 Be Ye Holy!
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"Holiness" by J. C. Ryle Table of Contents
The Ruler of the Waves
A furious squall came up, and the waves broke over the
boat, so that it was nearly swamped. Jesus was in the stern, sleeping on a
cushion. The disciples woke him and said to him, "Teacher, don't you care if
we drown?"
He got up, rebuked the wind and said to the waves, "Quiet! Be still!" Then
the wind died down and it was completely calm.
He said to his disciples, "Why are you so afraid? Do you still have no
faith?" Mark 4:37-40
It would be well if professing Christians in modern days
studied the four Gospels more than they do. No doubt all Scripture is
profitable. It is not wise to exalt one part of the Bible at the expense of
another. But I think it would be good for some who are very familiar with
the Epistles, if they knew a little more about Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
Now, why do I say this? I say it because I want
professing Christians to know more about Christ. It is well to be acquainted
with all the doctrines and principles of Christianity. It is better to be
acquainted with Christ Himself. It is well to be familiar with faith and
grace and justification and sanctification. They are all matters "pertaining
to the King." But it is far better to be familiar with Jesus Himself, to see
the King’s own face, and to behold His beauty. This is one secret of eminent
holiness. He that would be conformed to Christ’s image, and become a
Christ–like man, must be constantly studying Christ Himself.
Now the Gospels were written to make us acquainted with
Christ. The Holy Spirit has told us the story of His life and death, His
sayings and His doings, four times over. Four different inspired hands have
drawn the picture of the Savior His ways, His manners, His feelings, His
wisdom, His grace, His patience, His love, His power are graciously unfolded
to us by four different witnesses. Ought not the sheep to be familiar with
the Shepherd? Ought not the patient to be familiar with the Physician? Ought
not the bride to be familiar with the Bridegroom? Ought not the sinner to be
familiar with the Savior? Beyond doubt it ought to be so. The Gospels were
written to make men familiar with Christ, and therefore I wish men to study
the Gospels.
On whom must we build our souls if we would be accepted
with God? We must build on the Rock, Christ. From whom must we draw that
grace of the Spirit which we daily need in order to be fruitful? We must
draw from the Vine, Christ. To whom must we look for sympathy when earthly
friends fail us or die? We must look to our elder Brother, Christ. By whom
must our prayers be presented, if they are to be heard on high? They must be
presented by our Advocate, Christ. With whom do we hope to spend the
thousand years of glory, and the after eternity? With the King of kings,
Christ. Surely we cannot know this Christ too well! Surely there is not a
word, nor a deed, nor a day, nor a step, nor a thought in the record of His
life, which ought not to be precious to us. We should labor to be familiar
with every line that is written about Jesus.
Come now, and let us study a page in our Master’s
history. Let us consider what we may learn from the verses of Scripture
which stand at the head of this message. You there see Jesus crossing the
lake of Galilee, in a boat with His disciples. You see a sudden storm arise
while He is asleep. The waves beat into the boat and fill it. Death seems to
be close at hand. The frightened disciples awake their Master and cry for
help. He arises and rebukes the wind and the waves, and at once there is a
calm. He mildly reproves the faithless fears of His companions, and all is
over. Such is the picture. It is one full of deep instruction. Come now, and
let us examine what we are meant to learn.
1. Following Christ
will not prevent our having earthly sorrows and troubles
Here are the chosen disciples of the Lord Jesus in great
anxiety. The faithful little flock, which believed when priests and scribes
and Pharisees were all alike unbelieving, is allowed by the Shepherd to be
much disturbed. The fear of death breaks in upon them like an armed man. The
deep water seems likely to go over their souls. Peter, James and John, the
pillars of the Church about to be planted in the world, are much distressed.
Perhaps they had not reckoned on all this. Perhaps they
had expected that Christ’s service would at any rate lift them above the
reach of earthly trials. Perhaps they thought that He, who could raise the
dead and heal the sick and feed multitudes with a few loaves and cast out
devils with a word, He would never allow His servants to be sufferers upon
earth. Perhaps they had supposed He would always grant them smooth journeys,
fine weather, an easy course and freedom from trouble and care.
If the disciples thought so, they were much mistaken. The
Lord Jesus taught those who a man may be one of His chosen servants, and yet
have to go through many an anxiety, and endure many a pain.
It is good to understand this clearly. It is good to
understand that Christ’s service never did secure a man from all the ills
that flesh is heir to, and never will. If you are a believer, you must
reckon on having your share of sickness and pain, of sorrow and tears, of
losses and crosses, of deaths and bereavements, of partings and separations,
of vexations and disappointments, so long as you are in the body. Christ
never undertakes that you shall get to heaven without these. He has
undertaken that all who come to Him shall have all things pertaining to life
and godliness; but He has never undertaken that He will make them
prosperous, or rich, or healthy, and that death and sorrow shall never come
to their family.
I have the privilege of being one of Christ’s
ambassadors. In His name I can offer eternal life to any man, woman or child
who is willing to have it. In His name I do offer pardon, peace, grace,
glory, to any son or daughter of Adam who reads this message. But I dare not
offer that person worldly prosperity as part and parcel of the Gospel. I
dare not offer him long life, an increased income and freedom from pain. I
dare not promise the man who takes up the cross and follows Christ that in
following Him he shall never meet with a storm.
I know well that many do not like these terms. They would
prefer having Christ and good health, Christ and plenty of money, Christ and
no deaths in their family, Christ and no wearing cares, Christ and a
perpetual morning without clouds. But they do not like Christ and the cross,
Christ and tribulation, Christ and the conflict, Christ and the howling
wind, Christ and the storm.
Is this the secret thought of anyone who is reading this
message? Believe me, if it is, you are very wrong. Listen to me, and I will
try to show you have yet much to learn.
How should you know who are true Christians, if following
Christ was the way to be free from trouble? How should we discern the wheat
from the chaff, if it were not for the winnowing of trial? How should we
know whether men served Christ for His own sake or from selfish motives, if
His service brought health and wealth with it as a matter of course? The
winds of winter soon show us which of the trees are evergreen and which are
not. The storms of affliction and care are useful in the same way. They
discover whose faith is real and whose is nothing but profession and form.
How would the great work of sanctification go on in a man
if he had no trial? Trouble is often the only fire which will burn away the
dross that clings to our hearts. Trouble is the pruning–knife which the
great Husbandman employs in order to make us fruitful in good works. The
harvest of the Lord’s field is seldom ripened by sunshine only. It must go
through its days of wind and rain and storm.
If you desire to serve Christ and be saved, I entreat you
to take the Lord on His own terms. Make up your mind to meet with your share
of crosses and sorrows, and then you will not be surprised. For want of
understanding this, many seem to run well for a season, and then turn back
in disgust, and are cast away.
If you profess to be a child of God, leave to the Lord
Jesus to sanctify you in His own way. Rest satisfied that He never makes any
mistakes. Be sure that He does all things well. The winds may howl around
you, and waters swell. But fear not, "He is leading you by the right way,
that He may bring you to a city of habitation" (Ps. 107:7).
2. Jesus Christ is
truly and really Man
There are words used in this little history which, like
many other passages in the Gospels, bring out this truth in a very striking
way. We are told that when the waves began to break on the ship, Jesus was
in the hinder part, "asleep on a pillow." He was weary, and who can wonder
at it, after reading the account given in the fourth chapter of Mark? After
laboring all day to do good to souls—after preaching in the open air to vast
multitudes, Jesus was fatigued. Surely if the sleep of the laboring man is
sweet, much more sweet must have been the sleep of our blessed Lord!
Let us settle deeply in our minds this great truth, that
Jesus Christ was verily and indeed Man. He was equal to the Father in all
things, and the eternal God. But He was also Man, and took part of flesh and
blood, and was made like unto us in all things, sin only excepted. He had a
body like our own. Like us, He was born of a woman. Like us, He grew and
increased in stature. Like us, He was often hungry and thirsty, and faint
and weary. Like us, He ate and drank, rested and slept. Like us, He sorrowed
and wept and felt. It is all very wonderful, but so it is. He that made the
heavens went to and fro as a poor weary Man on earth! He that ruled over
principalities and powers in heavenly places, took on Him a frail body like
our own. He that might have dwelt forever in the glory which He had with the
Father, amid the praises of legions of angels, came down to earth and dwelt
as a Man among sinful men. Surely this fact alone is an amazing miracle of
condescension, grace, pity and love.
I find a deep mine of comfort in this thought, that Jesus
is perfect Man no less than perfect God. He in whom I am told by Scripture
to trust is not only a great High Priest, but a feeling High Priest. He is
not only a powerful Savior but a sympathizing Savior. He is not only the Son
of God, mighty to save, but the Son of man able to feel.
Who does not know that sympathy is one of the sweetest
things left to us in this sinful world? It is one of the bright seasons in
our dark journey here below, when we can find a person who enters into our
troubles and goes along with us in our anxieties, who can weep when we weep,
and rejoice when we rejoice.
Sympathy is far better than money, and far rarer too.
Thousands can give who know not what it is to feel. Sympathy has the
greatest power to draw us and to open our hearts. Proper and correct counsel
often falls dead and useless on a heavy heart. Cold advice often makes us
shut up, shrink and withdraw into ourselves, when tendered in the day of
trouble. But genuine sympathy in such a day will call out all our better
feelings, if we have any, and obtain an influence over us when nothing else
can. Give me the friend who, though poor in gold and silver, has always
ready a sympathizing heart.
Our God knows all this well. He knows the very secrets of
man’s heart. He knows the ways by which that heart is most easily
approached, and the springs by which that heart is most readily moved. He
has wisely provided that the Savior of the Gospel should be feeling as well
as mighty. He has given us one who has not only a strong hand to pluck us as
brands from the burning, but a sympathizing heart on which the laboring and
heavy laden may find rest.
I see a marvelous proof of love and wisdom in the union
of two natures in Christ’s person. It was marvelous love in our Savior to
condescend to go through weakness and humiliation for our sakes, ungodly
rebels as we are. It was marvelous wisdom to fit Himself in this way to be
the very Friend of friends, who could not only save man, but meet him on his
own ground. I want one able to perform all things needful to redeem my soul.
This Jesus can do, for He is the eternal Son of God. I want one able to
understand my weakness and infirmities, and to deal gently with my soul,
while tied to a body of death. This again Jesus can do, for He was the Son
of man, and had flesh and blood like my own. Had my Savior been God only, I
might perhaps have trusted Him, but I never could have come near to Him
without fear. Had my Savior been Man only, I might have loved Him, but I
never could have felt sure that He was able to take away my sins. But,
blessed be God, my Savior is God as well as Man, and Man as well as God—God,
and so able to deliver me—Man, and so able to feel with me. Almighty power
and deepest sympathy are met together in one glorious Person, Jesus Christ,
my Lord. Surely a believer in Christ has a strong consolation. He may well
trust, and not be afraid.
If any reader of this message knows what it is to go to
the throne of grace for mercy and pardon, let him never forget that the
Mediator by whom he draws near to God is the Man Christ Jesus.
Your soul’s business is in the hand of a High Priest who
can be touched with the feeling of your infirmities. You have not to do with
a being of so high and glorious a nature, that your mind can in no wise
comprehend Him. You have to do with Jesus, who had a body like your own, and
was a Man upon earth like yourself. He well knows that world through which
you are struggling, for He dwelt in the midst of it thirty three years. He
well knows "the contradiction of sinners," which so often discourages you,
for He endured it Himself (Heb. 12:3). He well knows the are and cunning of
your spiritual enemy, the devil, for He wrestled with him in the wilderness.
Surely with such an advocate you may well feel bold.
If you know what it is to apply to the Lord Jesus for
spiritual comfort in earthly troubles, you should well remember the days of
His flesh, and His human nature.
You are applying to One who knows your feelings by
experience, and has drunk deep of the bitter cup, for He was "a Man of
sorrows, and acquainted with grief" (Isa. 53:3). Jesus knows the heart of a
man, the bodily pains of a man, the difficulties of a man, for he was a Man
Himself, and had flesh and blood upon earth. He sat wearied by the well at
Sychar. He wept over the grave of Lazarus at Bethany. He sweat great drops
of blood at Gethsemane. He groaned with anguish at Calvary.
He is no stranger to your sensations. He is acquainted
with everything that belongs to human nature, sin only excepted.
a. Are you poor and needy? So also was Jesus. The foxes
had holes and the birds of the air had nests, but the Son of man had nowhere
to lay His head. He dwelt in a despised city. Men used to say, "Can any good
thing come out of Nazareth?" (John 1:46). He was esteemed a carpenter’s son.
He preached in a borrowed boat, rode into Jerusalem on a borrowed colt and
was buried in a borrowed tomb.
b. Are you alone in the world, and neglected by those who
ought to love you? So also was Jesus. He came unto His own, and they
received Him not. He came to be a Messiah to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel, and they rejected Him. The princes of this world would not
acknowledge Him. The few that followed Him were publicans and fishermen. And
even these at the last forsook Him, and were scattered every man to his own
place.
c. Are you misunderstood, misrepresented, slandered and
persecuted? So also was Jesus. He was called a glutton and a wine–bibber, a
friend of publicans, a Samaritan, a madman and a devil. His character was
belied. False charges were laid against Him. An unjust sentence was passed
upon Him and, though innocent, He was condemned as a malefactor, and as such
died on the cross.
d. Does Satan tempt you, and offer horrid suggestions to
your mind? So also did he tempt Jesus. He bade Him to distrust God’s
fatherly providence: "Command these stones to be made bread." He proposed to
Him to tempt God by exposing Himself to unnecessary danger: "Cast Yourself
down" from the pinnacle of the temple. He suggested to Him to obtain the
kingdoms of the world for His own, by one little act of submission to
himself "All these things will I give You, if You will fall down and worship
me" (Matt. 4:1–10).
e. Do you ever feel great agony and conflict of mind? Do
you feel in darkness, as if God had left you? So did Jesus. Who can tell the
extent of the sufferings of mind He went through in the garden? Who can
measure the depth of His soul’s pain when He cried, "My God, My God, why
have You forsaken Me?" (Matt. 27:46).
It is impossible to conceive a Savior more suited to the
wants of man’s heart than our Lord Jesus Christ, suited not only by His
power, but by His sympathy, suited not only by His divinity, but by His
humanity. labor I beseech you, to get firmly impressed on your mind that
Christ, the refuge of souls, is Man as well as God. Honor Him as King of
kings, and Lord of lords. But while you do this, never forget that He had a
body, and was a Man. Grasp this truth, and never let it go. The unhappy
Socinian errs fearfully when he says that Christ was only Man, and not God.
But let not the rebound from that error make you forget that while Christ
was very God He was also very Man.
Listen not for a moment to the wretched argument of the
Roman Catholic, when he tells you that the Virgin Mary and the saints are
more sympathizing than Christ. Answer him that such an argument springs from
ignorance of the Scriptures and of Christ’s true nature. Answer him that you
have not so learned Christ, as to regard Him only as an austere Judge, and a
being to be feared. Answer him that the four Gospels have taught you to
regard Him as the most loving and sympathizing of friends, as well as the
mightiest and most powerful of saviors. Answer him, that you want no comfort
from saints and angels, from the Virgin Mary or from Gabriel, so long as you
can repose your weary soul upon the Man Christ Jesus.
3. There may be much
weakness and infirmity, even in a true Christian
You have a striking proof of this in the conduct of the
disciples here recorded when the waves broke over the ship. They awoke Jesus
in haste. They said to Him, in fear and anxiety, "Master, care You not that
we perish?"
There was impatience. They might have waited until their
Lord thought fit to arise from His sleep.
There was unbelief. They forgot that they were in the
keeping of One who had all power in His hand. "We perish."
There was distrust. They spoke as if they doubted their
Lord’s care and thoughtfulness for their safety and well–being: "Care You
not that we perish?"
Poor faithless men! What business had they to be afraid?
They had seen proof upon proof that all must be well so long as the
Bridegroom was with them. They had witnessed repeated examples of His love
and kindness towards them, sufficient to convince those who He would never
let them come to real harm. But all was forgotten in the present danger.
Sense of immediate peril often makes men have a bad memory. Fear is often
unable to reason from past experience. They heard the winds. They saw the
waves. They felt the cold waters beating over them. They fancied death was
close at hand. They could wait no longer in suspense. "Care You not," said
they, "that we perish?"
But, after all, let us understand this is only a picture
of what is constantly going on among believers in every age. There are too
many disciples, I suspect, at this very day, like those who are here
described.
Many of God’s children get on very well so long as they
have no trials. They follow Christ very tolerably in the time of fair
weather. They fancy they are trusting Him entirely. They flatter themselves
they have cast every care on Him. They obtain the reputation of being very
good Christians.
But suddenly some unlooked–for trial assails them. Their
property makes itself wings, and flies away. Their own health fails. Death
comes up into their house. Tribulation or persecution arises, because of the
Word. And where now is their faith? Where is the strong confidence they
thought they had? Where is their peace, their hope, their resignation? Alas,
they are sought for and not found. They are weighed in the balances and
found wanting. Fear and doubt and distress and anxiety break in upon them
like a flood, and they seem at their wits’ end. I know that this is a sad
description. I only put it to the conscience of every real Christian,
whether it is not correct and true.
The plain truth is that there is no literal and absolute
perfection among true Christians, so long as they are in the body. The best
and brightest of God’s saints is but a poor mixed being. Converted, renewed
and sanctified though he be, he is still compassed with infirmity. There is
not a just man upon earth, that always does good, and sins not. In many
things we offend all. A man may have true saving faith, and yet not have it
always close at hand and ready to be used (Eccl. 7:20; James 3:2).
Abraham was the father of the faithful. By faith he
forsook his country and his kindred, and went out according to the command
of God to a land he had never seen. By faith he was content to dwell in the
land as a stranger, believing that God would give it to him for an
inheritance. And yet this very Abraham was so far overcome by unbelief, that
he allowed Sarah to be called his sister, and not his wife, through the fear
of man. Here was great infirmity. Yet there have been few greater saints
than Abraham.
David was a man after God’s own heart. He had faith to go
out to battle with the giant Goliath when he was but a youth. He publicly
declared his belief that the Lord, who delivered him from the paw of the
lion and bear, would deliver him from this Philistine. He had faith to
believe God’s promise that he should one day be King of Israel, though he
was owned by a few followers, though Saul pursued him like a partridge on
the mountains, and there often seemed but a step between him and death. And
yet this very David at one time was so far overtaken by fear and unbelief,
that he said, "I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul" (1 Sam. 27:1). He
forgot the many wonderful deliverances he had experienced at God’s hand. He
only thought of his present danger, and took refuge among the ungodly
Philistines. Surely here was great infirmity. Yet there have been few
stronger believers than David.
I know it is easy for a man to reply, "All this is very
true, but it does not excuse the fears of the disciples. They had Jesus
actually with them. They ought not to have been afraid. I should never have
been so cowardly and faithless as they were!" I tell the man who argues in
that way that he knows little of his own heart. I tell him no one knows the
length and breadth of his own infirmities if he has not been tempted. No one
can say how much weakness might appear in himself if he was placed in
circumstances to call it forth.
Does any reader of this message think that he believes in
Christ? Do you feel such love and confidence in Him that you cannot
understand being greatly moved by any event that could happen? It is all
well. I am glad to hear it. But has this faith been tried? Has this
confidence been put to the test? If not, take heed of condemning these
disciples hastily. Be not high–minded, but fear. Do not think because your
heart is in a lively frame now, that such a frame will always last. Say not,
because your feelings are warm and fervent today, "Tomorrow shall be as
today, and much more abundant." Say not, because your heart is lifted up
just now with a strong sense of Christ’s mercy, "I shall never forget Him as
long as I live." Oh, learn to abate something of this flattering estimate of
yourself. You do not know yourself thoroughly. There are more things in your
inward man than you are at present aware of. The Lord may leave you as He
did Hezekiah, to show you all that is in your heart (2 Chron. 32:31).
Blessed is he that is "clothed with humility." "Happy is he that fears
always." "Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall" (1 Peter
5:5; Prov. 28:14; 1 Cor. 10:12).
Why do I dwell on this? Do I want to apologize for the
corruptions of professing Christians, and excuse their sins? God forbid! Do
I want to lower the standard of sanctification, and countenance anyone in
being a lazy, idle soldier of Christ? God forbid! Do I want to wipe out the
broad line of distinction between the converted and the unconverted, and to
wink at inconsistencies? Once more I say, ‘God forbid’ I hold strongly that
there is a mighty difference between the true Christian and the false,
between the believer and the unbeliever, between the children of God and the
children of the world. I hold strongly that this difference is not merely
one of faith, but of life; not only one of profession, but of practice. I
hold strongly that the ways of the believer should be as distinct from those
of the unbeliever as bitter from sweet, light from darkness, heat from cold.
But I do want young Christians to understand what they
must expect to find in themselves. I want to prevent their being stumbled
and puzzled by the discovery of their own weakness and infirmity. I want
them to see that they may have true faith and grace, in spite of all the
devil’s whispers to the contrary, though they feel within many doubts and
fears. I want them to observe that Peter and James and John and their
brethren were true disciples, and yet not so spiritual but that they could
be afraid. I do not tell them to make the unbelief of the disciples an
excuse for themselves. But I do tell those who it shows plainly that, so
long as they are in the body, they must not expect faith to be above the
reach of fear.
Above all, I want all Christians to understand what they
must expect in other believers. You must not hastily conclude that a man has
no grace merely because you see in him some corruption. There are spots on
the face of the sun, and yet the sun shines brightly and enlightens the
whole world. There is quartz and dross mixed up with many a lump of gold
that comes from Australia, and yet who thinks the gold on that account worth
nothing at all? There are flaws in some of the finest diamonds in the world,
and yet they do not prevent their being rated at a priceless value. Away
with this morbid squeamishness, which makes many ready to excommunicate a
man if he only has a few faults! Let us be quick to see grace, and more slow
to see imperfections! Let us know that, if we cannot allow there is grace
where there is corruption, we shall find no grace in the world. We are yet
in the body. The devil is not dead. We are not yet like the angels. Heaven
has not yet begun. The leprosy is not out of the walls of the house, however
much we may scrape them, and never will be until the house is taken down.
Our bodies are indeed the temple of the Holy Spirit, but not a perfect
temple, until they are raised or changed. Grace is indeed a treasure, but a
treasure in earthen vessels. It is possible for a man to forsake all for
Christ’s sake, and yet to be overtaken occasionally with doubts and fears.
I beseech every reader of this message to remember this.
It is a lesson worth attention. The apostles believed in Christ, loved
Christ and gave up all to follow Christ. And yet you see in this storm the
apostles were afraid. Learn to be charitable in your judgment of them. Learn
to be moderate in your expectations from your own heart. Contend to the
death for the truth, that no man is a true Christian who is not converted
and is not a holy man. But allow that a man may be converted, have a new
heart and be a holy man, and yet be liable to infirmity, doubts and fears.
4. The Lord Jesus
Christ is powerful
You have a striking example of His power in the history
upon which I am now dwelling. The waves were breaking into the ship where
Jesus was. The terrified disciples awoke Him and cried for help. "He arose
and rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea, ‘Peace, be still!’ And the wind
ceased, and there was a great calm." This was a wonderful miracle. No one
could do this but One who was almighty. The same One who spoke and brought
forth the created universe, here reveals Himself by speaking and showing
that he has ultimate control over it. This is power! He who has the power to
bring into being matter and the seas and the wind, also has the unbounded
energy to harness the wind and calm the seas with what seems a mere word,
proceeding with authority from His lips.
It is good for all men to have clear views of the Lord
Jesus Christ’s power. Let the sinner know that the merciful Savior, to whom
he is urged to flee, and in whom he is invited to trust, is nothing less
than the Almighty, and has power over all flesh to give eternal life (Rev.
1:8; John 17:2). Let the anxious inquirer understand that if he will only
venture on Jesus, and take up the cross, he ventures on One who has all
power in heaven and earth (Matt. 28:18). Let the believer remember as he
journeys through the wilderness, that his Mediator and Advocate and
Physician and Shepherd and Redeemer is Lord of lords and King of kings, and
that through Him all things may be done (Rev. 17:14; Phil. 4:13). Let all
study the subject, for it deserves to be studied.
a. Study it in His works of creation. "All things were
made by Him, and without Him was not any thing made that was made" John
1:3). The heavens and all their glorious host of inhabitants, the earth and
all that it contains, the sea and all that is in it—all creation, from the
sun on high to the least worm below, was the work of Christ. He spoke and
they came into being. He commanded and they began to exist. That very Jesus,
who was born of a poor woman at Bethlehem, and lived in a carpenter’s house
at Nazareth, had been the Former of all things. Was not this power?
b. Study it in His works of providence, and the orderly
continuance of all things in the world. "By Him all things consist" (Col.
1:17). Sun, moon and stars roll round in a perfect system. Spring, summer,
autumn and winter follow one another in regular order. They continue to this
day and fail not, according to the ordinance of Him who died on Calvary (Ps.
119:91). The kingdoms of this world rise and increase, and decline and pass
away. The rulers of the earth plan and scheme and make laws and change laws
and war and pull down one and raise up another. But they little think that
they rule only by the will of Jesus, and that nothing happens without the
permission of the Lamb of God. They do not know that they and their subjects
are all as a drop of water in the hand of the crucified One, and that He
increases the nations and diminishes the nations, just according to His
mind. Is not this power?
c. Study the subject not least in the miracles worked by
our Lord Jesus Christ during the three years of His ministry upon earth.
Learn from the mighty works which He did, that the things which are
impossible with man are possible with Christ. Regard every one of His
miracles as an emblem and figure of spiritual things. See in it a lovely
picture of what He is able to do for your soul. He that could raise the dead
with a word can just as easily raise man from the death of sin. He that
could give sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf and speech to the dumb
can also make sinners to see the kingdom of God, hear the joyful sound of
the Gospel, and speak forth the praise of redeeming love. He that could heal
leprosy with a touch can heal any disease of heart. He that could cast out
devils can bid every besetting sin yield to His grace. Oh, begin to read
Christ’s miracles in this light! Wicked and bad and corrupt as you may feel,
take comfort in the thought that you are not beyond Christ’s power to heal.
Remember that in Christ there is not only a fullness of mercy, but a
fullness of power.
d. Study the subject in particular as placed before you
this day. I dare be sure your heart has sometimes been tossed to and fro
like the waves in a storm. You have found it agitated like the waters of the
troubled sea when it cannot rest. Come and hear this day that there is One
who can give you rest. Jesus can say to your heart, whatever may be its
ailment, "Peace, be still!"
You have doubts? You think yourself in a unique
circumstance? Can Christ conquer any man’s heart, even yours, and give any
one rest, even you? Can He? Even if your conscience within is lashed by the
recollection of countless transgressions, and torn by every gust of
temptation? Even if the remembrance of past hideous immorality is grievous
unto you, and the burden intolerable? Even if your heart seems full of evil,
and sin appears to drag you where it will like a slave? Even if the devil
rides to and fro over your soul like a conqueror, and tells you it is vain
to struggle against him, and that there is no hope for you? I tell you there
is One who can give even you pardon and peace. My Lord and Master Jesus
Christ can rebuke the devil’s raging, can calm even your soul’s misery, and
say even to you, "Peace, be still!" He can scatter that cloud of guilt which
now weighs you down. He can bid despair depart. He can drive fear away. He
can remove the spirit of bondage, and fill you with the spirit of adoption.
Satan may hold your soul like a strong man armed, but Jesus is stronger than
he, and when He commands, the prisoners must go free. Oh, if any troubled
reader wants a calm within, let him go this day to Jesus Christ, and all
shall yet be well!
But what if your heart be right with God, and yet you are
pressed down with a load of earthly trouble? What if the fear of poverty is
tossing you to and fro, and seems likely to overwhelm you? What if pain of
body be racking you to distraction day after day? What if you are suddenly
laid aside from active usefulness and compelled by infirmity to sit still
and do nothing? What if death has come into your home, and taken away your
Rachel or Joseph or Benjamin and left you alone, crushed to the ground with
sorrow? What if all this has happened? Still there is comfort in Christ. He
can speak peace to wounded hearts as easily as calm troubled seas. He can
rebuke rebellious wills as powerfully as raging winds. He can make storms of
sorrow abate, and silence tumultuous passions, as surely as He stopped the
Galilean storm. He can say to the heaviest anxiety, "Peace, be still!" The
floods of care and tribulation may be mighty, but Jesus sits upon the
waterfloods, and is mightier than the waves of the sea (Ps. 93:4). The winds
of trouble may howl fiercely round you, but Jesus holds them in His hand,
and can stay them when He lists. Oh, if any reader of this message is
broken–hearted and care–worn and sorrowful, let him go to Jesus Christ, and
cry to Him and he shall be refreshed. "Come unto Me," He says, "all you that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest" (Matt. 11:28).
I invite all who profess to call themselves Christians to
take large views of Christ’s power. Doubt anything else if you will, but
never doubt Christ’s power. Whether you do not secretly love sin, may be
doubtful. Whether you are not privately clinging to the world, may be
doubtful. Whether the pride of your nature is not rising against the idea of
being saved as a poor sinner by grace, may be doubtful. But one thing is not
doubtful and that is, that Christ is "able to save to the uttermost," and
will save you, if you will let Him (Heb. 7:25).
5. Let us learn, in the last place,
how tenderly and patiently the Lord Jesus
deals with weak believers
We see this truth brought out in His words to His
disciples, when the wind ceased and there was a calm. He might well have
rebuked them sharply. He might well have reminded them of all the great
things He had done for them, and reproved them for their cowardice and
mistrust, but there is nothing of anger in the Lord’s words. He simply asks
two questions: "Why are you so fearful? How is it that you have no faith?"
The whole of our Lord’s conduct towards His disciples on
earth deserves close consideration. It throws a beautiful light on the
compassion and patience that there is in Him. No master surely ever had
scholars so slow to learn their lessons as Jesus had in the apostles. No
scholars surely ever had so patient and forbearing a teacher as the apostles
had in Christ. Gather up all the evidence on this subject that lies
scattered through the Gospels, and see the truth of what I say.
At no time of our Lord’s ministry did the disciples seem
to comprehend fully the object of His coming into the world. The
humiliation, the atonement, the crucifixion, were hidden things to them. The
plainest words and clearest warnings from their Master of what was going to
befall Him seemed to have had no effect on their minds. They understood not.
They perceived not. It was hid from their eyes. Once Peter even tried to
dissuade our Lord from suffering "Be it far from You, Lord," he said, "this
shall not be unto You" (Matt. 16:22; Luke 18:34; 9:45).
Frequently you will see things in their spirit and
demeanor which are not at all to be commended. One day we are told they
disputed among themselves who should be greatest (Mark 9:34). Another day
they considered not His miracles, and their hearts were hardened (Mark
6:52). Once two of them wished to call down fire from heaven upon a village,
because it did not receive them (Luke 9:54). In the garden of Gethsemane the
three best of them slept when they should have watched and prayed. In the
hour of His betrayal they all forsook Him and fled and, worst of all, Peter,
the most forward of the twelve, denied his Master three times with an oath.
Even after the resurrection, you see the same unbelief
and hardness of heart cling to them; though they saw their Lord with their
eyes, and touched Him with their hands, even then some doubted. So weak were
they in faith! So slow of heart were they to "believe all that the prophets
had spoken" (Luke 24:25). So backward were they in understanding the meaning
of our Lord’s words and actions and life and death.
But what do you see in our Lord’s behavior towards these
disciples all through His ministry? You see nothing but unchanging pity,
compassion, kindness, gentleness, patience, long suffering and love. He does
not cast them off for their stupidity. He does not reject them for their
unbelief. He does not dismiss them forever for cowardice. He teaches them as
they are able to bear. He leads them on step by step, as a nurse does an
infant when it first begins to walk. He sends them kind messages as soon as
He is risen from the dead. "Go," He said to the women, "Go tell my brethren
that they go into Galilee, and there shall they see Me" (Matt. 28:10). He
gathers them round Himself once more. He restores Peter to his place, and
bids him "feed His sheep" John 21:17). He condescends to sojourn with them
forty days before He finally ascends. He commissions them to go forth as His
messengers, and preach the Gospel to the Gentiles. He blesses them in
parting, and encourages them with that gracious promise "I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world" (Matt. 28:20). Truly this was a love
that passes knowledge. This is not the manner of man.
Let all the world know that the Lord Christ is very
pitiful, and of tender mercy. He will not break the bruised reed, nor quench
the smoking flax. As a father pities his children, so He pities those who
fear Him. As one whom his mother comforts, so will He comfort His people
(James 5:11; Matt. 12:20; Ps. 103:13; Isa. 66:13). He cares for the lambs of
His flock as well as for the old sheep. He cares for the sick and feeble
ones of His fold as well as for the strong. It is written that He will carry
them in His bosom, rather than let one of them be lost (Isa. 40:11). He
cares for the least member of His body, as well as for the greatest. He
cares for the babes of His family as well as the grown–up men. He cares for
the tenderest little plants in His garden as well as for the cedar of
Lebanon. All are in His book of life, and all are under His charge. All are
given to Him in an everlasting covenant, and He has undertaken, in spite of
all weaknesses, to bring every one safe home. Only let a sinner lay hold on
Christ by faith, and then, however feeble, Christ’s word is pledged to him,
"I will never leave you nor forsake you." He may correct him occasionally in
love. He may gently reprove him at times. But He will never, never give him
up. The devil shall never pluck him from Christ’s hand.
Let all the world know that the Lord Jesus will not cast
away His believing people because of shortcomings and infirmities. The
husband does not put away his wife because he finds failings in her. The
mother does not forsake her infant because it is weak, feeble and ignorant.
And the Lord Christ does not cast off poor sinners who have committed their
souls into His hands because He sees in them blemishes and imperfections.
Oh, no, it is His glory to pass over the faults of His people, and heal
their backslidings, to make much of their weak graces, and to pardon their
many faults. The eleventh of Hebrews is a wonderful chapter. It is marvelous
to observe how the Holy Spirit speaks of the worthy men whose names are
recorded in that chapter. The faith of the Lord’s people is there brought
forward, and held in remembrance. But the faults of many of them, which
might easily have been brought up also, are left alone, and not mentioned at
all.
Who is there now among the readers of this message that
feels desires for salvation, but is afraid to become decided, lest later on
he should fall away? Consider, I beseech you, the tenderness and patience of
the Lord Jesus, and be afraid no more. Fear not to take up the cross, and
come out boldly from the world. That same Lord and Savior who bore with the
disciples is ready and willing to bear with you. If you stumble, He will
raise you. If you err, He will gently bring you back. If you faint, He will
revive you. He will not lead you out of Egypt, and then allow you to perish
in the wilderness. He will conduct you safe into the promised land. Only
commit yourself to His guidance and then, my soul for yours, He shall carry
you safe home. Only hear Christ’s voice, and follow Him, and you shall never
perish.
Who is there among the readers of this message that has
been converted, and desires to do his Lord’s will? Take as an example, this
day, your Master’s gentleness and long–suffering, and learn to be
tenderhearted and kind to others. Deal gently with young beginners. Do not
expect them to know everything and understand everything all at once. Take
them by the hand. Lead them on and encourage them. Believe all things, and
hope all things, rather than make that heart sad which God would not have
made sad. Deal gently with backsliders. Do not turn your back on them as if
their case was hopeless. Use very lawful means to restore them to their
former place. Consider yourself, and your often infirmities, and do as you
would be done by. Alas, there is a painful absence of the Master’s mind
among many of His disciples. There are few Churches, I fear, in the present
day, which would have received Peter into communion again for many a long
year, after denying his Lord. There are few believers ready to do the work
of Barnabas—willing to take young converts by the hand, and encourage them
at their first beginnings. Verily we want an outpouring of the Spirit upon
believers almost as much as upon the world.
Bear with me a few moments, while I say a few words to
impress the things you have been reading more deeply on your heart.
1. This message will very likely be read by some who know
nothing of Christ’s service by experience, or of Christ Himself.
There are only too many who take no interest whatever in
the things about which I have been writing. Their treasure is all below.
They are wholly taken up with the things of the world. They care nothing
about the believer’s conflict and struggles and infirmities and doubts and
fears.
They care little whether Christ is Man or God. They care
little whether He did miracles or not. It is all a matter of words and names
and forms about which they do not trouble themselves. They are without God
in the world.
If perhaps you are such a man as this, I can only warn
you solemnly, that your present course cannot last. You will not live
forever. There must be an end. Gray hairs, age, sickness, infirmities,
death—all, all are before you, and must be met one day. What will you do
when that day comes?
Remember my words this day. You will find no comfort when
sick and dying, unless Jesus Christ is your Friend. You will discover, to
your sorrow and confusion, that however much men may talk and boast, they
cannot do without Christ when they come to their deathbed. You may send for
ministers, and get them to read prayers, and give you the sacrament. You may
go through every form and ceremony of Christianity. But if you persist in
living a careless and worldly life, and despising Christ in the morning of
your days, you must not be surprised if Christ leaves you to yourself in
your latter end. Alas, these are solemn words, and are often sadly
fulfilled: "I will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear comes"
(Prov. 1:26).
Come then, this day, and be advised by one who loves your
soul. Cease to do evil. Learn to do well. Forsake the foolish, and go in the
path of understanding. Cast away that pride which hangs about your heart,
and seek the Lord Jesus while He may be found. Cast away that spiritual
sloth which is palsying your soul, and resolve to take trouble about your
Bible, your prayers and your Sundays. Break off from a world which can never
really satisfy you, and seek that treasure which alone is truly
incorruptible. Oh, that the Lord’s own words might find a place in your
conscience! "How long, you simple ones, will you love simplicity, and the
scorners delight in their scorning, and fools hate knowledge? Turn you at my
reproof behold I will pour out my Spirit unto you, I will make known my
words unto you" (Prov. 1:22, 23). I believe the crowning sin of Judas
Iscariot was that he would not seek pardon, and turn again to his Lord.
Beware lest that be your sin also.
2. This message will probably fall into the hands of some
who love the Lord Jesus, and believe in Him, and yet desire to love Him
better. If you are such a man, suffer the word of exhortation, and apply it
to your heart. Keep before your mind, as an ever–present truth, that the
Lord Jesus is an actual living Person, and deal with Him as such.
I am afraid that many who profess Christ in our day have
lost sight of our Lord’s person. They talk more about salvation than about
their only Savior, and more about redemption than the one true Redeemer, and
more about Christ’s work than Christ Himself. This is a great fault, one
that accounts for the dry and shriveled spirit that infuses the religious
lives of many who profess faith.
As ever you would grow in grace, and have joy and peace
in believing, beware of falling into this error. Cease to regard the Gospel
as a mere collection of dry doctrines. Look at it rather as the revelation
of a mighty living Being in whose sight you are daily to live. Cease to
regard it as a mere set of abstract propositions and abstruse principles and
rules. Look at it as the introduction to a glorious personal Friend. This is
the kind of Gospel that the apostles preached. They did not go about the
world telling men of love and mercy and pardon in the abstract. The leading
subject of all their sermons was the loving heart of an actual living
Christ. This is the kind of Gospel which is most calculated to promote
sanctification and fitness for glory. Nothing, surely, is so likely to
prepare us for that heaven where Christ’s personal presence will be all, and
that glory where we shall meet Christ face to face, as to realize communion
with Christ, as an actual living Person here on earth. There is all the
difference in the world between an idea and a person.
Try to keep before your mind, as an ever–present truth,
that the Lord Jesus is utterly unchanged. That Savior, in whom you trust, is
the same yesterday, today and forever. He knows no variableness, nor shadow
of turning. Though high in heaven at God’s right hand, He is just the same
in heart that He was eighteen hundred years ago on earth. Remember this, and
you will do well.
Follow Him all through His journeys to and fro in
Palestine. Mark how He received all that came to Him and cast out none. Mark
how He had an ear to listen to every tale of sorrow, a hand to help every
case of distress, a heart to feel for all who needed sympathy. And then say
to yourself, "This same Jesus is He who is my Lord and Savior. Place and
time have made no difference in Him. What He was, He is, and will be for
evermore."
Surely this thought will give life and reality to your
daily religion. Surely this thought will give substance and shape to your
expectation of good things to come. Surely it is matter for joyful
reflection, that He who was thirty–three years upon earth, and whose life we
read in the Gospels, is the very Savior in whose presence we shall spend
eternity.
The last word of this message shall be the same as the
first. I want men to read the four Gospels more than they do. I want men to
become better acquainted with Christ. I want unconverted men to know Jesus,
that they may have eternal life through Him. I want believers to know Jesus
better, that they may become more happy, more holy and more meet for the
inheritance of the saints in light. He will be the holiest man who learns to
say with Paul, "To me to live is Christ" (Phil. 1:21).
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