HIS PLACE IN HISTORY
1. The Man for the Time.-There
are some men whose lives it is impossible to study
without receiving the impression that they were expressly
sent into the world to do a work required by the juncture
of history on which they fell. The story of
the Reformation, for example, cannot be read by a
devout mind without wonder at the providence by which
such great men as Luther, Zwingli, Calvin
and Knox were simultaneously raised up in different
parts of Europe to break the yoke of the papacy and
republish the gospel of grace. When the Evangelical
Revival, after blessing England, was about to break
into Scotland and end the dreary reign of Moderatism,
there was raised up in Thomas Chalmers a mind of such
capacity as completely to absorb the new movement
into itself, and of such sympathy and influence as
to diffuse it to every corner of his native land.
2. This impression is produced
by no life more than by that of the Apostle Paul.
He was given to Christianity when it was in its most
rudimentary beginnings. It was not, indeed, feeble,
nor can any mortal man be spoken of as indispensable
to it; for it contained within itself the vigor of
a divine and immortal existence, which could not but
have unfolded itself in the course of time.
But, if we recognize that God makes use of means which
commend themselves even to our eyes as suited to the
ends He has in view, then we must say that the Christian
movement at the moment when Paul appeared upon the
stage was in the utmost need of a man of extraordinary
endowments, who, becoming possessed with its genius,
should incorporate it with the general history of
the world; and in Paul it found the man it needed.
3. A Type of Christian Character.-Christianity
obtained in Paul an incomparable type of Christian
character. It already, indeed, possessed the
perfect model of human character in the person of its
Founder. But He was not as other men, because
from the beginning He had no sinful imperfection to
struggle with; and Christianity still required to
show what it could make of imperfect human nature.
Paul supplied the opportunity of exhibiting this.
He was naturally of immense mental stature and force.
He would have been a remarkable man even if he had
never become a Christian. The other apostles
would have lived and died in the obscurity of Galilee
if they had not been lifted into prominence by the
Christian movement; but the name of Saul of Tarsus
would have been remembered still in some character
or other even if Christianity had never existed.
Christianity got the opportunity in him of showing
to the world the whole force it contained. Paul
was aware of this himself, though he expressed it
with perfect modesty, when he said, “For this
cause I obtained mercy, that in me as chief might
Jesus Christ show forth all His long-suffering for
an ensample of them who should hereafter believe on
Him to everlasting life.”
4. His conversion proved the
power of Christianity to overcome the strongest prejudices
and to stamp its own type on a large nature by a revolution
both instantaneous and permanent. Paul’s
was a personality so strong and original that no other
man could have been less expected to sink himself
in another; but, from the moment when he came into
contact with Christ, he was so overmastered with His
influence that he never afterward had any other desire
than to be the mere echo and reflection of Him to
the world.
But, if Christianity showed its strength
in making so complete a conquest of Paul, it showed
its worth no less in the kind of man it made of him
when he had given himself up to its influence.
It satisfied the needs of a peculiarly hungry nature,
and never to the close of his life did he betray the
slightest sense that this satisfaction was abating.
His constitution was originally compounded of fine
materials, but the spirit of Christ, passing into these,
raised them to a pitch of excellence altogether unique.
Nor was it ever doubtful either to
himself or to others that it was the influence of
Christ which made him what he was. The truest
motto for his life would be his own saying, “I
live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.”
Indeed, so perfectly was Christ formed in him that
we can now study Christ’s character in his,
and beginners may perhaps learn even more of Christ
from studying Paul’s life than from studying
Christ’s own. In Christ Himself there
was a blending and softening of all the excellences
which makes His greatness elude the glance of the beginner,
just as the very perfection of Raphael’s painting
makes it disappointing to an untrained eye; whereas
in Paul a few of the greatest elements of Christian
character were exhibited with a decisiveness which
no one can mistake, just as the most prominent characteristics
of the painting of Rubens can be appreciated by every
spectator.
5. A Great Thinker.-Christianity
obtained in Paul, secondly, a great thinker.
This it specially needed at the moment. Christ
had departed from the world, and those whom He had
left to represent Him were unlettered fishermen and,
for the most part, men of no intellectual mark.
In one sense this fact reflects a peculiar glory on
Christianity, for it shows that it did not owe its
place as one of the great influences of the world
to the abilities of its human representatives:
not by might nor by power, but by the Spirit of God,
was Christianity established in the earth. Yet,
as we look back now, we can clearly see how essential
it was that an apostle of a different stamp and training
should arise.
6. Christ had manifested forth
the glory of the Father once for all and completed
his atoning work. But this was not enough.
It was necessary that the meaning of his appearance
should be explained to the world. Who was he
who had been here? what precisely was it he had done?
To these questions the original apostles could give
brief popular answers; but none of them had the intellectual
reach or the educational training necessary to put
the answers into a form to satisfy the intellect of
the world. Happily it is not essential to salvation
to be able to answer such questions with scientific
accuracy. There are tens of thousands who know
and believe that Jesus was the Son of God and died
to take away sin and, trusting to Him as their Saviour,
are purified by faith, but who could not explain these
statements at any length without falling into mistakes
in almost every sentence. Yet, if Christianity
was to make an intellectual as well as a moral conquest
of the world, it was necessary for the Church to have
accurately explained to her the full glory of her Lord
and the meaning of his saving work.
Of course Jesus had himself had in
his mind a comprehension both of what he was and of
what he was doing which was luminous as the sun.
But it was one of the most pathetic aspects of his
earthly ministry that he could not tell all his mind
to his followers. They were not able to bear
it; they were too rude and limited to take it in.
He had to carry his deepest thoughts out of the world
with him unuttered, trusting with a sublime faith
that the Holy Ghost would lead his Church to grasp
them in the course of its subsequent development.
Even what he did utter was very imperfectly understood.
There was one mind, it is true, in
the original apostolic circle of the finest quality
and capable of soaring into the rarest altitudes of
speculation. The words of Christ sank into the
mind of John and, after lying there for half a century,
grew up into the wonderful forms we inherit in his
Gospel and Epistles. But even the mind of John
was not equal to the exigency of the Church; it was
too fine, mystical, unusual. His thoughts to
this day remain the property only of the few finest
minds. There was needed a thinker of broader
and more massive make to sketch the first outlines
of Christian doctrine; and he was found in Paul.
7. Paul was a born thinker.
His mind was of majestic breadth and force.
It was restlessly busy, never able to leave any object
with which it had to deal until it had pursued it
back to its remotest causes and forward into all its
consequences. It was not enough for him to know
that Christ was the Son of God: he had to unfold
this statement into its elements and understand precisely
what it meant. It was not enough for him to
believe that Christ died for sin: he had to go
farther and inquire why it was necessary that He should
do so and how His death took sin away.
But not only had he from nature this
speculative gift: his talent was trained by education.
The other apostles were unlettered men; but he enjoyed
the fullest scholastic advantages of the period.
In the rabbinical school he learned how to arrange
and state and defend his ideas. We have the
issue of all this in his Epistles, which contain the
best explanation of Christianity possessed by the world.
The right way to look at them is to regard them as
the continuation of Christ’s own teaching.
They contain the thoughts which Christ carried away
from the earth with him unuttered. Of course
Jesus would have uttered them differently and far
better. Paul’s thoughts have everywhere
the coloring of his own mental peculiarities.
But the substance of them is what Christ’s
must have been if he had himself given them expression.
8. There was one great subject
especially which Christ had to leave unexplained-his
own death. He could not explain it before it
had taken place. This became the leading topic
of Paul’s thinking-to show why it
was needed and what were its blessed results.
But, indeed, there was no aspect of the appearance
of Christ into which his restlessly inquiring mind
did not penetrate. His thirteen Epistles, when
arranged in chronological order, show that his mind
was constantly getting deeper and deeper into the
subject. The progress of his thinking was determined
partly by the natural progress of his own advance
in the knowledge of Christ, for he always wrote straight
out of his own experience; and partly by the various
forms of error which he had at successive periods
to encounter, and which became a providential means
of stimulating and developing his apprehension of the
truth, just as ever since in the Christian Church
the rise of error has been the means of calling forth
the clearest statements of doctrine. The ruling
impulse, however, of his thinking, as of his life,
was ever Christ, and it was his lifelong devotion
to this exhaustless theme that made him the Thinker
of Christianity.
9. The Missionary of the Gentiles.-Christianity
obtained in Paul, thirdly, the missionary of the Gentiles.
It is rare to find the highest speculative power
united with great practical activity; but these were
united in him. He was not only the Church’s
greatest thinker, but the very foremost worker she
has ever possessed. We have been considering
the speculative task which was awaiting him when he
joined the Christian community; but there was a no
less stupendous practical task awaiting him too.
This was the evangelization of the Gentile world.
10. One of the great objects
of the appearance of Christ was to break down the
wall of separation between Jew and Gentile and make
the blessings of salvation the property of all men,
without distinction of race or language. But
he was not himself permitted to carry this change
into practical realization. It was one of the
strange limitations of his earthly life that he was
sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
It can easily be imagined how congenial a task it
would have been to his intensely human heart to carry
the gospel beyond the limits of Palestine and make
it known to nation after nation; and-if
it be not too bold to say so-this would
certainly have been his chosen career, had he been
spared. But he was cut off in the midst of his
days and had to leave this task to his followers.
11. Before the appearance of
Paul on the scene, the execution of this task had
been begun. Jewish prejudice had been partially
broken down, the universal character of Christianity
had been in some measure realized, and Peter had admitted
the first Gentiles into the Church by baptism.
But none of the original apostles was equal to the
emergency. None of them was large-minded enough
to grasp the idea of the perfect equality of Jew and
Gentile and apply it without flinching in all its
practical consequences; and none of them had the combination
of gifts necessary to attempt the conversion of the
Gentile world on a large scale. They were Galilean
fishermen, fit enough to teach and preach within the
bounds of their native Palestine. But beyond
Palestine lay the great world of Greece and Rome-the
world of vast populations, of power and culture, of
pleasure and business. It needed a man of unlimited
versatility, of education, of immense human sympathy
and breadth, to go out there with the gospel message-a
man who could not only be a Jew to the Jews, but a
Greek to the Greeks, a Roman to the Romans, a barbarian
to the barbarians-a man who could encounter
not only rabbis in their synagogues, but proud
magistrates in their courts and philosophers in the
haunts of learning-a man who could face
travel by land and by sea, who could exhibit presence
of mind in every variety of circumstances, and would
be cowed by no difficulties. No man of this
size belonged to the original apostolic circle; but
Christianity needed such an one, and he was found
in Paul.
12. Originally attached more
strictly than any of the other apostles to the peculiarities
and prejudices of Jewish exclusiveness, he cut his
way out of the jungle of these prepossessions, accepted
the equality of all men in Christ, and applied this
principle relentlessly in all its issues. He
gave his heart to the Gentile mission, and the history
of his life is the history of how true he was to his
vocation. There was never such singleness of
eye or wholeness of heart. There was never such
superhuman and untiring energy. There was never
such an accumulation of difficulties victoriously
met and of sufferings cheerfully borne for any cause.
In him Jesus Christ went forth to evangelize the
world, making use of his hands and feet, his tongue
and brain and heart, for doing the work which in His
own bodily presence He had not been permitted by the
limits of His mission to accomplish.