By J. L. Dagg
Conclusion
"What think ye of Christ?" We may now, with great propriety, consider this
question solemnly addressed to us. We have contemplated the person, states,
and offices of Christ. What impression does the contemplation leave in our
minds? What emotions has it produced? Have the words of the prophets been
fulfilled in our case: "He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see
him, there is no beauty that we should desire him"? Or, can we say, "He is the
chief among ten thousands, and altogether lovely"? According as Christ appears
in our view, the evidence of our spiritual state is favorable or unfavorable;
and by this test, we may try our hope of acceptance through him, and of
reigning with him for ever.
In the ordinary experience of mankind, the affections are attracted most
strongly by objects near at hand. To the imagination, distance may lend
enchantment; but the affections of the heart play around the fireside, and fix
their firmest hold on those with whom we converse most familiarly. In
accordance with this tendency of our nature, the son of God attracted the
hearts of men, by dwelling among them, and exhibiting himself in familiar
intercourse with them, and in the endearing relations well known in human
society. We see him, as the affectionate brother and friend, weeping in the
sorrows of others, and alleviating their sufferings by words and acts of
kindness. The tenderness with which, when hanging on the cross, he committed
his mother to the care of his beloved disciple, is an example of filial love,
which cannot be contemplated with an unmoved heart. In the simple narratives
of his life, which have been given for our instruction, we trace his course in
his daily walk as a man among men, going about doing good, and the traits of
character exhibited in this familiar intercourse, call forth our love. The
heavens have now received him out of our sight, but we know that, in
fulfillment of his promise, he is always with us; and we are taught to regard
him, not only as near at hand, but also as sympathizing with our infirmities,
having been tempted in all points as we are. In the humanity of Jesus, we see
the loveliness of the divine perfections familiarly and intelligibly
exhibited.
It sometimes happens, in the experience of mankind, that persons of
extraordinary merit remain for a time in obscurity, and that those who have
been most intimate with them have been taken by surprise, when the unsuspected
greatness of their character has been disclose. Writers of fiction know how to
interest the feelings, by presenting great personages under disguise, and
unveiling them at a fit moment, to produce impression. But incidents,
infinitely transcending all fiction, are found in the true history of Jesus
Christ, in which the concealed majesty of his divinity broke forth, and caused
surpassing astonishment. The humble sleeper in the boat on the Lake of
Tiberias, comes forth from his slumbers, and stills the raging water; and the
beholders of the miracle exclaim: "What manner of man is this?" The weary
traveller arrives at Bethany, and claims to be the resurrection and the
life, and demonstrates the truth of his claim, by calling the dead Lazarus from
the tomb. As a condemned malefactor, he hangs on the cross, and expires with
such exhibitions of divinity, that the astonished Roman centurion cried:
"Truly this man was the Son of God." We have contemplated the divinity of
Jesus Christ, not merely in these transient outbursts which occurred while he
was on earth, but in the full demonstration which has been given since he
ascended to heaven, and the impression on our hearts ought to be strong and
abiding. The disciples who attended on his personal ministry loved and honored
him; but when they saw him ascend to heaven, being more deeply impressed with
his divinity, they worshipped him. Let us devoutly join in rendering him
divine honor.
We read with interest the history of men who have passed through great changes
in their condition, and who, in every condition, have displayed great and noble
qualities. But no changes of condition possible to men, can equal those which
the Son of God has undergone. Once rich in his original glory, he became so
poor that he had not where to lay his head: and from his depth of poverty, he
has been exalted to supreme dominion, and made proprietor and ruler of all
worlds. Through these changes he has ever exhibited such moral perfections as
have been most pleasing to God. In whatever condition we view him, let us
delight in him, as did his Father.
The offices which Christ sustains toward us, are such as have been in highest
repute among men. Prophets, priests, and kings have always been accounted
worthy of honor. We should give the highest honor to Christ, who, as a
prophet, is superior to Moses; as a priest, superior to Aaron; and as a king,
the Lord of David. These offices, as exercised by Christ, deserve our honor,
not only because of their excellence, but also because of their adaptedness to
us. We are, by nature, ignorant, guilty, and depraved. As ignorant, we need
Christ, the prophet, to teach us; as guilty, we need Christ, the priest, to
make atonement for us; and as depraved, we need Christ, the king, to rule over
us, and bring all our rebellious passions into subjection. These offices of
Christ are also adapted to the graces which distinguish and adorn the Christian
character. The chief of these, as enumerated by Paul, are faith, hope, and
love; in the exercise of faith, we receive the truth, revealed by
Christ, the prophet; in the exercise of hope, we follow Christ, the
priest, who has entered into the holiest of all, to appear before God for us;
and we submit to Christ, the king, in the exercise of love, which is the
fulfilling of the law, the principle and sum of all holy obedience.
In the theology of the ancient Christians, Christ held a central and vital
place. If we take away from the epistles of Paul all that is said about
Christ, what mutilation shall we make? If, when we have opened anywhere to
read, as at 1 Cor. ch. i., we expunge Christ, what have we left? Paul, while
in ignorance and unbelief, thought that he did God service, by persecuting
Jesus of Nazareth. But when his eyes were opened, to see that the despised
Nazarene, whom his nation had crucified, was the Lord of Glory, when he learned
that in him are the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, unsearchable riches, and
the fulness of grace, the heart of the persecutor was changed, and he
became devoted to the service of him whom he had sought to destroy.
Henceforth, he counted all things but loss, for the excellency of the knowledge
of Christ Jesus. Has our knowledge of Christ produced a like effect on us? If
our hearts are in unison with that of the great Apostle, we are prepared to
say, from the inmost soul, "Though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any
other gospel," a gospel of which Christ is not the centre and the sum,
"let him be accursed."[1] "If any man love not
our Lord Jesus Christ, let him be an anathema maranatha."[2]
In our investigation of religious truth, we have found four sources of
knowledge: our own moral feelings, the moral feelings and judgments of others,
the course of nature, and the book of divine revelation. The first three of
these can give us no knowledge of Jesus Christ and his great salvation. For
this knowledge we are wholly indebted to the Bible. Yet, when we have learned
our lost and helpless state by nature, the scheme of salvation which the Bible
reveals is so perfectly adapted to our condition, that it brings with it its
own evidence of having originated in the wisdom of God.
When Paul preached the gospel of salvation, he know nothing but Jesus Christ,
and him crucified. He gloried in nothing, save the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ. We have tarried long in our meditations on the doctrine concerning
Jesus Christ; and, before we dismiss the subject, it may be profitable to
linger yet a little time at the cross, that we may again survey its glory, and
feel its soul-subduing power.
In the cross of Christ, all the divine perfections are gloriously and
harmoniously displayed. Infinite love, inviolable truth, and inflexible
justice are all seen, in their brightest and most beautifully mingled colors.
The heavens declare the glory of God; but the glory of the cross outshines the
wonders of the skies. God's moral perfections are here displayed, which are
the highest glory of his character.
The cross of Christ is our only hope of life everlasting. On him who hangs
there, our iniquities were laid, and from his wounds flows the blood that
cleanses from all sin. Our faith views the bleeding victim, and peacefully
relies on the great atoning sacrifice. It views mercy streaming from the
cross; and to the cross it comes to obtain every needed blessing.
In the cross, the believer finds the strongest motive to holiness. As we stand
before it, and view the exhibition of the Saviour's love, we resolve to live to
him who died for us. The world ceases to charm. We become crucified to the
world, and the world crucified to us. Sin appears infinitely hateful. We
regard it as the accursed thing which caused the death of our beloved Lord; and
we grow strong in the purpose to wage against it an exterminating war. By all
the Saviour's agonies, we vow to have no peace with it for ever. The cross is
the place for penitential tears. We look on him whom we have pierced, and
mourn. Our hearts bleed at the sight of the bleeding sufferer, murdered by our
sins; and we resolve that the murderers shall die. The cross is a holy place,
where we learn to be like Christ, to hate sin as he hated it, and to delight in
the law of God which was in his heart. In the presence of the cross, we feel
that omnipotent grace has hold of our heart; and we surrender to dying love.
The wisdom of man did not devise the wonderful plan of salvation. As well
might we suppose that it directed the great Creator, when he spread abroad the
heavens, and laid the foundations of the earth. But as in the heavens and
earth human reason may see the power and wisdom of God, so, to the Christian
heart, Christ crucified is the power of God, and the wisdom of God. The
doctrine of the cross needs no other demonstration of its divine origin, than
its power to sanctify the heart, and bring it into willing and joyful
subjection to Christ. |
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[1] Gal. i. 8. [2] 1 Cor. xvi. 22. |