HIS GOSPEL
51. Sojourn in Arabia.-When
a man has been suddenly converted, as Paul was, he
is generally driven by a strong impulse to make known
what has happened to him. Such testimony is
very impressive; for it is that of a soul which is
receiving its first glimpses of the realities of the
unseen world, and there is a vividness about the report
it gives of them which produces an irresistible sense
of reality. Whether Paul yielded at once to
this impulse or not we cannot say with certainty.
The language of the book of Acts, where it is said
that “straightway he preached Christ in the
synagogues,” would lead us to suppose so.
But we learn from his own writings that there was
another powerful impulse influencing him at the same
time; and it is uncertain which of the two he obeyed
first. This other impulse was the wish to retreat
into solitude and think out the meaning and issues
of that which had befallen him. It cannot be
wondered at that he felt this to be a necessity.
He had believed his former creed intensely and staked
everything on it; to see it suddenly shattered in pieces
must have shaken him severely. The new truth
which had been flashed upon him was so far-reaching
and revolutionary that it could not be taken in at
once in all its bearings. Paul was a born thinker;
it was not enough for him to experience anything;
he required to comprehend it and fit it into the structure
of his convictions.
Immediately, therefore, after his
conversion he went away, he tells us, into Arabia.
He does not, indeed, say for what purpose he went;
but, as there is no record of his preaching in that
region and this statement occurs in the midst of a
vehement defense of the originality of his gospel,
we may conclude with considerable certainty that he
went into retirement for the purpose of grasping in
thought the details and the bearings of the revelation
he had been put in possession of. In lonely
contemplation he worked them out; and, when he returned
to mankind, he was in possession of that view of Christianity
which was peculiar to himself and formed the burden
of his preaching during the subsequent years.
52. There is some doubt as to
the precise place of his retirement, because Arabia
is a word of vague and variable significance.
But most probably it denotes the Arabia of the Wanderings,
the principal feature of which was Mount Sinai.
This was a spot hallowed by great memories and by
the presence of other great men of revelation.
Here Moses had seen the burning bush and communed
with God on the top of the mountain. Here Elijah
had roamed in his season of despair and drunk anew
at the wells of inspiration. What place could
be more appropriate for the meditations of this successor
of these men of God? In the valleys where the
manna fell and under the shadows of the peaks which
had burned beneath the feet of Jéhovah he pondered
the problem of his life.
It is a great example. Originality
in the preaching of the truth depends on the solitary
intuition of it. Paul enjoyed the special inspiration
of the Holy Ghost; but this did not render the concentrated
activity of his own thinking unnecessary but only lent
it peculiar intensity; and the clearness and certainty
of his gospel were due to these months of sequestered
thought. His retirement may have lasted a year
or more; for between his conversion and his final departure
from Damascus, to which he returned from Arabia, three
years intervened; and one of them at least was spent
in this way.
53. We have no detailed record
of what the outlines of his gospel were till a period
long subsequent to this; but, as these, when first
they are traceable, are a mere cast of the features
of his conversion, and, as his mind was working so
long and powerfully on the interpretation of that
event at this period, there can be no doubt that the
gospel sketched in the Epistles to the Romans and
the Galatians was substantially the same as he preached
from the first; and we are safe in inferring from
these writings our account of his Arabian meditations.
54. Failure of Man’s Righteousness.-The
starting-point of Paul’s thinking was still,
as it had been from his childhood, the conviction,
inherited from pious generations, that the true end
and felicity of man lay in the enjoyment of the favor
of God. This was to be attained through righteousness;
only the righteous could God be at peace with and
favor with His love. To attain righteousness
must, therefore, be the chief end of man.
55. But man had failed to attain
righteousness and had thereby come short of the favor
of God, and exposed himself to the divine wrath.
Paul proves this by taking a vast survey of the history
of mankind in pre-Christian times in its two great
sections-the Gentile and the Jewish.
56. The Gentiles failed.
It might, indeed, be supposed that they had not the
preliminary conditions for entering on the pursuit
of righteousness at all, because they did not enjoy
the advantage of a special revelation. But Paul
holds that even the heathen know enough of God to
be aware of the obligation to follow after righteousness.
There is a natural revelation of God in His works and
in the human conscience sufficient to enlighten men
as to this duty. But the heathen, instead of
making use of this light, wantonly extinguished it.
They were not willing to retain God in their knowledge
and to fetter themselves with the restraints which
a pure knowledge of Him imposed. They corrupted
the idea of God in order to feel at ease in an immoral
life. The revenge of nature came upon them in
the darkening and confusion of their intellects.
They fell into such insensate folly as to change
the glorious and incorruptible nature of God into the
images of men and beasts, birds and reptiles.
This intellectual degeneracy was followed by still
deeper moral degeneracy. God, when they forsook
Him, let them go; and, when His restraining grace was
removed, down they rushed into the depths of moral
putridity. Lust and passion got the mastery
of them, and their life became a mass of moral disease.
In the end of the first chapter of Romans the features
of their condition are sketched in colors that might
be borrowed from the abode of devils, but were literally
taken, as is too plainly proved by the pages even of
Gentile historians, from the condition of the cultured
heathen nations at that time. This, then, was
the history of one half of mankind: it had utterly
fallen from righteousness and exposed itself to the
wrath of God, which is revealed from heaven against
all unrighteousness of men.
57. The Jews were the other
half of the world. Had they succeeded where
the Gentiles had failed? They enjoyed, indeed,
great advantages over the heathen; for they possessed
the oracles of God, in which the divine nature was
exhibited in a form which rendered it inaccessible
to human perversion, and the divine law was written
with equal plainness in the same form. But had
they profited by these advantages? It is one
thing to know the law and another thing to do it; but
it is doing, not knowing, which is righteousness.
Had they, then, fulfilled the will of God, which
they knew?
Paul had lived in the same Jerusalem
in which Jesus assailed the corruption and hypocrisy
of scribes and Pharisees; he had looked closely at
the lives of the representative men of his nation;
and he does not hesitate to charge the Jews in mass
with the very same sins as the Gentiles; nay, he says
that through them the name of God was blasphemed among
the Gentiles. They boasted of their knowledge
and were the bearers of the torch of truth, the fierce
blaze of which exposed the sins of the heathen; but
their religion was a bitter criticism of the conduct
of others; they forgot to examine their own conduct
by the same light; and, while they were repeating,
Do not steal, Do not commit adultery, and a multitude
of other commandments, they were indulging in these
sins themselves. What good in these circumstances
did their knowledge do them? It only condemned
them the more; for their sin was against light.
While the heathen knew so little that their sins
were comparatively innocent, the sins of the Jews
were conscious and presumptuous. Their boasted
superiority was therefore inferiority. They
were more deeply condemned than the Gentiles they
despised, and exposed to a heavier curse.
58. The truth is, Gentiles and
Jews had both failed for the same reason. Trace
these two streams of human life back to their sources
and you come at last to a point where they are not
two streams but one; and, before the bifurcation took
place, something had happened which predetermined
the failure of both. In Adam all fell, and from
him all, both Gentiles and Jews, inherited a nature
too weak for the arduous attainment of righteousness;
human nature is carnal now, not spiritual, and, therefore,
unequal to this supreme spiritual achievement.
The law could not alter this; it had
no creative power to make the carnal spiritual.
On the contrary, it aggravated the evil. It
actually multiplied offenses; for its clear and full
description of sins, which would have been an incomparable
guide to a sound nature, turned into temptation for
a morbid one. The very knowledge of sin tempts
to its commission; the very command not to do anything
is to a diseased nature a reason for doing it.
This was the effect of the law: it multiplied
and aggravated transgressions. And this was God’s
intention. Not that He was the author of sin;
but, like a skillful physician, who has sometimes
to use appliances to bring a sore to a head before
he heals it, He allowed the heathen to go their own
way and gave the Jews the law, that the sin of human
nature might exhibit all its inherent qualities, before
He intervened to heal it. The healing, however,
was His real purpose all the time: He concluded
all under sin, that He might have mercy upon all.
59. The Righteousness of God.-Man’s
extremity was God’s opportunity; not, indeed,
in the sense that, one way of salvation having failed.
God devised another. The law had never, in His
intention, been a way of salvation. It was only
a means of illustrating the need of salvation.
But the moment when this demonstration was complete
was the signal for God to produce His method, which
He had kept locked in His counsel through the generations
of human probation. It had never been His intention
to permit man to fail of his true end. Only He
allowed time to prove that fallen man could never
reach righteousness by his own efforts; and, when
the righteousness of man had been demonstrated to
be a failure, He brought forth His secret-the
righteousness of God.
This was Christianity; this was the
sum and issue of the mission of Christ-the
conferring upon man, as a free gift, of that which
is indispensable to his blessedness, but which he
had failed himself to attain. It is a divine
act; it is grace; and man obtains it by acknowledging
that he has failed himself to attain it and by accepting
it from God; it is got by faith only. It is “the
righteousness of God, by the faith of Jesus Christ,
unto all and upon all them that believe.”
60. Those who thus receive it
enter at once into that position of peace and favor
with God in which human felicity consists and which
was the goal aimed at by Paul when he was striving
for righteousness by the law. “Being justified
by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ, by whom also we have access by faith
into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope
of the glory of God.” It is a sunny life
of joy, peace and hope which those lead who have come
to know this gospel. There may be trials in
it; but, when a man’s life is reposing in the
attainment of its true end, trials are light and all
things work together for good.
61. This righteousness of God
is for all the children of men-not for
the Jews only, but for the Gentiles also. The
demonstration of man’s inability to attain righteousness
was made, in accordance with the divine purpose, in
both sections of the human race; and its completion
was the signal for the exhibition of God’s grace
to both alike. The work of Christ was not for
the children of Abraham, but for the children of Adam.
“As in Adam all died, so in Christ shall all
be made alive.” The Gentiles did not need
to undergo circumcision and to keep the law in order
to obtain salvation; for the law was no part of salvation;
it belonged entirely to the preliminary demonstration
of man’s failure; and, when it had accomplished
this service, it was ready to vanish away. The
only human condition of obtaining God’s righteousness
is faith; and this is as easy for Gentile as Jew.
This was an inference from Paul’s
own experience. It was not as a Jew, but as
a man, that he had been dealt with in his conversion.
No Gentile could have been less entitled to obtain
salvation by merit than he had been. So far
from the law raising him a single step toward salvation,
it had removed him to a greater distance from God than
any Gentile, and cast him into a deeper condemnation.
How, then, could it profit the Gentiles to be placed
in this position? In obtaining the righteousness
in which he was now rejoicing he had done nothing which
was not competent to any human being.
62. It was this universal love
of God revealed in the gospel which inspired Paul
with unbounded admiration for Christianity. His
sympathies had been cabined, cribbed, confined in a
narrow conception of God; the new faith uncaged his
heart and let it forth into the free and sunny air.
God became a new God to him. He calls his discovery
the mystery which had been hidden from ages and generations,
but had been revealed to him and his fellow-apostles.
It seemed to him to be the secret of the ages and
to be destined to usher in a new era, far better than
any the world had ever seen. What kings and prophets
had not known had been revealed to him. It had
burst on him like the dawn of a new creation.
God was now offering to every man the supreme felicity
of life-that righteousness which had been
the vain endeavor of the past ages.
63. This secret of the new epoch
had not, indeed, been entirely unanticipated in the
past. It had been “witnessed by the law
and the prophets.” The law could bear
witness to it only negatively by demonstrating its
necessity. But the prophets anticipated it more
positively. David, for example, described “the
blessedness of the man unto whom God imputed righteousness
without works.” Still more clearly had
Abraham anticipated it. He was a justified man;
and it was by faith, not by works, that He was justified-“he
believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness.”
The law had nothing to do with his justification,
for it was not in existence for four centuries afterward.
Nor had circumcision anything to do with it, for he
was justified before this rite was instituted.
In short, it was as a man, not as a Jew, that he
was dealt with by God, and God might deal with any
human being in the same way. It had once made
the thorny road of legal righteousness sacred to Paul
to think that Abraham and the prophets had trodden
it before him; but now he knew that their life of
religious joy and psalms of holy calm were inspired
by quite different experiences, which were now diffusing
the peace of heaven through his heart also.
But only the first streaks of dawn had been descried
by them; the perfect day had broken in his own time.
64. The Old Adam and the New.-Paul’s
discovery of this way of salvation was an actual experience;
he simply knew that Christ, in the moment when He
met him, had placed him in that position of peace and
favor with God which he had long sighed for in vain,
and, as time went on, he felt more and more that in
this position he was enjoying the true blessedness
of life. His mission henceforth must be to herald
this discovery in its simple and concrete reality under
the name of the Righteousness of God. But a
mind like his could not help inquiring how it was
that the possession of Christ did so much for him.
In the Arabian wilderness he pondered over this question,
and the gospel he subsequently preached contained
a luminous answer to it.
65. From Adam his children derive
a sad double heritage-a debt of guilt,
which they cannot reduce, but are constantly increasing,
and a carnal nature, which is incapable of righteousness.
These are the two features of the religious condition
of fallen man, and they are the double source of all
his woes.
But Christ is a new Adam, a new head
of humanity, and those who are connected with Him
by faith become heirs of a double heritage of a precisely
opposite kind. On the one hand, just as through
our birth in the first Adam’s line we get inevitably
entangled in guilt, like a child born into a family
which is drowned in debt, so through our birth in
the line of the second Adam we get involved in a boundless
heritage of merit, which Christ, as the Head of His
family, makes the common property of its members.
This extinguishes the debt of our guilt and makes
us rich in Christ’s righteousness. “As
by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners,
so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous.”
On the other hand, just as Adam transmitted to his
posterity a carnal nature, alien to God and unfit for
righteousness, so the new Adam imparts to the race
of which He is the Head a spiritual nature, akin to
God and delighting in righteousness.
The nature of man, according to Paul,
normally consists of three sections-body,
soul and spirit. In his original constitution
these occupied definite relations of superiority and
subordination to one another, the spirit being supreme,
the body undermost, and the soul occupying the middle
position. But the fall disarranged this order,
and all sin consists in the usurpation by the body
or the soul of the place of the spirit. In fallen
man these two inferior sections of human nature, which
together form what Paul calls the Flesh, or that side
of human nature which looks toward the world and time,
have taken possession of the throne and completely
rule the life, while the spirit, the side of man which
looks toward God and eternity, has been dethroned
and reduced to a condition of inefficiency and death.
Christ restores the lost predominance of the spirit
of man by taking possession of it by his own Spirit.
His Spirit dwells in the human spirit, vivifying
it and sustaining it in such growing strength that
it becomes more and more the sovereign part of the
human constitution. The man ceases to be carnal
and becomes spiritual; he is led by the Spirit of
God and becomes more and more harmonious with all that
is holy and divine.
The flesh does not, indeed, easily
submit to the loss of supremacy. It clogs and
obstructs the spirit and fights to regain possession
of the throne. Paul has described this struggle
in sentences of terrible vividness, in which all generations
of Christians have recognized the features of their
deepest experience. But the issue of the struggle
is not doubtful. Sin shall not again have dominion
over those in whom Christ’s Spirit dwells, or
dislodge them from their standing in the favor of
God. “Neither death nor life, nor angels,
nor principalities nor powers, nor things present
nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any
other creature shall be able to separate us from the
love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
66. The Pauline Gospel.-Such
are the bare outlines of the gospel which Paul brought
back with him from the Arabian solitudes and afterward
preached with unwearied enthusiasm. It could
not but be mixed up in his mind and in his writings
with the peculiarities of his own experience as a
Jew, and these make it difficult for us to grasp his
system in some of its details. The belief in
which he was brought up, that no man could be saved
without becoming a Jew, and the notions about the
law from which he had to cut himself free, lie very
distant from our modern sympathies; yet his theology
could not shape itself in his mind except in contrast
to these misconceptions. This became subsequently
still more inevitable when his own old errors met him
as the watchwords of a party within the Christian
Church itself, against which he had to wage a long
and relentless war. Though this conflict forced
his views into the clearest expression, it encumbered
them with references to feelings and beliefs which
are now dead to the interest of mankind. But,
in spite of these drawbacks, the Gospel of Paul remains
a possession of incalculable value to the human race.
Its searching investigation of the failure and the
wants of human nature, its wonderful unfolding of
the wisdom of God in the education of the pre-Christian
world, and its exhibition of the depth and universality
of the divine love are among the profoundest elements
of revelation.
67. But it is in its conception
of Christ that Paul’s gospel wears its imperishable
crown. The Evangelists sketched in a hundred
traits of simple and affecting beauty the fashion
of the earthly life of the man Christ Jesus, and in
these the model of human conduct will always have
to be sought; but to Paul was reserved the task of
making known, in its heights and depths, the work
which the Son of God accomplished as the Saviour of
the race. He scarcely ever refers to the incidents
of Christ’s earthly life, although here and
there he betrays that he knew them well. To
him Christ was ever the glorious Being, shining with
the splendor of heaven, who appeared to him on the
way to Damascus, and the Saviour who caught him up
into the heavenly peace and joy of a new life.
When the Church of Christ thinks of her Head as the
deliverer of the soul from sin and death, as a spiritualizing
presence ever with her and at work in every believer,
and as the Lord over all things who will come again
without sin unto salvation, it is in forms of thought
given her by the Holy Ghost through the instrumentality
of this apostle.