REV. GERVASE SMITH
“Of which salvation the prophets
have enquired 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 testified
beforehand the sufferings of Christ, and the glory
that should follow.” -- 1 PETER i 10,
11.
There is a peculiar interest attaching
to the writer of this epistle. Although it was
probably in old age, when a large experience of labour
and sorrow had chastened his spirit, and in prospect
of martyrdom, that he composed these chapters, they
bear unmistakable proofs of his own vigour of thought,
and suggest many reminiscences of his remarkable life.
Whether you regard him as a man, a Christian, or an
apostle, he presents an illustrious subject for the
student of these modern times. His history puts
before us many and serious defects; but there is much
more to approve and admire: and while a feeling
or sorrow lingers over the one, the other is so marked
and prominent that it secures your sympathy, and you
are drawn towards the man with an ineffable affection.
There is a candour, and honesty, and generosity,
and heroism, which gives to his character a most healthy
tone. The qualities of his mind and heart, when
sanctified by grace, become really noble; and if it
were right, you would like to forget his failings
in presence of so much that is both manly and good.
His two epistles are a precious legacy
to the Church. The first is addressed to the
“scattered strangers:” but whether
this expression refer to Jews, or converted Gentiles,
or both, or to the “dispersed” of the ten
tribes, there is no satisfactory evidence. We
are in similar doubt as to the place from which it
was written. The Church at Babylon is
named in the last chapter; but there was a Babylon
in Egypt, and another in Assyria, and Rome itself
is thus figuratively designated.
The style of the apostle’s writing
is just what you would expect from the man himself.
Vehemence, majesty, and, at the same time, ease and
freedom, are manifest in every page.
The chief design of this epistle is
to administer comfort to those already suffering;
and to prepare others for the affliction they were
about to endure. The first chapter adduces several
considerations to uphold their constancy. One
is that they are the chosen of God; “Elect
according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through
sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling
of the blood of Jesus Christ: grace unto you,
and peace, be multiplied.” Then, as the
elect of God, they had a good hope of heaven.
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ, which according to his abundant mercy,
hath begotten us again unto a lively hope, by the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an
inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that
fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you, who are
kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation,
ready to be revealed in the last time.”
A third consideration is, that though in the midst
of trial, their Saviour was with them, and the end
of their faith was sure. “Whom having
not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see Him not,
yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable, and
full of glory: receiving the end of your faith,
even the salvation of your souls.” And,
finally, they were to remember that this subject of
their salvation had been matter of earnest enquiry
among the prophets, whose labours are now made to
contribute to their comfort. “Of which
salvation the prophets have enquired 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 testified beforehand the sufferings
of Christ, and the glory that should follow.”
I. THE STUDENT, AND
II. HIS THEME.
I. “The prophets have enquired and
searched diligently.”
The term “prophet” is
most properly applied to one who is divinely instructed
as to future events, and divinely inspired to make
them known. In an accommodated sense it is given
to the apostles and public teachers of the primitive
Church. And now it is conventionally used to
denote a somewhat less honourable class. “The
prophets of our day” are many. From the
positive style they have adopted, you would suppose
that the gift of prescience had come upon them in
a far more absolute form than upon the prophets of
old. With more dogmatism and less authority do
they pronounce upon “the times and seasons.”
Though failure on failure happens, this seems rather
to nerve their confidence; and every successive mistake
is followed by another guess with increased assurance.
1. Who are the prophets referred
to in the text? They are the men to whom
the term is strictly applicable. We do not forget
such names as Moses and Samuel, and Elijah and Elisha,
and others; but their prophecies are not given with
the formality of those distinct books to which perhaps
St. Peter refers. In point of time Jonah comes
just with his message of woe to the city of Nineveh.
Amos the herdman and Hosea his contemporary follow.
Then Joel with his thunder, and Isaiah with his evangelism;
Micah with his earnestness; Nahum with his sublimity;
and Zephaniah with his severity, take their place
in about equal succession. Jeremiah then appears
with all his weightiness of matter and solemnity of
manner. Habakkuk in briefer form takes up the
same subjects. Daniel with great grandeur of
style dwells on the topics of the text. Obadiah
stands between him and Ezekiel as though to make them
both more prominent. At a later period come
Haggai and Zechariah; and then Malachi closes the
illustrious train, taking the last pen from the wing
of inspiration, or putting the signet upon the scroll
of prophecy. Some of these may be especially
referred to; but we include them all: for “to
Him give all the prophets witness; that in his name
whosoever believeth in Him shall have forgiveness
of sins.”
(i.) They were men; not angels,
or belonging to some order of being superior to ourselves;
but they were members with us of the same human family,
and “subject to like passions as we are.”
They were sinners: born with the old
taint of corruption; subject to hereditary guilt,
depravity, and death, and exposed to all the evils
to which flesh is heir. They were redeemed
sinners, included in that same covenant of mercy
of which we make our boast. They were therefore
personally interested in those truths which
became the subject of their search.
The original promise belonged to them
as well as to us. They claimed an interest in
the leading facts of patriarchal history, and in the
gorgeous ceremonial of the Mosaic Institute.
All the events of divine providence which were preparing
the way for the Messiah’s coming, and the predictions
which they themselves uttered, had some personal bearing.
They were not uninterested students of past history,
of present circumstances, or of future events.
Their own destinies were involved in the truths they
taught.
(ii.) They were good men.
That the Divine Being has sometimes made “false
prophets” means of carrying out his purposes
there can be no doubt. But he is a daring man
who would venture from this either to justify or extenuate
an impure ministry. Sanctuary services are too
pure and solemn to be performed by any but “clean
hands.” The instruments which God
ordains are holy. With a miserable exception
here and there, even the enemies of truth have not
denied to the ancient prophets the crown of a good
character. Try them by any recognised standard
of virtue, and they will not be found wanting.
Trace the minutest circumstances of their private
life; their self denial; their exposure to danger;
their fearlessness in denouncing sin; their being proof
against corruption; their zeal; their sympathy; their
benevolence and they present a startling
contrast with the priests of Paganism, or the false
prophets among the Jews.
Call to mind the meekness of Moses;
the heroism of Elijah; the gratitude of David; the
sweetness of Hosea; the fervour of Isaiah; the tenderness
of Jeremiah; the constancy of Daniel; the faithfulness
of Ezekiel and you unhesitatingly endorse
the inspired oracle, that they were “holy men.”
And although some of the prophets are remarkable for
particular features of character, they are not wanting
in all the others which are requisite to constitute
goodness.
But what a magnificent portrait could
you present to the mind as you review the whole!
The characteristics of these different men meet and
blend in the photograph; and you look upon a being human
it is true, but sanctified by grace, and fitted to
exercise “a more telling influence upon the
destines of the world,” than the mightiest statesman,
or the profoundest philosopher, or the noblest warrior
of which history can boast. Like the hues of
the rainbow, which in all their softness and sweetness
and sublimity, rejoice to span the heavens together,
and make up one token of the covenant, do the prophets
stand before us as one class of men, unfolding the
covenant of mercy, and offering light and life to
a dying and dark world.
(iii.) They were inspired good
men. And here is suggested one of the most
formidable dangers of the present day. An attempt
is being made to dry up the most fruitful source of
confidence which the Christian has in the truth of
his Bible: viz., its plenary inspiration.
We know that this is not new; but the lover of “the
Book” had charmed himself with the hope that
the controversy was over, and the truth triumphant.
He is now, however, alarmed on finding that in addition
to the old adversaries the infidel, the
sceptic, and the profane he has to enter
the lists with new combatants altogether; and among
the rest, the descendants of those glorious Reformers,
who, centuries ago, shook the papal power to its centre;
melted the Bible’s chain in the martyr’s
flame; and liberated the mind of a continent from
the most crushing spiritual despotism the world ever
knew. It is a distressing sound to hear those
academic halls, which have been the greatness and
the pride of Germany, resounding with pernicious error,
not to say, positive blasphemy. Looking at the
subject in the light of heaven we gratefully and confidently
say that “the word of the Lord endureth for
ever;” but humanly speaking, the Bible is in
danger. And we must be prepared to meet it with
a zeal, “such as in the martyr’s glowed,
dying champions for their God.” The plenary
inspiration of the Scriptures, and therefore of the
prophets is our impregnable stronghold,
and must never be abandoned. The apostle says,
when referring to the Old Testament “All
Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable
for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
in righteousness. For the prophecy came not in
old time by the will of man; but holy men of God spake
as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.”
And by this inspiration we do not merely mean that
some general ideas were poured into their minds, which
they clothed in their own language, and then published
them to the world as a revelation from heaven.
If the Bible be inspired at all, it is fully
inspired. Otherwise, you cannot tell where to
make the distinction between what is divine and what
is human. You must either maintain the truth
of the whole book, or abandon your conviction
of its supreme authority. We adopt the statement
that the prophets “composed their works under
so plenary and immediate an influence of the Holy
Spirit that God may be said to speak by them to man,
and not merely that they spoke to men in the name
of God, and by his authority.” Mark the
wide distinction which is here suggested. Take
the case of an earnest and trustworthy minister.
He tells his congregation that he is anxious to give
them the truth; and has been to God in his closet
asking for light. In answer to prayer he believes
that the Holy Spirit has given him light; and, confident
that it is the truth, he announces it to the people.
But you would not say that that man is inspired.
There may be much of what is fallible and human with
what is truthful and divine. Suppose, however,
that on some Sabbath morning, he could with authority
stand up and say that what is now about to be declared
is not his, but God’s that he is in
ignorance of what the utterance will really be, and
that in simple fact, God is to speak through him,
using his lips only as the medium of communication;
you have here an instance of what is meant by plenary
inspiration. And this we say is the case with
the prophets. These “holy men of God spake
as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.
Not in the words which man’s wisdom
teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth.”
2. Their Conduct. They
“enquired and searched diligently.”
(i.) What is implied in the search
they made? It would seem as if for the moment
the thought of their inspiration was dropped; and like
other earnest students of the Bible, they now search
to ascertain the meaning of their own, and each other’s
prophecies. There is here, however, an incidental,
though strong proof of the justice of their claims.
The predictions they uttered were not their own conceptions;
not the product of their own reasoning; and perhaps
not even engraven on their own memory. They
gave expression to statements beyond themselves, and
the meaning of which at the time, they did not understand.
And when (if we may so say) the breath of inspiration
had passed from them, they sat down to discover by
diligent search the import of those utterances which
they had made. They had written for the
world: they now enquired for themselves.
Their predictions are by the grace of God,
the property of the Church: their search
is for their own personal benefit. The truths
they proclaim, become the power of God to their own
comfort and purity.
The metaphor is taken from the employment
of a miner who digs deeply into the caverns of the
earth that he may find its treasures; and by their
appropriation enrich himself. The prophets were
not satisfied with the mere knowledge of the fact
that the mine existed, and that its contents were
more brilliant than any of Golconda, and beyond the
price of rubies. They went to dig for themselves;
and seizing the precious pearls of truth, they enriched
and beautified and ennobled their own character, until
their shining became too glorious for earth: they
were then translated to heaven to sparkle amid eternal
sunshine, and burn in glory for ever. How solemnly
does the Great Teacher’s injunction sound in
our ears “Search the Scriptures;
for in them ye think ye have eternal life; and they
are they which testify of Me.”
(ii.) The earnestness of their
search. They “enquired and searched diligently.”
This word is forceful and signifies to trace out or
explore thoroughly. The idea which the apostle
intends to convey is thought to be this: “they
perceived that in their communications there were
so great and glorious truths which they did not fully
comprehend, and they diligently employed their natural
faculties to understand that which they were appointed
to impart to succeeding generations.” There
is much of simplicity and power in the account which
Daniel gives of his own search. “In
the first year of” the reign “of Darius” “I
(Daniel) understood by books the number of
the years, whereof the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah,
the prophet, that he would accomplish seventy years
in the desolations of Jerusalem. And I set
my face (marking earnestness and diligence and
resolve) unto the Lord God to seek by prayer and supplication”
the meaning of these things. You are not surprised
at the visit of the man Gabriel, who was caused to
fly swiftly; and, touching him at the time of the
evening oblation, said, “O Daniel I am now come
forth to give thee skill and understanding. I
will show thee that which is noted in the Scriptures
of truth.”
Now, if the prophets had thus with
earnest diligence to search out the meaning of their
own predictions, what but our capacity should be the
measure of our toil? Nor is this labour to be
confined to the pulpit. “The secret of
the Lord is with them that fear Him.” If
you want to know the meaning of your Bible, you must
prayerfully study it. “These in Berea
were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that
they received the word with all readiness of mind,
and searched the Scriptures daily, whether those things
were so.”
Here then is our Student: himself
a study for all who are anxious to comprehend this
book. There are only three orders of being by
whom God has spoken to the world: Christ; the
angels; and men. And among these men
the prophets hold the first rank. At an early
period the elements of religion being already
revealed a new method of communicating truth
was employed; and man rose from the position of an
observer, to the dignity and majesty of the
prophet. In some instances he is removed at
once into this office without previous training.
But generally God walks among “the schools
of the prophets;” and laying his hand upon the
chosen one, He bids him go forth. His very call
seems to constitute him an extraordinary man.
Both his appearance and actions make him singular.
He stands alone. The mountain or the sequestered
vale is his abode; and he is only seen among men when
he has some message from God. Clothed in his
sackcloth, he appears at the court, the city, and the
village; and having pronounced the coming woe, or
stated the imposed duty, or offered pardon, he mysteriously
disappears; and is seen no more, till the burden is
again upon him, and forces him to come forth and speak.
There is a fire in his eye, but it is inspiration,
not wildness. There is a majesty in his gait,
as though he is either great himself, or is employed
by one who is. There is a solemnity of countenance
and a nobility of manner, which say that he is not
often among mortals, but dwells in a higher sphere.
In language which more fully pertains to us as Christians,
his “conversation is in heaven.”
Carried up by the Spirit perhaps to the summit of
the mountain which covers his retreat, views of the
future break upon his vision. His eye burns;
his lips quiver; his bosom heaves. And opening
his mouth, he pours forth in more than angelic cadences,
the designs of God concerning men, and kingdoms, and
the human race. It may be that to himself all
this is a mystery. He therefore gathers up every
utterance, and carries them to his mountain home.
In that consecrated cave he spreads out the panorama;
and lifting up his eyes to heaven for light, he traces
the picture to see what “the Spirit of Christ
which was in” him “did signify.”
“Sweet is the harp of
prophecy; too sweet
Not to be wronged by a mere
mortal touch,
Nor can the wonders it records
be sung
To meaner music, and not suffer
loss.”
II. THE THEME.
It
is here presented in a twofold aspect. First,
in its entirety: and secondly, in one
of its branches.
1. The great subject of prophetic
enquiry is salvation. “Of which
salvation the prophets have enquired and searched
diligently.”
(i.) In its nature.
Is there a word in universal language which has as
much meaning in it as this word salvation? It
takes within its range all time and all eternity.
Though specially designed for man, it has its influence
upon every order of being God has made, and presents
the most glorious manifestations of God himself which
the world possesses. It glares upon sin with
indignation, but throws its arms of mercy around the
sinner; offers to him a deliverance from the guilt
and power and pollution and inbeing of evil; gives
him the favour and image of his Maker; assures to
him victory over his final adversary; introduces him
to, and acquits him before the great white throne;
and arrays him in all the glories of an everlasting
heaven.
To understand it fully comes not within
the range of angelic intellect; and yet it demands
our highest regard, as it has had the attention of
enquiring prophets. ’Tis true they had
not the light upon it that a better dispensation has
given to us. It is not to be expected that they
should be penetrated with its glory as we ought to
be; but they were so impressed by its grandeur, that
their thoughts were raised above all merely temporal
deliverances, and they felt that their own interests
were wrapped up in the theme. “And thus,”
we are told, “did this sweet stream of their
doctrine, as the rivers, make its own banks fertile
and pleasant as it ran by, and flowed still forward
to after ages; and by the confluence of more such
prophecies, grew greater as it went, till it fell
in with the main current of the gospel in the New Testament
both acted and preached by the Great Prophet himself
whom they foretold as to come, and recorded by his
apostles and evangelists, and thus united into one
river clear as crystal. This doctrine of salvation
in the Scriptures hath refreshed the city of God,
his Church under the gospel, and still shall do so
till it empty itself into the ocean of eternity.”
(ii.) This salvation in its provision,
is of grace. “Who prophesied of
the grace that should come unto you.”
The apostle does not mean to say by this clause,
that there is something in the theme exclusively
adapted to those to whom he wrote. But we understand
him to mean, in general terms, that the ancient seers
searched diligently into that system of mercy, which
should in after times, and under the Christian dispensation,
be more fully revealed.
The word “grace” may have
reference to the manner in which this scheme
should be made known; intimating that it was by divine
favour that the new economy supervened upon the
old. But we take it rather to denote the
gospel salvation itself. It is altogether
a system of grace. In its projection; in its
development; in its accomplishment; in its application;
in its final consummation, it is all of grace.
“By grace ye are saved.”
We are not among the number of those
who doubt or deny the entire and absolute fall of
man. Whatever good there was in him was then
destroyed; whatever evil there is in him, was then
induced. He is fallen in mind and soul and body.
Physically, morally, spiritually, he is a wreck.
But was no vestage left of that divine image in which
he was created? Not one. No lingering
desire to regain his glory and the position he had
lost? None. Was he altogether dead to virtue
and his Maker’s claims? Yes, altogether.
But was his nature so far polluted as that no trace
of his original purity could be discovered?
Not a trace to be seen even by an Omniscient eye.
And was there left to him no inherent power
to do that which is good? None whatever.
“From the sole of the foot even unto the head
there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises,
and putrifying sores: they have not been closed,
neither bound up, neither mollified with ointment.”
Then see his position. If his
fall, which is so entire, is his own act, he is as
much amenable to his Maker as he was before.
The fact of his fall will not lesson his obligations:
nor will it impose upon God any necessity to show
mercy. He therefore stands before his Judge a
condemned criminal; and the course which the Judge
shall take is entirely within himself. There
is nothing which can force Him to show favour.
If He say, die, He is as justly glorious as He was
before. If then, there is no obligation
upon God to save: and if He does determine
to be gracious, the salvation must be of grace.
Oh, is it possible to conceive the solemnity of that
moment when the destinies of untold millions were
in the balance? Can you picture the suspense
of heaven and hell when waiting Jehovah’s fiat?
Surely for the moment the pulse of nature throbbed
not; heaven’s music ceased to flow, and the howl
of the pit was hushed. Then God, on his azure
throne, holding in one hand the sword, and in the
other the sceptre, stretched out the sceptre saying,
“Deliver him from going down to the pit; I have
found a ransom.”
Your salvation is of grace.
You are required to pray; but you are saved
by grace. You are required to believe;
but you are saved by grace. You are required
to labour; but you are saved by grace.
You are required to suffer; but you are saved
by grace. You will have to die; but when
you stand a spirit glorified before the throne, it
will be by grace.
(iii.) Salvation in its object
is the soul. “Receiving the end of your
faith even the salvation of your souls.”
By the soul we understand the immaterial principle
or spiritual part of man; which though united with
the body, is perfectly distinct from it.
As to its nature, it is possessed
of intelligence, volition, sensation. It has
capacities for enjoyment and suffering: for both
good and evil. Its immortality is assured
to us by the mouth of God. It may be lost.
With all its dignity and glory, it may be for ever
crushed by the divine hand, but never destroyed.
While, however, it may be lost, it may be saved.
The grace which can calm its fears, and satisfy its
hopes, and purge its impurity, and consummate its
bliss is now manifested. How insignificant does
everything appear when compared with its salvation.
The blotting of the sun, the desolation of an universe
is a trifle when put in the balance with an immortal
spirit. Let the sceptic doubt its immortality,
and the atheist deny, and the scoffer jest; but let
us look forward to the judgment-seat and beyond it,
for “the soul, immortal as its sire, shall never
die.”
(iv.) Salvation, in its attainment,
is by faith. “The end of your faith.”
There is no article of our religion
more plainly revealed than this “By
grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves:
it is the gift of God. Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and thou shalt be saved. Whosoever believeth
in Him shall not perish, but hath eternal life.
He that believeth shall be saved.” Faith
is the simplest operation of the mind; and may therefore
strictly be said to be incapable of definition.
Still it is easy to say what is meant by the term when
applied to personal salvation. It means the
trust of the heart on the atonement of Christ, as
the condition of pardon. “With the heart
man believeth unto righteousness.” It
is however of the highest importance that the thought
of its simplicity be made prominent. Let
us not undervalue religious knowledge; for to some
extent it is absolutely necessary. But do not
mystify the plan of mercy, and perplex the anxious
seeker by requirements which the gospel has not made
prominent. Many a poor sinner exercises faith
in Christ who cannot give a philosophical disquisition
as to its nature. It is not necessary to be
thoroughly acquainted with the science of optics in
order to see. A man may look through a telescope
before he can define the refraction or reflection
of light. Now all that is included in the word
salvation hangs on this simple condition.
The question may be regarded perhaps
more nice than wise as to why such a condition
should have been appointed; and yet it will sometimes
force itself upon the thoughtful mind. The answer
to it must in great measure be conjectural, but may
we not suppose that one design of it was to
do away with the last vestige of self-righteousness
in man? If Moses had struck the rock with something
more powerful than the little rod, the gushing of
the waters might have been attributed to his own strength.
If Jericho had been taken by a regular siege, the
glory of its conquest would have been ascribed to
military science and the prowess of arms. If
some heavy conditions had been imposed upon the sinner,
he would have claimed his pardon.
“But, ’how unlike
the complex works of man,
Heaven’s easy, artless,
unencumbered plan,
No meretricious graces to
beguile,
No clustering ornaments to
clay the pile.
From ostentation as from weakness
free,
It stands like the cerulean
arch we see,
Majestic in its own simplicity.
Inscribed above the portal
from afar,
Conspicuous as the brightness
of a star,
Legible only by the light
they give,
Stand the soul-quickening
words Believe and Live.’”
2. The apostle next concentrates
attention upon one leading branch of this great
theme.
Having put the whole subject before
us in the word salvation, he now fixes our thought
upon the relation which Christ sustains to it.
“Searching what, or what manner of time, the
Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify, when
it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ,
and the glory that should follow.” The
testimony which is here said to be borne to Christ,
is by the Spirit, and the signification of the Spirit
in the testimony is that which the prophets sought.
He who in the text is called “the Spirit of
Christ,” in the following verse is designated
the Holy Ghost, so that there can be no doubt as to
the person referred to. He is variously spoken
of as “the Spirit of God” “the
Spirit of the Father” “the Spirit
of the Son” “the Holy Spirit,”
and He is the third person in the Holy Trinity.
“In the entire and undivided unity of the Godhead,
there is a Trinity of personal subsistences; consubstantial,
co-equal, and co-eternal.” It was this
“Spirit of Christ” who inspired the prophets;
for these “holy men of God spake as they were
moved by the Holy Ghost.”
(i.) They sought the signification
of the Spirit as to the Saviour’s person.
“Searching what.” This expression
is said to mean either what time; or what people;
or what person. But looking at the whole
passage it seems most naturally to refer to Him who
is the subject of these predictions. They therefore
diligently enquired as to who He was, of whom they,
under inspiration, had been speaking.
(ii.) They also studied the prophecies
as to the time of his coming: “What
manner of time?” This phrase has a twofold application.
It may refer to that particular period of the world’s
history when the Saviour should come to endure his
sufferings and enter into his glory. So Daniel
reckoned up the number of the weeks, and sought to
understand the time.
It may also have reference to “the
character and condition of the age” when He
should become incarnate. “What manner
of time?”
We are now brought to the testimony
itself which the Spirit beforehand gave.
(iii.) The Saviour’s sufferings,
in their relation to our salvation. “The
sufferings of Christ.”
We limit ourselves to two thoughts:
these sufferings were predicted, and those
predictions were fulfilled. Nearly the
whole of the Old Testament has a connection with them.
They are predicted by the very page which records
the fall. “And I will put enmity between
thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed:
it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his
heel.” Under the patriarchal economy there
was a significant allusion to them in the offering
up of Isaac. The Mosaic types were prophecies.
The paschal lamb; the smitten rock; the brazen serpent;
and the scape-goat on the day of expiation, exhibited
this feature of Messiah’s character. Well
nigh every page of the prophets is marked by blood
and sorrow. The Psalmist, in thrilling tone,
enquires, “My God, my God why hast thou forsaken
Me?” And in the last struggles of death Jesus
quoted the passage in its application to himself.
The fifty-third chapter of Isaiah is an unapproachable
description of a suffering person. Its reference
to Christ has been extorted from the Jew, and is confidently
believed by every Christian. The notion of two
Messiahs the one suffering and the other
conquering is an unworthy subterfuge, and
stands opposed to both fact and Scripture. Daniel
is second only to Isaiah in his minute and powerful
description of the Redeemer’s sufferings.
Zechariah almost closes the book by the startling
cry, “Awake, O sword, against my Shepherd, and
against the man that is my fellow, saith the Lord
of hosts: smite the Shepherd, and the sheep shall
be scattered; and I will turn mine hand upon the little
ones.”
That these Scriptures have been fulfilled
who can doubt that believes the gospels? Just
before the Saviour’s ascension, and while yet
partaking of the valedictory feast with his disciples,
“He said unto them, these are the words which
I spake unto you, while I was yet with you, that all
things must be fulfilled which were written in the
law of Moses, and in the Prophets, and in the Psalms
concerning Me. Then opened He their understanding
that they might understand the Scriptures, and said
unto them, thus it is written, and thus it behoved
Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third
day.” We pass by the pain and hunger and
thirst which are the attributes of humanity; but from
his very incarnation may it be said that his sufferings
began. Mark the meanness of his birth; the poverty
of his circumstances; the persecution which drove
Him from his infant-home, and think of his manner of
life prior to the public announcement of his character,
and you say with the prophet “A man
of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.”
Now look into Gethsemane’s innermost
recess and you see an amount of suffering unendurable
except under heavenly strengthening; “And, being
in an agony, He prayed more earnestly: and his
sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling
down to the ground. And there appeared an angel
unto Him from heaven, strengthening Him.”
Betrayed by a disciple, He is apprehended by the
“multitude with swords and staves:”
then arraigned before the high priest; then before
Pilate: then taken before Herod and clothed in
the purple; then bound and dragged again before Pilate:
then smitten by the ruffianly attendants, and forsaken
by his followers He is condemned to die. After
the Roman fashion He is led away bearing his own cross
to the fated hill. Here is the consummation of
their cruelty, of his suffering, and of heaven’s
suspense. The leader of an army to the battle-field
looks with anxiety to that moment of the day which
decides the conflict; and either covers him with a
nation’s glory, or overwhelms him in a nation’s
disgrace. The fate of empires has hung on the
actions of an hour; and the liberties of a continent
have trembled for an instant in the balance.
But the salvation of a world was hanging on Calvary
till the Sufferer exclaimed: “It is finished.”
You will not suppose that we have
exhibited all, or even a principal part of “the
sufferings of Christ.” We do not wish to
underrate this bodily distress; but oh, compare it
not with the depth of the soul’s agony.
The hand of man which smote Him was malignant and
painful too; but the hand of God with the sword of
justice in it, fell in dreadful weight and pierced
his spirit. His being betrayed and forsaken by
the disciples was a source of pain; but it was when
the Father hid his face that his sufferings were complete.
“My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken Me?”
In addition to the general scope of
prophecy, there are many minute and particular predictions
of suffering which were fulfilled. The Psalmist
says “Yea mine own familiar friend
in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath
lifted up his heel against me.” And you
call to mind the betrayal of our Saviour. David
says again, “They pierced my hands and my feet.”
And when He was crucified the nails were driven through
these parts of the body. Isaiah says, “He
was numbered with the transgressors;” and we
know that He was crucified between two thieves.
Prophecy says, “They part my garments among them,
and casts lots upon my vesture.” History
says, “And they crucified Him, and parted his
garments casting lots.” Prophecy says,
“A bone of Him shall not be broken.”
History says that when the soldiers “came to
Jesus and saw that He was dead already, they brake
not his legs.” Prophecy says, “They
gave me also gall for my meat, and in my thirst they
gave me vinegar to drink.” History says,
“They gave Him vinegar to drink mingled with
gall,” when He said “I thirst.”
You are not surprised then, that after the fulfilment
of so many and varied predictions, Jesus should have
spoken to the two doubting disciples with a somewhat
sterner voice than was his wont: “O fools,
and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets
have spoken, ought not Christ to have suffered these
things, and to enter into his glory.”
(iv.) See the connection between
this salvation and the Saviour, with regard to the
glory resulting from his passion and death.
“And the glory,” or glories, “that
should follow.” We distract not your mind
with the many meanings of the word “glory.”
In the text it signifies the honour accruing to the
Redeemer himself, and the benefit resulting to the
world from his sufferings. It will apply to his
resurrection; for even of this the prophets had
some knowledge. “Thou wilt not leave my
soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy
One to see corruption.” It has also reference
to the Saviour’s exaltation to and session
at the right hand of the Father: for this
is the result of his humiliation. “We see
Jesus, who was made a little lower than the angels
for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and
honour; that He by the grace of God should taste death
for every man.” But it has another meaning.
The glory resulting from “the sufferings of
Christ,” is to be seen in the carrying out
of his own scheme of mercy, and the universal
happiness of man. Nothing short of this can
satisfy the scope of the text; the expectation and
claims of the Messiah; or the call of the Church.
It was no less an object than this the
saving of a whole world that brought Christ
from heaven and raised up the Church on earth.
If you look or labour for anything short of this,
you degrade your Master and dishonour yourselves.
You have got too large a machinery at work for anything
less than this. You will cripple the energies
and damp the ardour of our Captain’s embattled
hosts, if you are satisfied with anything short of
the conquest of a world. The question therefore
is, have we any fair prospect of, and guarantee for,
universal glory?
The text itself affords ground of
hope that in the Scriptures we shall find all we desire.
An intimation is given that the prophets themselves
not only predicted it, but by their diligent search,
apprehended and believed it. And let us not
suppose that our faith in a happy world rests on a
few dark or obscure expressions thinly scattered over
the Bible, and requiring more than ordinary penetration
to find them at all. Science by gigantic strides
seems almost to have reached its perfection.
We are told that by its light the philosopher can,
from a single bone put into his hands, discover the
existence of a “great wingless bird” of
another hemisphere, and can construct “its skeleton
so exactly, that when all the bones” arrive
in this country “the correspondence between them
and their conjectural portraits” is complete;
that the astronomer is able by his calculations to
tell the existence of a planet, which observation
proves to be strictly true. But wonderful as
is all this, we are not reduced to any such necessity
with regard to the future of the gospel. We have
not to take a few dark sayings, or enigmatical expressions,
or hieroglyphic inscriptions, and as we best may spell
out the universal spread of truth. As with the
light of a sunbeam, or with “the point of a
diamond,” is it revealed. He that runs
may read. Abraham saw it: “And in
thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed.”
Jacob saw it: “The sceptre shall not depart
from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet,
until Shiloh come; and unto Him shall the gathering
of the people be.” David saw it:
“Ask of Me, and I will give thee the heathen
for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the
earth for thy possession.” Isaiah saw
it: “The wolf also shall dwell with the
lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid;
and the calf, and the young lion, and the fatling
together; and a little child shall lead them.”
Oh what a state of security and peace!
“Lift up thine eyes round about,
and see; all they gather themselves together, they
come to thee; thy sons shall come from far, and thy
daughters shall be nursed at thy side.”
Let the Church no more hang down her head with grief.
Look up, and see what is approaching. “All
they gather themselves together, they come to thee:
thy sons shall come from far, and thy daughters shall
be nursed at thy side.” A general confluence
of the nations is at hand, and all will flow into the
church. “Then thou shalt see, and flow
together, and thine heart shall fear, and be enlarged;
because the abundance of the sea shall be converted
unto thee, the forces of the Gentiles shall come unto
thee.” The vast-swelling multitude with
their wealth shall come and beg admission. “We
have now to beg people to come into the church:
the day is coming when they shall ask permission.
“Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as
the doves to their windows?” Who are
these myriads making their way to Christ? “And
as the doves to their windows?” There is a storm
at hand: the people foresee it, and run for refuge.
“Thy gates shall be open continually; they
shall not be shut day or night; that men may bring
unto thee the forces of the Gentiles, and that their
kings may be brought.” So constant is
the pouring in that the doors must be kept open.
It is now a rare thing to see a convert approaching;
but then the stream will be continuous, and the houses
of prayer open night and day.
“Thou shalt also suck the milk
of the Gentiles, and shalt suck the breast of kings:
and thou shalt know that I the Lord am thy Saviour
and thy Redeemer, the mighty One of Jacob.”
The very wealth which is now in heathen hands shall
be consecrated to the further spread of the gospel.
“And thou shalt suck the breast of kings:”
for they shall become “nursing fathers and queens
nursing mothers;” and the reign of the Messiah
shall be one of peace. “Violence shall
no more be heard in thy land, wasting nor destruction
within thy borders: but thou shalt call thy walls
Salvation, and thy gates Praise. The sun shall
be no more thy light by day; neither for brightness
shall the moon give light unto thee: but the
Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light, and thy
God thy glory. Thy sun shall no more go down;
neither shall thy moon withdraw itself: for the
Lord shall be thine everlasting light, and the days
of thy mourning shall be ended. Thy people also
shall be all righteous; they shall inherit the land
for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my
hands, that I may be glorified. A little one
shall become a thousand, and a small one a strong
nation: I the Lord will hasten it in his time.”
Do not say that this glorious chapter is exceptional.
It is only a sample, and the bulk is equal in beauty.
If the Bible, then, be true, a redeemed universe
is hastening upon us. Paradise created even cannot
put before us the glory of paradise restored.
All the events which are passing over us even
those which appear the most alarming are
under an influence which will make them tributary
to the final issue. “Blessed be the Lord
God, the God of Israel, who only doeth wondrous things,
and blessed be his glorious name for ever; and let
the whole earth be filled with his glory. Amen
and Amen.”
1. Let us learn a lesson of
veneration for the Scriptures. Unless
it be the great doctrine of atonement, there is no
truth to which the Christian clings, assailed with
greater bitterness in our days than the plenary authority
of the Bible. Moreover the low views on this
question which many professing Christians hold and
teach, are most deplorable and damaging. We
expect opposition from the avowed adversaries of the
Book; but, the source of truth is now imperilled by
indifference and treachery. The whole volume
has a divine origin. “God who at sundry
times and in divers manners spake in times past by
the prophets hath in these last days spoken to us
by his Son.”
2. A lesson of love to the
Saviour. “He hath died” for us,
“the just for the unjust, that He might bring
us to God.” Do not forget your personal
interest in those sufferings to which the text refers.
They are in the strictest sense vicarious.
He suffered not for his own sins, but for yours.
You may realise their saving efficacy, and be “made
meet for the inheritance of the saints in light.”
How great are his claims upon our affection and service!
3. A lesson of duty to the
world. The salvation of the whole race is
provided by “the sufferings;” and is included
in “the glory.” A sanctified universe
is to be the result of the Saviour’s cross:
and to a large extent He has made the Churches responsible
for the conversion of the world. A weight of
obligation rests upon each member which cannot be
put into language. The wailings of a dying race
call loudly for our zeal. The groans of the
lost gather strength as they ascend the pit.
The voice of heaven, from angels, saints, and God,
urge us onward in the discharge of duty. Oh,
the wreck is on the billow; hasten with the means
of safety. The plague-spot is in the camp; offer
the incense of atonement. And let all your efforts
be put forth in faith, and under a deep impression
of the truth of Cecil’s memorable words:
“Faith is the master-spring of a Minister,”
as well as of every Christian. “Hell is
before me, and thousands of lost souls are shut up
there in everlasting agony. Jesus Christ stands
forth to save men from rushing into this bottomless
abyss. He sends me to proclaim His ability and
love. I want no fourth idea.”