’Them
that are without.’ COL. iv 5.
That is, of course, an expression
for the non-Christian world; the outsiders who are
beyond the pale of the Church. There was a very
broad line of distinction between it and the surrounding
world in the early Christian days, and the handful
of Christians in a heathen country felt a great gulf
between them and the society in which they lived.
That distinction varies in form, and varies somewhat
in apparent magnitude according as Christianity has
been rooted in a country for a longer or a shorter
time, but it remains, and is as real to-day as it ever
was, and there is neither wisdom nor kindness in ignoring
the distinction.
The phrase of our text may sound harsh,
and might be used, as it was by the Jews, from whom
it was borrowed, in a very narrow and bitter spirit.
Close corporations of any sort are apt to generate,
not only a wholesome esprit de corps, but a
hostile contempt for outsiders, and Christianity has
too often been misrepresented by its professors, who
have looked down upon those that are without with supercilious
and unchristian self-complacency.
There is nothing of that sort in the
words themselves; the very opposite is in them.
They sound to me like the expression of a man conscious
of the security and comfort and blessedness of the
home where he sat, and with his heart yearning for
all the houseless wanderers that were abiding the
pelting of the pitiless storm out in the darkness there.
The spirit and attitude of Christianity to such is
one of yearning pity and urgent entreaty to come in
and share in the blessings. There is deep pathos
in the words, as well as solemn earnestness, and in
such a spirit I wish to dwell upon them now for a
short time.
I. I begin with the question:
Who are they that are outside? And what is it
of which they are outside?
As I have already remarked, the phrase
was apparently borrowed from Judaism, where it meant,
‘outside the Jewish congregation,’ and
its primary application, as used here, is no doubt
to those who are outside the Christian Church.
But do not let us suppose that that explanation gets
to the bottom of the meaning of the words. It
may stand as a partial answer, but only as partial.
The evil tendency which attends all externalising
of truth in the concrete form of institutions works
in full force on the Church, and ever tempts us to
substitute outward connection with the institution
for real possession of the truth of which the institution
is the outgrowth. Therefore I urge upon you very
emphatically and all the more earnestly
because of the superstitious overestimate of outward
connection with the outward institution of the Church
which is eagerly proclaimed all around us to-day that
connection with any organised body of believing men
is not ‘being within,’ and that isolation
from all these is not necessarily ‘being without.’
Many a man who is within the organisation is not ‘in
the truth,’ and, blessed be God, a man may be
outside all churches, and yet be one of God’s
hidden ones, and may dwell safe and instructed in
the very innermost shrine of the secret place of the
Most High. We hear from priestly lips, both Roman
Catholic and Anglican, that there is ’no safety
outside the Church.’ The saying is true
when rightly understood. If by the Church be
meant the whole company of those who are trusting to
Jesus Christ, of course there is no safety outside,
because to trust in Jesus is the one condition of
safety, and unless we belong to those who so trust
we shall not possess the blessing. So understood,
the phrase may pass, and is only objectionable as
a round-about and easily misunderstood way of saying
what is much better expressed by ’Whosoever shall
call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.’
But that is not the meaning of the
phrase in the mouths of those who use it most frequently.
To them the Church is a visible corporation, and not
only so, but as one of the many organisations into
which believers are moulded, it is distinguished from
the others by certain offices and rites, bishops,
priests, and sacraments, through whom and which certain
grace is supposed to flow, no drop of which can reach
a community otherwise shaped and officered!
Nor is it only Roman Catholics and
Anglicans who are in danger of externalising personal
Christianity into a connection with a church.
The tendency has its roots deep in human nature, and
may be found flourishing quite as rankly in the least
sacerdotal of the ‘sects’ as in the Vatican
itself. There is very special need at present
for those who understand that Christianity is an immensely
deeper thing than connection with any organised body
of Christians, to speak out the truth that is in them,
and to protest against the vulgar and fleshly notion
which is forcing itself into prominence in this day
when societies of all sorts are gaining such undue
power, and religion, like much else, is being smothered
under forms, as was the maiden in the old story, under
the weight of her ornaments. External relationships
and rites cannot determine spiritual conditions.
It does not follow because you have passed through
certain forms, and stand in visible connection with
any visible community, that you are therefore within
the pale and safe. Churches are appointed by
Christ. Men who believe and love naturally draw
together. The life of Christ is in them.
Many spiritual blessings are received through believing
association with His people. Illumination and
stimulus, succour and sympathy pass from one to another,
each in turn experiencing the blessedness of receiving,
and the greater blessedness of giving. No wise
man who has learned of Christ will undervalue the
blessings which come through union with the outward
body which is a consequence of union with the unseen
Head. But men may be in the Church and out of
Christ. Not connection with it, but connection
with Him, brings us ‘within.’ ‘Those
that are without’ may be either in or out of
the pale of any church.
We may put the answer to this question
in another form, and going deeper than the idea of
being within a visible church, we may say, ’those
that are without’ are they who are outside the
Kingdom of Christ.
The Kingdom of Christ is not a visible
external community. The Kingdom of Christ, or
of God, or of Heaven, is found wherever human wills
obey the Law of Christ, which is the will of God,
the decrees of Heaven; as Christ himself put it, in
profound words profound in all their simplicity when
He said, ’Not every man that saith unto Me Lord!
Lord! shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, but
he that doeth the will of My Father, which is in Heaven.’
‘Them that are without’ are they whose
wills are not bent in loving obedience to the Lord
of their spirit.
But we must go deeper than that.
In the Church? Yes! In the Kingdom?
Yes! But I venture to take another Scripture phrase
as being the one satisfactory fundamental answer to
the question: What is it that these people are
outside of? and I say Christ, Christ. If you will
take your New Testament as your guide, you will find
that the one question upon which all is suspended
is the, Am I, or Am I not, in Jesus Christ? Am
I in Him, or Am I outside of Him? And the answer
to that question is the answer to this other:
Who are they that are without?
They that are outside are not the
‘non-Christian world’ who are not church
members; they that are inside are not the ‘Christian
world’ who make an outward profession of being
in the Kingdom. It is not going down to the foundation
to explain the antithesis so; but ’those that
are within’ are those who have simple trust
upon Jesus Christ as the sole and all-sufficient Saviour
of their sinful spirits and the life of their life,
and having entered into that great love, have plunged
themselves, as it were, into the very heart of Jesus;
have found in Him righteousness and peace, forgiveness
and love, joy and salvation. Are you in Christ
because you love Him and trust your soul to Him?
If not, if not, you are amongst those ‘that
are without,’ though you be ever so much joined
to the visible Church of the living God.
And then there is one more remark
that I must drop in here before I go on, namely, that
whilst I thankfully admit, and joyfully preach, that
the most imperfect, rudimentary faith knits a man to
Jesus Christ, even if in this life it may be found
covered over with a great deal that is contradictory
and inconsistent; on the other hand there are some
people who stand like the angel in the Apocalypse,
with one foot on the solid land and one upon the restless
sea, half in and half out, undecided, halting that
is, ’limping’ between two opinions.
Some people of that sort are listening to me now,
who have been like that for years. Now I want
them to remember this plain piece of common-sense half
in is altogether out! So that is my answer to
the first question: Who are they that are outside,
and what is it that they are outside of?
I cannot carry round these principles
and lay them upon the conscience of each hearer, but
I pray you to listen to your own inmost voice speaking,
and I am mistaken if many will not hear it saying:
’Thou art the man!’ Do not stop your ears
to that voice!
II. Notice next the force of
this phrase as implying the woeful condition of those
without.
I have said that it is full of pathos.
It is the language of a man whose heart yearns as,
in the midst of his own security, he thinks of the
houseless wanderers in the dark and the storm.
He thinks pityingly of what they lose, and of that
to which they are exposed.
There are two or three ways in which
I may illustrate that condition, but perhaps the most
graphic and impressive may be just to recall for a
moment three or four of the Scripture metaphors that
fit into this representation: ‘Those that
are without’; and thus to gain some different
pictures of what the inside and the outside means in
these varying figures.
First, then, there is a figure drawn
from the Old Testament which is often applied, and
correctly applied, to this subject Noah’s
Ark.
Think of that safe abode floating
across the waters, whilst all without it was a dreary
waste. Without were death and despair, but those
that were within sat warm and dry and safe and fed
and living. The men that were without, high as
they might climb upon rocks and hills, strong as they
might be when the dreary rainstorm wept
itself dry, ’they were all dead corpses.’
To be in was life, to be out was death.
That is the first metaphor. Take
another. That singular institution of the old
Mosaic system, in which the man who inadvertently,
and therefore without any guilt or crime of his own,
had been the cause of death to his brother, had provided
for him, half on one side Jordan and half on the other,
and dotted over the land, so that it should not be
too far to run to one of them, Cities of Refuge.
And when the wild vendetta of those days stirred up
the next of kin to pursue at his heels, if he could
get inside the nearest of these he was secure.
They that were within could stand at the city gates
and look out upon the plain, and see the pursuer with
his hate glaring from his eyes, and almost feel his
hot breath on their cheeks, and know that though but
a yard from him, his arm durst not touch them.
To be inside was to be safe, to be outside was certain
bloody death.
That is the second figure; take a
third; one which our Lord Himself has given us.
Here is the picture a palace, a table abundantly
spread, lights and music, delight and banqueting,
gladness and fulness, society and sustenance.
The guests sit close and all partake. To be within
means food, shelter, warmth, festivity, society; to
be without, like Lear on the moor, is to stand the
pelting of the storm, weary, stumbling in the dark,
starving, solitary, and sad. Within is brightness
and good cheer; without is darkness, hunger, death.
That is the third figure. Take
a fourth, another of our Master’s. Picture
a little rude, stone-built enclosure with the rough
walls piled high, and a narrow aperture at one point,
big enough for one creature to pass through at a time.
Within, huddled together, are the innocent sheep;
without, the lion and the bear. Above, the vault
of night with all its stars, and watching all, the
shepherd, with unslumbering eye. In the fold
is rest for the weary limbs that have been plodding
through valleys of the shadow of death, and dusty
ways; peace for the panting hearts that are trembling
at every danger, real and imaginary. Inside the
fold is tranquillity, repose for the wearied frame,
safety, and the companionship of the Shepherd; and
without, ravening foes and a dreary wilderness, and
flinty paths and sparse herbage and muddy pools.
Inside is life; without is death. That is the
fourth figure.
In the Ark no Deluge can touch; in
the City of Refuge no avenger can smite; in the banqueting-hall
no thirst nor hunger but can be satisfied; in the
fold no enemy can come and no terror can live.
Brethren! are you amongst ‘them
that are without,’ or are you within?
III. Lastly why is
anybody outside? Why? It is no one’s
fault but their own. It is not God’s.
He can appeal with clean hands and ask us to judge
what more could have been done for His vineyard that
He has not done for it. The great parable which
represents Him as sending out His summons to the feast
in His palace puts the wonderful words in the mouth
of the master of the house, after his call by his
servants had been refused. ‘Go out into
the highways and hedges,’ beneath which the beggars
squat, ‘and compel them to come in, that my
house may be full.’ ’Nature abhors
a vacuum,’ the old natural philosophers used
to say. So does grace; so does God’s love.
It hates to have His house empty and His provisions
unconsumed. And so He has done all that He could
do to bring you and me inside. He has sent His
Son, He beckons us, He draws us by countless mercies
day by day. He appeals to our hearts, and would
have us gathered into the fold. And if we are
outside it is not because He has neglected to do anything
which He can do in order to bring us in.
But why is it that any of us resist
such drawing, and make the wretched choice of perishing
without, rather than find safety within? The deepest
reason is an alienated heart, a rebellious will.
But the reason for alienation and rebellion lie among
the inscrutable mysteries of our awful being.
All sin is irrational. The fact is plain, the
temptations are obvious; excuses there are in plenty,
but reasons there are none. Still we may touch
for a moment on some of the causes which operate with
many hearers of God’s merciful call to enter
in, and keep them without.
Many remain outside because they do
not really believe in the danger. No doubt there
was a great deal of brilliant sarcasm launched at Noah
for his folly in thinking that there was anything
coming that needed an ark. It seemed, no doubt,
food for much laughter, and altogether impossible
to think of gravely, that this flood which he talked
about should ever come. So they had their laughter
out as they saw him working away at his ludicrous
task ’until the day when the flood came and swept
them all away,’ and the laughter ended in gurgling
sobs of despair.
If a manslayer does not believe that
the next of kin is on his track, he will not flee
to the City of Refuge. If the sheep has no fear
of wolves, it will choose to be outside the fold among
the succulent herbage. Did you ever see how,
in a Welsh slate-quarry, before a blast, a horn is
blown, and at its sound all along the face of the quarry
the miners run to their shelters, where they stay
until the explosion is over? What do you suppose
would become of one of them who stood there after the
horn had blown, and said: ’Nonsense!
There is nothing coming! I will take my chance
where I am!’ Very likely a bit of slate would
end him before he had finished his speech. At
any rate, do not you, dear friend, trifle with the
warning that says: ’Flee for refuge to Christ
and shelter yourself in Him.’
There are some people, too, who stop
outside because they do not much care for the entertainment
that they will get within. It does not strike
them as being very desirable. They have no appetite
for it. We preachers seek to draw hearts to Jesus
by many motives and among others by setting
forth the blessings which he bestows. But if a
man does not care about pardon, does not fear judgment,
does not want to be good, has no taste for righteousness,
is not attracted by the pure and calm pleasures which
Christ offers, the invitation falls flat upon his ear.
Wisdom cries aloud and invites the sons of men to
her feast, but the fare she provides is not coarse
and high spiced enough, and her table is left unfilled,
while the crowd runs to the strong-flavoured meats
and foaming drinks which her rival, Folly, offers.
Many of us say, like the Israelites ‘Our souls
loathe this light bread,’ this manna, white and
sweet, and Heaven-descended, and angels’ food
though it be, and we hanker after the reeking garlic
and leeks and onions of Egypt.
Some of us again, would like well
enough to be inside, if that would keep us from dangers
which we believe to be real, but we do not like the
doorway. You may see in some remote parts of the
country strange, half-subterranean structures which
are supposed to have been the houses of a vanished
race. They have a long, narrow, low passage, through
which a man has to creep with his face very near the
ground. He has to go low and take to his knees
to get through; and at the end the passage opens out
into ampler, loftier space, where the dwellers could
sit safe from wild weather and wilder beasts and wildest
men. That is like the way into the fortress home
which we have in Jesus Christ. We must stoop very
low to enter there. And some of us do not like
that. We do not like to fall on our knees and
say, I am a sinful man, O Lord. We do not like
to bow ourselves in penitence. And the passage
is narrow as well as low. It is broad enough
for you, but not for what some of you would fain carry
in on your back. The pack which you bear, of earthly
vanities and loves, and sinful habits, will be brushed
off your shoulders in that narrow entrance, like the
hay off a cart in a country lane bordered by high
hedges. And some of us do not like that.
So, because the way is narrow, and we have to stoop,
our pride kicks at the idea of having to confess ourselves
sinners, and of having to owe all our hope and salvation
to God’s undeserved mercy, therefore we stay
outside. And because the way is narrow, and we
have to put off some of our treasures, our earthward-looking
desires shrink from laying these aside, and therefore
we stop outside. There was room in the boat for
the last man who stood on the deck, but he could not
make up his mind to leave a bag of gold. There
was no room for that. Therefore he would not leap,
and went down with the ship.
The door is open. The Master
calls. The feast is spread. Dangers threaten.
The flood comes. The avenger of blood makes haste.
’Why standest thou without?’ Enter in,
before the door is shut. And if you ask, How
shall I pass within? the answer is plain:
’They could not enter in because of unbelief.
We which have believed do enter into rest.’