’Let
us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on
the
breastplate of faith and love; and for a
helmet
the hope of salvation.’ 1 THESS. v 8.
This letter to the Thessalonians is
the oldest book of the New Testament. It was
probably written within something like twenty years
of the Crucifixion; long, therefore, before any of
the Gospels were in existence. It is, therefore,
exceedingly interesting and instructive to notice
how this whole context is saturated with allusions
to our Lord’s teaching, as it is preserved in
these Gospels; and how it takes for granted that the
Thessalonian Christians were familiar with the very
words.
For instance: ’Yourselves
know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh
as a thief in the night’ (ver 2).
How did these people in Thessalonica know that?
They had been Christians for a year or so only; they
had been taught by Paul for a few weeks only, or a
month or two at the most. How did they know it?
Because they had been told what the Master had said:
’If the goodman of the house had known at what
hour the thief would come, he would have watched,
and would not have suffered his house to be broken
up.’
And there are other allusions in the
context almost as obvious: ’The children
of the light.’ Who said that? Christ,
in His words: ’The children of this world
are wiser than the children of light.’ ’They
that sleep, sleep in the night, and if they be drunken,
are drunken in the night.’ Where does that
metaphor come from? ’Take heed lest at any
time ye be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness,
and the cares of this life, and so that day come upon
you unawares.’ ’Watch, lest coming
suddenly He find you sleeping!’
So you see all the context reposes
upon, and presupposes the very words, which you find
in our present existing Gospels, as the words of the
Lord Jesus. And this is all but contemporaneous,
and quite independent, evidence of the existence in
the Church, from the beginning, of a traditional teaching
which is now preserved for us in that fourfold record
of His life.
Take that remark for what it is worth;
and now turn to the text itself with which I have
to deal in this sermon. The whole of the context
may be said to be a little dissertation upon the moral
and religious uses of the doctrine of our Lord’s
second coming. In my text these are summed up
in one central injunction which has preceding it a
motive that enforces it, and following it a method
that ensures it. ’Let us be sober’;
that is the centre thought; and it is buttressed upon
either side by a motive and a means. ‘Let
us who are of the day,’ or ’since we are
of the day, be sober.’ And let
us be it by ’putting on the breastplate
and helmet of faith, love, and hope.’ These,
then, are the three points which we have to consider.
I. First, this central injunction,
into which all the moral teaching drawn from the second
coming of Christ is gathered ’Let
us be sober.’ Now, I do not suppose we
are altogether to omit any reference to the literal
meaning of this word. The context seems to show
that, by its reference to night as the season for
drunken orgies. Temperance is moderation in regard
not only to the evil and swinish sin of drunkenness,
which is so manifestly contrary to all Christian integrity
and nobility of character, but in regard to the far
more subtle temptation of another form of sensual
indulgence gluttony. The Christian
Church needed to be warned of that, and if these people
in Thessalonica needed the warning I am quite sure
that we need it. There is not a nation on earth
which needs it more than Englishmen. I am no
ascetic, I do not want to glorify any outward observance,
but any doctor in England will tell you that the average
Englishman eats and drinks a great deal more than
is good for him. It is melancholy to think how
many professing Christians have the edge and keenness
of their intellectual and spiritual life blunted by
the luxurious and senseless table-abundance in which
they habitually indulge. I am quite sure that
water from the spring and barley-bread would be a great
deal better for their souls, and for their bodies
too, in the case of many people who call themselves
Christians. Suffer a word of exhortation, and
do not let it be neglected because it is brief and
general. Sparta, after all, is the best place
for a man to live in, next to Jerusalem.
But, passing from that, let us turn
to the higher subject with which the Apostle is here
evidently mainly concerned. What is the meaning
of the exhortation ‘Be sober’? Well,
first let me tell you what I think is not the meaning
of it. It does not mean an unemotional absence
of fervour in your Christian character.
There is a kind of religious teachers
who are always preaching down enthusiasm, and preaching
up what they call a ’sober standard of feeling’
in matters of religion. By which, in nine cases
out of ten, they mean precisely such a tepid condition
as is described in much less polite language, when
the voice from heaven says, ’Because thou art
neither cold nor hot I will spue thee out of My mouth.’
That is the real meaning of the ‘sobriety’
that some people are always desiring you to cultivate.
I should have thought that the last piece of furniture
which any Christian Church in the twentieth century
needed was a refrigerator! A poker and a pair
of bellows would be very much more needful for them.
For, dear brethren, the truths that you and I profess
to believe are of such a nature, so tremendous either
in their joyfulness and beauty, or in their solemnity
and awfulness, that one would think that if they once
got into a man’s head and heart, nothing but
the most fervid and continuous glow of a radiant enthusiasm
would correspond to their majesty and overwhelming
importance. I venture to say that the only consistent
Christian is the enthusiastic Christian; and that the
only man who will ever do anything in this world for
God or man worth doing is the man who is not sober,
according to that cold-blooded definition which I
have been speaking about, but who is all ablaze with
an enkindled earnestness that knows no diminution
and no cessation.
Paul, the very man that is exhorting
here to sobriety, was the very type of an enthusiast
all his life. So Festus thought him mad, and even
in the Church at Corinth there were some to whom in
his fervour, he seemed to be ‘beside himself’
(2 Cor. v 13).
Oh! for more of that insanity!
You may make up your minds to this; that any men or
women that are in thorough earnest, either about Christianity
or about any other great, noble, lofty, self-forgetting
purpose, will have to be content to have the old Pentecostal
charge flung at them: ’These men
are full of new wine!’ Well for the Church, and
well for the men who deserve the taunt; for it means
that they have learned something of the emotion that
corresponds to such magnificent and awful verities
as Christian faith converses with.
I did not intend to say so much about
that; I turn now for a moment to the consideration
of what this exhortation really means. It means,
as I take it, mainly this: the prime Christian
duty of self-restraint in the use and the love of
all earthly treasures and pleasures.
I need not do more than remind you
how, in the very make of a man’s soul, it is
clear that unless there be exercised rigid self-control
he will go all to pieces. The make of human nature,
if I may say so, shows that it is not meant for a
democracy but a monarchy.
Here are within us many passions,
tastes, desires, most of them rooted in the flesh,
which are as blind as hunger and thirst are. If
a man is hungry, the bread will satisfy him all the
same whether he steals it or not; and it will not
necessarily be distasteful even if it be poisoned.
And there are other blind impulses and appetites in
our nature which ask nothing except this: ’Give
me my appropriate gratification, though all the laws
of God and man be broken in order to get it!’
And so there has to be something like
an eye given to these blind beasts, and something
like a directing hand laid upon these instinctive
impulses. The true temple of the human spirit
must be built in stages, the broad base laid in these
animal instincts; above them, and controlling them,
the directing and restraining will; above it the understanding
which enlightens it and them; and supreme over all
the conscience with nothing between it and heaven.
Where that is not the order of the inner man you get
wild work. You have set ’beggars on horseback,’
and we all know where they go! The man who lets
passion and inclination guide is like a steam-boat
with all the furnaces banked up, with the engines
going full speed, and nobody at the wheel. It
will drive on to the rocks, or wherever the bow happens
to point, no matter though death and destruction lie
beyond the next turn of the screw. That is what
you will come to unless you live in the habitual exercise
of rigid self-control.
And that self-control is to be exercised
mainly, or at least as one very important form of
it, in regard to our use and estimate of the pleasures
of this present life. Yes! it is not only from
the study of a man’s make that the necessity
for a very rigid self-government appears, but the
observation of the conditions and circumstances in
which he is placed points the same lesson. All
round about him are hands reaching out to him drugged
cups. The world with all its fading sweet comes
tempting him, and the old fable fulfils itself Whoever
takes that Circe’s cup and puts it to his lips
and quaffs deep, turns into a swine, and sits there
imprisoned at the feet of the sorceress for evermore!
There is only one thing that will
deliver you from that fate, my brother. ‘Be
sober,’ and in regard to the world and all that
it offers to us all joy, possession, gratification ’set
a knife to thy throat if thou be a man given to appetite.’
There is no noble life possible on any other terms not
to say there is no Christian life possible on any other
terms but suppression and mortification
of the desires of the flesh and of the spirit.
You cannot look upwards and downwards at the same moment.
Your heart is only a tiny room after all, and if you
cram it full of the world, you relegate your Master
to the stable outside. ’Ye cannot serve
God and Mammon.’ ‘Be sober,’
says Paul, then, and cultivate the habit of rigid
self-control in regard to this present. Oh! what
a melancholy, solemn thought it is that hundreds of
professing Christians in England, like vultures after
a full meal, have so gorged themselves with the garbage
of this present life that they cannot fly, and have
to be content with moving along the ground, heavy
and languid. Christian men and women, are you
keeping yourselves in spiritual health by a very sparing
use of the dainties and delights of earth? Answer
the question to your own souls and to your Judge.
II. And now let me turn to the
other thoughts that lie here. There is, secondly,
a motive which backs up and buttresses this exhortation.
’Let us who are of the day’ or
as the Revised Version has it a little more emphatically
and correctly, ‘Let us, since we are of the day,
be sober.’ ‘The day’; what
day? The temptation is to answer the question
by saying ’of course the specific
day which was spoken about in the beginning of the
section, “the day of the Lord,” that coming
judgment by the coming Christ.’ But I think
that although, perhaps, there may be some allusion
here to that specific day, still, if you will look
at the verses which immediately precede my text, you
will see that in them the Apostle has passed from
the thought of ‘the day of the Lord’ to
that of day in general. That is obvious, I think,
from the contrast he draws between the ‘day’
and the ‘night,’ the darkness and the light.
If so, then, when he says ‘the children of the
day’ he does not so much mean though
that is quite true that we are, as it were,
akin to that day of judgment, and may therefore look
forward to it without fear, and in quiet confidence,
lifting up our heads because our redemption draws
nigh; but rather he means that Christians are the children
of that which expresses knowledge, and joy, and activity.
Of these things the day is the emblem, in every language
and in every poetry. The day is the time when
men see and hear, the symbol of gladness and cheer
all the world over.
And so, says Paul, you Christian men
and women belong to a joyous realm, a realm of light
and knowledge, a realm of purity and righteousness.
You are children of the light; a glad condition which
involves many glad and noble issues. Children
of the light should be brave, children of the light
should not be afraid of the light, children of the
light should be cheerful, children of the light should
be buoyant, children of the light should be transparent,
children of the light should be hopeful, children
of the light should be pure, and children of the light
should walk in this darkened world, bearing their
radiance with them; and making things, else unseen,
visible to many a dim eye.
But while these emblems of cheerfulness,
hope, purity, and illumination are gathered together
in that grand name ’Ye are the children
of the day,’ there is one direction especially
in which the Apostle thinks that that consideration
ought to tell, and that is the direction of self-restraint.
’Noblesse oblige!’ the
aristocracy are bound to do nothing low or dishonourable.
The children of the light are not to stain their hands
with anything foul. Chambering and wantonness,
slumber and drunkenness, the indulgence in the appetites
of the flesh, all that may be fitting for
the night, it is clean incongruous with the day.
Well, if you want that turned into
pedestrian prose which is no more clear,
but a little less emotional it is just this:
You Christian men and women belong if you
are Christians to another state of things
from that which is lying round about you; and, therefore,
you ought to live in rigid abstinence from these things
that are round about you.
That is plain enough surely, nor do
I suppose that I need to dwell on that thought at
any length. We belong to another order of things,
says Paul; we carry a day with us in the midst of
the night. What follows from that? Do not
let us pursue the wandering lights and treacherous
will-o’-the-wisps that lure men into bottomless
bogs where they are lost. If we have light in
our dwellings whilst Egypt lies in darkness, let it
teach us to eat our meat with our loins girded, and
our staves in our hands, not without bitter herbs,
and ready to go forth into the wilderness. You
do not belong to the world in which you live, if you
are Christian men and women; you are only camped here.
Your purposes, thoughts, hopes, aspirations, treasures,
desires, delights, go up higher. And so, if you
are children of the day, be self-restrained in your
dealings with the darkness.
III. And, last of all, my text
points out for us a method by which this great precept
may be fulfilled: ’Putting on the
breastplate of faith and love, and for an helmet the
hope of salvation.’
That, of course, is the first rough
draft occurring in Paul’s earliest Epistle,
of an image which recurs at intervals, and in more
or less expanded form in other of his letters, and
is so splendidly worked out in detail in the grand
picture of the Christian armour in the Epistle to
the Ephesians.
I need not do more than just remind
you of the difference between that finished picture
and this outline sketch. Here we have only defensive
and not offensive armour, here the Christian graces
are somewhat differently allocated to the different
parts of the armour. Here we have only the great
triad of Christian graces, so familiar on our lips faith,
hope, charity. Here we have faith and love in
the closest possible juxtaposition, and hope somewhat
more apart. The breastplate, like some of the
ancient hauberks, made of steel and gold, is framed
and forged out of faith and love blended together,
and faith and love are more closely identified in
fact than faith and hope, or than love and hope.
For faith and love have the same object and
are all but contemporaneous. Wherever a man lays
hold of Jesus Christ by faith, there cannot but spring
up in his heart love to Christ; and there is no love
without faith. So that we may almost say that
faith and love are but the two throws of the shuttle,
the one in the one direction and the other in the
other; whereas hope comes somewhat later in a somewhat
remoter connection with faith, and has a somewhat different
object from these other two. Therefore it is
here slightly separated from its sister graces.
Faith, love, hope these three form the defensive
armour that guard the soul; and these three make self-control
possible. Like a diver in his dress, who is let
down to the bottom of the wild, far-weltering ocean,
a man whose heart is girt by faith and charity, and
whose head is covered with the helmet of hope, may
be dropped down into the wildest sea of temptation
and of worldliness, and yet will walk dry and unharmed
through the midst of its depths, and breathe air that
comes from a world above the restless surges.
And in like manner the cultivation
of faith, charity, and hope is the best means for
securing the exercise of sober self-control.
It is an easy thing to say to a man,
‘Govern yourself!’ It is a very hard thing
with the powers that any man has at his disposal to
do it. As somebody said about an army joining
the rebels, ’It’s a bad job when the extinguisher
catches fire!’ And that is exactly the condition
of things in regard to our power of self-government.
The powers that should control are largely gone over
to the enemy, and become traitors.
‘Who shall keep the very keepers?’
is the old question, and here is the answer: You
cannot execute the gymnastic feat of ’erecting
yourself above yourself’ any more than a man
can take himself by his own coat collar and lift himself
up from the ground with his own arms. But you
can cultivate faith, hope, and charity, and these three,
well cultivated and brought to bear upon your daily
life, will do the governing for you. Faith will
bring you into communication with all the power of
God. Love will lead you into a region where all
the temptations round you will be touched as by an
Ithuriel spear, and will show their foulness.
And hope will turn away your eyes from looking at
the tempting splendours around, and fix them upon
the glories that are above.
And so the reins will come into your
hands in an altogether new manner, and you will be
able to be king over your own nature in a fashion that
you did not dream of before, if only you will trust
in Christ, and love Him, and fix your desires on the
things above.
Then you will be able to govern yourself
when you let Christ govern you. The glories that
are to be done away, that gleam round you like foul,
flaring tallow-candles, will lose all their fascination
and brightness, by reason of the glory that excelleth,
the pure starlike splendour of the white inextinguishable
lights of heaven.
And when by faith, charity, and hope
you have drunk of the new wine of the kingdom, the
drugged and opiate cup which a sorceress world presents,
jewelled though it be, will lose its charms, and it
will not be hard to turn from it and dash it to the
ground.
God help you, brother, to be ‘sober,’
for unless you are ’you cannot see the kingdom
of God!’