so prolific, it has So Tlie Mystery of Providence. been shown that all these inequalities are really parts of God's ways ; that they pertain to a fixed plan which He is earning forward, and to which they are, every one of them, essential ; that being only " parts" of His ways, no inferences should be drawn from them as if they were the whole of His ways, — the reasonable presumption being that everything will be explained hereafter; that, notwithstanding the veil of mystery which enwraps this dispensation, it is quite apparent that it owes its peculiarities to our moral character ; and that, as among the ends to be accomplished by it, God designs, by these inscrutable arrangements, to manifest His own estimate of the enormity of sin, and also to provide for us a course of moral discipline which shall gradually fit us for heaven. Considerations like these may, possibly, do some- thing to relieve the obscurity which rests upon our condition, and even to make us patient and cheerful in treading the chequered path which leads from a fallen to an unfallen world. Assuredly if it was re- quired of the Son of God that He should wear a crown of thorns before wearing a crown of glory, it is not for us to complain that the road which con- ducts us to our crown has its thorns also : especially when we must add, with the penitent malefactor, — "And we indeed justly, for we receive the due reward of our deeds ; but this Man hath done nothing amiss." The Mystery of Providence. Besides, our trials come in mercy. " Whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth." The painful mysteries of our lot, our losses, our changes, our conflicts, — what are they but the assayer's fire, to consume the dross and refine the gold ? He afflicts, not willingly, but because He is a Father; and, as a Father, whom He chastens, He will gloriously reward. " For God has marked each sorrowing day, And number d every secret tear; And heaven's long age of bliss shall pay For all His children suffer here." A single thought more and I have done. There are mysteries here. Life, I repeat, is a riddle which no wit of man can solve. It must needs be so where we see but " parts of His ways." But all is not dark. There are some things so plain that a child can see and understand them. And, happily for us, these are the matters which most deeply concern us. Whatever else may be dark, there is one path trav- ersing the earth which shines with an unquenchable brightness. The sun which illumines it never sets; and they who do not see it must shut their eyes. It is the " narrow way" to the celestial city. And the great lesson of our subject for us all, and especially for the unconverted, is, not to allow the study of what is obscure in our lot to make us unmindful of what is plain. What surpassing folly is it for men to waste 82 The Mystery of Providence. their lives in cavilling at the Divine dispensations, or in fruitless efforts to unravel the web of Providence, while their salvation is uncared for! These mysteries may be studied hereafter. It will no doubt be one of the employments and privileges of the ransomed, to see this whole probationary system relieved of the difficulties which are now, to our feeble minds, so intractable, and every enigma of the present econ- omy, even the most intricate, satisfactorily cleared up. But while those questions may be postponed, the other cannot be. The salvation or perdition of the soul is a question of time, not of eternity. And yet eternity hangs upon it ! Cease, then, from use- less, if I must not say irreverent, complaints against the appointments of Him whose " way is in the sea." Leave the things so hard to be understood, where He has left them. Enough to know that we are lost in the first Adam, and may be saved in the second : that where sin abounded, grace doth much more abound : and that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, even the chief. Come in penitence and faith to Him, and He will not cast you out. THE CHURCH: UNITY IN DIVERSITY; DIVERSITY IN UNITY. I. Corinthians xii. 12. "For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body : so also is Christ!' The apostle's discourse is of spiritual gifts. These were largely distributed among the Christians of Corinth, — too largely, it would seem, for the grace that went along with them. For they all desired certain gifts in preference to others ; coveting those of a conspicuous or imposing character, and dispar- aging such as came in a more modest guise. It is humiliating to think that a church founded by apos- tolic hands should, even in its infancy, become in- volved in a controversy of this sort. It only shows that the human nature which the apostles had to deal with, was the same nature that so constantly tried the Divine patience under the ancient Economy, and which works for evil in our own hearts and in all around us. This root of bitterness wrought great 83 84 The Church: I T nity in Diversity* mischief there. St. Paul feels himself obliged to treat of it in a very grave and formal way. His argument is this. There are diversities of gifts, — as the word of wisdom, the word of knowledge, the gifts of healing, miracles, prophecy, discovering of spirits, tongues, the interpretation of tongues, and the like. But these all proceed from the same sov- ereign and gracious Spirit. He confers them, and they are conferred for a common end ; not for the honor of the several recipients, but for the edification of believers and the welfare of the whole Church. The variety they embrace is essential to the work to be done, — essential to the completeness of the Church, — precisely as various members are neces- sary to constitute the body. This comparison he carries out into details, showing how absurd it would be for the foot to complain that it is not the hand, or the ear that it is not the eye ; and applying this principle to the organization of the Church : " For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body : so also is Christ (i.e., the Church, the body of Christ). For by one Spirit arc we all bap- tized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit." The diversity iti unity here affirmed by the apostle of the gifts communicated to the early Church, per- The Church : Diversity in Unity. 85 tains to the Church in its entire structure. It is, in fact, the law of its composition, — an identity of char- acter and experience, combined with an endless diver- sity in the details. Analogy would predispose us to expect this, for the same principle pervades the king- dom of nature. Everywhere, in looking abroad, we behold variety. One star differs from another star in glory. Each zone not only, but each country, has its own Flora. A single forest may contain twenty different species of trees, and a single garden a hun- dred species of shrubs and flowers. No two trees even of the same species are alike. No two flowers are so identical in shape, color, and structure that a powerful magnifier would not reveal some points of difference. The woods have their distinctive quali- ties of hardness, hue, weight, strength, and elasticity. The grasses with which nature has carpeted the earth differ as much as the artificial fabrics with which we cover our floors. So, also, in the animal world, every beast and bird, every reptile, and fish, and insect, has, with its proper nature, attributes which distinguish it from the rest of its own tribe. Yet with all this diversity, there is a principle of unity running through the several departments of nature, which not only separates each department from the others, but combines the individuals of each genus, and again of each species, into a uniform and consistent whole. We need not pursue this topic. 86 The Church: Unity in Diversity. It will be enough to have hinted at the fundamental law which underlies the Creator's work throughout the world of nature, as preparing the mind for the prevalence of the same law in the kingdom of grace. The most palpable exemplification of this law is that which is offered by the diverse outivard forms in which the Church exists. This is not suggested as the idea, or as any part of the idea, set forth in the text and context. It is not the visible Church which the apostle affirms to be one; but the true Church, — the Church made up of the regenerated and saved, who are confined to no one communion, and are known to God alone. But it is not without its significance that He has per- mitted the visible Church to be cast in many separate moulds. He might have prescribed a polity with such distinctness, and enjoined it in such terms of authority, that all churches would have conformed to it. But He saw fit so to frame His instructions on this subject as to leave room for a diversity of interpretation. We do not doubt that our own gov- ernment and worship are in harmony with the forms which prevailed in the apostolic age. Our brethren who differ from us, on the one hand in the direction of Independency, and on the other in the direction of Prelacy, have a similar conviction in respect to their forms. May we not reasonably infer that it was the will of God to allow a certain variety in the The Church : Diversity in Unity. 8 7 outward things of religion, as being suited to that variety of taste and disposition with which He has endowed men ? The fact is indisputable, that to one class of minds this form of worship is the more edi- fying; to another, that. And while we cannot be- lieve that all forms are equally scriptural, it will lay no great strain upon our charity to concede that God may have His own children in each of these communions so widely separated by their denomina- tional lines. In this view we may refer to the visi- ble Church as illustrating the principle of diversity in unity. The principle, however, finds its legitimate sphere within the brotherhood of real believers. This phrase, in fact, defines the sense in which they are affirmed to be one; they are "real believers :" this makes them one. So the apostle teaches in the passage before us: The body of Christ (the Church) is one: "for (v. 13) by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free." It is through the anointing of the Spirit men are born again, and so engrafted into Christ as to become members of His body. This is the communicating of a new nature which makes them one, as really as the natural birth, the possession of a common humanity, makes them one. External diversities are of no conse- quence in either case. The child of the hovel, the 8S The Church: Unity in Diversity. wigwam, the palace, it matters not where or when he is born, he inherits the common nature and belongs to the race. So with the new birth. It merges all outward distinctions. " Whether we be Jews or Gentiles:" which is equivalent to saying, "Whether we have been worshippers of the true God or benighted idolaters :" here are the two extremes of the religious scale. " Whether we be bond or free," masters or servants: here, especially under the rigors of Roman bondage, are the two social extremes. He means, then, that in the pres- ence of the cross, no earthly distinctions are recog- nized : that the baptism of the Spirit so far levels separating barriers of every kind, as to combine all who receive it in a sacred and indissoluble unity. This unity includes a common Head. " Christ is the Head of the Church." Union with Christ is in- dispensable. Being " in Christ" is the familiar New Testament phrase for designating a true Christian. It denotes, further, a oneness of faith. Diversities of belief there certainly are among real believers. Aside from minor and local peculiarities, two great systems divide the Christian world. But Calvinism and Arminianism are not as light and darkness to each other. The points where they coalesce are numerous and important. As philosophies, they are thoroughly discordant. But they meet and bow together in lowly reverence before the cross. They The Church : Diversify in Unify. 89 alike recognize the work of the Divine Spirit. They ascribe salvation to the mercy and grace of God. All Christians concur in the necessity of " repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, ,, in disclaiming all merit of their own, and in acknowl- edging the authority of the moral law as a rule of life. We claim for them, therefore, that they are of " one faith." They are also of one purpose. The various mem- bers of the body, controlled by a single will, work together for the same ends. The members of Christ's mystical body have a common aim. They regard the care of the soul as the one thing needful. They make it their concern to follow Christ; to obey His precepts; to seek His honor and glory; to aid in building up His kingdom. That the service they render Him is precarious and inconstant, and that their best duties are defiled with sin, must be freely admitted. But we may, nevertheless, insist that they are one in purpose and endeavor; one in striving to live unto Him who loved them. They are united, too, by the bonds of a mutual sympathy. In the human body, if one member suf- fers, all suffer; if one rejoices, all rejoice. We con- cede the comparative feebleness of this principle in the Church of our day : it is not what it should be. But it exists. The solicitude of every real Christian (and of such alone are we speaking) is for the cause 90 The Church: Unity in Diversity. of Christ. He rejoices in every triumph of the Gos- pel, lie mourns over every disaster to the cause of true religion. He recognizes those who love his Master as brethren. He hails them as co-workers. He delights in their well-being. He would gladly alleviate their sorrows. The tie which unites him to them is stronger than any earthly bond. We may justly affirm, then, that they are one in sympathy. Not to specify other points of identity, the unity of Christians comprehends, with a common Head, a oneness of faith, of purpose, and of sympathy. But this unity is not monotony. The Church is one. But it is one as the body is one; as the animal kingdom is one; the vegetable; the mineral; the whole realm of nature. The formula of definition in all these cases is, Unity in diversity, and diver- sity IX UNITY. The Christian Church began in this way, and began gloriously. The Day of Pentecost supplied the mould in which it was to be cast. " Parthians and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Meso- potamia, and in Judea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia, in Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrcne, and strangers of Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians." What an assemblage was this! A Congress of all nations, convened as it were on purpose to supply a perfect type of that universal Church which was now The Church : Diversity in Unity. 9 1 to supersede the narrow courts of the Levitical tem- ple. Henceforth there could be no question as to the import of that Divine commission, " Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every crea- ture ;" no misgiving as to the races that were to find a place in the Church. And as it set out, so it has continued. Contemning all distinctions of climate, empire, language, and religion, the Church has gone on, gathering into its ample fold people of all lands and tongues and faiths ; cementing them into one harmonious whole ; and that, without disturbing the elements which mark their several nationalities. We can imagine a scene which would surpass even the Day of Pentecost in presenting this truth as a sub- lime and beneficent reality. For we can picture to ourselves a communion-season at one of the great centres of the world, which should bring together around the table of their common Lord, representa- tives of all the evangelical denominations of the globe ; where there should sit down together disci- ples of the various European and American Churches, with converts of all lands, Jews, Chinese, Hindoos, Burmese, Siamese, Turks, Greeks, Nestorians, Arme- nians, Africans of a score or two of tribes, Indians of our forests, Greenlanders, Esquimaux, Tahitians, Feejees, and the like. Nothing could exceed the disparities and contrasts which such an assemblage would present in form and feature and complexion, 92 The Church: Unity in Diversity, in dress and manners, in language and culture. Yet would the sacred symbols convey to their minds the same meaning, and awaken kindred emotions in every breast. And were the service administered by one capable of speaking their different tongues, he might utter precisely the same sentiments in ad- dressing them, and all hearts would respond with the same feelings of penitence, trust, and grateful praise to God, and of mutual love to one another. The world may yet witness this august and beautiful demonstration of the multiform-unity of the Church: and if earth does not see it, heaven will. But we may see this diversity in unity without convening the Church Ecumenical. It is the law of the kingdom everywhere. In the apostolic age, the household of faith comprised persons of every rank and occupation. Not many mighty and noble were called, but some were: and the poor were there in abundance. The wayside beggars, the despised lepers, the fishermen of Tiberias, the " honorable women," and " Caesar's household," were all repre- sented. There were gifts and graces of every sort and degree. The knowledge we have of the apos- tolic college, though very imperfect as to the major part of them, warrants the conclusion that no two of these twelve men were alike; each one having his strongly-marked individual traits. And this variety has been perpetuated. The ministry has never been The Church : Diversity in Unity. 93 without its Johns and Pauls, its Thomases and Peters, its sons of thunder and its sons of consola- tion. You have but to reflect for a moment, and you will be able to call up a whole gallery of por- traits from the annals of the modern Church as di- verse as were the original preachers. Let me name Baxter, Owen, Bunyan, Jeremy Taylor, Bishop Hall, the Wesleys, the Erskines, Romaine, President Ed- wards, Whitefield, Dwight, Robert Hall, Chalmers, Davies, Mason, the Alexanders. What a galaxy is this ! Every star is brilliant ; but no two shine with the same lustre ; the same indeed in one sense, for the light they reflect is from the same Sun : — herein is the unity. But it varies in hue and measure and velocity: herein is the diversity. And as with the ministry so with the people. To delineate the variety which pertains to the many members of the one spiritual body would be to de- scribe the numerous sorts of people aggregated in a community. For the Church recruits itself indiffer- ently from the vast outlying masses of humanity. It appropriates to itself all ages, sexes, and condi- tions. Its merciful conscription lays hold upon the rich and the poor, the humble and the proud, the sedate and the ardent, the resolute and the gentle, the learned and the illiterate, the dissolute and the moral. Baptizing them into Christ, it makes them all one body; and yet without destroying or even 94 The Church : I T nity in Diversity. impairing their individuality. Of course the training to which it subjects them demands the lopping off of excrescences and the healing of disorders which, neglected, would consume the life. But within the wise and wide limitations prescribed by the Divine I [usbandman, it allows all the trees and shrubs trans- planted into its enclosure to follow out each the law of its own growth. The pine is not expected to be- come an oak ; nor the orange a vine; nor the violet a rose. All the requisition is that the pine shall be a thrifty pine and the oak a thrifty oak; and that the orange and the vine, the violet and the rose, and every other tree, and herb, and flower, shall grow up towards perfection, and thus fulfil the end of its own being. This rule is observed even in respect to the methods by which the dead branches are engrafted into the True Vine and made alive. It is the prerogative of the one Almighty Spirit to effect this; here is the unity. But He does it in a great variety of modes; here is the diversity. To be born of the Spirit is in- dispensable. To be renewed in precisely this or that way is not essential. Conversion varies indefinitely in its times, means, antecedents, and consequents. God is a Sovereign here, as in all His other works. And He displays the same diversity of operations here as throughout the wide range of creative nature. As if to rebuke the attempt — which has, neverthe- less, been so often made — to shut Him up to a The Church: Diversity in Unity. 95 single inflexible method of bringing sinners out of darkness into His marvellous light, the variety which marks the cases of conversion recorded in Scripture is scarcely less signal than the conversions them- selves. Without stopping to comment on so familiar a theme, let it suffice to refer to the examples of Levi the publican, Zacchaeus, the thief on the cross, Saul of Tarsus, Lydia, and the jailer of Philippi. And from that day to this, He has continued to exert His renewing grace with the same sovereign right of choice in respect to occasions and instruments, the measure and duration of conviction, and all the in- cidents pertaining to this mightiest of changes in the character and condition of men. Nor in conversion only. He carries the same variety of modes and means into the culture and development of the immortal germ deposited in re- generation. The efficiency in all instances is His own. And the one agency He has Himself pre- scribed, is His word. But who can describe the paths along which He leads His people, and the endless combinations of providential and gracious influences by which He conducts them step by step up the acclivities of the higher life, and fashions them to the "likeness of the heavenly"? Who can portray the opulent diversity of gifts, intellectual and spiritual, with which He endows them ; to one, five talents; to another, two; to another, one, — dividing to 96 The Church: Unify in Diversity. every man severally as He will? The fact is patent to every one. Let us advert to a few of the more important aspects in which it offers itself to our con- templation. It will not be difficult to show that this Divine law of diversity in unity is as essential to the proper perfection of the Church as it is morally beautiful. I. Let me begin with this latter thought, the moral beauty of this arrangement. This is not a thing to be argued. Beauty is a matter not of logic, but of feeling. Its appeal is to a constitutional suscepti- bility. And it is a part of our constitution to crave variety. We do not want a painting to be all of one color, nor a tune of one strain. The ocean would pall upon us if it were always still or always boister- ous. Who would ever lift his eyes to the heavens if the sky shone with a perpetual serenity? As children, we want new toys. And as grown chil- dren (for we are nothing more), we tire if we have to look continually upon the same objects. It is a relief even to re-arrange the books on your shelves and the furniture of your room; to put the old articles into new positions. We grow weary of looking day by day at the same people in the same situation, unless they arc our intimate friends. And as to our friends, would not have them all alike if we could. It is one of the charms of the domestic state, the variety there is in families. We cannot only bear, but en- The Church: Diversity in Unity. 97 joy, what is termed a " family resemblance" in a household. But who could endure a family that looked exactly alike? Much more, a family that were exactly alike in voice and manner, in tone and temper, in sentiment and character ? He who made man made the Church ; and of course adapted it to this as well as to every other part of his nature. No one can complain of the New Testament as a monotonous book ; nor feel that when he has seen one of its personages he has seen all. They pass and repass before us with that variety of character and experience which pertains to the actors in other histories. The same diversity attaches to the several religious denominations, and, generally speaking, to every Church. There is no Christian here who has not something peculiar to himself; something by which he is distinguished from his brethren. And if you would learn how copious is this variety, you must take the records of the Church and call over the names which make up the entire enrolment. There is certainly a " fam- ily resemblance," for they are children of one Father; and unless they bear some of the lineaments of His image, they are not really of the household. But beyond this, how unlike they are in their worldly circumstances and occupations, in disposition, in in- tellectual endowments, in their social qualities, in their graces, in their modes and measures of re- 9 98 The Church: Unity in Diversity. ligious activity! We may lament the errors and infirmities which cleave to them. We may wish that some were different from what they are. But every one would sooner take such a society as it is than have all its members recast in the same metallic mould. We love the Church all the more because its unity, like that of a garden, effloresces in a grate- ful variety of fruits and flowers. 2. The principle of diversity in unity upon which the Church is constructed illustrates the pozver and efficacy of Divine grace. The palpable fact which meets the eye is, that while grace is more than a match for depravity in its worst forms,- it renews and elevates all the nobler traits of humanity ; and in either case, without dis- turbing identity of character. The Church, as al- ready observed, is recruited from every quarter. God selects the objects of His mercy where He will. For the most part they are among the chil- dren of believers, the true line of succession, but by no means confined to these. If He sees fit to sum- mon to His service a rich man like Barnabas, a vora- cious publican like Zacchaeus, a timid Pharisee like Nicodemus, a malignant zealot like Saul, a pagan captain like the Centurion, He has but to speak and the)- must hear. He will not be shut out from any spot of the globe He has created, nor from any hu- man heart that He chooses to enter. He will follow The Church : Diversity in Unity. 99 men into the fastnesses of error and impiety, into dens of iniquity and idol-temples, and bring them forth willing converts to the faith they once de- stroyed. He will take by the hand the thoughtful, the refined, the affectionate, the teachable, yea, the little prattlers who brighten our homes with their mirth, and lead them into His house and adopt them as His children. Classes constituting the op- posite extremes of society, and all the intermediate classes, He clothes with a common nature, imbues with the same spirit, enriches with kindred gifts, and makes them " one in Christ Jesus," while they sev- erally retain their marked characteristics. There is certainly a resemblance among them which there was not before. But there is no such resemblance as to expose a single one to the hazard of being taken for any one but himself. May we not refer to these facts as illustrating the power and efficacy of Divine grace ? The problems here so successfully resolved would turn to nought all human skill and energy. In man's hands these various types of character might be bent or broken; they could never be renewed. Changed they might be, but not changed without sad contortion or mutilation. Too often has the experiment been tried. Christendom abounds with individuals and fraternities, male and female, who show what comes of man's arrogating his Maker's work ; of attempting ioo The Church: Unity in Diversity. to make his fellows new creatures by a complex, protracted, cruel regimen of his own, in place of the simple teaching of the word and the transforming energy of the Holy Ghost. A wonderful achieve- ment it is, as wonderful in power as in love, that of imbuing- a whole community with a new life, from its very nature pervading, elevating, and controlling, and yet so incorporating it with all the natural facul- ties and functions as to aid their proper working and their true development. We cite it as one of the fruits of that diversity in unity which enters radically into the constitution of the Church. 3. It is still more to our purpose to refer to the wisdom, perhaps we may say the necessity, of this principle, in view of the mission assigned to the Church. It is not for man to say that anything is abso- lutely necessary to God in effecting His purposes which He has not declared to be so. But we may speak of the perfect adaptation of the principle we are considering, to the ends for which the Church was established. Not to name other topics, the Church is appointed to be, under God, the Teacher and Guide of the world. Its business is to dis- ciple all nations. It has to do with people of every type and condition ; with all the sins and all the sorrows, all the avocations, all the duties, and all the hopes, of humanity. Its field is the world. The Church : Diversity in Unity. I o I It needs, therefore, laborers of every sort and every variety of talent. With fewer gifts in kind, some portions of its work would be neglected. If it is to carry Christianity through the globe, it must have men whose constitutions and training fit them for the various climates of the earth. It must have men of iron nerve who can face dangers. It must have men of the requisite scholarship to grapple with strange languages and preach to strange peoples. In its home-field there is room for the exercise of every kind of gift. Witness the diversity in congre- gations; the mission-fields in the cities and in the country; the benevolent institutions to be sustained and governed ; schools ; hospitals ; prisons ; armies. Witness the multitudes of the poor, the sick, the sorrowing. Everywhere there are perishing sinners to be sought out and instructed in religion. Every- where the kingdom of Christ is to be aided in its warfare with earth and hell. A scheme so vast demands a corresponding variety and affluence of talents. And this want is provided for in that diversity which, as we have seen, enters into the constituency of the Church. There are min- isters of every grade of culture and with every kind of gifts. How, otherwise, could the ministry fulfil its design ? For the people vary indefinitely. No one style of preaching would suit them; no two styles, nor three, nor six. One may say that a 9* io2 The Church: I T nity in Diversity. preacher like President Edwards ought to be accept- able to everybody. Another may put in the same claim for a Whitefiekl, and a third for a Mason. But it would not be so. Some would prefer one of these great preachers to the others; and some would pre- fer a fourth preacher to any of them. It is well that every taste can be gratified. And who can survey the broad acres which the Church is cultivating, without rejoicing in the com- bination of gifts employed in carrying forward the work? A radical part of this agency lies in the silent power of example ; the simple routine of a quiet and upright life. He is not a cipher in the Church who is conscientiously discharging the duties of his station, however moderate his gifts, and how- ever obscure his lot. Perhaps there is no one ele- ment so important as this in estimating the entire impression of the Church upon the world. Then there are Christians whose influence is mainly felt in their generous pecuniary contributions to the cause of Christ. Others have a gift for teaching. Not a few are ready to go forth and minister to the sick and the poor in their homes and in hospitals. A glance around the field will detect many faithful workers who belong to no recognized classes, but are unobtrusively doing their Lord's will. We need not dwell upon details. The thought which con- cerns us now is, that this whole army of workers, The Church: Diversity in Unity. 103 clerical and lay, male and female, is one in faith and purpose, in sympathy and hope ; while they are many in gifts and graces, in spheres of labor, in means and methods of exertion, and in their relative measures of success. Some are breaking up the fallow ground. Some are sowing. Some are nurturing the precious grain. And others reaping and gathering the crop. But all are servants of the Great Task- Master; all look to Him for direction; and all are hoping to celebrate the glorious Harvest-Home in His presence. Thus needful is the principle of di- versity in unity to the full efficiency of the Church. We have already pointed out the moral beauty of this arrangement, and shown how it illustrates the power and efficacy of Divine grace. The unfolding of such a subject suggests the prac- tical lessons which grow out of it. I will detain you to give expression to only two or three of these. One is a lesson of instruction and encouragement in respect to religions experience. We have seen that this is of no uniform type. Certain elements are es- sential, but beyond these it partakes of a very great variety. We are not, then, to set up this or that instance of conversion, nor this or that form of the Christian life, as the standard by which all others are to be tested. God has His own methods for bringing men into His kingdom, and for keeping 104 The Church: Unity in Diversity. them when there. An absolute identity in all ex- amples oi supposed conversion, as to means, occa- sions, and exercises, would not merely justify distrust, but afford presumptive proof that many cases were counterfeit. For this would contravene the principle of diversity in unity, which is fundamental, as to His kingdom of nature, so also to His kingdom of grace. The only safe or authorized mode of trying our state is to come to the law and the testimony. 2. As unity in diversity is the law of the Church, it is the duty of all its members to cherish and pro- mate the spirit of unity. The apostle points out the effect of a schism among the members of the body, as illustrative of a divisive spirit among the members of the Church. The divisions among Christians have always been the opprobrium of religion. They spring from false doctrine, and from evil tempers, — such as pride, jealousy, envy, uncharitableness, and the like. To indulge these passions is to breed discord, and thus impair the unity, mar the beauty, and lessen the usefulness of the Church. 3. As diversity in unity is the law of the Church, let us try to learn what are oar oivn gifts y and to fill each his own place. If we are in the Church at all (I do not mean in the visible Church merely) we must have some gift, and there is a place for us. Your place is not your neighbor's, nor his yours. The Corinthians were The Church: Diversity in Unity. 105 too ambitious to heed this. The apostle had to argue the point with them, which he did at length. He closes by asking, " Are all apostles ? Are all prophets ? Are all teachers ? Are all workers of miracles ?" The very nature of the Church forbids this. There must be " many members," with their several gifts and functions, or there could be no spiritual body. And it is not a mere matter of per- sonal choice with us — our endowments and position. There is a higher agency here. " God hath set the members, every one of them, in the body (both the spiritual and the natural body), as it hath pleased Him." His aim in this arrangement is service ; and that should be ours. He brings us into the Church that we may serve Him, not by doing another's work, but our own. To learn what this is, we must ask His teaching in prayer. We must consider our situation and circum- stances. We must endeavor to find out what gifts we have, and how they can be used to the best pur- pose. The more important spheres of religious ac- tivity (for the laity), such as charitable associations, teaching, visiting the poor and the sick, and con- tributing of one's substance, are too familiar to re- quire comment. But every gift involves an obliga- tion to use it for your Master. It may be a facile needle. It may be music. It may be a capacity for writing useful books. It may be the Divine art of io6 The Church: Unify i)i Diversity, composing hymns of devotion. It may be letter- writing, — a beautiful gift, which beguiles the suffering of many a weary hour; and soothes the sorrowing; and animates the sweet ". . . . fellowship of kindred minds;" and fortifies the tempted and wavering ; and quickens the lukewarm; and revives the desponding; and cheers the hearts that are perpetually sighing, " Nearer, my God, to Thee, Nearer to Thee !" Yes, you all have your gifts, and you should feel that it is a high privilege to employ them in the ser- vice of God. Should all do this, — all within a single fold even, — with what energy would it clothe the Gospel, and how nobly would it illustrate the wisdom, power, and grace displayed in the structure of Chrises mystical body ! Then only, when we have attained this standard, shall we be able to appreciate the value of that principle of diversity in unity which is so vital to the symmetry, the harmony, and the efficiency of the Church. 4. There is one other lesson which I would gladly enforce if the time would permit, viz., a lesson of charity in judging of the Christianity of others. It will not do for us to forget that while the Church is one, it is also many. The gracious principle de- velops itself in an endless variety of forms, and dwells The Church: Diversity in Unity. 107 with dispositions and gifts of every type. We are not called to exercise the same liking towards all Christians, but let us watch against capricious an- tipathies. Your brother may have some untoward traits and ways, but is he not a brother still ? Of the ministers you happen to hear, you dismiss one as tin- suited to his work because he is " too metaphysical" ; and a second, because he is "too flowery"; a third, because he is "too quiet"; and a fourth, because he is " too vehement" ; and so on to the end. But you greatly err if you think it would have been better to fashion all these preachers after your model. This diversity of gifts is indispensable to the ministry, in regard both to the work to be done and the varieties of human character to be dealt with. Each one has his vocation. And to brand them as unfit for their office may be not only to violate the charity of the gospel, but, by implication, to reproach Him who saw fit to organize the Church upon this plan. If they all cast out devils, why require that they shall every one do it in your way? The same caution may be needed in passing judg- ment upon private Christians who differ widely from ourselves. — But I must not trespass further. Let us only look well to our own hearts, and try to do our own work faithfully. So shall we best help on the Church in its sublime mission and honor our gra- cious Lord. REDEMPTION, A STUDY TO THE ANGELS. I. Peter i. 12. " Which things the angels desire to look into!' " Which things /" — we must read the context to understand this allusion. "Of which salvation the prophets have inquired and searched diligently, who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you : searching what, or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify, when it testi- fied beforehand the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should follow. Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did min- ister the things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven ; which things the angels desire to look into." The meaning is obvious. The things into which the angels de- sire to look, are the things which formed the bur- Hen of prophetical and apostolical teaching, to wit: the "salvation" of men; the atoning "sufferings of Christ/ 1 and "the glory" (G v., glories), His glory and Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 109 that of His people, "which should follow." In sim- pler phrase, the theme which awakens this interest among the angels is, Redemption. No commentator fails to notice the peculiar force and beauty of the verb in this sentence. Our ver- sion has it, " desire to look into." It denotes a bending attitude with a gaze of fixed intensity. The allusion is supposed to be to the figures of the Cheru- bim above the mercy-seat in the holy of holies, who were represented as bending downwards with their eyes fastened upon the blood-sprinkled ark, as if try- ing to penetrate the great mystery it symbolized, the blending of the law and the Gospel, the justice and the mercy of God. Let us dwell for a little upon this in- teresting theme, Redemption, a study to the angels. It cannot but be deemed remarkable that we should be so isolated from the rest of the universe. Here are millions of orbs brought within the range of our vision by the telescope. We cannot doubt that they are the abodes of rational creatures. The ingenious theory defended with so much learning and logic by one of the most accomplished philoso- phers* of our day, which would make our globe the only inhabited world, has probably not won a single convert in either hemisphere. So natural, so univer- sal, is the conviction that these other spheres and * Professor WhewelL 10 i io Redemption, a Study to the Angels. systems arc inhabited, that it may almost be classed with the intuitions of the human mind: we accept it without argument, and we cling to it in the face of argument Yet of the races that tenant these count- less worlds we know absolutely nothing. One race only besides our own is introduced to us: and of that, the notices are quite too meagre to satisfy us. We see just enough of the angels to wish to see a great deal more. We " desire to look" into their affairs, as they into ours. In the absence of full in- formation concerning them, we give scope to our imaginations, and explore, as we best may, the wide realm in which they dwell, and their various powers and employments, — not always with a very accurate regard to the hints the Scriptures give us of their position and functions. We are on safe ground in ascribing to them supe- rior intelligence and ample knowledge. But the knowledge of a creature, whatever his rank, must necessarily be progressive. Infinite knowledge (in- cluding prescience) pertains only to the Creator. The angels, like ourselves, must learn things by the nt, — excepting when God may have been pleased to reveal His purposes to them. We are not to take it for granted that they knew, before this world was made, what was to happen here. They were already in existence. They saw our globe and the visible heavens created: and, at the sublime spectacle, "the Redemption, a Study to the Angels, in » — morning stars saner together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy." But, except through some special revelation, of which we have no hint, it was impos- sible they should foresee the extraordinary transac- tions which were to distinguish this orb from all the others scattered through the wide fields of space. From the very first, however, the Divine procedure on this planet would arrest their attention. The Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve, the trees of life and of the knowledge of good and evil, the myste- rious prohibition, and the penalty annexed, — what could all this mean? Still more, how would it as- tonish them to witness the temptation. They had seen Satan and his fellow-apostates cast down to hell : and yet he is now permitted to come to this new-born world, fresh from its Maker's hand, to enter this blooming garden, and to appropriate one of the lower animals to the atrocious purpose of seducing the happy pair from their allegiance. Nay, he not only assails but actually overthrows their virtue. Is it fanciful to imagine that this event would fill the angels with amazement? that they would say one to another, " How can these things be? Is not sin that abominable thing which our holy and righteous Lord hates with a perfect hatred? Has He not testified His reprobation of it by the awful but just doom visited upon our compeers who fell? How, then, should He allow this pair to fall a prey to the i i 2 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. wiles of Satan? Why should He create another world if it was so soon to be banded over to the sway of I lis arch-adversary, — even though He may present!}- consign Adam and Eve to the same dismal fate with the tempter and his hosts?" Filled with surmisings like these, the angels would 11 desire to look into" the strange opening chapter of our history. But something no less inexplicable would now inflame their curiosity. They had heard the threatening, M In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." It came from lips which could not lie. It was but the inevitable penalty of His law. Once before it had been broken, and instantly the penalty took effect. And yet Adam and Eve do not 44 die," — i.e., they do not, on their transgression, M re- turn to the dust," nor are they banished into outer darkness. Cast off they are from the favor of God ; driven from Eden; made to feel that they are ruined; but they still live on. And, wonderful to relate, in- stead of a sentence of absolute and interminable de- struction, there gleams upon them from out the com- mingled horrors of that memorable day, a trembling ray of hope. To the serpent God said: " I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her sqh<\ ; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel." The angels hear this. Can words express how much they would desire to look into it? It speaks, as other communications Redemption, a Study lo the Angels. 1 1 ; had done, of the woman's u seed." Whether this was intelligible to them we do not know. The fall occurred before the birth of Cain. We are not cer- tain that the angels had ever seen an infant. Among their own race we may with confidence affirm they had not. Whether the same or similar laws prevail in other spheres which they had visited, as mark the family institute here, we are not informed. But the difference between our race and their own, in this particular, could not fail to interest them, not only at that juncture, but ever afterward. They were all created in the full maturity of their powers. Here is a globe of vast extent which is to be peopled by the descendants of a single pair, increasing and spreading through successive generations until they reach a thousand, possibly several thousand, millions. Whether the angels, then, had seen infants elsewhere or not, they could never have gazed upon any with the profound interest with which they would ponder the aspect and possible destiny of the children of Adam and Eve. In some way the seed of this woman is to bruise the serpent's head. Such is the inscrutable utterance which stays the uplifted arm of justice, while it assures them that sooner or later justice will take its course, and Satan's head be crushed by the race he had made partners in his sin. Obscure as this intimation must have been, as well to the angels as to the guilty pair, it would unveil to IO* 1 1 4 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. them a new attribute of the Godhead. Up to this period, it would seem, they had known nothing of the Divine Mercy. Its absence could be no defect in their eves, for the idea of Mercy was not yet born into the universe of creatures. The character of God, as they beheld it, was absolutely perfect: there was nothing wanting; no excess, and no defect. What a discovery was this which now broke upon them ! Listening to the fearful words of the Eternal as He pronounced sentence upon the tempter and the tempted, this vague promise of a Deliverer must have been as though He had lifted a veil and dis- closed to them one of the brightest glories of His character, of the existence of which they had, up to that moment, formed no conception. Truth, justice, Goodness, Holiness, — with these attributes they were familiar. But of Mercy they had never heard. They had bowed in grateful worship at His feet. They had gathered in shining bands around His throne. They had received His mandates, and hastened with them on joyful wing to distant orbs and systems. But neither in His august presence-chamber, nor in their intercourse with other tribes of holy and happy be- ings, had they heard of Mercy. Throughout this vast concourse of worlds and firmaments no tongue had ever lisped her name. Among the rapt hosts who stand within the very splendors of the throne, no created eye had ever gazed upon her radiant form. Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 1 1 5 Enfolded in the depths of His own infinitude, she had been from eternity awaiting the appointed day of her epiphany, — her glorious manifestation to heaven and earth. Yet even now that the period has come, she does not rise full-orbed upon the world, but mild and gently, like the dawn, as befits the quality of Mercy. But this shall suffice for angelic eyes. Enough for them, this vision of surpassing loveliness which rav- ishes their sight, as a single fold of those glitter- ing vestments is drawn aside and there falls upon their ears this vague promise about the seed of the woman. Though Mercy never spake before, she needs no interpreter. They know it is her voice ; and while they cannot fully comprehend her meaning, they do as the shepherds did when she came to them in her sweetest guise four thousand years afterward, — they " return glorifying and praising God for all the things that they have heard and seen." These occurrences could not fail to stimulate the curiosity of the angels. They would watch with deep solicitude the course of the Divine administra- tion towards our world. They would treasure every fresh intimation of the future deliverance to be effected by the seed of the woman. Their superior intelli- gence and sagacity, and their advantageous position, would enable them to understand better than our race could, the types and prophecies pointing to the Messiah. But we have no warrant for assuming; that 1 1 6 Redemption^ a Study to the Angels. they comprehended the plan, except as it was car- ried into effect. The presumption is, that during those fort\' centuries it was a perpetual study to them ; and that as the beneficent scheme was grad- ually developed, it only increased their desire to look into its unfathomable mysteries. Not to attempt the historical illustration of so broad a theme, let us note a very few of those lead- ing facts of redemption which were clearly in the contemplation of the apostle when he penned the text. The first and chief of these is, to quote St. Peter's own words, " tlic sufferings of Christ :" by which we may understand His entire work of humiliation from Bethlehem to Calvary. We must believe that the angels knew, long before the advent, that the prime- val promise upon which we have been commenting referred to the Second Person of the Trinity ; that He was to be the Redeemer of the world ; and that in some way it was to be brought about through suffering. But it is not certain that they had any distinct conception of the incarnation. Another apostle exclaims: " Great is the mystery of godli- ness, God manifest in the flesh." How could they have penetrated this mystery beforehand ? There was neither precedent nor analogy to aid them in resolving it. It is not probable that they had ever heard of the union of two natures in one person. And if such a marvel had occurred, not Gabriel him- Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 1 1 7 self could have soared to the conception of a union between the Creator and a creature. Accustomed as they were to render co-equal honors to the Trin- ity, and especially to adore the Son in " the posses- sion of the glory which He had with the Father be- fore the world was," how could they think of Him as stooping to be "born of a woman," as coming into this revolted world as an infant, blending His Divinity and our humanity in an indissoluble unity? When the event actually took place, they are sent to announce it to the shepherds. And the wonder which filled the breasts of the shepherds, as they stood by that manger, must have been tame as com- pared with their own. Hovering, unseen and un- thought-of spectators, over that little group, what tongue may essay to describe their emotions as they beheld in this babe, the Son of the Highest, the Creator of all things, Him who "thought it no rob- bery to be equal with God," and whom they had never seen before except on His throne? Here at length it dawns upon them, how the seed of the woman is to bruise the serpent's head. But it only dawns. They cannot yet divine what is to follow. Most earnestly do they "desire to look'' into the mystery of this scene at Bethlehem, to comprehend this infant, to forecast its predicted career of suffering and triumph. But they must wait. And their waiting only brings them into the presence of fresh marvels. i i 8 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. Imagine what a season of suspense those thirty years must have been to them which Jesus passed at Nazareth. How often would they visit the favored village. In what vast encampments would they spread around it. With what intense longings would they observe His every act and word, and ponder its possible bearings upon the great object of His incarnation. As He emerged from His seclu- sion to enter upon His public ministry, their interest would become deeper and deeper still, until it found its culmination in the cross. Many of the incidents in His life they would understand better than His disciples. But there must have been very much both in His actions and in His doctrine which they would desire to look into more thoroughly. Indeed, His official life as a whole would be just of this character. It was the life of a sufferer. They had always associated suffering with sin. Here was a " man of sorrows" who was " holy, harmless, and undefiled." They had associated suffering with weakness and dependence. Here was the Being who laid the foundations of the earth, and stretched out the heavens as a curtain, bending under a load of grief and wrong enough to crush a whole race even of creatures like themselves. They had re- ded death as the portion of finite and depraved natures. And here the Lord of glory cries, <4 It is finished!" and "gives up the ghost." Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 1 1 9 What a study was this for the angels ! If they flocked to Bethlehem, what myriads of them would hasten to Calvary! If the nativity perplexed and amazed them, how would they stand appalled before the crucifixion ! With what energy would they strive to sound its awful depths and compass its vast significance ! But we must not enlarge. Not only would the angels desire to look into the " sufferings of Christ," but into the application of redemption also. They were familiar with two types of character, perfect holiness and unmitigated depravity; and with two conditions of being, unalloyed happiness and absolute misery. Neither their own history nor, so far as we are informed, the annals of any other sphere supplied them with any example of a char- acter in which these elements were commingled, or afforded any hint of a possible transition from one state to the other. They knew nothing of forgive- ness, nothing of renewal. Once a transgressor, there remained, for any creature, nothing but an endless penalty and an eternal subjection to his evil passions. The sacrifice on Calvary now opens to them a new world, on earth as well as in heaven. They had, in- deed, seen something of this before, for the efficacy of the great expiation reached backward to the fall. But its triumph was reserved for the new dispensa- tion. They have opened the everlasting gates and i 20 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. let the King of glory in, laden with the spoils of earth and hell, and now they behold the Third Per- son o\ the Saered Trinity passing out of those gates and going down, not on a transient errand, but to make Mis permanent abode in this apostate world. And here they see His miracles of mercy, — not less marvellous in their effects upon the souls of men than had been those of the Messiah upon their bodies. This whole process of a sinner's conversion and sanc- tification, so varied in its times, and methods, and subjects; so illustrative of God's sovereignty, and power, and mercy ; cannot but be a perpetual study to them, affluent in instruction and replete with mo- tives to gratitude and praise. There must be much in the history of individual believers to awaken their sympathies, but still more in the general welfare of the Church. In both these departments they feel the interest which pertains to immediate actors: for they have always been em- ployed as u ministering spirits to the heirs of salva- tion," and as the servants of God in directing the affairs of the world. They cannot know in advance who are to be converted, nor what is to be the course of Divine Providence, except as they may infer it from the prophecies. We may be sure that things have not always gone as they expected: that events have constantly occurred which were well-nigh as inexplicable to them as to us. Must it not be a Redemption, a Study to the Angels, 1 2 1 marvel to them that the Church, the purchase of Christ's blood, should have made its way so slowly and so painfully in the world? that at one time it should be poisoned with error; at another, frozen with formalism ; at a third, debauched with secularity ; at a fourth, fissured and rent with internal strife? Could they decipher the ten early persecutions, the Dark Ages, the Papacy, and Islamism? Can they understand the wars which deluge Christian nations with blood; which enervate and demoralize them, arrest all healthful progress, and make a jubilee in hell? No such phenomena can meet their eyes in any other part of creation. In heaven there is no- thing to affect the stability of things ; nor in hell. Important changes must take place in those realms and in other orbs. But the presumption is, that ours is the only globe which is given up to perpetual change ; where good and evil are in constant and violent collision ; where the two great hostile powers of the universe, the good and bad angels, wage their Titanic war; and where the Lord of both stoops to engage in the mighty fray, and, stranger still, some- times permits His malignant foes to gain at least seeming victories. Can the angels understand all this? Can they thread this huge labyrinth? Can they follow the multiform mutations of a scene which knows no rest, which recognizes no law but inces- sant fluctuation, and which ever and anon plunges, 122 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. as it were, into a chaos so intractable as to suggest the fear that the Almighty may, in His wrath, have abandoned the world to final anarchy and ruin ? As- suredly there must be problems here which would baffle even a seraph's skill. But the darkness which surrounds them would only increase the desire of the angels to look into them. They know that this world is yet to be reclaimed: that the kingdom of the Nazarene is to absorb all other kingdoms ; that His glory is to cover the earth as the waters cover the seas. And with all the more earnestness do they study the career of God's providence, because they cannot divine how this tangled net-work of adverse events and hostile agencies, is to lead on to the mil- lennial glories of the Church. Here, in fact, is another of the themes which stimulate the curiosity of the angels, "the glories which should follow." They have seen the "sufferings of Christ;" they would fain see His glory. They have seen — they see now — the sufferings of His Church ; they would see its glory. They are assured that these glories are coming; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it They can, no doubt, frame a better conception of them than we can. And this very circumstance must increase their solicitude to witness the final result. They saw the first faint lineament of the august plan in Eden. They have not only watched, Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 123 but assisted in, its gradual unfolding to this hour, as they will to its close. They see also the preparation for it which is going on in heaven. No wonder that they long for its sublime consummation; that they desire to look into those coming glories which are to crown the perfect and indissoluble union between Christ and His Bride, the ransomed Church. Such are a very kw of the things which, accord- ing to our apostle, "the angels desire to look into.'' If we inquire whence this curiosity on their part, we may easily conjecture some of the motives which prompt it Without dwelling upon that simple craving after knowledge which pertains to every created intelli- gence, and which must find so luxuriant a field in the themes of Christianity, we may refer to the aid which the angels derive from Redemption in their study of the character and government of God. To any creature the knowledge of the Creator is the most important of all knowledge. To holy beings, no study can be so attractive. The angels, as already observed, have signal advantages for this study. But there is no volume open to them which yields so much information concerning God as Re- demption. We have illustrated this in respect to one of His perfections. It holds true no less of His wisdom and justice than of His mercy. St. Paul glances at this point: " to the intent that now unto i 24 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God." Heaven cannot lack for evidences of the Divine wisdom ; but if it would see this attribute in its glory, it must come down to earth. Its grand achievement is redemption. Justice vindicated, and mercy triumphant: sin punished, and the sinner saved : heaven bestowed upon the guilty and the vile, and the recipient not elated, but humbled: Satan vanquished by the seed of the woman: death turned into a fountain of life: the cross not merely transfigured into the brightest crown of the Son of God, but multiplied into as many such crowns as there will be ransomed sinners in heaven; — this is the wisdom which streams forth from redemption, and bathes Cherubim and Seraphim, no less than man, with its splendors. And what we affirm of His wisdom we claim also for His other moral attributes. Here " mercy and truth meet together, righteousness and peace kiss each other." Nowhere else has the Deity made so full, so august, so grateful, a revelation of Himself. From none of His works is He to receive such a inie of praise. None will so fill the universe with His glory. This is one reason why the angels to look into it. A second reason is to be found in their personal concern in the results of redemption. Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 125 It is an opinion sanctioned by many eminent names in theology, that the good angels owe their confirmation in holiness in some way to the media- tion of Christ. This is not asserted in Scripture, but there are passages which seem to favor the idea. We read, e.g., of "the elect angels." We are told that God " gathers together in one all things in CJirist, both which are in heaven and which are on earth, even in Him." And that "all power is given Him in heaven and in earth." There is room, then, for the conjecture that to Him these unfallen spirits may be indebted for their permanent preser- vation from apostasy. One thing is beyond ques- tion : redemption has supplied them with new mo- tives to fidelity, of the most tender and persuasive character. There is another respect in which they are inter- ested in this work. In the revolt of their associates, they became no less their enemies than the enemies of God. That mighty war of which we have so many glimpses, is a conflict between the fallen and the unfallen spirits : u . . . . tho' strange to us it seem At first, that angel should with angel war And in fierce hosting meet, who wont to meet So oft in festivals of joy and love Unanimous, as sons of one Great Sire, Hymning the Eternal Father." II* 126 Redemption, a Study to the Angels. It could not be otherwise. When Lucifer lifted his parricidal arm against God, the blow was aimed at every faithful subject of God throughout the uni- verse. Our great Epic Poet has not transcended the bounds of sober verity in representing the hosts of heaven as following their and our Divine Leader to our globe, here to contest with Satan the mastery of the human soul. In all the plots and counterplots, the assaults and repulses, the victories and defeats, of this war of centuries, they have taken a conspicu- ous part. Their immediate personal concern in it, then, is a cogent reason why they should desire to look into the mystery which infolds it. And this imports that their own happiness is in- volved in the issue. Merely to glance at this point, the benevolence of the angels must attract them to the study of redemp- tion. They know what the happiness of heaven is. They have vividly before their eyes the misery of hell. Here is a race whose destiny is undecided, the only race which is in this anomalous condition. They are sinners, and doomed to death. But a Saviour is offered them, and they may escape the doom. Whatever the issue, it must be irreversible. The fate of millions of souls hangs upon the trem- bling balance. Is it for an angel to look upon such a scene with indifference? This were to belie their nature; almost to betray their Lord. So far from Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 127 indifference, they are vigilant in defending men from the perils that surround them. They omit nothing which may promote the progress of true religion. They watch w T ith solicitude the effects produced by the preaching of the Gospel, and other means of grace. When even one sinner is converted, they hasten to announce it in heaven, and there is joy throughout all their shining ranks. They count it as a privilege to minister to the people of God. They encamp around them in danger, and deliver them. They succor them in sorrow and suffering. And at death, they receive the departing spirit, and convoy it to the Saviour's presence. To beings of such pure benevolence, offices of this kind must yield great happiness, especially when exercised to- wards those for whom the Lord of both saints and angels laid down His life. It can occasion no sur- prise, then, that they should never weary in studying the plan of salvation. But it is time to conclude this discourse. And I shall do it with two reflections, as obvious as they are important. I. Let us borrow from this Scripture a single ray of light to set forth the quality of that skepticism which men of cultivated minds sometimes cherish respecting Christianity. Now, as of old, the Gospel is "to the Jew a stum- i 28 Redemption^ a Study to the Angels. bling-block and to the Greek foolishness." You stigmatize it as not only oppressive in its demands, but even irrational in its principles. The doctrine of pardon through an atonement; of a gratuitous sal- vation through the obedience of a substitute, with- out any personal merit of your own ; of a transfor- mation of character wrought in the soul by the direct power of God ; — may suffice for children and peas- ants : it cannot command the suffrages of educated men. This is your feelfng, — your feeling as you look down in pity, if not in derision, upon the un- lettered around you. It so happens, however, that there is another race who look down upon you; a race whose intellectual elevation separates them even from our Lockes and Newtons and Laplaces by an immeasurably wider space than that which divides you from the people you hold in such contempt. In your foolish and criminal pride, you carry yourselves haughtily towards your fellow- creatures at your side. But let an angel come to you, as one came to the Saviour's tomb, " whose countenance was like lightning, and his raiment white as snow," and, like the sentinels who kept guard there, you would %i shake and become as dead men." Like Manoah, you would be ready to cry out, "Surely we shall die, because we have seen God." Well, heaven is full of such angels. Nor heaven only. Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 129 " Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth." Earth is their favorite sojourn. We have reason to believe that there is not one of these countless orbs that spangle the firmament, which they love so well to visit and where they spend so much time. And wherefore ? That they may cultivate the arts, and master the sciences, and amass the various knowl- edge on which you pride yourselves ? No. But to look into the deeper mysteries, and explore the richer treasures, and pursue the sublimer discoveries of that faith which you disdain to accept, or even candidly and thoroughly to examine. Away with this pretentious sciolism ! Go to the angels for a lesson of humility, and learn from them that if you would ever comprehend "these things" which so engross and ravish them, — if you would not die, and die eternally, without the sight of spiritual, saving truth, — you must search for it in a very different temper from that which has hitherto inspired your studies. 2. There is a keen rebuke in this Scripture for those who are living in the neglect of the Gospel. I am not speaking now of avowed opposers of re- ligion. The admonition, my unconverted hearers, is for you. What a reproach to any of us that we should be less interested in the work of redemption than the angels! They need no Saviour. It was not for their companions He died. Had He taken i $o Redemption, a Study to the Angels. on Him the nature of angels, this solicitude might have been anticipated. But it was our nature He assumed; our race He ransomed; our globe He made the theatre of those stupendous events to which the text alludes. These transactions are a study to the heavenly hosts. From every quarter they come here to learn lessons in theology, which no other sphere, not even heaven itself, could teach them. Employed in various ways in the affairs of our world, — in its harvests, its politics, its social progress, its wars, its storms and pestilences, — this is their chosen theme, their constant and delightful study. Nothing so invites, so entrances them as re- demption. And among the marvels which attract and confound them, the indifference of men to this subject cannot be the least signal. Does it not strike you so? Are you not sometimes amazed at your own torpor, — your ungrateful, criminal insensi- bility to the Gospel? Are the angels to be more concerned about redemption than we are, for whom Christ died? Is all heaven to be moved for our deliverance, and are we to slumber on? Is all the generous sympathy and all the watchful care of these exalted beings for our salvation to be turned to nought by our wilful blindness and perversity? As- suredly, my dear hearers, this conduct must yield its fruit. You must yet confront these angels. If you persevere in this course they will meet you at the Redemption, a Study to the Angels. 1 3 1 bar of Christ to overwhelm you with their testi- mony to your unbelief and impenitency. How much better to emulate their example now ; humbly and prayerfully to look into the things of redemption, and own the Lord of angels as your Redeemer. CHRIST, THE DESIRE OF ALL NATIONS. Haggai 11 And the Desire of all nations shall come" The last three Prophets, in the order of the Old Testament canon, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi, lived after the return of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity. The two brief chapters which bear the name of Haggai are mainly taken up with exhorta- tions concerning the rebuilding of the temple* Re- ferring in the context to the splendor of Solomon's temple, he utters the remarkable prediction, that " the glory of the latter house should be greater than of the former." " Remarkable," I call it, because his countrymen, whom he was urging to arise and build, could not have expected, with their scant means, to erect a structure which should rival the gorgeous temple of their fathers; and, as a matter of fact, the edifice they reared came far short of it in architect- ural magnificence. This is a cogent reason for ad- hering to the traditionary interpretation of the text 132 Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 133 as pointing to the Messiah. Eminent critics insist upon the rendering, " The beauty of the heathen, or of all nations, shall come ;" i.e., their beautiful things : their silver and gold and treasures of every kind shall come (in other phrase, shall be brought) into the promised kingdom foretold in the context. Even in this view the spirit of the passage is not in conflict with the other explanation ; for the reference is confessedly to the reign of the Messiah. But in writing to the Hebrews, St. Paul quotes the preceding- verses as applying (so he is commonly understood) the shaking of the earth and the heavens there men- tioned, to the great civil and military convulsions, which heralded the advent of Christ and the opening of the new dispensation. It is in this connection the prophet affirms that "the Desire of all nations shall come;" and that the new temple shall be more glo- rious than the old. As this was not verified in a material sense, Christian commentators of all schools have generally agreed that it must refer to the actual presence of the Redeemer in the second temple. The former temple contained a visible emblem of the Deity, the cloud of glory shadowing the mercy-seat. But the Lord himself came to the later temple. That had the shadow; this the substance. The type was there; the ante-type here. The resplendent prophecy there; the more resplendent fulfilment here. On these grounds we seem warranted in adhering; to the i 34 ( 7wlsl the Desire of all Nations. ancient view, that the text is a prediction of the coming of the Messiah: " The Desire of all nations, the promised Deliverer, shall come" Let us, then, contemplate the Lord Jesus Christ as 44 the Desire of all nations." The title, it must be ad- mitted, requires some explanation, since He is, to so large a portion even of the nominally Christian world, u as a root out of dry ground, without form or comeliness. " It is reasonable to suppose that this title has some respect to the design of the Father in sending Him into the world. The Jews could not believe that sal- vation was intended for any but themselves. But this fond conceit was at variance with their own Scriptures. In the covenant of redemption, the language of the Father to the Son was, 4< It is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the pre- served of Israel : I will also give thee for a Light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth." (Isa. xlix. 6.) Accordingly, in that beautiful prophecy of the patriarch (Gen. xlix. io), one of the earliest on record, it is declared, 44 Unto Him shall the gathering of the people be." Many times is this repeated along the line of proph- ecy. And when at length the infant Immanuel ap- pears, the venerable Simeon, taking the beloved child in his arms, utters over Him that touching, prophetic Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 135 aspiration, " Lord, now lettest thou Thy servant de- part in peace, according to Thy word : for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared before the face of all people ; a Light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of Thy people Israel." We may not pry too curiously into the reasons of that economy which virtually restricted salvation for several centuries to the seed of Abraham. Enough that it was the declared purpose of God to remove those walls of separation, and provide a Redeemer for the "world." "Ask of me, and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession." He did ask ; and the purpose and promise which began to pass into fulfilment on the day of Pentecost, are still achieving their victories before our eyes. This, indeed, may be cited as a separate confirma- tion of the title, the Desire of all nations. While He has not, up to this time, been the actual Desire of all of every nation, nor even of all of any one nation, yet very many of different nations have owned and adored Him as their Lord. A spectator of that scene at Pentecost could scarcely have re- pressed the feeling, " Surely, the Desire of all nations has come." For nearly twenty distinct nations and tribes came forward, by their representatives, on that memorable day, to do homage to the Son of God. More than thrice twenty have followed in their 136 C hrist, the Desire of all Nations. steps. Indeed, wherever His word has gone He has found friends and worshippers. In every land there have been some to desire Him. No nation so re- fined, none so debased, but there have been individ- uals among them to do Him honor. He is the only Being that has appeared in the world of whom this could be affirmed. Every nation, pagan, Mohammedan, and Christian, has its heroes and sages. Within their respective coun- tries they have received general homage. In some instances, they have acquired a world-wide celeb- rity. But for none of them could it be claimed that lie was the Desire of all nations, in the sense in which this title is challenged for Jesus of Naza- reth. Take the name of Confucius, of Aristotle, of Plato, of Mohammed even, and carry it round the world. Explain the ethical or religious system de- vised by any one of these distinguished men. Em- ploy all the arts of learning and logic to enforce its dicta upon the human mind and conscience. And what have you accomplished? Here and there, among the more cultivated peoples, you will have interested a few persons in the study of the themes presented. In the case of Mohammedanism, you will have made converts among the ruder tribes. But whoever may have been your hero, you will not re- turn from your mission with the feeling, " Here is the Desire of all nations." Nowhere — not in a single Christ, the Desire of all Nations, 137 bosom, or in respect to a single philosopher — will you have enkindled the emotions of love and grati- tude, of trust and joy, which ravish so many hearts throughout those very lands when the name of Jesus Christ, the Anointed of God, is pronounced. It is not that they admire Him as they may admire a great captain like Caesar or Wellington ; nor that they revere Him as they may an illustrious sage, like Zoroaster or Socrates ; nor that they honor Him as they may a generous philanthropist, like John Howard or William Wilberforce. It is some- thing deeper, loftier, holier, and more lasting than this. And it is a common sentiment. It is a plant that will grow in every soil and climate, — on the rock, in the clay, in the sand ; by the rivers and in the desert; at the equator and at the poles. Men of all kindreds and languages regard Jesus Christ with the same feelings. As between the cultivated scholars of Christendom and the African Caffir there is a chasm, intellectual, social, and moral, which no art of man can bridge over. And yet it needs only that two strangers, of whatever variant climes and tongues, standing on opposite sides of this abyss, shall be brought to Jesus Christ, to create a concord and a sympathy between them more complete and durable than any which springs out of the most en- dearing ties of natural affection. There may still be a wide difference in the breadth and comprehension 138 Christy the Desire of all Nations. of their spiritual views; and nearly as great an in- equality as before in their relative grades of mental culture. But when they think of the Redeemer, it will be with a common feeling of want and unworthi- ness, with a common affiance upon His sacrifice, and common sentiments of love and thankfulness. And this, in turn, will inspire a mutual esteem and make them feel that they are " one in Christ Jesus." The case is stronger still. Christ is the one para- mount Desire of those who have scarcely anything else in common. Men who are the poles apart on other topics, — on questions of literature, of politics, of trade, of metaphysics, of church-government, — use the same language when they bow before the mercy- seat, sing the same psalms of praise to the Redeemer, and labor with the same zeal to make Him known to others. Where He is concerned, all their hopes and aspirations coalesce, like needles pointing to the same pole. In this identity of experience there is ample reason why He should be styled the " Desire of all nations." It may be alleged, however, that this view compre- hends only those persons of whatever country who have been brought to a personal knowledge of Christ as their own Redeemer. Is there any sense in which the title in the text can be applied to Him in its lit- eral import? Is He, in the obvious signification of the words, the " Desire of all nations"? Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 139 Of course he cannot be the conscious Desire of na- tions who have never heard of Him: this would be a self-contradiction. But He may be, nay, He actually is, the unconscious Desire even of these nations, and so the " Desire of all nations." That is to say, there are desires common to the nations who know Him not, and to the nations that know Him, which can be satisfied only in Jesus Christ. We may suppose a city to be scourged with a pestilence which baffles the skill of its physicians. There is a medicine which would cure the disease. The afflicted people do not yet know of it. But every one of them is craving such an antidote. Would it not be proper to say of this medicine, " It is the desire of all their hearts" ? This is what we affirm of Christ in respect to the nations that have not heard of him. He is their Desire, inasmuch as they long for a competent and infallible Teacher. Enfeebled and depraved as human nature is, it craves truth as its proper aliment. The love of truth is natural to man. It may be blunted and borne down by vice and error and passion ; but it is not annihilated. There is still a latent yearning that is not to be pacified until it finds the truth which God has appointed as its nutri- ment. If proof of this be needed, look around. What is the mainspring of that activity which per- vades the intellectual world ? The pursuit of truth (I do not say of spiritual and saving truth) is the 140 Christy the Desire of all Nations. grand aim which engrosses all minds. In every branch of letters, in every science, in every depart- ment of society, in all professions and occupations, men are seeking after truth. And it is no less the anxious aspiration of many burdened hearts amidst the gloom of paganism, and in the darkness of skep- ticism, " What is truth f" Beyond the sphere of the Christian Scriptures, mankind have always been the sport of ignorance and error. One teacher follows another, and one system supplants another, each leading the multitude captive for the time, but all deceptive and tantalizing. These systems vary in- definitely among themselves. Some are more ra- tional and of better moral tendency than others; are more consistent, more practical, and more useful. But they labor under the same fatal defects : they are none of them clear enough to answer the pur- poses of a chart ; and none of them are clothed with authority. The voice with which they speak is the voice of feeble, short-sighted man ; and the course of events is constantly branding their utterances with ignorance and folly. Left to these blind guides, the nations have lived and died, wandering sadly through the mazes of error. Here and there they have rested for a while in some system which wore a better semblance than the one it superseded. But after a while this also has proved an ignis-fatuus, and they have found them- Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 141 selves without support or asylum. These changes, however, have rather fostered than impaired the in- ward craving for some wise, unerring, and authori- tative teacher. Worn and wearied with perpetual disappointments, humanity has longed for the ad- vent of One who could resolve its doubts, allay its fears, and re-inspire its hopes, by unfolding to it immortal truth, — truth in its purity, its fulness, its benevolence, and its Divine sanctions. Such a Teacher appeared in the Son of God incarnate. He came to reveal the truth on all those subjects which are of vital importance to man ; to dispel his igno- rance, rectify his mistakes, and conduct him where he could plant his feet on solid ground, and feel that he had exchanged light for darkness, certainty for conjecture, and peace for hopeless perplexity ■ and apprehension. So much was this the character of Christ as a Teacher, that He could even, without extravagance or presumption, lay His hand upon His breast and say, " I am the Truth." For all essential and saving truth emanates from, and centres in, Him. And in this view we vindicate the title applied to Him by the prophet, as the " Desire of all nations." Another mute prophecy of His advent, virtually included in the one just considered, is to be found in the general longing of mankind for a clearer mani- festation of the Deity. [42 Christy the Desire of all Nations. Man has been sufficiently degraded by sin ; but he must have been completely brutalized not to retain some sense of a Higher Power to whom he owed allegiance. There is an ineradicable law writ- ten upon his heart, which points to a sovereignty without himself, and makes him yearn for its revela- tion. He must have a god. If he cannot have the true God, he will fashion gods to himself. This he has been doing from the period of the primal apos- tasy. And if anything could abase the pride of human reason, it would be to look over the globe and see the objects which man has deified. Not to go into details, which the present argument does not call for, there is no visible thing, from the sun in the heavens to the worm we tread upon, that has not by some tribe or nation been exalted into a god. The mythologies alike of the most polished and the most ignorant peoples, have abounded with gods created by men's fears and hopes out of their own passions and vices. The vague but deep-seated craving after a blending of the seen and the unseen, the Divine and the human, the Creator and the creature, has found expression, on the one hand, in the apotheosis of heroes ; and on the other, in the incarnations of the Deity: the former, as in the dei- fied warriors of Greece and Rome, lifting up man to (j<>(\ ; the latter, as in the avatars of the Hindoos, bringing God down to man. Everywhere, and in all Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 143 ages, the deathless principle in man has been press- ing against the impenetrable curtain which shuts us in, essaying to find or make some rent through which it might gain a transient glimpse of that mysterious Being who sits there enthroned in awful majesty, if, peradventure, there might be some subtle bond of sympathy to link His nature with our own. In other words, man has sought a clearer manifes- tation of the Deity, and he has hoped to behold Him as, in some way, a sharer of our humanity. This universal yearning — for so we are warranted in regarding it — is met in the mission of Jesus Christ. The desire of all nations is satisfied in Him. As a revelation of God, His presence throws into shadow the brightest glories of the Divinity impressed upon the works of creation and providence. No nation need now ask in despondency, " What is God?" For in the Person of the Redeemer He offers Him- self to the contemplation and homage of the world, with His perfections unimpaired, and yet so veiled that mortal eyes can look upon them. And here, too, is the human with the Divine. Here is the strange commingling of the might and majesty, the immensity and holiness of the Godhead, with the innocent infirmities, the love and the pity and the tenderness of a fellow-man and fellow-sufferer. Ecce Homo! Ecce Deus ! Behold the Man! Behold the God ! What craving of the soul is not provided 1 44 C lirist, the Desire of all Nations. for here? Summon the nations from afar, — "from earth's remotest bound, " — Jew and Gentile, Christian and pagan, polytheist and pantheist: let them look upon our glorious Immanuel and say whether all they have longed to know concerning God is not revealed in Jesus Christ ; whether He does not meet all the demands of their reason and all the yearn- ings of their hearts ! Do we err, then, when we affirm that " the Desire of all nations" has come? With still greater emphasis may we point to Christ as "the Desire of all nations" in respect to His redeeming work. The grand necessity of the race is a Saviour. From the hour Adam hid himself from his Maker in the garden until now this has been man's ad- mitted, paramount, universal want. Every religion is founded upon it, — even the most revolting forms of polytheism, and the devil-worship of the poor Africans. Wherever man is there is a sense of sin and danger; a feeling of exposure to penalty; the dread of an offended Deity. This sentiment has ever expressed itself in one and the same form, that of sacrifice. Inheriting the conviction from the first pair, which they must have received by direct reve- lation, mankind have everywhere acted upon the belief that the offering up of life was essential to placate the God, too often the unknown God, they had displeased. Jt is no mere dictum of the Bible, Christy the Desire of all Nations. 145 "Without shedding of blood there can be no remis- sion." It is part of the " law written upon the heart." Witness the animals daily offered upon a million of altars. Witness the human victims im- molated sometimes by hecatombs. They all mean the same thing. They attest the universal con- science of guilt, and the necessity of appeasing the Deity by the sacrifice of life. The feeling is, that the more costly the sacrifice the more effectual is the expiation. Men have, therefore, brought to the altar their choicest animals. Nations have exulted in human sacrifices. And in great emergencies they have sought to avert public danger by selecting the noblest and most beautiful of their young men and maidens, and devoting them to slaughter with im- posing religious rites. This is one aspect of the question before us. It has another of kindred significance. The literature of all nations abounds with allusions to the bondage in which man is held by sin, and the necessity of de- liverance from it. The burden which you and I feel is not peculiar to us, nor to the people of Christian lands. Earnest and thoughtful men, who never saw the first glimmer of light from the Sun of righteous- ness, have felt and deplored it. They have de- scribed, as we describe, the fierce contest between the good and the evil principles in the breast. They have mourned their subjection to their inferior appe- 146 Christy the Desire of all Nations. tites. They have sighed for deliverance from this cruel thraldom; for freedom from the tyranny of sin. This is the other aspect of the question. Now, in neither of these relations has man been able to annul the curse or to escape from it. In rare instances a patient adherence to the maxims of some philosophic school has relaxed the fetters of sin. In still more, the blood of a victim has brought tran- sient peace of conscience. But there has been no general and permanent relief. Sin has still ruled the soul with a rod of iron. Conscience has still clam- ored. And the race has struggled on under its crushing sorrows, longing for a true expiation and an actual deliverance. The expiation has been made. The deliverance has come. In the Cross of Christ there is that which will satisfy even these yearnings, — the deepest, the saddest, the most abiding, the most universal, known to fallen humanity. " Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, even the chief." Here is the sublime and precious truth that man has been grop- ing after all adown the ages; the truth which so many breaking hearts have waited for through the weary vigils of a long night of pagan darkness. Stay the uplifted axe. God needs not your victims. 11 All the beasts of the forest are His, and the cattle upon a thousand hills." " Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 147 rivers of oil? Shall I give my first-born for my transgression? the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" Alas, these sacrifices have too often been offered, and He " would not away with them." There is His sacrifice, — on the cross. That blood has an infinite value. It cries to heaven for mercy. It takes away sin. It takes away all sin. It makes the scarlet soul like snow, and the crimson like wool. It avails for the Jew and for the Gentile. It brings pardon and it brings peace. It breaks the dominion of sin in the breast. It insures deliver- ance as well from the inward reign of depravity as from its outward curse. And in the end, it insures to the once enslaved and loathsome sinner a heaven of perfect purity and everlasting joy. Thus fully are the essential wants of the soul met by the sacrifice of the Son of God; and we claim for Him, therefore, this honored title of the 4< Desire of all nations." It has now been shown that among the deep- seated and universal sentiments of the human race are these, to wit: — They desire a competent and infallible Teacher. They desire a clearer manifes- tation of the Deity. And they desire a true atonement for sin, and complete deliverance from its servitude and corruption. These longings of humanity (and if the time would permit others might be specified) are thoroughly met and satis- 148 Christy the Desire of all Nations. Bed in Jesus Christ, and prove Him to be "the I >ESIRE OF ALL NATIONS." Our prophet, writing five hundred years before the advent, says, "The Desire of all nations shall come? You would naturally expect me to speak of His actual coming. But we have been so long be- guiled by the august and touching title under which He is here presented to us, that a few words only can be devoted to His advent. As regards the time of His coming, reference has already been made to the statement in the context, that it was to be while the temple, then about to be built, was standing. This is one of the texts upon which we rely in our controversy with the Jews. They are looking for a Messiah yet to come. Hag- gai tells them that their Messiah was to come dur- ing the period of the second temple; and that His presence w r ould make " the glory of this latter house greater than of the former. ,, It is an established historical fact that the Jews themselves expected the Messiah to appear in this temple, down to the time when Vespasian destroyed it. Their posterity, to evade the force of the testimony from this predic- tion, allege that the temple in which Jesus appeared was not this but a third temple, erected by Herod. The answer is, that this temple was never wholly destroyed; that Herod repaired it, and no doubt re- built portions of the edifice; that this is evident from Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 149 the fact that, during the entire "forty-six years" in which he was engaged in this work, there was a temple at Jerusalem in which the worship of God was conducted ; and that, in point of fact, the Jews of those days made no distinction between the tem- ple of Zerubbabel and that of Herod, but referred to them as one and the same temple. There are various other prophecies which bear upon the question of the period appointed for the advent ; but it will not be necessary to cite them here. It will be more to our purpose to advert briefly to the manner of the Messiah's coming. This, too, was distinctly pointed out by the pen of prophecy, especially in those remarkable predictions, " A virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel" (Isa. vii. 14); and "Unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given/' etc. (Isa. ix. 6). Yet no one of Haggai's time, interpreting his language of the Messiah, could well have supposed that He would so come. Nay, it seems very won- derful to us before whom the whole history has been enrolled. The inspired portraiture presents Him to us as the "Desire of all nations;" as a Teacher, Leader, Deliverer, Saviour, and Comforter, who was the yearning of all hearts ; whose coming, therefore, would be the great event of the ages ; the transac- tion which, as might be presumed, would gather upon itself the profound attention and the deepest '3* i 50 Christy the Desire of all Nations. sympathies o( the whole world. Men of that day would ask, — they ti&Zask, — with an absorbing inter- est, u Where and how will the ' Desire of all nations' make I lis appearance?" And zve marvel afresh as often as we turn to Bethlehem and behold "the De- sire of all nations'' lying a helpless infant in that manger. Step into that crowded caravansary, and you will exclaim with the apostle, " Great is the mystery of godliness!" What wonders meet and mingle in this child! Holding in your hand, not the full blaze of prophecy, but the single taper before us, how in- comprehensible does it seem that the most intense longings of all nations should be pointing uncon- sciously to this sleeping babe; that the sun in his radiant circuit should shine upon no palace and no hovel from which the winds of heaven, as they sweep by, do not waft a pensive sigh towards this gentle infant; that in this tiny frame there should be gar- nered up treasures of wisdom and love and sympa- thy enough to fill to overflowing all human bosoms ; and that we should be told of a day in the distant future when myriads of ransomed sinners shall go up in shining robes, and proclaim to an assembled universe that this child was the Desire of their hearts, and in Him their every craving had been satisfied : nay, that after they were all satisfied, the fulness of grace and love that dwelt in Him was no Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 151 more impaired than is the splendor of the sun by the beams with which he floods the globe in a single diurnal revolution. And yet, while we wonder, we perceive and ad- mire the mingled wisdom and benevolence of this provision. It was the gracious design of our Heav- enly Father, not simply to save His people from their sins, but to save them in a way which should invest their deliverance with its highest possible in- terest and value. This end has been effectually secured by the arrangement we have been contem- plating. To the attributes of the Godhead our Re- deemer adds not only the human nature, but a per- sonal experience of life through its several stages and its countless vicissitudes. And thus He has be- come a " merciful and faithful High-Priest," " like unto His brethren," a sharer of their temptations and trials. This makes salvation doubly precious to us. Is there any Christian mother who, as she looks upon her infant, is not cheered by the reflec- tion that Jesus was once cradled in a mother's arms? Is it not a sweet encouragement to the young to go with freedom to the Saviour, that they know He was once a child? Does it not hallow our house- hold ties and pleasures to remember that He spent the greater part of His days within the sacred pre- cincts of a family circle? And do not the tempted and troubled of every name find comfort in the 152 Christy the Desire of all Nations. thought, that He has made the entire pilgrimage of life, from childhood to maturity, and tasted of all its sorrows ? Let us bless God, then, that the " Desire of all nations" did stoop to be "made of a woman," and to enter the world as the Babe of Bethlehem. But we must not pursue this theme. It is time to suggest one or two lessons, by way of turning the subject to some practical account. It is quite apparent that if Christ be the u Desire (even the unconscious desire) of all nations," then no nation can enjoy true and permanent prosperity except by receiving and honoring Him. The real doctrine of this Scripture is, that nothing can take the place of Christ. A nation may have wealth and intelli- gence, power and splendor, but if it reject His reign, " Ichabod" is written upon its glory. The nation or kingdom that will not serve Him shall perish. The Jews in their blindness cried, " We will not have this man to reign over us ;" and for eighteen centuries they have been without a country or an organized government. Other nations have refused Him their homage, and He has given them over to the tyranny of their own passions, to internal strife and foreign aggression. Can any Christian doubt that we have suffered because of our unfaithfulness to Christ, the Head of all principality and power? Because we have not sought and cherished Him as our great M Desire ;" have not been careful to guard His rights; Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 153 have contemned His authority; have offered to our own wisdom and might the sacrifices which were due to Him alone? Never until we return to Him can we look for true peace and lasting prosperity. Again, if Christ be the " Desire of all nations," then the cause of Missions deserves our support as the great interest of earth. Two-thirds or three-fourths of the race are still sitting in darkness. They are longing and sighing for a Deliverer, and there is no Deliverer for them but Jesus of Nazareth. His name never fell upon their ears. But it is for Him they are yearning. Nor they only. All peoples, Christian as well as pagan, stand in equal need of Him : all desire Him. He alone can cure the world's maladies. He alone can bring salvation to the nations. It is our privilege to make Him known to them. This is our prime duty to them and to Him. A godlike service it is to min- ister such relief to our perishing fellow-creatures; to point them to One who can satisfy their restless cravings after happiness, and lift them up out of the depths of misery and crime to the dignity and fe- licity of sons of God. Can you deny the Missionary cause your sympathy, or be content with a meagre and reluctant support of it ? This cause must and will prosper. In the end it will achieve a glorious triumph. " The Desire of all nations" will one day be hailed by all nations as their Lord. " He shall IS4 Christy the Desire of all Nations. be as the light of the morning, when the sun riseth, even a morning without clouds." "The Gentiles shall come to His light, and kings to the brightness of His rising." " Men shall worship Him, every one from his place, even all the isles of the heathen." And in that day it will not much comfort you to re- flect that you took no part in helping on this glorious millennium. But our subject comes still nearer home. If Christ be " the Desire of all nations," what is He to us individually ? Is He the Desire of our hearts ? This question is vital. Heaven and hell hang upon it. In God's esteem, the test of character is not what we may be in race or color, in social position, in mental culture, in religious profession, but what we are Christ-ward. That we all have earnest and perma- nent desires which can be satisfied only in Him, has already been shown. But with us, unlike the heathen who have the mere light of nature to guide them, these desires must point consciously to Christ. We must desire Him in all His offices, not only as our Prophet to instruct, and our High-Priest to atone for us, but as our King, to set up His throne in our hearts, and put His gentle yoke upon our necks, and control our every act and word and thought. We must desire Him with a vehement and operative de- sire, — a desire which shall pervade the whole char- acter, and reveal itself in a faithful obedience to His Christ, the Desire of all Nations. 155 commands, and the culture of all the graces He enjoins. We must desire Him with the feeling that He is the " one thing needful ; that He must be ours, and that to miss of Him would be a calamity for which the acquisition of " the whole world" would be no equivalent. If Christ be our " Desire" in some such way as this, we may prepare to rejoice with Him in the day when " all kings shall fall down before Him, and all nations serve Him." But if you are utter strangers to this feeling; if after having heard of Christ from your cradles up you still " see no beauty in Him that you should desire Him," what blindness must have settled upon your minds ! what ingratitude and obduracy have taken possession of your hearts ! Sad enough will it be if when you stand at His bar He shall have no desire {or you, — sad enough if the rejoicings with which you now hail the return of the Christmas Festival should terminate in endless, hopeless sorrow that you ever heard of a Saviour's birth ! GOD THE ONLY ADEQUATE PORTION OF THE SOUL. Psalm lxxiii. 25. " Whom have I in heaven but Thee ? and there is none upon ear tli that I desire beside TheeT The writer of this Psalm had been painfully per- plexed, as many persons are still, with the apparent incongruity between certain providential arrange- ments and the perfections of the Deity. He could not reconcile the prosperity of the wicked with the righteous sovereignty of God. But when he "came to the Sanctuary" and learned what was to be their "end;" when he found that all the inequalities of the present life would be adjusted hereafter; he was more than satisfied ; he was ashamed and humbled at his misgivings. He accounts it as a mercy that he had not been cast off for his unbelief and stu- pidity. And with a heart overflowing with grati- tude, he protests anew his confidence in the faith ful- S of God, and his entire devotion to His service. 156 God, the Portion of the Sou/. 1 5 7 " Thou shalt guide me with Thy counsel, and after- wards receive me to glory. Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is none upon earth I desire beside Thee. My flesh and my heart faileth ; but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion forever." The theme presented in the text is, God the ONLY PROPER AND ADEQUATE PORTION OF THE SOUL ; a theme which it will require eternity to unfold, but which may well be a frequent, as it must be a profitable, subject of our meditations here. Ever since the apostasy the cry of mankind has been, "Who will show us any good?" In all ages, in all lands, with all tribes and all professions of men, the eager, restless, unsatisfied demand has been, " Who will show us any good ?" Our text supplies the only answer to this universal craving of humanity. 1. God is the proper portion of the soul, because He is the only nnderived and absolute good. " Why callest thou me good?" said our Saviour to the young ruler: "None is good save One, that is God." His meaning was that God alone is good essentially and in Himself; and that none other is good in comparison with Him. In a subordinate sense, many of His rational creatures are good; all of them, indeed, of whom we have any knowledge, except man and the lost angels ; and man, as re- 14 158 God % the Portion of the Soul. Hewed, has a spark of goodness in him which will burn and shine forever. But all this is derived