HISTORICAL MANIFESTATION OF THE REDEEMER:
THE TWO ESTATES
Humbled and Exalted
THE HUMILIATION,
as to the Redeemer's
Person
Exinanition
the Humiliation as to
His Work
Subordination, Passion, and
Death
THE ESTATE OF EXALTATION
its Stages
the Descensus
the Resurrection
as to the Redeemer's Person and Work
as to His Incarnation and
the Evidences of Religion
the Ascension and Session
SCRIPTURAL DEVELOPMENT
HISTORICAL THEORIES OF THE TWO
ESTATES
Monothelitism Adoptianism
Nihilianism
Necessity of Incarnation Lutheran Communicatio
Idiomatum and Ubiquity
Krypsis and Kenosis
Depotentiation
Modern Theories and Speculations
THE THREE OFFICES
THE CHRIST OF PROPHECY
Anointing Symbol;
Messianic Predictions of Scripture
Moulded in Later Judaism Expectation of the
Christ
THE CHRIST OF FULFILMENT
The Personal Unction
One Mediator
The Official Unction
Baptism of John and of Holy
Spirit
Gradual Assumption of Offices
THE PROPHETIC OFFICE
Personal
Permanent
Universal
THE PRIESTLY OFFICE
The High Priest, and His
Function
The Sacrifice
Its Rites
Presentation, Sprinkling, Burning, Meal
Its Various Kinds
Burnt-offerings,
Peace-offerings,
Sin-offerings.
All united in Christ
Sacrificial Seasons
Passover, Day of Atonement, Combined
Intercession and Benediction
the Jewish and
Christian Temples
THE REGAL OFFICE
Prediction
Assumption
Function
The process of the Saviour's history passes through two stages
of Humiliation and
Exaltation, and His mediatorial work divides into three branches
as He is Prophet, Priest,
and King
THE TWO ESTATES
The history of the Redeemer is the history of redemption; and
the history of redemption
fills, so far as concerns man, both eternity and time, both
heaven and earth. The stages of
the Lord's progression, most comprehensively viewed, have, to
speak paradox, no
beginning and no end. His goings were from everlasting. From His
pretemporal, eternal
existence, He descended to become the second Head of mankind;
was for ages an
unrevealed Reality in human affairs; in the fullness of time
became incarnate; finished
His work upon earth; ascended into heaven; and will, when His
work is a second time
finished, assume a final manifestation which only the day will
declare. Thus His estates
are manifold. But as the revealed Redeemer, as the Christ under
the burden of His
Messianic office, His estates are two: that of Humiliation and
that of Exaltation
THE ESTATE OF HUMILIATION
The Estate of Humiliation may be viewed, first, with regard to
our Lord's Person, and,
secondly, with regard to His work: a distinction, however, which
must not be too
precisely maintained, inasmuch as the two are inseparable
HUMILIATION OF THE INCARNATE PERSON
The humiliation of the Person of Christ began with His
miraculous conception, and ended
with His session at the right hand of God. But it may be
unfolded as the humble
development of His human nature, and the obscuration of the
Divine and personal
Sonship
I. Our Lord took our manhood in its sinless perfection; but
under the law of its
development, and with the natural infirmities to which sin had
reduced it
1. The term Development, as applied to human nature in
contradistinction from the
Divine, and also as differenced from the angelic, is of wide
application. Humanity has a
purely physical development: the beginning of which was not in
the first man, who
passed only through its later stages. It has an intellectual
development, pertaining to the
soul as acting in bodily organization. It has a moral
development: which, though we
know it only as a restoration from sin to holiness, may be
predicated of sinless human
nature. It has an historical development: the union of all the
former processes in the
accomplishment of the end destined for mankind in the eternal
idea. To all these our Lord
submitted. He might have assumed our nature in its ultimate
perfection; but then the
design of redemption would have been either unpurposed or
unaccomplished. He took
into personal union with Himself the germ of all that is called
Man; and in His sacred
Person the human nature was unfolded to its final perfectness in
His ascension. He was
found in fashion as a man;
1 even
as we shall hereafter be found conformed to the fashion
of His glorified humanity
1 Phil. 2:8
2. Our Lord's manhood was subject to the infirmities of our
mortal condition. He was sent
in the likeness of sinful flesh.
1 Sin bruised His heel before He bruised its head.
He was a
Man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief,
2 in a
lower as well as in a higher sense: He
experienced, that is, the griefs and sorrows of our common human
condition which we
can understand as well as the griefs and sorrows of His
Messianic burden which pass our
knowledge. After recording His descent from the Mount, St.
Matthew begins his record
of His miraculous cures of human disease by quoting the prophecy
concerning the
Righteous Servant:
Himself; took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses.
3 This
passage
has no other design than to include our physical distress in the
benefit of the great
vicarious intervention. The Scripture preserves the silence of
Divine decorum as to the
literal participation of our Lord in the ills of the flesh. But
it reveals to us His humiliation
in assuming a nature of itself unshielded from infirmity
1 Rom. 8:3;
2 Isa.
53:3; 3
Mat. 8:17; Isa. 53:4
3. The communion of natures, or their incomprehensible union in
one Person, requires us
to regard both the development and the infirmity of the lower
nature as the humiliation of
the Son Incarnate. That an integral part of Himself should pass
from stage to stage
towards perfection, and in that passage should be marred as well
as perfected, was the
voluntary abasement of the Eternal Son: after
being, found in fashion as a man, He
HUMBLED HIMSELF;
1 and
that particular element of humility, which pre-ceded and was
the condition of every other, did not cease until the heavens
received Him to glory
1 Phil. 2:8
II. Nor must we shrink from applying the term humiliation to our
Lord's Person as
Divine: not to His Divinity, which is immutable Eternal Spirit;
but to His Person as
Divine-human, and therefore to the Divinity as hiding for a
season the manifestation of
its glory under the veil of the flesh
1. We must begin with a qualification. If, in the Person of the
Mediator, we require the
verity of the unchanged Manhood, much more must we insist upon
the verity of the
unchangeable Godhead. Sound theology is as tenacious of the
Divine as of the human
reality in the One Christ. Any theory of the Redeemer's
humiliation which assumes the
possibility of His relinquishment or even suppression of any
Divine attribute is selfcondemned
Much more must we reject any theory that would make the Eternal
Son
voluntarily reduce or retract His Divine Self into an abstract
potency or principle made
concrete in human nature. It is only due honor to the God Who
was manifest in the flesh1
that this proposition should be left undefended: God in Christ
is immutable, the same
yesterday and to-day and for ever.2
1 1 Tim. 3:16;
2 Heb.
8:8
2. But the Person of the Christ was humbled during His sojourn
on earth; and that
humiliation continued until He finally entered the heavens.
Hence while the Son
tabernacled with us He did not in the exercise of His ministry
and in the work of
redemption manifest His Divine attributes beyond the extent to
which His perfect human
nature might be the organ of their manifestation. The
glory as of the Only-begotten
1
witnessed by the Apostles was only what might be seen in the
Incarnate Person: He
manifested forth His glory,
2 but
not to the uttermost. This may be more clearly
formulated in three ways
1 John 1:14;
2 John
2:11
(1.) The Incarnate Son was
SUBORDINATE TO THE FATHER
in a specific humiliation which
did not continue, as touching His Person, after the ascension.
Undoubtedly there is a
sense in which His subordination still continues, as there is a
sense also in which it will
continue for ever in His fellowship with human nature. But,
until the hour when He could
say, all power
is given unto Me in heaven and in earth,
1 He
was, as the Servant of God
and of man, in a deeply humbled and very special state of
subjection. From the first
words concerning His mission, /
must be in My Father's will,
2
down to the last,
My
Father is greater than I,
3 this
truth rules all the Redeemer's relations to His God and our
God
1 Mat. 28:18;
2 Luke
2:49; 3
John 14:28
(2.) He was UNDER
THE GUIDANCE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT during His
earthly life rather than
under the independent agency of His Divine personality. Our
Lord's human nature was
sealed and consecrated and enriched with sevenfold perfection by
the Spirit given to Him
not by measure.1
This particular subordination ceased when He
who received became the
Giver of the Holy Ghost: indeed, it may be said to have ceased
when the Redeemer laid
down His life OF
HIMSELF, and
through the
ETERNAL SPIRIT,
2
His own essential Divinity,
offered Himself to God
for us. Until then, however, the Son as such did not act through
His human nature alone. His own Divine supremacy is in abeyance,
and, as the
Representative of man, He is, like us,
led of the Spirit.3
1 John 3:34;
2 Heb.
9:14; 3
Gal. 5:18
(3.) Hence the marked prominence which He gave always to His
HUMAN NATURE
as the
organ of His self-revelation. Until the ascension, He spoke of
Himself chiefly as the Son
of Man: a title which at once declares His unity with the human
race as its Representative
and His submission to humanity as the sphere, and as it were the
only sphere, of His
temporary and temporal self-manifestation
These are the elements and factors in the humiliation of the
Divine-human Person. Their
combination presents to us an un-fathomable mystery. Separately
and conjointly they
pervade the evangelical narrative, and equally the later
Scripture based upon it. From
deeper and bolder investigation we are repelled by the
limitation of our faculties
Moreover, all that can be further said must needs occupy
attention when the humiliation
of the Redeemer's work is considered, and the historical
controversies on the subject rise
before us
HUMILIATION OF THE REDEEMING WORK
Viewed in relation to His work the humbled estate of Christ
began with His baptism and
ended with His descent through death into Hades. It may be
regarded as His personal
submission to be the Representative of a sinful race; and as His
obedience to the Father's
redeeming will. These converge to His Passion and Death, in
which the Redeemer's
humiliation was perfected
THE REPRESENTATIVE OF SINNERS
That our Lord humbled Himself to be the
REPRESENTATIVE OF SINFUL MAN
is the first key
to the solution of His entire history on earth.
God sent forth His Son, made of a
woman,
made under the law;
1 made
under law
generally, the Mosaic only included; and
made
under law:
genómenon, the same aorist participle
that is used for the Incarnation, thus
showing that He was born under conditions of law. Now Christ was
man, the Seed of the
woman, before He was Jewish man, the Seed of David: as the Seed
of Abraham He was
both in one
1 Gal. 4:4
1. The history of the Messiah gives us His humiliation as
exhibited in His Israelitish
relations first; or rather His human humiliation first under its
Israelitish aspect. Of this
His CIRCUMCISION
was the sign and seal.
THAT HOLY THING1—our
Lord's human nature—
underwent the rite that signified at once initiation into the
Hebrew covenant and the
obligation to put away human sin. This rite was in the case of
our Lord the symbol of all
obligation to the old law until He Himself abrogated it, and His
unconscious submission
to the imputation of sin even as His baptism was His conscious
submission to it. Hence
He was presented in the Temple, though Greater than the Temple;
became in His twelfth
year a Son of the law; and honored down to the end every Divine
ordinance and
legitimate tradition in the old economy
1 Luke 1:35
2. But He was the Representative of sinful mankind. When He
appeared unto Israel He
appeared to the race of man. His Baptism and Temptation were of
universal import in this
respect. He came to His
BAPTISM
as the
Lamb of God which taketh away the sin
of THE
WORLD:1
though sinless, and incapable of sin, He was
in the river Jordan already
numbered with the transgressors.
2 Not
until He had thus fulfilled the requirement of
all
righteousness 3
did He receive the attestation from heaven
which declared that sin had
nothing in Him otherwise than as imputed. In the
TEMPTATION,
also, He represented the
sinning race; while He demonstrated that
in Him is no sin,
4 nor
the possibility of sin
He repelled temptation as the Son of God incarnate, Who, by the
necessity of His Divine
personality, could not be
tempted with evil;
5 but
He repelled it in terms of human
rejection, giving His example to tempted mortals by the use of
Scripture appropriate to
sinners. He was made under law in this sense too, that He
underwent the human
probationary test in which He was not found wanting. In the
SINLESS HOLINESS
of His life,
also, He was the Representative of sinful humanity: presenting
to God the perfect
obedience due from mankind, and to man the perfect example
which, through the virtue
of His expiatory death, man should be able to imitate. But here
we must modify the sense
in which He was under law. It is the characteristic of
evangelical righteousness that it is
not under the law;
6 that
its obedience is from within; and if this is true of the servants,
much more was it true of the Master. His holiness was not the
fulfillment of duty imposed
on Him; but the new and Divine expression in His life of the
commandment itself
In Him, as in us, it was the perfect love of God and perfect
charity to man: love in Him,
as in us, was
the fulfilling of the law. 7
Finally, in His
VICARIOUS PASSION,
in His
voluntary endurance of the penalty of human sin, He was the
Representative of sinners:
literally made
under the law. 8
How literally is proved by three passages, which
may be
combined into one: Christ was made
sin for us. Who knew no sin;
9
hath
redeemed us
from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us;
10
was
made under the law, to
redeem them that were under the law.11
1 John 1:29;
2 Isa.
53:12; 3
Mat. 3:15;
4 1
John 3:5; 5
James 1:13;
6 Rom.
6:14; 7
Rom
13:10; 8
Gal. 4:4;
9 2
Cor. 5:21; 10
Gal. 3:13;
11
Gal. 4:4,5
3. Being found
in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself:
1 the
voluntary humiliation
which made the Holy One a Representative of sinners extended
over His whole life. It is
impossible to point to any crisis when it began. The shadow of
His cross fell upon His
entire path, though it did not betray its influence on His
thoughts and feelings and words
until the hour approached; until about the period when from the
Tabor of His
transfiguration He lifted up His eyes and saw the Moriah of His
sacrifice, after which He
began to speak to His disciples of His coming betrayal and
death. Nor dare we curiously
inquire into the secrets of our Lord's internal consciousness as
bearing this relation to
mankind. Suffice that through this
His visage was so marred more than any
man; that
this made Him a
Man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.
2 To
be numbered with the
transgressors; and that,
not only by the transgressors themselves, but by His Father, Who
put Him to grief!
3
1 Phil. 2:8;
2 Isa.
52:14; 3
Isa. 53:3,12,10
OBEDIENCE
All this finds its fuller Scriptural expression in the
OBEDIENCE
which the Incarnate Son
rendered to the Mediatorial Will of the Father. The term is
generally limited to the active
and passive righteousness; but, before considering it in that
more restricted sense, we
may refer it to the general subordination of the Redeemer during
the whole course of His
humbled estate
1. He who is the Lord of all entered the world as the Servant of
God. I came down from
heaven, not to do Mine own mil, but the will of Him that sent
Me. 1
He was under a
discipline of submission peculiar to His person and office. The
commandment received of
My Father 2
was one not written in any code of laws
appointed for man, but belonged
only to Himself. In keeping that great Messianic commandment He
was alone: the law
was one and unique, the obedience one and unique. This supreme
submission is the
theory of the Redeemer's history on earth. It explains His
invariable deference to the
Father: My
Father is greater than I; 3
His references to God as distinct from
Himself:
there is none good but one, that is, God;
4 His
abnegation of the use of Divine names and
attributes: but
of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which are in
heaven, neither the Son, but the Father;
5 His
calling the Father His God: I
ascend unto
My Father, and your Father, and to My God, and your God;
6
and His habitual adherence
to the title Son
of Man. All this is profoundly
consistent with His Divine prerogatives
apart from the subordination. As the Son of God He is equal with
God, knoweth all
things, and claims equal honor with the Father. In His
mysterious subordination He is the
Servant of the Holy Trinity, and the current of His
self-revelation is faithful to that
fundamental principle of His mission
1 John 14:28;
2 John
10:18; 3
John 14:28;
4 Mat.
19:17; 5
Mark 13:32;
6 John
20:17
2. But the Obedience of Christ may be more specifically viewed
as the one great act of
reparation to the Divine law which He accomplished on the behalf
of mankind: His
Active and Passive Righteousness, which are one. In His active
obedience He perfectly
fulfilled the obligation of righteousness as the love of God and
man; and thus it was
proved that His atonement was not needed for Himself. In His
passive obedience He
endured the penalty of human transgression. But the relation of
His one obedience to the
Atonement and our justification must be reserved for a later
stage. Meanwhile it is
sufficient to mark the three cardinal passages in which it is
referred to. For as by one
man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience
of One shall many be
made righteous:
1 this
includes the whole mediatorial work of Christ as the Second
Adam, superabounding against the sin of the race in the First
Adam. Though He were a
Son, yet learned He obedience by the things which He suffered:
2
this makes His great
submission the voluntary act of the Eternal Son, Who needed it
not for Himself. Being
found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became
obedient unto death, even
the death of the cross:
3 this
makes it the Divine-human act of the Redeemer consummated
in death.Uniting the three, we gather that the entire obedience
of our Savior was
one work, that it was the act of the Divine Son, but voluntarily
rendered in the nature of
mankind
1 Rom. 5:19;
2 Heb.
5:8; 3
Phil. 2:8
THE PASSION AND DEATH
THE DEATH of Christ was His
perfect humiliation. Its atoning character will be hereafter
dwelt upon. For the present we must consider it as an act of
supreme submission, selfrenunciation,
and abasement. It was His Passion generally, and His Crucifixion
in
particular
1. The Passion or Suffering of the Redeemer must be separated in
thought from the
precise manner of His decease. He
was obedient unto death.
1 His
soul was exceeding
sorrowful, even unto death.
2 He
was made a little lower than the
angels, for the suffering
of death. 3
This was the penalty of human sin: not the
destruction of soul and body
merely, but that severance of the spirit from God the uttermost
terrors of which no mortal
has ever known. It was this which our Lord underwent. His
physical dissolution was after
the manner of men: not of that did He say,
Behold and see if there be any sorrow
like
unto My sorrow!
4 His
passion, or suffering, as a voluntary sacrifice for sin, brought with
it the death of the body as one of its effects. That crisis
would have taken place in
Gethsemane—for there its awful signs began —but His hour was not
yet come. In His
Old-Testament lamentation the future Redeemer cries,
Reproach hath broken My heart.5
The blood and
water 6
which followed the piercing after death gave token
that this was
literally true. Though it was ordered that
a bone of Him shall not be broken,
7
this did not
extend to the fleshy protection of His sacred heart, rent by the
pressure of intolerable
woe. Thus far our own human experience gives us light. But no
further: the appeal, My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?
8 was
the exceeding bitter cry that sprang
from the Redeemer's infinite perception of what lies in eternal
abandonment by God
That was the death of redemption
1 Phil. 2:8;
2 Mat.
27:38; 3
Heb. 2:9;
4 Lam.
1:12; 5
Psa. 69:20;
6 John
19:34; 7
John 19:36;
8 Mark 15:34
2. The death of the Redeemer cannot, however, be separated from
His Crucifixion. He
became obedient unto death,
EVEN THE DEATH OF THE CROSS.1
he sacred details of the
scene of which the cross is the centre are given by all the
Evangelists, who here at last
converge to a perfect unity: the harmony of their narrative is
broken by a few seeming
contradictions, which appear on a superficial view, but vanish
before deeper
investigation. The only one of these that deserves mention is
the apparent difference
between the Synoptists and St. John as to the actual day of our
Lord's death. Collating
their several accounts with St. Paul's to the Corinthians—Christ
OUR PASSOVER
was
sacrificed for us,
2 it
were on 14th Nisan, and rose THE
FIRST FRUITS,
3 as
it were on the
16th Nisan—and marking that the Synoptists speak of the day of
crucifixion as the
Preparation 4
of the great Sabbath of 15th Nisan, and
not on the feast day
itself,
5 we
are
led to the conclusion that the Last Supper was, as St. John
records, before the feast of the
Passover, 6
and that the Crucifixion took place on
Friday, the 14th Nisan. The disciples
who, according to the Synoptists, on
the first day of the Feast of
unleavened bread, put
their question,
Where wilt Thou that ice prepare for Thee to eat the Passover?
7
prepared
the meal on the 14th Nisan, but before the 13th had ended, that
is, on the evening of
Thursday, the 13th Nisan, and on that same evening the Lord
anticipated the Passover
which He so much
desired to eat 8
with them. The exact date of the world's redemption
may, with near approach to absolute certainty, be assigned to
the Friday, 18th March,
14th Nisan, in the year of Rome 782,
A.D.
29
1 Phil. 2:8;
2 1
Cor. 5:7; 3
1 Cor. 15:23;
4 Luke
23:54; 5
Mat. 26:5;
6 John
13:1; 7
Mat
26:17; 8
Luke 22:15
3. Viewing the Passion in its relation to the Crucifixion, we
may venture to make a few
further remarks
(1.) As entering into the fulfillment of the
determinate counsel and foreknowledge
of
God, 1
the crucifixion may be said to have been an
accident of the Passion. The Father
made the soul of His Servant
an offering for sin,
2 and
His Son sin for us;
3 but
in what
way that oblation should be offered was predetermined only in
the foresight of human
malignity. The immolation on Calvary is never spoken of save as
the act of man. The
shame and ignominy of the cross was endured by Jesus as the
expression of man's
rejection: by
wicked hands 4
He was
crucified and slain.
The
princes of this world, in
their ignorance and in the infamy: of their pride,
crucified the Lord of glory.
5
But this
was foreseen and made the subject of type and prophecy; though
of such type and
prophecy as required the event for their full explanation. It
was the death that was
predestined; the cross was only foreknown: a distinction
sustained by the usage of
Scripture
1 Acts 2:23;
2 Isa.
53:10; 3
2 Cor. 5:21;
4 Acts
2:23; 5
1 Cor. 2:8
(2.) The crucifixion of our Lord was, therefore, the fulfillment
of prophecy: whether the
acted prophecy of type or the spoken prophecy of prediction.
Isaac, the only son of
Abraham, bore the
wood of the burnt offering 1
to Mount Moriah, even as the Onlybegotten
bore His cross. The
serpent lifted up in the wilderness
was the type of the
Son of
Man lifted up.
2 While the prophets fore-announced the
sacrifice of the Lamb, they
indicated that His death would be unlike that of the ancient
victim. He was
WOUNDED
for
our transgressions.
3
They shall look upon Me Whom they have
PIERCED;
4
and
they
PIERCED My hands
and My feet. 5
These words were spoken as from the heart of Jesus
in
the Old Testament. It was reserved for Himself to utter the
first express prediction of the
Cross, which He had hinted at to Nicodemus, but began to speak
of, for Himself and all
His followers, when He was about to ascend the Mount on which He
lifted up His eyes
and saw His Other Mount in the distance.
6 The
history of the crucifixion shows that the
minutest details were ordered as it had been written concerning
Him: signifying what
death, poíoo thanátoo,
He should die.7
1 Gen. 22:6;
2 John
3:14; 3
Isa. 53:5;
4 Zec.
12:10; 5
Psa. 22:16;
6 John
12:33; 7
John
18:32
(3.) The Providence took up into its plans the death of the
Cross as that which alone could
unite the whole world in its perpetration.
To this end was I born,
He said—and we may
add for this purpose He died—to
bear witness unto the truth. 1
He was a Martyr to the
eternal truth of God. And His martyrdom was the act of the world
which, like Satan its
prince, abode
not in the truth. 2
It was the deed of the Jews, for they delivered Him
to
Pilate; it was the deed of the Gentiles, for they alone
crucified their malefactors. The
combined wicked hands of mankind universal cast out the Eternal
Word. They
CONSCIOUSLY rejected the Divine Witness; they
UNCONSCIOUSLY
offered up the
Eternal Victim, and consummated the world's iniquity in the very
act which obtained the
world's salvation. He who knew what was in man prayed for them:
they know not what
they do! 3
1 John 18:37;
2 John
8:44; 3
Luke 23:34
4. Hence the cross was to our High Priest simply the awful form
which His altar
assumed. His own
Self bare our sins in His own body on the tree:1
epi to xulon,
as St.
Peter invariably terms the Cross, and he only. The most
affecting type of the Eternal Son
incarnate bore the wood on his shoulders to his Calvary, and
that wood became the altar
on which in a
figure 2
he was slain, and from which in
a figure
he was raised again. St
Peter has indicated this in the most impressive phrase of the
New Testament, and the
Epistle to the Hebrews, not mentioning the cross, alludes to it
when it says that Jesus
suffered without the gate,
3 and
that we have an altar.
On that altar our High Priest
offered His oblation; and
put away sin by the sacrifice of
Himself."4
1 1 Pet. 2:24;
2 Heb.
11:19; 3
Heb. 13:10,12;
4 Heb.
9:26
5. But, while the cross
on which human malignity slew the Holy One is really the altar on
which He offered Himself, and we forget the tree in the altar
into which it was
transformed, the Cross still remains as the sacred expression of
the curse which fell upon
human sin as represented by the Just One. God
made Him to be sin for us Who knew no
sin; 1
and, though it is not said that He made Him a curse
for us, it is said: Christ hath
redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for
us; for it is written,
Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree.
2 In
His Holy Person sin was represented, and
its penalty endured. It was
condemned in the flesh.
3 But,
He who endured the cross,
despising the shame,
4 thus
cast down the powers of evil,
triumphing over them in it. 5
His
Cross is now the glory of Christianity. It is the seat whence
the Prophet teaches His
highest lessons. It is the altar of His continually availing
sacrifice. And it is the throne of
His Power as King in the universe. But the Cross is no longer
His or His alone. It is
Divinely in a
figure transferred 6
to us. All our religion is the
fellowship of His sufferings,
being made conformable unto His death,
7 and
bearing His reproach.
8
Our sub-exemplar
said, I am
crucified with Christ
1 2 Cor. 5:21;
2 Gal.
3:13; 3
Rom. 8:3;
4 Heb.
12:2; 5
Col. 2:15;
6 1
Cor. 4:6; 7
Phil. 3:10;
8 Heb. 13:13
LIMITS OF THE HUMILIATION
The humiliation of the Redeemer, therefore, embraces the whole
process of His incarnate
life, from His Conception to His Burial. These two extreme
terms, however, must be
carefully defined. The first requires a distinction to be made
between the Incarnation and
the Conception; the second, between the Burial and the Descent
into Hades. (1.) The Son
of God might have exhibited His incarnate Person in majesty from
the beginning; in
which case the Transfiguration glory would have been the rule
and not the exception
But, condescending to become incarnate, He was conceived of the
Holy Ghost and born
after the manner of man. The distinction between the Incarnation
generally, and the
humble manner of His assumption of flesh, is subtle but not
unimportant. (2.) And the
end of His abasement was reached when He became
obedient unto death.
1
Obligation
went no further than the dissolution of soul and body. That
separation was attested by His
entombment. But the burial itself has two aspects. It was the
descent of the body to the
sepulcher; where the flesh of the Holy One of God saw no
corruption, being still part of
His incarnate Person. Humiliation was arrested at the moment
that Death received the
sacred Form, as the Baptist received the Heavenly Candidate for
baptism: COMEST THOU
TO ME?
2
Meanwhile the exaltation of the Redeemer had already begun. For, His spirit,
also part of His incarnate Person, quickened by the Spirit of
His Divinity, went down to
the nether world and received at the very moment of its
severance from the body the keys
of Hades and of death.
3
1 Phil. 2:8;
2 Mat.
3:14; 3
Rev. 1:18
HUMILIATION OF PERSON AND WORK ONE
Having distinguished between the humiliation of our Lord's
Person and that of His work,
it is expedient that we efface the distinction and regard His
Person and His work as one
Apart from the ministry of redemption there is, theologically,
no Person of Christ. Some
important results follow from this truth: first, the redeeming
submission makes the
personal humiliation a profound reality; secondly, the
inalienable Divine dignity of the
Redeemer gives its glory to the submission
1. There is a sense in which the Person of the Incarnate, as
such, was incapable of
abasement. His assumption of a pure human nature, by" which the
centre of His being,
that is His Personality, was not changed, was an act of infinite
condescension, but not of
humiliation strictly so called. The self-determining or
self-limiting act of the Godhead in
creating all things cannot be regarded as a derogation; nor was
it such in the specific
union of Deity with manhood. But, as we shall hereafter see that
the Descent into Hades
was the moment which united the deepest abasement and the
loftiest dignity of the Christ,
so the moment of the incarnation in the womb of the Virgin
united the most glorious
condescension of the Second Person with His most profound
abjection. His work began
as a suffering Redeemer, with the submission to conception and
birth. Hence the Person
and the work cannot be separated. And the humiliation which the
Redeemer underwent
must be regarded as the humiliation of the God-man. He assumed
it, even as He assumed
the nature that rendered it possible
2. As the glory of our Lord's Divinity was manifested forth in
His Person and work, so
that glory shines through all the narratives of His humbled
estate. Many lesser evidences
might be adduced; but we may be content with the three
testimonies given by the Father
from heaven at the three great crises of that humiliation, and
occasional assertions of our
Savior as to the voluntary and Divine character of His
submission
(1.) At the Baptism, which has been hitherto viewed only as it
was received by the
Representative of sinners, the Divine attestation was given:
This is My beloved Son.
1
Here was more than the perfect complacency of the Father in His
Son now incarnate, and
the acknowledgment of the sinless development of the past; it
was also a symbolical
exhibition of the Holy Trinity as to be revealed in redemption;
and the Triune glory,
though it vanished from human observation, rested for ever on
the Saviour's work
Midway in His career, or rather when preparing to enter the path
of final sorrow, our
Lord received
from God the Father honor and glory
2 on
the holy mount. That glory
rests, slanting along a double perspective vista, upon the two
intervals, backwards to the
Baptism and forward to the Passion. Whatever other lessons the
Transfiguration taught, it
certainly declared that the Holy Sufferer was the Divine Son;
and that the brightness of
the Father's glory in Him was only withdrawn or hidden, or
veiled for a season. Finally,
the hour of our Saviour's preparatory passion was magnified by a
third demonstration of
the Father's honor put upon His Son. He heard the Voice which
others did not
distinguish; the Voice which declared that all the past of the
Redeemer had glorified the
Divine Name, and that the still greater future would still more
abundantly glorify it: I
have both glorified it and will glorify it again.
3
1 Mat. 3:17;
2 2
Pet. 1:17; 3
John 12:2
(2.) On many occasions He asserted for Himself the Divine
dignity which coexisted with
His humiliation. A
Teacher come from God, 1
He re-uttered the law on the Mount as His
own, and the entire fabric of the Sermon asserts His supremacy.
While He vindicated His
own observance of Sabbatic ordinance as real and true, He
declared Himself Lord also of
the Sabbath; 2
and, honoring the Temple prescriptions,
proclaimed Himself Greater than
the Temple. 3
Complying with an exaction of men as subject
to the powers that be, He
intimated that as the Son He was free from tribute.
4 He
ever made it known that His life
was in His own hands, that He did not and could not renounce the
prerogative of life in
Himself, 5
that He laid down His life with Divine
freedom, that He had power to
lay it
down, and
power to take it again.
6 And
what He declared in life He proved in death: for,
though the Father's rebuke of sin broke His heart, He
spontaneously yielded up His soul,
or gave up the
ghost, 7
parédooken tó pneúma,
even as He voluntarily gave up His body
to those who came to capture Him.
8 It
was part of the commandment
received of My
Father that our Lord
should sometimes assert, what His consciousness could not be bereft
of, His absolute independence of the creature with which, for
the sake of redemption, He
had so closely bound Himself. Hence He declares His
self-abnegation to be the
example 9
which He gave His disciples, nor does He ever once speak of it
save for that purpose
Before He bequeathed His peace He left them this legacy, showing
by its most affecting
illustration in Himself the eternal connection between humility
as the source and peace as
the result. The Feet washing was the symbolical representation
of His entire way of
lowliness; and in it the
Master and Lord
10 set
the seal of Divine dignity on His earthly
condescension. When, drawing very nigh to the lowest limit of
His abasement, He said,
Believest thou not that I am in the Father,
and the Father in Me?
11
and, more than that,
He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father,
He Himself declared that the whole of His
past career had been a manifestation of God in the flesh:
I and My Father are one.
12 We
have not, however, isolated passages only to rely on. The whole
history of our Lord's
humbled estate in the Gospels, and the exposition of it in the
Epistles, alike proclaim that
in the mystery of His condescension to the lowest depth His
glory was revealed. As the
Incarnate Son He said of Himself:
Ought not Christ to have suffered these
things, and to
enter into His glory?
13 But
the glorification of Divine love waited not for the ascension
The Divine majesty of the Son was most richly and blessedly
manifested IN
the
redeeming sorrows and not alone
AFTER
them. To the Christian sentiment the obscuration
of the Cross is the very
darkness
which God makes His
secret place.
14
1 John 3:2;
2 Luke
6:5; 3
Mat. 12:6;
4 Mat.
17:26; 5
John 5:26;
6 John
10:18; 7
John 19:30;
8 John 10:18;
9 John
11:15; 10
John 13:13;
11
John 14:10,9; 12
John 10:30;
13
Luke 24:26;
14 Psa. 18:11
THE ESTATE OF EXALTATION
The Redeemer's Estate of Exaltation may be viewed in its
historical stages as a process:
the Descent, the Resurrection, and the Ascension; and with
reference to its completeness
as affecting the Person and the Work of the Redeemer. These,
however, need not be
separated: the latter branch may be merged in the former, partly
because it has been
anticipated in the Humiliation, and, partly, because it enters
into the discussion of the
Three Offices
The process of the Redeemer's exaltation, like that of His
humiliation, is matter of
Scriptural testimony alone. We are taught that it began with the
Descent into the invisible
world; that it was continued in His Resurrection; and that it
was consummated in His
Ascension and Session at the right hand of God
THE DESCENT
Between the lowest point of our Lord's humiliation and the
beginning of His glorification
there was, there could be, no interval. In fact, the critical
instant of His death was at the
same time the critical instant of His commencing triumph. Here
we must consider what
the Descent into Hades imports, and how it belonged to the
exaltation of Christ: but in
few words, as the light of Scripture here soon fails us
1. The phrase Descent into Hell, Descensus ad Inferos, is not in
the New Testament. St.
Peter, bearing witness to the Lord's resurrection, quotes the
words of David: 1
Thou wilt
not leave My soul in Hades; neither wilt thou give Thine Holy
One to see corruption. 2
The Greek "Aidos
Hades, answering to the Hebrew Sheol,
signifies the Unseen State;
which again corresponds with the English Hell, according to its
simple original meaning
of Covered or Hidden Depth, and without reference to punishment
endured in it. Into this
State of the Dead our Lord entered: as to His body it was buried
and concealed in the
sepulcher or visible representative of the invisible Hades into
which He entered as to His
soul. It is observable, however, that St. Paul, making the same
use of the Psalm, does not
distinguish between the grave and Hades. He speaks only of the
body: they laid Him in a
sepulcher; 3
and thinks it enough to quote,
Thou wilt not give Thine Holy One to
see
corruption. Undoubtedly
the entombment of our Lord, and His passing into the condition
of the dead, are the one meaning of these passages; and they
signify that His death was a
reality, and that so far His burial belonged to His humbled
estate
1 Acts 2:30,31;
2 Psa.
16:10; 3
Acts 13:29,35
2. But that this descent into Hades was at the same time the
beginning of His exaltation is
evident from the following negative and positive considerations
(1.) Negatively, when our Lord cried
It is finished!
1 The
abasement of the Representative
of mankind ended. The expiation of sin demanded no more: it did
not require that the
Redeemer should be kept under the power of death. After the
tribute of His voluntary
expiation death had
no more dominion over Him.
2 He
triumphed over all the enemies of
salvation on the cross. Death was at once His last sacrifice,
His triumph, and His release;
it was not possible that He should be holden of it:
3 not
only because He was the Prince
of Life, but because the
law had no further claim. When He offered up His holy spirit,
wrath to the uttermost was spent upon human sin; bat He Himself
was never the object of
wrath, and the Father received the spirit commended to Him as a
sufficient sacrifice. The
Holy One could not endure the torments of the lost: the thought
that He could and did is
the opprobrium of one of the darkest chapters of historical
theology. Not in this sense did
He make His
grave with the wicked.4
1 John 19:30;
2 Rom.
6:9; 3
Acts 2:24; 3:15;
4 Isa.
53:9
(2.) Positively, He triumphed in death over death. First, in His
one Person He kept
inviolate His human body, which did not undergo the material
dissolution of its elements:
not because, as it is sometimes said, He was delivered from the
grave before corruption
had time to affect His sacred flesh; but because the work of
death was arrested in the very
instant of the severance of soul and body. As His spirit
dieth no more,
1 so
His body saw
no corruption.
2 The unviolated flesh of our Lord was, till
the moment He was quickened,
a silent declaration of perfect victory: His Divinity never left
His body, any more than it
forsook His spirit in its passage to the world of spirits.
Secondly, according to the
testimony of two Apostles, our Lord triumphantly descended into
the lower world, and
took possession of the kingdom of the dead.
To this end Christ both died, and,
having
died, lived,
that He might be Lord both of the dead and living:
3
these words indefinitely
distribute the mediatorial empire over man into its two great
provinces. He died, and in
death took possession of the Dead; He revived, and ruleth over
the Living. Who shall
descend into the deep?4
(that is, to bring up Christ
again from the dead): here the deep,
or the abyss, must refer to the great Underworld.
Now that He ascended, what is it but
that He also descended [first] into the lower parts of the
earth? 5
whence, in the strong
figure of Scripture,
He led captivity captive.
6
Triumphing over
all the enemies of our
salvation—sin, death, and Satan—in
it, the cross, He declared His triumph
in the
Descent.
Quickened by the Spirit of His Divinity,
by which also He went and
preached
unto the spirits in prison:
7 the
historical sequence—He went, by
the resurrection, Who is
gone into heaven—indicates,
and will allow no other interpretation, that in the Interval
the Redeemer asserted His authority and lordship in the vast
region where the
congregation of the dead
8 is
the great; aggregate of mankind, the great assembly to
which also we may apply the words,
In the midst of the congregation will I
praise Thee.9
1 Rom. 6:9;
2 Acts
13:37; 3
Rom. 14:9;
4 Rom.
10;7; 5
Eph. 4:8,9;
6 Col.
2:15; 7
1 Pet
3:18,19,22; 8
Pro. 21:16;
9 Psa.
22:22
THE RESURRECTION
The Resurrection of our Lord, viewed in its widest import, is
His exaltation. It is the
perfect opposite of His humbled estate. As a fact in His history
it is only a stage in the
process of glorification; but the general strain of the New
Testament teaches us to regard
it as absolutely the counterpart and antithesis of His
humiliation. If His death is the limit
and measure of the Obedience, His resurrection is the substance
and sum of His dignity
and reward. The preaching of the Apostles everywhere gives
prominence to these two
truths as the pillars of the Christian faith; and the evidence
of the supreme miracle of the
resurrection of Jesus is, both as internal and external,
sufficient to establish the dignity of
His Person and the authority of His work. This point of view
alone commands all the
elements of the doctrine of Christ's resurrection
IN ITS DOGMATIC RELATIONS
The Resurrection was the glorification of the Redeemer's Person
and the seal of His
atoning work
I. His rising from death Divinely vindicated the Redeemer's
Person. As such, it was the
demonstration of His Divinity, as effected by His own power;
and, as effected by the
Father, the declaration of His Incarnate dignity: both, in the
unity of the Holy Ghost,
merged into the Godhead generally
1. It is remarkable that in all our Lord's predictions of His
resurrection He makes Himself
the Agent. His first allusion to it was among His earliest
predictions: Destroy this
temple,
and in three days I will raise it up;
1 and
His last was among His latest: I
lay down My
life, that I might take it again. No man taketh it from Me, but
I lay it down of Myself. I
have power to lay it down, and 1 have power to take it again.
2
It may be objected that the
words follow:
this commandment have I received of My Father.
But the mediatorial law
of obedience included both death and resurrection; and, as
certainly as the commandment
implied a personal voluntary surrender of life, the offering of
Himself in death, so
certainly it implied the personal voluntary resumption of that
life. The mediatorial
authority is distinct from the Divine power inherent in the Son:
this latter being the
foundation of the former. He who was the Seed of David after the
flesh was declared to
be the Son of God with power,
3 the
Son of God no longer in weakness and obscuration,
according to the Spirit of holiness.
His Divine nature,
by the resurrection from the dead
Hence the most general statement is that
He rose again the third day:
4
the words
containing rather an active than a passive meaning
1 John 2:19;
2 John
10:17,18; 3
Rom. 1:4;
4 1
Cor. 15:4
2. Like every other event in the history of the Mediator, the
resurrection is ascribed to
God the Father
(1.) He was
raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father:
1 that
Father of glory
whose glory had its utmost manifestation in the power wherewith
it wrought in Christ
when He raised Him from the dead,
2 and,
as St. Peter adds, gave Him
glory. 3
Hence the
glory of God the Father is His power in its exercise; and its
result is the Son's
resurrection. He to Whom the Incarnate offered the sacrifice of
His humiliation bestowed
upon Him the reward of His resurrection. When the Redeemer
prayed, Glorify Thy Son,
that Thy Son also may glorify Thee,
4 He
had in view both His death and His rising again
from the dead. As the crucified and risen Son He was glorified
by the Father
1 Rom. 6:4;
2 Eph.
1:20; 3
1 Pet. 1:21;
4 John
17:1
(2.) It was not only, however, the resurrection to glory and
reward: it was also the
Father's testimony to the perfection of His Divine-human Person
as the Son. St. Paul
gives the final interpretation of the memorable words of the
Psalm: Thou art My Son, this
day have I begotten Thee.
1 The
manhood of the Incarnate Son was never perfected until
the resurrection, which was therefore the consummating period of
the Incarnation. The
glad tidings 2
announced at the first birth are perfectly
declared at the second birth of the
Incarnate Son:
this day 3
is the One Day of the Lord's incarnate history from
the
miraculous conception to the rising from the dead, which was the
moment of His
perfection both as an Incarnate Person and as the Christ
1 Acts 13:33;
2 Luke
2; 3
Acts 13:32
3. Generally, God absolutely, without distinction of Persons, is
said to have raised up the
Savior
(1.) This is in harmony with the tenor of Scripture, which
speaks everywhere of the
processes of the mediatorial history being under the arrangement
and ordering of God
The resurrection of the Mediator is ascribed to God always when
the Messianic
subordination is implied or made prominent:
Him God raised up the third day,
1
the same
who anointed
Jesus of Nazareth and
was with Him.
It may be said generally that the
processes of the Redeeming Work of the Three Persons are
ascribed to God as the term of
Deity representing each
1 Acts 10:38,40
(2.) It is referred to God also when Christ's resurrection is
connected with ours; the
demonstration of Divine power being made emphatic:
the exceeding greatness of His
power to us-ward who believe, according to the working of His
mighty power, which He
wrought in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead.
1 So
in that remarkable passage:
but if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead
dwell in you, He that raised up
Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by
His Spirit that dwelleth in
you. 2
This text, thus read, seems to imply that the Holy
Ghost was the Agent in the
quickening of Christ, and will be the Agent in ours. But another
reading is to be
preferred: diá
toú enoikoún, on account of the Spirit that dwelleth in us.
The Holy Ghost
is, strictly speaking, the Agent in spiritual quickening alone
1 Eph. 1:19;
2 Rom.
8:11
(3.) But it must be remembered that here, as everywhere in
relation to the Mediatorial
Trinity, all actions proceeding ad extra are referred
interchangeably to the several Persons
of the Trinity. The Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost are
one in the sending and
raising up and dominion of Him Who is, not the Christ of the
Father, but THE CHRIST OF
GOD 1
or THE
LORD'S
CHRIST.2
1 Col. 2:2;
2 Luke
2:26
II. The resurrection was the seal and glorification of His
redeeming work. This may be
viewed in regard to the three offices hereafter to be mentioned
individually, and to the
claims and character of the Messiah generally. Reserving the
latter for the next Section,
let us mark how the Author and Finisher of the Christian Faith
was in the several offices
in which He laid the foundations of that Faith justified or
approved by His resurrection
1. As the Prophet or the Apostle of revelation He appeals to all
His works for the
authentication of His teaching generally, and to His
resurrection in particular as the
crowning work by which He would vindicate His claim to be the
Supreme Oracle to
mankind. His first emphatic and distinct prediction to the
people at large was that
concerning the raising of the
temple of His body.
1 He
again and again foreannounced it,
calling attention to
the third day;
2 and
His resurrection on that day was the seal and
confirmation of His prophetic mission. Not only so, however: it
was also the entrance of
the Prophet on a wider sphere of teaching and influence for the
whole world, and the
preliminary seal of that new function. It confirmed at once the
words already spoken on
earth, and the words
that should be spoken from
heaven. 3
Thus, viewed in relation to the
past, it was the ratification of His claim as a prophetic
Teacher; viewed in relation to the
future, it was the credential of His eternal teaching after its
first principles had been given
below
1 John 2:21;
2 Mat.
17:23; 3
Heb. 12:25
2. As the High Priest of the atoning sacrifice our Lord was
justified in the resurrection. It
declared that His propitiatory offering was accepted as
salvation from death, the penalty
of sin; and that the Spirit of a new life was obtained for all:
both these in one, and as
summing up the benefits of the Atonement
(1.) As the Divine- HUMAN
Representative of mankind Christ
was delivered for our
offences; 1
as the Divine-human Representative He
was raised again for our justification
The strong evidence both of the vicarious character and of the
validity of our Lord's
sacrifice is given in His resurrection. His release from death
declared that He died not for
His own sin, and that His atonement was accepted for mankind:
Who is he that
condemneth ? 2
It is Christ that died, yea
rather, that was raised. The
resurrection
establishes the atoning character of the death
1 Rom. 4:25;
2 Rom.
8:34
(2.) His resurrection is the pledge of life—perfect and
consummate life in every
definition of it—to His people. On it depended the gift of the
Spirit of life, the fruit of the
Ascension. The Lord rose again as the First begotten from the
dead, the First fruits of
them that slept.
1
If we died with Him, we shall also live
with Him. 2
Because I live, ye
shall live also.3
1 1 Cor. 15:20;
2 2
Tim. 2:11; 3
John 14:19
3. As King our Lord was sealed, anointed, and crowned in the
resurrection. In virtue of
His Divinity, on the one hand, and, on the other, in
anticipation of His atoning work, He
was King even in His humiliation, and taught and acted as such.
Though He spoke of the
kingdom of heaven, and of the kingdom of God, He also spoke of
His own kingdom: My
kingdom is not of this world,
1 He
said to His judge; to His disciples:
and I appoint unto
you a kingdom, as My Father hath appointed unto Me; that ye may
eat and drink at My
table in My kingdom.
2 But
it was not until His resurrection that He was clothed with
mediatorial authority, according to the set time and order of
the economy of grace. From
the sepulcher He went to the mountain in Galilee, where He
clothed Himself with His
final authority, and said:
All power is given unto Me in heaven
and in earth.3
1 John 18:36;
2 Luke
22:29,30; 3
Mat. 28:18
EVIDENCES OF THE RESURRECTION
The Resurrection was the assurance and infallible proof of the
Messiahship of Jesus. It
was the Divine demonstration of the truth of the Christian
revelation, and itself was
demonstrated by sufficient evidences
I. Generally, His resurrection is referred to as the crowning
evidence that Jesus is the
Christ, and therefore of the Divine authority of His religion
1. The one great argument of the New Testament is that Jesus of
Nazareth, rejected and
crucified by the Jews, was their Messiah and the world's Christ,
the Son of God and the
Son of man. Before His death His Divine credentials of word and
work approved Him
To them He made His appeal. But He also appealed by anticipation
to His own future
resurrection. This was His first public pledge laid down in the
Temple; and it was
repeated when He gave the sign of the prophet Jonas:
so shall the Son of man be three
days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
1 He
had His own resurrection in view
when He convicted the Sadducees of
not knowing the Scriptures.
2
Hence He further
prepared for its evidential force by making the raising of the
dead the crowning miracle
of His many wonderful works, reserving the greatest for the
last
1 Mat. 12:40;
2 Mat.
22:29
2. But for all ages and all times the one demonstration of the
Christ and His religion is
His rising from the dead. This is the view taken of it by the
preachers of the Gospel in the
Acts and the teachers of the Christian Faith in the Epistles.
They point to it in every
discourse as their own great credential, and as confirmed by the
Holy Ghost
accompanying their words. They preached
Jesus and the Resurrection.
1 St.
Paul speaks
for the whole company when he says that all human hope depended
upon the verity of
this event. If
Christ hath not been raised, then is our preaching vain, your faith also is
vain.2
1 Acts 17:18;
2 1
Cor. 15:14
II. Hence the evidences of the Fact are sufficient. They are of
two classes: first, the
witness of those to whom our Lord appeared; and, secondly, the
witness of the Spirit after
His final departure: these, however, are to be combined for
ever. The external evidence is
not alone; nor is the spiritual evidence of the Christian Faith
or demonstration of the Holy
Ghost without a basis of facts which He thus demonstrates to be
true
1. No part of our Lord's history is more minutely recorded than
the history of the Forty
days, which must chiefly be regarded under this aspect, as a
continuous practical proof of
the verity of His resurrection to His own chosen witnesses
(1.) These witnesses were selected as such:
Him God raised up the third day, and
showed
Him openly; not to all the people, but unto witnesses chosen
before of God, even to us,
who did eat and drink with Him after He rose from the dead.
1
The Lord never appeared
to the Jews after their rejection of Him: the day of their
visitation was over. This also was
foretold: I go
My way, and ye shall seek Me. 2
Neither will they be persuaded,
though one
rose from the dead.
3 The
witnesses were, in fact, all the members of the Lord's
discipleship: expanding in number from the solitary Mary
Magdalene to the Five
Hundred. But they were
chosen
in the sense that special demonstration of the
reality and
of the nature of His risen body was given to the Apostolic
Company
1 Acts 10:40,41;
2 John
8:21; 3
Luke 16:31
(2.) Though the witnesses were chosen, Christ was, according to
St. Peter, openly shown
of God; and the four Evangelists record the reasons of His
prearranged appearance. Five
times He showed Himself alive on the day of His resurrection: to
Mary Magdalene, 1
to
another company of women,
2 to
Peter, 3
to two disciples on the way to Emmaus,
4 to
the
Eleven. 5
To these must be added another Jerusalem appearance
for the conviction of St
Thomas. Two manifestations took place after long silence in
Galilee, to the Seven and to
the Five Hundred. Two again in Jerusalem: one to James, the
Lord's brother, and another
at the Ascension. 6
These Ten are all the appearances that are
recorded: probably all that
took place.7
1 Mark 16:1;
2 John
20:1; 3
Mat. 28:1;
4 Luke
24:13,33,34; 5
John 20:19,24;
6 Mat.
28:16;
7 John 21:1
(3.) The Lord's occasional visits were accompanied by
many infallible proofs;
1 by
many
signs,
tekmeeríois, which could not deceive
those who witnessed them. First, He
distinguished the day of His resurrection, the third day, by a
more abundant exhibition of
those signs. The third day was connected with the ancient type
of the wave-offering, as
the three days and three nights with the prophet Jonah: both
meaning, according to
Hebrew computation, one whole day and two fragments.
On the morrow after the
Sabbath the priest shall wave it;
2 the
first fruits of harvest were waved before the Lord,
and the lamb sacrificed, thus typically uniting the paschal
atoning sacrifice of Christ and
its Easter acceptance. On the fourteenth Nisan our Lord died,
having eaten His Passover
on the preceding evening. The paschal Sabbath was the day of His
rest in the grave; on
the sixteenth He rose; and to give evidence of the honor put on
this third day, which was
to become the first, He appeared many times. Secondly, He took
more than one
opportunity of showing the marks,
tekmeería,
3 of
His hands and His feet, and of
exhibiting the verity of His body: even eating and drinking with
His disciples. Into the
mystery of His double relation—to the present world in a body
that might be nourished,
and to the spiritual world in a body which suddenly appeared
within closed doors—we
cannot penetrate. Suffice that the Lord added this special
miracle of an occasional
resumption of His physical relations in order to demonstrate the
reality of His resurrection
He could undergo the Transfiguration at will, and by it closed
every interview,
and all His appearances, until the ascension. Thirdly, the
tokens of the reality of His
resurrection were the perfect identity of His human affections.
He tarried to convince the
doubters by the Old Testament, and by exhibition of Himself; to
pardon the transgressors
who had forsaken Him, especially Peter, who had added denial to
his abandonment, and
had a private interview for his personal pardon before the
public interview for his official
pardon; and to teach the things concerning His kingdom. He thus
showed Himself to be
the same Jesus
1 Acts 1:3;
2 Lev.
23:11; 3
Luke 24:39
2. The evidence of our Lord's resurrection contained in the
New-Testament records is
unimpeachable. Its assailants have always employed one of three
methods of resisting it
(1.) They sometimes adopt the transcendent principle of
skepticism: the absolute rejection
of this supreme miracle, simply because it is miracle. To this
all assaults on this
fundamental fact of Christianity come at last. The cumulative
force of the evidences of
every kind is such that it cannot be resisted by those who
believe in revelation and the
possibility of miraculous intervention. Those who reject the
Lord's resurrection on this
ground therefore reject with it all Divine revelation; they
persistently refuse to consider
the evidences of it: not persuaded, incapable of being
persuaded, though One rose from
the dead.1
1 Luke 16:31
(2.) Certain theories are devised which may account for the
universal acceptance of the
fact on the part of the disciples. These may be reduced to two:
either the first preachers of
Christ's resurrection were impostors; or they were enthusiasts,
who, having once listened
to the visionary tale of a supposed appearance of Christ,
propagated the delusion, and
recorded it in legendary narratives. But a careful consideration
of the character of the
Apostles, of the simplicity of their faith in the resurrection
of their Lord, of the selfsacrificing
labors by which they sealed their testimony even unto death,
will teach every
candid mind that neither of these can be the solution. And the
narratives themselves in
their coherence and tranquil consistency irresistibly plead
their own cause
(3.) These narratives are sometimes subjected to a process of
examination which detects
in them inconsistencies. It is true that there are certain
differences in the minute details of
the day of the resurrection, even as there are differences in
the accounts of the Lord's
earlier history. But it must be remembered that the witnesses
give independent evidence,
and that each records something not mentioned by the others.
Every Evangelist has his
own design: St. Matthew, for instance, keeps the final Mountain
and Commission in
view; St. Luke, Emmaus and the Ascension; St. John, the more
public appearances of the
Risen Lord, concerning which he says that he records as the
third what was really the
eighth. St. Luke's Gospel seems to make the Lord's final
departure take place on the
evening of the resurrection; but he himself, in the Acts,
mentions the forty days. The third
Evangelist has two accounts of the Ascension, entirely different
in detail but the same in
fact; just as he, a careful historian, gives three narratives of
Christ's appearance to Saul, in
which the minute differences-—such as that the companions of the
Convert in one
account see without hearing, and in another hear without
seeing—only confirm the
accuracy of the narrative
3. The supreme Witness of the resurrection of Christ was the
Holy Ghost. To His
evidence our Lord referred before He departed. The Spirit
accompanied the testimony of
the Apostles; He has made the Christian Church the abiding
demonstration of the life of
its Head; and He gives His assurance in the hearts of all to
whose penitent faith He
reveals the ascended Savior
(1.) The Apostles preached the Lord's resurrection as witnesses
who were sustained by
the Spirit's higher testimony: literally, a witness through, and
in, and with their preaching
And we are His witnesses of these things; and so is also the
Holy Ghost, Whom God hath
given to them that obey Him.
1
While St. Peter preached the Risen Jesus to Cornelius
the
Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the Word.
2 This
was the reason that with great
power gave the Apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord
Jesus; 3
it was because
they declared it with the confidence of personal assurance,
God also bearing them
witness, both by signs and wonders, and by divers powers, and
gifts of the Holy Ghost,
according to His own will.4
1 Acts 5:32;
2 Acts
10:44; 3
Acts 4:33;
4 Heb.
2:4
(2.) The history of the Christian Church, with its institutions,
is one continuous and everenlarging
demonstration of the unseen life of its Ruler. The Lord's Day,
which has been
kept as the memorial of the resurrection from its very morning,
is itself testimony that
there was never a time when the clear faith in that vital Fact
was not held. Similarly, the
Eucharistic celebration has from the beginning avowed reliance
on a Death once suffered
and in a Life which has not been continued upon earth. From the
day of Pentecost the
Church has been opposed by principalities and powers, human and
superhuman; but
never has the resurrection of its Head and Defender been
successfully assailed
(3.) The most universal and best evidence is the influence of
the unseen Redeemer by His
Spirit in the hearts and lives of believers. The later New
Testament dwells on the working
in us of the
mighty power which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the
dead. 1
The spiritual life of those who accept the Savior
is to themselves a ground of
assurance that needs nothing to be added. They receive the
records because they are
bound up with the Scriptures of truth; they believe the Event
recorded because it took
place in harmony with ancient prediction, according to the
Lord's own word, and in
consistency with His own Divine power. They know that no
argument was brought
against the fact by those who were most interested in denying it
at the beginning; and that
no argument has been brought since that has any force. But their
infallible evidence is the
life of their own souls
1 Eph. 1:19,20
THE ASCENSION AND SESSION
The Ascension of our Lord is the historical term and end of His
Exaltation; and, as such,
may be viewed in its preliminaries, recorded by all the
Evangelists; as an actual event
recorded by St. Luke mainly; and in its sequel including the
entire Apostolical testimony
to His Session and Intercession
I. The narrative of the Forty Days describes, not only the
sequel of the resurrection, but
also the preparation for the ascension. The seven weeks of
interval corresponded to the
seven weeks numbered from the wave-offering, the type of
CHRIST THE FIRST-FRUITS.
1
But nothing in Old-Testament symbol or type points to the
fortieth day as that of the
Saviour's going up. That day was chosen by our Lord: but not
arbitrarily. In His love to
His disciples and in His wise provision for the future He gave
to them the larger part of
this time. It may be supposed that His main purpose was to wean
them from their
dependence on His personal and visible presence. Hence the
gradually diminishing
appearances. Hence that one preliminary note of the ascension:
Touch Me not, for I am
not yet ascended!
2 This
explains the blended remembrances of the past and anticipations
of the future: of which the last chapter of St. John is an
impressive example. Of any
preparation of His body for the day of His glorifying there is
no hint. It was simply the
set hour; but the hour set by Himself: no change passed upon Him
during the interval
The resurrection was the final removal from the conditions of
human life; and, so far as
concerned Himself, there was no reason to keep Him on earth. His
tarrying so long in a
midway condition was due to His tender concern for His
disciples. And the result was
that when He finally departed they were fully prepared for the
new economy of His
spiritual manifestation; they surrendered Him resignedly to the
heavens which must
receive Him;
3 and
they returned to Jerusalem with
great joy.4
1 1 Cor. 15:23;
2 John
20:17; 3
Acts 3:21;
4 Luke
24:52
II. The history of the Event is recorded only by St. Luke. His
account in the Gospel
describes it rather as the end of the Lord's life on earth, in
the Acts with reference rather
to His mediatorial work in heaven and final return to finish
redemption
1. The Ascension was the end of the Saviour's earthly course
(1.) Until that day Jesus
went in and out among us;
1 and
His life had been spent amidst
unglorified human conditions. The forty days were also
days of His flesh,
2 for
all His
manifestations were in many respects like those of former times:
the spiritual vanishings
were anticipations of the ascension, and are not alluded to save
as marking the
appearances themselves
1 Acts 1:21;
2 Heb.
5:7
(2.) Hence the clear historical narrative which runs on with a
continuous detail of what
Jesus began both to do and to teach until the day in which He
was received up. 1
The
Lord led them
out as far as to Bethany. 2
He went before them as He was wont to do,
but
now for the last time. He led them out designedly that they
might be witnesses. Reported
from them and was carried up into heaven;
or, as elsewhere,
far above all heavens,
3 far
above the gradational heavens to which St. Paul himself, and
other saints, had been rapt
It was not, as before, a disappearance into Hades—between which
and the upper world
the Forty Days alternated—but a local withdrawal into what is
called the Presence of
God, 4
concerning which we cannot and we need not form any
conception. During His
life He spoke of His ascent as belonging to His incarnation: the
Son of Man was in
heaven, and had
ascended up to heaven, 5
in virtue of the hypostatic union. But in this
final going up the
heaven must receive 6
Him: words which must retain their full
significance, though they are quite consistent with His
receiving the heavens
1 Acts 1:1,2;
2 Luke
24:50,51; 3
Eph. 4:10;
4 Heb.
9:24; 5
John 3:13;
6 Acts
3:21
(3.) The Apostles were witnesses of this event. The Resurrection
neither they nor any
mortal witnessed; but the Forty Days were a continuous evidence
to them that their Lord
had risen. The entire community of believers was not summoned to
Bethany: for, though
it was necessary that the resurrection should be attested by
all, the ascension had not the
same evidential character. In this respect it was only the
natural conclusion, as it were, of
the resurrection itself; and is never referred to in the
Epistles save in its theological,
experimental, and practical bearings. The Apostles had been with
their Master in His
temptations, and they were permitted to behold the honor and
glory which He received in
His ascension. Only three of them witnessed the
transfiguration-earnest, the same,
namely, who witnessed the agony of the garden; but all are
admitted to the second holy
mount: only, however, the Apostolic company, for there is
selection still. Their evidence
is sufficient to assure us of the reward conferred on the human
nature of our Lord, and of
the fact of His entrance into the invisible world
2. As the beginning of a new life the ascension was the passing
into a new sphere of
mediatorial action, the taking possession of
the Presence of God
for His people, in a
departure from earth which preceded a return from heaven or His
appearing the second
time.1
1 Heb. 9:24,28
(1.) With the Lord's ascension is always connected the priestly
office of intercession
wherein as the High Priest He pleads His
propitiation for the sins of the whole
world, 1
and as His people's Surety pleads especially for them.
We have an Advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous; Who is passed into the
heavens, 2
even as His type
entereth into the holy place every year.
3 And
the government of the Church is in His
hands, as seated on the mediatorial throne: to exercise the
dominion He went up, even as
He came down to obtain it through death. Hence it is said to be
a dignity with His right
hand 4
conferred on the Son by the Father, and to be the
reward of His humiliation unto
death. In this sense heaven is the centre of the universe, from
which the heavens, the
earth, and things under the earth are surveyed and governed by
the Incarnate Lord. But
the further consideration of this subject belongs to the
doctrine of the Offices of Christ
1 1 John 2:1,2;
2 Heb.
4:14; 3
Heb. 9:25;
4 Acts
5:31
(2.) The account of the Acts connects the departure of our Lord
with His return: hence the
prophetic Mount
called Olivet,1
the new angelic announcement which in every word
respects the future and not the past, and the emphasis laid upon
the first Promise of the
perfected Christ:
This same Jesus, Which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come
in like manner as ye have seen Him go into heaven.2
The Second Coming is predicted as
soon as the first is past; this being the link of continuity
between the old covenant and the
new: in both there is a great expectation of the Savior.
Meanwhile, the theological
bearing of the Ascension of our Lord is most affectingly taught
in connection with the
doctrine of His people's union with Him. In virtue of this,
believers are blessed with all
spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ;
3
and seek the things that are above,
where Christ is, seated on the right hand of God.4
And, according to the last words of the
New Testament, their one deep longing is to see Him again:
Even so, come, Lord Jesus!
5
1 Acts 1:12; Zec. 14:4;
2
Acts 1:11;
3 Eph.
1:3; 4
Col. 3:1;
5 Rev.
22:20
III. The sequel of the Ascension is the Session at the right
hand of God in heaven; with
its attestation on earth, the Pentecostal descent of the Holy
Spirit, the Promise of the New
Covenant
1. The Session was the subject of our Saviour's prophecy,
equally with the events that
preceded it. His first reference to it was indirect:
He saith unto them, How then doth
David in Spirit call Him Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my
Lord, Sit Thou on My right
hand, till I make Thine enemies Thy footstool?1
Afterwards, in His own day of judgment,
when He was adjured by the high priest and confessed Himself the
Son of God, He varied
the phrase:
Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power.
2
This
emphatic twofold allusion of Christ is echoed throughout the New
Testament, and rules
all that follows
1 Mat. 22:43,44;
2 Mat.
26: 64
(1.) The Apostle Peter speaks of Him as raised
by the right hand of God
1 to
sit on the
right hand of God.
2 And
he constantly refers to the Session, sometimes with and
sometimes without the term, to express the mediatorial authority
of Christ as an administration
of the power of God: to shed forth the influences of that Holy
Ghost Who
represents upon earth the Lord's administration in heaven. But
St. Paul is the elect
expositor of this authority, and he sums up the entire doctrine
in his Ephesian Epistle He
raised Him from the dead, and set Him at His own right hand in
the heavenly places, far
above all principality, and power and might, and dominion, and
every name that is
named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to
come; and hath put all things
under His feet, and gave Him to be the Head over all things to
the Church, which is His
body, the fullness of Him that fillet all in all.
3
1 Acts 2:33;
2 1
Pet. 3:22; 3
Eph. 1:20-22
(2.) Hence the Ascension is described as the beginning of a
supreme authority which is to
end when He hath
put all enemies under His feet.
1
Until then our Lord's Session is
passive also, as in the attitude of expectation:
But He, when He had offered one
sacrifice
for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of God; from
henceforth expecting till His
enemies be made His footstool.
2 But
Stephen, for his assurance in death, saw
the Son of
Man STANDING
on the right hand of God.3
1 1 Cor. 15:25;
2 Heb.
10:12,13; 3
Acts 7:56
(3.) But, lastly, this delegated and terminable authority is
based upon an eternal
prerogative of Session: He who
sat down on the right hand of the
Majesty on high was
THE SON,
Whom He hath appointed heir of all
things, by Whom also He made the worlds;
before His incarnation
being the effulgence of His glory, and
the express image of His
person, and upholding all things by the word of His power.
1
Nor could He have sat on
the right hand of God, in universal supremacy, had He not in His
eternal dignity been in
the Bosom of the Father.2
1 Heb. 1:2,3;
2 John
1:18
2. The Pentecostal gift of the Holy Ghost was at once the
immediate proof of the verity of
the ascension, and demonstration of the authority to which it
led. The prediction of the
Psalmist, Thou
hast received gifts for men; yea, for the rebellious also, that the Lord God
might dwell among them,
1 was
interpreted both by our Lord and by St. Paul of the
supreme Gift of the Spirit.
I will send Him unto you
2 was
the promise before the
Saviour's departure; it was confirmed after His resurrection;
and it was fulfilled on the
Day of Pentecost once for all and for ever
1 Psa. 68:18;
2 John
16:7
(1.) For this there were Ten days of preparation. Whether or not
the disciples connected
the promised Gift with the Fiftieth day, the end of the seven
weeks, we cannot tell:
probably they did. The indefinite
not many days hence
1
might suggest to the
presentiment of some among them what others were not prepared to
infer. Evidently their
Master's purpose was to make this interval a period of
discipline: without His personal
presence in the flesh, and without His spiritual manifestation
by the Holy Ghost, they
were reduced for a season to a midway condition of which there
is no parallel. But these
days were days of prayer; of personal and united preparation for
the most glorious
revelation heaven had ever sent down to earth. The circle of the
Apostolic company was
made complete by the choice of St. Matthias; and this by lot, as
in an intermediate
dispensation between the Lord's departure and the coming of the
Spirit. Thus the organic
body prepared for the Spirit by the Lord Himself was made whole
after the great breach
that had been made in it. And the individual believers were
prepared for the high Gift by
meditation upon their own powerlessness and need, and by fervent
prayer for its
bestowment. Hence the history of the Eve of Pentecost is
narrated in the Acts with careful
precision as the record of the final preparations for this
consummate fullness of time, the
descent of the Holy Ghost
1 Acts 1:5
(2.) The Gift itself was the demonstration of the Session of
Christ at the right hand of
God. Having
received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, He hath shed forth
this, which ye, now see and hear.
1 St.
Paul speaks of the ascension
gifts unto men with
special reference to the dispensation of
the ministry, unto the edifying of the
body of
Christ, 2
which began with the day of Pentecost. But
the great prophecy in the Psalm,
that
the Lord God might dwell among them,
3 had
its plenary fulfillment when the Holy Ghost
came down as the Shekinah, the symbol of God manifest in the
flesh, resting upon the
Church and abiding within it as the indwelling presence of the
Holy Trinity. Thus the
glory within the veil, and the candlestick outside, symbols of
the Son and the Spirit, were
blended when the veil was removed, into one and the same
FULNESS OF GOD.4
1 Acts 2:33;
2 Eph.
4:8,12; 3
Psa. 68:18;
4 Eph.
3:19
SCRIPTURAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO ESTATES
The Two Estates of the Redeemer are exhibited throughout the
Scriptures with the same
precision and uniformity as that which we have marked in the
doctrine of the Two
Natures in the Incarnate Lord. But we need not trace so
carefully the process of Biblical
teaching on this subject, as it has been to a great extent
anticipated in the development of
the doctrine of Christ's Person
I. In the Old Testament the history of the future Minister of
redemption is foreshadowed
as a career leading through deep humiliation to glory; the
Messiah being a mediatorial
Person, whose attributes are Divine and human, but Who always
occupies a subordinate
position in carrying out the Divine counsel. The first distant
intimation of this is the
phrase Angel of Jehovah, where Jehovah is the Agent of Jehovah.
In due time the term
Messiah, or The Anointed, prophetically designated the same
Angel as incarnate: the
future Revealer of the Divine will, Propitiation for human sin,
and Ruler of a saved and
ransomed people. But this Messiah is described as consecrated
for God by God, first to a
state of the deepest depression and then to a state of the
highest majesty In Isaiah's
prophecy, which gave our Lord His own term Minister, the coming
of the Incarnate is
predicted as that of a Servant. All the Psalms and the Prophets,
however, agree in
ascribing to the Redeemer a subordination to God which is made
mysteriously consistent
with Divine titles and honors. In Him the Alpha and Omega meet
II. Our Lord never defines the secret of His incarnate Person;
never speaks of His two
natures as united in one; nor does He once propose the mystery
of His examination and
its results to the acceptance of His disciples. He reveals it
distinctly but does not
distinctly explain it, thus tacitly rebuking beforehand the
future presumption of
speculative theology. We must consider only therefore the kind
of testimony which He
gives as to the two Estates respectively
1. In many ways He declares His subordination in His humbled
state; but always speaks
of it as a voluntary submission
(1.) He terms Himself the Son of Man rather than the Son of God,
though not refusing the
latter name. He speaks of Himself as come
not to be ministered unto, but to
minister; 1
of
His doctrine as
what My Father hath taught Me, and the
things which I have heard of
Him: 2
of His mediatorial work as a commission or
commandment received of My
Father, 3
for the strength to accomplish which He
prayed, while for its gradual disclosure,
or the hour of each crisis, He waited:
Of that day and that hour knoweth no
man, no, not
the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father.
4
He spoke of God as
apart from Himself: His God as well as ours. He said,
My Father is greater than I,
5
when
speaking of His going to Him through the way of humble
suffering. Not so much in individual
passages, as in the uniform tone of His self-disclosure, we mark
the Redeemer's
strict subordination to the Father as the God and Head of the
redeeming economy
1 Mat. 20:28;
2 John
8:26,28; 3
John 10:18;
4 Mark
13:32; 5
John 14:28
(2.) That the incarnate Jesus in His humbled estate voluntarily
made Himself subject,
while retaining the eternal dignity of His Divinity, is obvious
from these assertions of His
oneness with the Father to which reference has already been
made, from His demand of
honor equal to that paid to the Father, and especially from His
anticipation of a return of
the glory which He surrendered in His incarnation. There are
some passages in which the
voluntary subordination and the coequal dignity are combined in
a manner that ought not
to be misunderstood.
For as the Father hath life in Himself,
even so gave He to the Son
also to have life in Himself.
1
I came forth and am come from God;
neither came I of
Myself, but He sent Me.
2 The
profoundest word, however, is not in St. John, but in St
Matthew: All
things are delivered unto Me of My Father; and no one knoweth the Son,
but the Father; neither doth any know the Father save the Son.3
1 John 5:26;
2 John
8:42; 3
Mat. 11:27
(3.) Hence we are constrained to interpret our Lord's testimony
to His exinanition in a
sense that shall make it consistent with His consciousness of
equality with the Father
This is the great difficulty of the subject; but it is a
Scriptural difficulty, committed to
humble faith ;
and this doctrine of a relative and only
mediatorial inferiority is much more
consonant with the Christian idea of God than the theories of a
contracted or
depotentiated Divinity which are invented in its stead
2. The Saviour's testimonies to His state of dignity are in word
before His ascension, in
word and manifestation afterwards
(1.) It is important to consider in what way our Lord was wont
to look forward to His
future dignity. Here we mark the same twofold strain that we
find throughout the subject
On the one hand, He speaks of His exaltation as simply the
avowal to the universe of His
true character and dignity.
No man hath ascended into heaven, but
He that descended out
of heaven, even the Son of Man which is in heaven:
1 the
Savior, foreseeing His
ascension, speaks of it as adding nothing to His real dignity,
because He is never out of
heaven. Human nature in contact with Him is already exalted. He
who heard these words
had just before heard the Lord say:
Destroy this temple, and in three days
I will raise it
up. 2
But when the Lord at the close prayed for His
coming glorification we understand
that Jesus, for
the joy that was set before Him, endured the cross,
3
anticipating His
reward
1 John 3:13;
2 John
2:19; 3
Heb. 12:2
(2.) After His ascension the Redeemer most expressly teaches us
the continuance of a
mediatorial subjection in harmony with the essential Divinity of
His Divine-human
Person. As to the fact of the abiding subordination, He speaks
of Himself as the Minister
of redemption precisely in the same terms as while on earth.
There is literally no
difference. He bids His servants speak of Him as the Prince and
the Savior Whom God
exalted with His right hand,
1 as
the Son or the Servant sent to
bless. 2
There is no more
glorious manifestation of Christ than that to Saul in his
conversion, and there we hear our
Lord saying that his office should be to turn men
from the power of Satan unto God . .
by faith that is in Me.
3 So
in the Epistle to the Church of Philadelphia He speaks of
the
temple of My God and
the name of My God:
4
reminding us of the words before the
ascension, My
Father and your Father, My God and your God.
5 But
that this continuing
ministry is consistent with His supreme Divinity, we have the
Apocalyptic testimony
When St. John was in Patmos, and
in the Spirit,
he heard the voice of the Redeemer,
saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End:
6
than these words none more
expressly declare in Scripture the necessary, absolute being of
God. That the Risen
Savior spoke of Himself is evident from what follows the first
human manifestation: Fear
not; I am the First and the Last: I am He that liveth!
7
Deep meditation on these and all
other such sayings of our Lord must constrain us to understand
His secret: the FELLOW
of
God made the
SERVANT of redemption
1 Acts 5:31;
2 Acts
3:26; 3
Acts 26:18;
4 Rev.
3:12; 5
John 20:17;
6 Rev.
22:13; 7
Rev
1:17,18
III. The Two Estates occupy a prominent place in the Apostolical
theology. It will be
expedient to refer only to a few salient points: the
subordination generally; its
continuance until the last day; its continuance for ever
1. The subordination of our Lord is in one sense limited to the
days of His flesh, and ends
with His exaltation at the ascension. One passage is entirely
dedicated to this subject: that
in the Epistle to the Philippians which makes the voluntary
condescension of Christ the
example of Christian humility. The Eternal Son, retaining His
equality with God, and still
being in the
form of God, yet
made Himself of no reputation,
1
or emptied Himself. It is
too often forgotten that the subjection of Christ is here
altogether voluntary; that it is
matter of self-imputation rather than of an impossible reality.
As in the form of God,
Christ was still the possessor of Divine attributes, but He did
not use or manifest them
He thought it not robbery to be equal with God:
He did not, as to His human nature, think
fit to arrogate the display of His equality with God. But it was
in the form of a servant
that He humbled
Himself; while His examination was that
of the God-man, in respect,
however, to His Divinity as making the manhood its organ
1 Phil. 2:2-8
2. The exalted state is, further, not described as the
resumption of our Lord's pretemporal
glory apart from His incarnate subjection. Though the
fullness of the Godhead
1 is
in
Him, it is in Him
bodily, 2
and as flowing from the pleasure of the Father: the
eternal
generation was not an act of the Divine will, but in the
necessity of the Divine essence;
but it pleased
the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell
after the ascension. Hence
in the Corinthian Epistles we have some distinct exhibitions of
the subordination. The
Head of Christ is God:
3 this
is perhaps the most striking expression of the fact that even
in heaven the Incarnate is mediatorially subject.
And Christ is God's
4
declares the same
truth. But it is the current doctrine of the Epistles; and finds
its reason as well as its
expression in the sequel of the passage above quoted:
therefore God also hath highly
exalted Him! 5
1 Col. 2:9;
2 Col.
1:19; 3
1 Cor. 11:3;
4 1
Cor. 3:23; 5
Phil. 2:9
3. There is a sense, however, in which the subordination is
represented as abiding
eternally. Only one passage expressly refers to this; but it is
one which is exceedingly
explicit, and gives so much prominence to the subject that we
must not pass it by as
belonging to the hidden and reserved mysteries of the Christian
faith. Then shall the Son
also Himself be subjected to Him that put all things under Him:
autós ho Huiós
hupotageésetai.
1
Here, theologically at least, we might take a middle signification: the
Son shall
subject Himself. It is indeed as if, at
the close of the redeeming economy, He
reaffirms His original assumption of our nature. He will not
fold it or lay it aside as a
vesture. Remaining in the unity of the Father and the Holy
Ghost—God shall be All in
all—He will end the
whole history and mystery of redemption by ratifying His
incarnation for ever
1 1 Cor. 15:28
4. Before leaving the Scriptural view of this subject we should
observe that the sacred
writers give no formula to express the mediatorial relation of
the Son incarnate to the
Father and to the Holy Trinity. All that is meant by
subordination is asserted, but the
word is not used; nor is any synonym employed until the
subjection of the last day is
referred to. This is a remarkable circumstance and points to a
striking theological
paradox. It might seem that the following was the order of the
Lord's historical process:
The Logos in the Trinity, the humiliation of the incarnate
state, the elevation to supreme
dignity after the resurrection, the abdication at the close of
all mediatorial authority as
such, and the voluntary continuance of the Son as incarnate in a
subordination to the
Eternal Trinity that does not impair the dignity of the Son as
God in the unity of the
Father and of the Holy Ghost. The union of man with His Creator
is thus made perfect:
not by Pantheistic absorption into the Godhead, but by union
with God in the Son. The
Lamb is in the
midst of the throne; 1
and He is
the Head of the Church, the Savior of
the
Body, 2
for ever
1 Rev. 7:17;
2 Eph.
5:23
ECCLESIASTICAL DEVELOPMENT
The earlier developments of historical Christology were limited
to the relation of the two
natures in the one Person of the Christ Subsequent controversies
had reference rather to
the nature of the subordinate estate into which the Redeemer
descended. At the
Reformation the characteristics of the Divine-human humiliation
on the one hand, and on
the other its reversal in the ascended dignity, were profoundly
studied and became the
ground of many divisions. A few general remarks will be enough
to indicate the direction
which theological study here takes: first, in mediaeval
theology; then in the theories of
Lutheranism ;
and, lastly, in some miscellaneous
tendencies of modern thought
I. After the settlement of the Four Ecumenical Councils the
Christological discussions
reappeared in controversies referring rather to the degree in
which the Divine Person
partook of the humiliation of the human nature. Four speculative
tendencies may, without
violence, be brought into relation with each other
1. First the Monophysite and Monothelite errors made our Lord's
humbled estate a real
renunciation of both His natures, without seeming to do so.
These were simply the reflex
of the Eutychian heresy, which has never vanished from theology
(1.) The Monophysite dogma has been called Theopaschitism,
because its tendency was
to assign one nature as well as one Person to Christ, Who
therefore as a composite Godman
was crucified: the emphasis of course resting on the Divine
nature which absorbed
the human, the passion was exaggerated into a suffering of God
Hence the name. This
error was held in a great variety of forms; in its one general
principle it was the link of
transition between pure Eutychianism, which absorbed the man in
the God, and the
philosophical Eutychianism of modern Lutheran theories.
Monophysites are supposed to
linger only among the Eastern sects: in reality the divines of
the Depotentiation school
are their representatives
(2.) The Monothelite heresy was the same with a difference: the
former error just
mentioned had reference to the human nature of Christ generally;
this latter to His single
will only. Now if there was in Christ only one will, there could
be only one nature; for the
will cannot be divided. Hence the humanity was abolished in this
dogma, and the
humiliation of the Son of God was His sinking to such a point as
to say NOT
AS I
WILL
The true doctrine taught indeed
ONE THEANDRIC,
OPERATION,
but as the result of two
wills, the human being of necessity submissive to the Divine or
necessarily one with it in
act
2. The heresy sometimes called Adoptianism was taught by two
Spanish divines in the
eighth century, and was condemned at the Synod of Frankfurt,
A.D. 794. It was really a
revival of Nestorianism; as it kept apart the Divine and the
human son-ship of our Lord,
making the human nature partaker of the Divine Sonship only by
an act of heavenly and
gracious adoption. Thus the humbled estate of the God-man was
merely the expression of
His alliance with a human person of consummate and more than
human excellence
Alcuin and other opponents of this view laid great stress on the
fact that the humiliation
of Christ was His union with our nature, not with a human
individual: " In absumtione
carnis a Deo, persona perit hominis, non natura."
3. The term Nihilianism is suggested by a controversy once
vigorous, but of little
importance save as the expression of an erroneous protest
against a still greater error. It
took up the word that defeated the error just mentioned—that is,
the IMPERSONALITY
of our Lord's human nature—and defended the position that the
Second Person
underwent no change whatever through the assumption of flesh.
The notion was
condemned by the Lateran Council of
A.D.
1215, as tending to reduce the Incarnation to a
nullity. It was the very opposite of Theopaschitism before, and
of the Depotentiation
theory that followed, the Reformation: these errors both being
based on the assumption
that God in one of the Divine Persons is capable of being
reduced to such a point as to
combine with a finite personality as its power and energy. But
error cannot cast out error;
and this theory perverted the true dogma of the impersonality of
the human nature of our
Lord by excluding the reality of a human presentation of His
Divine human Person. It
went far towards abolishing the Humbled Estate, and leaving only
a Docetic Christianity
4. Very much more interesting was the mediaeval discussion as to
whether the suffering
of the God-man was essentially necessary, or whether His union
with human nature was
attended with humiliation only on account of sin. While the
question is confined to these
limits the answer is plain enough: we know of no manhood as the
object of the
Redeemer's condescension apart from sin, and of no Mediator who
was not made sin for
us. But the question does not rest there
5. This beautiful speculation involves another topic of very
great importance. The
question is not simply whether or not human sin rendered
necessary the Incarnation, but
whether man was not really the created expression of God's
eternal idea in His Son. The
Infinite and the finite were one in Him. The universal Spirit in
God found its incarnate
embodiment, realized itself, in humanity as conceived in the
historical Jesus. The
Pantheistic Christology of Duns Scotus in the early middle ages
laid the foundation for
modern German transcendental philosophy, which, whether in Kant
or Hegel, is
intimately bound up with the necessary evolving of the Trinity
through Christ. But from
these speculations we must turn away
II. At the Reformation, the Lutheran and the Reformed dogmas
concerning our Lord's
Two Estates widely disparted
1. The Lutheran was based upon the principle of a
COMMUNIO NATURARUM,
or
COMMUNICATIO IDIOMATUM: the
latter implying that the attributes of the Divinity were
imparted to the manhood in the unity of the Person; the former
implying further that the
one nature is interpenetrated by the other, that what one nature
is and does the other is
and does. The " Natura humana est in Christo capax Divinae." The
Reformed doctrine
denied this: "Finitum non est capax Infiniti." It asserted that
the humanity of Christ never
was nor ever could be possessed of Divine attributes. It may be
well to consider more at
large the Lutheran dogmatics on this subject. It divides the
Communicatio Idiomatum, or
interchange of attributes, into three branches. (1.) The
GENUS IDIOMATICUM:
this signifies
the use of predicates taken from either nature and applied to
the whole Person. (2.) The
GENUS AUCHEMATICUM SEU MAJESTATIGUM:
this signifies the ascription of Divine
attributes to the human nature, in the
POSSESSION
from the conception, in the full
USE
from the ascension. (3.) The
GENUS APOTELESMATICUM:
this signifies the ascription of
mediatorial acts to the One Agent. It is obvious that the second
of these contains the
peculiarity of Lutheran doctrine. The Reformed theologians, and
the great body of the
Christian Church, have always denied the communication of
omnipresence, omniscience,
and omnipotence in any sense to the human nature of our Lord
2. The application of the theory to the Two Estates may be
traced in two opposite
directions: first, in regard to the deification of the human
nature generally in the
ascension, and particularly the ubiquity of that nature in the
Eucharist; secondly, in
regard to the more modern theories of retraction or
depotentiation of Divinity in the
Incarnate Man
(1.) In the Lutheran theology the ascension of Christ is
regarded as the assumption of His
human nature into the full dignity and use of all Divine
perfections. During His
humiliation He possessed the attributes of omnipresence,
omniscience and omnipotence,
but voluntarily declined to exhibit them. After the exaltation
there was in Him the
fullness of the Godhead bodily.
1 His
body became not merely the organ of these
attributes, but itself possessed them. He entered not into the
local heaven, but into the
immensity of God. The heavens did not receive Him, but He
received the heavens: so are
the words hón
deí mén déxasthai áchri 2
translated by the advocates of this view
1 Col. 2:9;
2 Acts
3:21
(2.) Hence the soul and body of Christ have the ubiquity of the
Godhead. Not, however,
that the actual flesh of the Redeemer can be literally extended
to infinity; but that the
hypostatic union gives the Divine power and knowledge to the
Glorified Man, and
therefore the omnipresence also. The application of this
doctrine to the Saviour's offices
will be hereafter seen. Suffice here to observe that it is made
to explain the anomaly in
the prophetic office that the Divine-human Revealer was ignorant
of some things while
on earth: in Him now are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge. The Glorified
King now sways the destinies of the universe as God-man: while
on earth He had, no
such authority save in the unity of the Triune God. As Priest
the Redeemer gives the
virtue of omnipresence now to the sacrifice He offered for sin,
dispensing to the
communicants at the Eucharist His glorified body and blood at
every altar. The theology
of Lutheranism generally attaches much importance to the
physical aspect of redemption
It seems to regard corporeal embodiment as " the end of all
God's ways:" to use the
favorite language of some of its modern exponents
(3.) In the beginning of the seventeenth century a controversy
on this subject sprang up in
Lutheranism. One party maintained that the humiliation of Christ
was the hiding of
Divine attributes which in His human estate He possessed: this
idea of krypsis,
or
concealment, gave them their name of Kryptists. Another party
affirmed that there was an
actual kenosis,
or emptying Himself, of the Divine attributes which belonged to the
human nature in virtue of the hypostatical union: hence they
were Kenotists. The former
view invested Jesus as man with omnipresence, omniscience and
omnipotence from the
moment of the Conception; but this possession was veiled during
the earthly life, and
avowed only after the Ascension. The latter regarded Him as
having the ktoosis
or
possession of these attributes from His birth, but as utterly
renouncing their chresis
or use
until He was glorified. The former view, held by the Tubingen
theologians, made the
ascension the first display of Christ's Divine attributes in
humanity; the latter view, held
by the Giessen theologians, made it the first, resumption of
them. The controversy was
one of infinite subtlety, but concerned only the Lutheran
theologians: they alone asserted
a communication of Divine attributes to the manhood, and they
alone were involved in
the embarrassments resulting. The general bearing of the
question is well seen in the
following words of Gerhard: —"Not a part to a part, but the
entire Logos was united to
the entire flesh, and the entire flesh was united to the entire
Logos; therefore, on account
of the hypostatic union and intercommunion of the two natures,
the Logos is so present to
the flesh and the flesh so present to the Logos that neither is
the Logos EXTRA CARNEM,
nor is the flesh
EXTRA LOGON; but wherever the Logos is,
there it has the flesh most
present, as having been assumed into the unity of the person."
The controversy led to no
definite results: indeed, to us who look at the question from
the outside, there is but little
difference between them
(4.) During the present century the condescension of the Son of
God in the Incarnation
has been profoundly studied by German and French divines under
the influence of a
certain Eutychianism that has never ceased to cling to Lutheran
Christology, but modified
by the transcendental philosophy which sees in Christ the
developing body of the Spirit
of the Godhead coming to perfect personality in the Holy Ghost.
The various opinions to
which the names of individual men are attached need not be
discussed at length; that
would be to exaggerate their importance. It will be enough to
mention the one element
common to them all: namely, that of a literal merging of the
Divinity of the Son into the
finite Spirit of the Man Christ Jesus. The general idea takes
many forms: sometimes
simply Pantheistic, the Eternal Spirit thinking itself as a
Person in Christ; sometimes
purely Eutychian, God the Son contracted into humanity, and both
growing together to
perfection; sometimes Apollinarian, the Potency of the Son
working dynamically in the
psychical soul and flesh of Jesus. But all these hypotheses have
been shown by
anticipation to be incapable of resisting the simple argument of
the essential Immutability
of the Divine nature
III, Many modern theories have been revived from antiquity or
invented afresh which
have striven to break the fall of the Divine into the human, the
chief of these being the
interposition of a human pre-existent soul of Christ
1. The one fundamental principle in these sporadic speculations
—they have never been
formulated in any Confessions—is that the pure humanity of our
Lord was as
independent of the race of man as that of Adam was when he came
from the Hand and
Breath of his Maker. Denying, with the Scripture, that Jesus
owed anything to a human
father, they deny, without or in opposition to Scripture, that
He derived anything from a
human mother. The Virgin was no more than the instrument or
channel through which a
Divine humanity, existing before the foundation of the world or
from eternity, was
introduced by the Holy Ghost into human history. The passages
relied upon for the maintenance
of this notion are such as that in which our Lord says,
I came down from heaven,1
and the Second
Man is [the Lord] from heaven,
2 which, with some like them, are made
to signify that the human nature as well as the Divine was
pre-existent in eternity
1 John 6:38;
2 1
Cor. 15:47
2. Modern Mysticism has furnished in Behmen, Poiret, Barclay,
AEtinger, Goschel,
Petersen, and others, the most attractive forms of this theory.
In them the pure ideal
humanity of Jesus—which it is hard however to conceive as purely
ideal— was one with
the Word from eternity, as it were in a pretemporal incarnation.
After the fashion of that
humanity man was created: and the incarnate Jesus of history
literally came unto His
own. 1
AEtinger,
one of the most unexceptionable of Mystics, says: " Because Wisdom,
before the Incarnation, was the visible Image of the invisible
God, therefore the Son, in
comparison with the Being of all beings, is something relatively
incorporeal, although He
too is a pure spirit. The heavenly humanity which He had as the
Lord from heaven was
invisibly present even with the Israelites. They drank out of
the rock." But in all these
speculations the Incarnation is antedated; or, rather, it is not
the Son of God Who
becomes flesh but the Son of God already in the heavenly nature
of mankind
1 John 1:11
3. Swedenborgianism, in its theological system, has on this
subject as on every other, a
peculiar revelation. Swedenborg asserted the unity of God, and
strove to reconcile with
that the Deity of Christ. His theory established a kind of
hypostatic union between the
Father and the Son in the One Christ, the only God in the
universe. The Incarnation he
viewed in an Apollinarian way: the eternal God, eternally
God-man, manifested Himself
in the animal soul and psychical body derived from the Virgin;
but the material body was
finally absorbed and glorified. This is literally a composite of
nearly all the heresies of
antiquity. But its peculiarity as to the person of Christ is
that it gives Him, like all other
men, both a material body and a spiritual, the former
corresponding with the world of
sense, the latter with the spiritual world which He never left.
The Christ of this system is
the one eternal Jehovah, God and Man in one
4. Others, of whom Isaac Watts may be regarded as the
representative, have held similar
views as to the pre-existent humanity of Christ. Their starting
point is the same as the
Lutheran, that the human spirit is capable of expansion to
infinity. Now the pre-existent
soul of Christ was, in their view, created and personally united
with the Logos: here
Orthodoxy and Arianism unite. This already incarnate Logos
became incarnate on earth
by assuming the animal life of a natural body: here
Apollinarianism, as so often
elsewhere, steps in. Accordingly, all the humiliation of our
Lord consisted in this
transcendent human spirit being bereft of its knowledge and
passing through all stages of
exinanition until the ascension restored it to its perfection.
But in this case the Man Christ
Jesus is not strictly one of us. There is an enormous addition
made to His Person; but
there is no relief afforded to the difficulties of His
humiliation
THE THREE OFFICES OF THE CHRIST
Jesus is, in virtue of His incarnation, the Anointed Mediator
between God and man. To
the offices of His mediatorship His incarnate Person was
specifically anointed at His
baptism, and thus He became the perfected Christ of God. His
work was the fulfillment
and consummation of the ancient prophetical, priestly and regal
functions to which the
typical servants of God under the old economy were anointed.
These offices He began to
discharge on earth, and continues to discharge in heaven. While
considering them as
distinct, it is important to remember that they are one in the
mediatorial work; and that
the integrity of evangelical truth depends upon the faithfulness
with which we give to
each its due tribute in the unity of the two others
The division of the mediatorial work into Three Offices is
based, as will be seen, on the
Scriptures, both of the Old and of the New Testament, but it is
not formally stated in
them. It was current in later Judaism; is distinctly to be
traced in the early Fathers,
especially Eusebius, Cyril of Jerusalem, and Augustine; and in
the Middle Ages was
elaborated by Thomas Aquinas. It was introduced into their
theology both by Luther and
Calvin, and, though contended against by some writers who object
to the too systematic
distinction of the several offices, it has become current in
modern theology. There are
many reasons why it is inexpedient to make the Three Offices the
basis of an analysis of
the mediatorial work. But their consideration is most
appropriate in the present review of
the process of historical redemption
THE CHRIST OF PROPHECY
The Redeemer of mankind, whose advent in the fullness of time is
the supreme verbal
and typical prophecy of the Old Testament, was marked out as
THE LORD'S
ANOINTED or
THE CHRIST. This appellation
was not at first given to Him directly, but indirectly as He
was represented by those who in the Theocracy were anointed to
their office. In some
passages however the future Savior is predicted by this name;
and when He came into the
world He was the fulfillment of a general expectation of the
Messiah as hereafter to come
in one or all of these three offices
I. Anointing was from early times a symbol of consecration to
God: to the Divine
possession and to the Divine service
1. Generally, it signified human dedication and Divine
acceptance. So, in the first
recorded instance of its use, Jacob
took the stone that he had put for his
pillows, and set it
up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the top of it,
1
because it was revealed to him,
the
Lord is in this place.
More particularly it was the symbol of light and peace and joy: of
light for prophetical illumination, of peace for priestly
atonement, of joy for regal
government as the presence of God with His people
1 Gen. 28:18,16
2. This anointing oil was the emblem of the Holy Ghost, the
Spirit of consecration. As
blood was the expiatory symbol, water that of purification, and
light of God's accepting
presence, so oil was the symbol of sanctification generally as
mystically combining all
these. This symbol in its most perfect form, the
holy anointing oil,
1 was
a peculiar
confection, like everything pertaining to the sanctuary after a
Divine pattern, and never to
be used save in connection with Divine uses, for the priesthood
and the sanctuary; it was
not to be privately prepared, nor to be
poured upon man's flesh
or
the stranger. It is holy,
and it shall be holy unto you.
Thus the precious ointment, the ointment of the
apothecary,
was the elect typical emblem of the Holy Ghost in His special
relation to the unction of
Christ, and in His general relation to that of the saints who
share the sacred unction
1 Exo. 30:22-33
II. Anointing oil was used for the consecration of the
priesthood and of the prophets and
rulers; especially of the high priest and the kings in the
ancient economy
1. The priests were anointed, as also the furniture of the
sacrificial service: all things were
both sprinkled with blood and anointed with oil.
And thou shalt anoint Aaron and his
sons, and consecrate them.
1
And Moses took of the anointing oil,
and of the blood which
was upon the altar, and sprinkled it upon Aaron, and upon his
garments, and upon his
sons, and upon his sons' garments with him; and sanctified
Aaron. 2
The anointing oil
was therefore as essential and as pervasive as the blood, its
correlative symbol: the
expiatory atonement and the consecration of the Holy Ghost being
co-ordinate. After the
first institution
the priest that is anointed
3 signified the High Priest: it is to be
supposed
that the successors in the ordinary priesthood were not
consecrated by this symbol. The
prophets were set apart in the same way. Moses, the head of the
prophetic order, who
anointed the priests, did not himself undergo the rite. The
Spirit anointed him without the
emblem. But Elijah was commanded to anoint Elisha to be prophet
in his room. 4
As to
the kings, the testimony is more clear. Elijah anointed Hazael
to be king, which points
back to an earlier ordinance.
5 The
judges were not thus instituted. Joshua received the
imposition of Moses' hands as one on whom the Spirit of
consecration had already
fallen.6
But, when Saul was given to Israel,
Samuel took a vial of oil, and poured
it upon
his head, and kissed him, and said, is it not because the Lord
hath anointed thee to be
captain over His inheritance?
7
David, however, was the specific regal type of the
Messiah. Then
Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the midst of his brethren;
and the Spirit of the Lord came upon David from that day
forward. 8
Designation and
endowment with gifts were the two elements in the regal
consecration: the former making
the Lord's Anointed a sacred and inviolable person, and the
latter insuring him every
requisite grace for the administration of his office
1 Exo. 30:30;
2 Lev.
8:30; 3
Lev. 4:3;
4 1
King 19:16; 5
1 King 19:15;
6 Num.
27:18,23;
7 1 Sam. 10:1;
8 1
Sam. 16:13
2. Thus the anointing oil, the symbol of the Holy Ghost, had
various meanings in the
typical economy: meanings which were afterwards one in Christ.
The prophetic anointing
signified rather the setting apart of an organ for occasional
influence: it pointed out one in
whom the Spirit was already present. The priestly anointing
indicated not so much mere
appointment as consecration to the Divine service. The regal
anointing superadded to the
other meanings that of the permanent divine indwelling: the king
was God's
representative alone. The prophet and the king represented God
and not man: the former,
occasionally; the latter, permanently. The priest represented
God to man, and man to
God; his consecration was abiding, and affected all things
connected with him. As in the
case of the altar,
whatsoever toucheth them shall be holy.1
1 Exo. 30:29
III. There are a few remarkable passages in which the future
Redeemer is foreannounced
as the Anointed One, the preeminent
mashiychekaa,
and in relation to these three offices
distinctively
1. The Psalms open with the Great Name of the future, which was
to be sanctified for
ever as common to Christ and His people:
The rulers take counsel together,
against the
Lord, and against His anointed.
1 Here
is the regal office; and this is echoed in a later
Psalm: God, Thy
God, hath anointed Thee, 2
where the prophetic office is also referred
to,
and the priestly consecration is scarcely hid
1 Psa. 2:2;
2 Psa.
14:7,2,8
2. The Anointed One speaks of Himself through Isaiah:
The Spirit of the Lord [God] is
upon Me; 1
because the Lord hath anointed
Me to preach good tidings. 2
Here is by our
Lord's own interpretation the prophetic office: the only passage
of this class which He
quotes. Others He left for the use of His Apostles
1 Isa. 61:1;
2 Luke
4:18
3. Daniel closes the Messianic prophecy proper by giving the
name Messiah to the Future
Redeemer, specifically as High Priest, but including His other
offices. Three times he
mentions the word.
After threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for
Himself: seventy weeks are determined .
. .
to make reconciliation for iniquity .
. . and to
anoint the Most Holy.
1 But
He is Messiah the Prince;
and His coming was to
seal up the
prophecy. Here are all
the offices combined; this distinction and combination are the
glory of Daniel's predictions
1 Dan. 9:24,25,26
IV. Hence in later Judaism a clear testimony was borne to the
union of the three functions
in One Supreme Person; and the Savior when He came found among
the people a general
expectation of the Messiah or Christ. He appealed to it as
everywhere latent
1. The Targums, or Chaldaic paraphrases of the Scripture
substituted for the Hebrew text
in public reading after the Captivity, exhibit in very many
passages a clear view of the
Messiah in His offices. They call Him God; the King; the
Prophet; the High Priest upon
His throne; the promised Shiloh. They apply to Him all the
passages which Christians are
wont to apply. They make His two advents one, however, and
regard the delay of the
Messiah as caused by the sins of the people; at least this is
the explanation of some of
later date, when the critical periods indicated for the coming
of Messiah were evidently
overpast. Some Jewish authorities, it is true, invented a double
Messiah; one, the Son of
Joseph, in humiliation; the other, the Son of David, in glory.
Others referred the
predictions of sorrow to the Hebrew race, not to the Messiah:
the People being the
afflicted Servant of God. But before the time of Christ Jewish
expectation took very
much the form which is sketched in our own exposition of the Old
Testament
2. The state of Messianic expectation in the time of our Lord
may be gathered from the
Gospels with great precision. The Christ was to come
of the seed of David
and
out of the
town of Bethlehem where David was.
1 The
people were wont to ask, Is not
this the Son of
David?2
He was to be heralded by Elijah:
Why then say the scribes that Elijah
must first
come? 3
He was to be the Anointed:
He inquired of them where Christ should
be born,4
Who had been announced to Simeon as
the Lord's Christ.
5
Andrew's word to Simon was:
We have found the Messiah, (which is, being interpreted,
Christ). 6
So the people were
accustomed to say,
When Christ cometh, will He do more miracles than these which this
man hath done?
7 He was expected in His three offices. As
King especially, for the state
of the Jewish people would endear that character:
Where is He that is born King of the
Jews or
the Christ?
8 with
which corresponds the final charge:
saying that He Himself is
Christ a King!
9 As Prophet also: of Him whom they would
take by force to make Him a
King, 10
they testified,
This is of a truth the prophet that
should come into the world. 11
There was no real difference between those who said,
Of a truth this is the Prophet!
and
those who said,
This is the Christ! Samaria shared the
expectation of Christ as a prophet:
I know that Messiah cometh, (Which is called Christ}: when He is
come, He will tell us
all things. 12
We have not the same direct evidence that
the Messiah was expected to be a
priest. It is plain, however, that the representatives of
Judaism who welcomed the Child
Jesus waited for a priestly Messiah Zacharias, Simeon, and the
Baptist all regarded Him
as the incarnation of God Who
visited and redeemed His people,
13
not by the right hand
of His power simply, but
by the remission of their sins,
14
through the sacrifice of the
Lamb of God Which taketh away the sin of the world.
15 But
here the popular expectation
faltered and failed. The Christ was expected as
the Son of God which should come into
the world, 16
that
abideth for ever
17
upon earth: as the pledge of the Divine presence, and
life, and power among men; as the Head of a new kingdom of
heaven and as the
vindicator and redeemer of God's ancient people. But as the High
Priest, Himself the
Offerer and the Offering, they did not recognize their Messiah.
Hence no part of our
Lord's sayings was more offensive than those in which He spoke
of His flesh given for
the life of the world.
18 The
common people were one with the Pharisees and Scribes, and
the disciples themselves differed little from them, in the
carnality of their hopes. Be it
far
from Thee, Lord!
19
said Simon Peter, when under the teaching not of the Father but of
flesh and blood; and in these words the Lord perceived not only
the timorous loyalty of
one who loved Him, but also the blinding agency of Satan, whose
object was to merge
the priestly office of the Messiah in the two others: to induce
the nation to regard Him
only as a supreme Teacher and a mighty King. Peter's híleoós
soi kúrie was not from
above but from below. Such theories of the Messiah holding the
prophetic and regal
offices alone and without the priestly bond between them, have
been the watchwords of
most of the errors of the Christian Church concerning the work
of Christ
1 John 7:42;
2 Mat.
12:23; 3
Mat. 17:10;
4 Mat.
2:4; 5
Luke 2:26;
6 John
1:41; 7
John 7:31;
8 Mat. 2:2,4;
9 Luke
23:2; 10
John 6:14,15;
11
John 7:40,41; 12
John 4:25;
13
Luke 1:68;
14 Luke 1:77;
15
John 1:29; 16
John 11:27;
17
John 12:34; 18
John 6:51,52;
19
Mat. 16:22
3. It is well known that at the time of our Saviour's advent the
world at large was familiar
with the Jewish expectation, and even shared it. The Desire of
the People was the Desire
of the Nations also. The coming of the Magi was a testimony to
this: the blessing of the
Spirit resting upon the seed sown in the Captivity. Outside the
Scripture we read: "
Percrebuerat Oriente toto vetus et constans opinio esse in fatis
ut eo tempore Judaea
profecti rerum potirentur." And again: " Pluribus persuasio
inerat anti-quis sacerdotum
literis contineri eo ipso tempore fore ut valesceret oriens,
profectique Judaea rerum
potirentur."
4. Finally, all this will explain the appeals of the early
preachers of the Faith
Contending with the Jews the Apostles constantly made it their
aim to prove that Jesus
was the Messiah: so St. Paul reasoned
that this Jesus, Whom I preach unto
you, is Christ.1
Here was to the Jewish people, always and everywhere, the theme
of all argument and
preaching. Preaching to the Gentiles, they skillfully touched
the same great Messianic
desire, known to be latent in all hearts: there are glimpses of
this in the New Testament,
but much more evident illustrations in the Apologetics of the
first two centuries. The
history of Christian Missions in all ages adds its tribute. The
Gospel never fails of a
response when it speaks to the indestructible hope of a
Deliverer, whose coming the
world has longed for ever since it began its career of wandering
from God
1 Acts 17:3
THE CHRIST OF FULFILMENT
As the Messiah or Christ of Fulfillment our Lord accomplished in
Himself all the types
and symbols and prophecies of the Old Testament. The holy oil of
unction is in the New
Testament the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Christ's anointing in
two senses: first, as
consecrating His Person in the Incarnation; and, secondly, as
consecrating Him to His
offices at the Baptism
THE PERSONAL UNCTION
Our Lord in His Person is the Lord's Anointed. As such He is the
Messiah of the Old
Testament come in the flesh; and the Mediator between God and
men in both natures as
united in one Person
I. At the Saviour's birth He was declared to be
a Savior, which is Christ the Lord;
Simeon
saw the Lord's
Christ. 1
And He was so called, not in anticipation only, but
because in
His incarnation or conception His human nature was sanctified
and consecrated,
essentially separated from the sin of our race by the Holy
Ghost. The body of humanity
thus prepared for Him He assumed before it came to personal and
independent
subsistence, and insured its eternal sinlessness. He was the
Lord's Christ, even as He was
Jesus, from the instant of His conception. And, as the term
Mediator is bound up with the
term Christ, He was the Mediator in His incarnation, before the
mediating act of
atonement was accomplished
1 Luke 2:11,26
II. Hence all the future functions of the Christ must be
attributed to neither of His natures
distinctively, but to His one Person. Our Lord, as Mediator, is
not divided
1. He sustains no office which is not based upon His Divinity,
and executed through His
human nature. As Prophet He is still the only-begotten God,
Which is in the bosom of the
Father, 1
Whom as Man He hath
declared
to men. As Priest He is the Son Who
learned
obedience by the things which He suffered;
2
it behoved Him,
as the Son,
to be made like
unto His brethren,
3 and,
taken from among men, to make
propitiation for the sins of the
people. 4
The
Church of God,
or the Lord,
was purchased with His own blood;
5
and the
High Priest offered Himself
through the Eternal Spirit
6 of
His Divinity. So also His
Kingly authority, exercised in human nature, requires as its
foundation the Divine dignity
of the Son Who
upholdeth all things by the word of His power.
7 The
first verses of the
Epistle to the Hebrews contain the three offices of the one
Incarnate Person in their most
complete and grandest exhibition
1 John 1:18;
2 Heb.
5:8; 3
Heb. 5:1;
4 Heb.
2:17; 5
Acts 20:28;
6 Heb.
9:14; 7
Heb. 1:3
2. The Incarnate Person is the one Mediator: not the human
nature as some Romanists
have affirmed; not the Divine nature as Osiander and some other
Protestants maintained;
but the one Theanthropic Agent whose mediatorial volition is one
in the unity of the
Divine and human wills. Hence the word Mediator has a unique
meaning as descriptive
of the Christ:
There is one Mediator between God and men,
rather,
of God and men, the
Man Christ Jesus,
1
rather, Jesus Christ Man.
This passage, solitary as marking the union
of the two natures in relation to the Christ as such, is
supported by others testifying that
He became afterwards the Mediator of the New Covenant, in which
Moses was His type
In the former—His incarnate mediation—He had and could have no
type. As the one
Mediator His Person Incarnate is the Agent of all His doctrine,
of all His sacrificial acts,
and of all His authority as King. He teaches as the Word
speaking in human language; He
atones and intercedes as the High Priest taken from among men,
but first given to man as
the Son; and He rules as the Eternal Son to Whom in the flesh
all power is mediatorially
and economically committed
1 1 Tim. 2:5
3. It follows that our Lord, as in His own Person the
fulfillment of the promises
concerning Christ, gathered all types into one before He entered
upon the distributive
functions of His several offices. He is the unity of God and
man; and the unity of all the
distinct elements of the predicted Mediatorial Ministry. No one
man ever united the three
offices. Moses was prophet or lawgiver, but, strictly speaking,
neither priest nor king
David was king and prophet, but not priest. Melchizedek was
priest and king, but not
prophet. Ezekiel was prophet and priest, but not king. And where
the functions were
united in one person, they were still distinct: he who
occasionally prophesied might occasionally
act as priest. Though each office was permanent in some cases,
as in Moses,
Aaron, and David, never were two or three of these offices
permanent in one office
bearer. But in the one Person of the Incarnate all these offices
are united, in their
perfection, in their constant exercise, and each as necessary to
the other. He is always the
Light of the world, always the Life of redemption, always the
Ruler of mankind
OFFICIAL UNCTION AT BAPTISM
Our Lord's second or official unction was received at His
Baptism, which was His public
designation or sealing to the Messianic office, and the full
equipment of His human
nature for its discharge. After His baptism He assumed at
successive intervals the three
offices distinctively; and began to fulfill them. After His
ascent He continued them all in
perfection; and will not lay them down until the end. The
beginnings of the Messianic
work are recorded in the Gospels; its consummation is exhibited
in the Apostolic
testimony
I. The Baptism of Christ to His office was the effusion upon Him
of the Holy Spirit:
marking Him out as the Messiah, and at the same time
replenishing Him, as to His human
nature, with all Messianic gifts. This outpouring from heaven
was preceded by a baptism
of water, shared by our Lord with men generally as the baptism
of repentance, but which
had a special twofold significance in regard to Him
1. Jesus was baptized by His Forerunner, who was both the
representative of the old
economy and the preacher of repentance for the new. (1.) In the
former relation the
Baptist performed on the Person of the Christian High Priest the
washing which preceded
His anointing with the Holy Ghost. The typical high priests in
particular were washed
before they were anointed; and anointing generally was preceded
by baptism. (2.) In the
latter relation the preacher of repentance administered the
baptismal pledge of penitent
waiting for the Messiah, to One who, though the Messiah Himself,
was also the
representative of sinful man. Thus in the case of our Lord's
descent into the Jordan two
ends were accomplished: on the one hand, He was baptized as the
Head and Surety of the
human race assuming in its symbol the transgression of mankind;
and, on the other, He
was designated as the Messiah in whom were combined all the
offices to which His types
were of old anointed. In the former sense His baptism
represented a sin assumed but not
shared; He was already
numbered with the transgressors
1
at the Jordan, and
came by
water before He came by
blood.
2 The
Baptism was a prelude of the Crucifixion. In the
latter, it represented the perfect purity which His preeminent
ministry required; the water
represented not the cleansing from sin but the absence of the
need of purification
1 Isa. 53:12;
2 1
John 5:6
2. The Baptism of the Holy Ghost must be viewed as the
designation of Christ to His
work as the Representative of the Holy Trinity, and the
equipment of His human nature
with all the gifts necessary for His mission
(1.) When John was sent to his ministry he was told that the
Messiah would be indicated
to him by a higher baptism than his own:
Upon Whom thou shalt see the Spirit
descending, and remaining on Him, the same is He which baptized
with the Holy Ghost
The symbol was beheld by the Baptist, who came,
baptizing with water,
that the Baptizer
with the Spirit
should be made manifest to Israel; and
of the token of the Spirit's descent
he says, / saw,
and bare record that this is the Son of God.
1 The
Holy Trinity united in
this designation. The
voice from heaven
was that of the Father; it proclaimed that the Man
Christ Jesus was at the same time His
beloved Son;
2 and
John saw the Spirit of God
descending like a dove and lighting upon Him.
3 Thus
was the Lord marked out to His
forerunner, who before
knew Him not;
and that forerunner in his turn marked Him out to
the world, which also in another sense as yet knew Him not
1 John 1:31,33,34;
2 Mat.
3:16,17; 3
John 1:31
(2.) According to the ancient prophecy, the Spirit was to
descend upon the Messiah in the
sevenfold unity and distribution of His perfect gifts. It was
said of the Branch of the root
of Jesse: and
the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon Him, the Spirit of wisdom and
understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of
knowledge and of the fear of
the Lord. 1
Concerning this gift which replenished the
human nature of the Redeemer, or
His Person as represented by His humanity, the Baptist said:
God giveth not the Spirit by
measure [unto Him].
2 And
it is this gift that He distributes to His people: what He has
for us without measure He distributes by measure to us. Long
afterward he who testified
of these things gave the first and the last formal expression of
the privilege of believers to
share their Master's anointing:
ye have an unction from the Holy One,
3
where the
chrísma is from the Holy
One who needed no anointing for His own soul but reserved it
for ours: that we might be Christians as He is the Christ.
The disciples were
CALLED—but
not MADE—Christians
first in Antioch.4
1 Isa. 11:2;
2 John
3:34; 3
1 John 2:20;
4 Acts
11:26
II. Our Lord formally assumed His three offices at certain set
times, each of which is
solemnly recorded by an Evangelist
1. As the Messiah generally He always spoke and acted as having
in Himself the unity of
these functions from the beginning. But during His humbled
estate, and until He had
fulfilled His chief office, that of making atonement, He
maintained a certain reserve, and
only by degrees declared the full mystery of His work. He began
by declaring Himself to
be the Lawgiver and Teacher: that is, by assuming His prophetic
office. And this function
He discharged alone until the eve of His departure; when, in His
self-consecrating prayer,
He assumed the ministry of His High-priesthood, and offered
Himself a sacrifice for sin
Having accomplished that, He assembled His disciples around Him
after the resurrection
and assumed His royal authority: the power given to Him in
heaven and upon earth
2. But this was also
IN
heaven FOR
earth; the Savior ascended to discharge all His
offices
above; and the Acts and the Epistles contain that full
theological development of their
meaning which was not possible until the Holy Spirit had come
down at Pentecost. The
later New Testament is no other than the expansion of the
Saviour's own doctrine
concerning His Messianic work. We must therefore take each
several office and consider
our Lord's own testimony and that of His Apostles based upon it
3. The offices of Christ will be laid down at the last day.
Though He will for ever retain
the hypostatic unity of His Person, the mediatorial economy will
cease. Not the regal
office alone will terminate, but all His offices. He will come
without sin:
1 that
is, without
His priestly relation to sin. He will no longer be the Revealer;
for God shall be all in all.
2
But this will be viewed hereafter with respect to the several
functions
1 Heb. 9:28;
2 1
Cor. 15:28
THE PROPHETIC OFFICE
Christ as Prophet is, generally, the perfect Revealer of Divine
Truth to mankind: as such
He comes with His supreme credentials, the Truth, and the Light
of men. More
particularly He was, during His earthly ministry, the Lawgiver
and the Preacher of the
Gospel: each distinctly, but both in one. This office, filled by
Himself, was fulfilled
through His word by the Holy Ghost
A distinction must be noted here between the absolute or
universal office of Christ as
Revealer, and His economical office as the Minister of His own
generation. It may serve
a good purpose to consider the latter first as being
transitional to the former
THE PERSONAL MINISTRY
St. Paul affirms that
Christ was made a Minister of the
Circumcision for the truth of God,
to confirm the promises made unto the fathers, and that the
Gentiles might glorify God
for His mercy.
1 These words have reference to the office
of Christ generally, but particularly
as the Revealer of the Divine will to the Jews and for the
Gentiles: as to the
former, in the re-enactment of the Law; as to the latter, in the
preaching of the Gospel
Here, then, we may consider the Ministry generally, and then its
two branches
1 Rom. 15:8,9
I. Our Lord's personal prophetic ministry constitutes the
substance of the teaching of the
Word in the Four Gospels
1. It was strictly a continuation of the ancient prophetic
economy, according to the
argument of St. Stephen:
This is that Moses, which said unto
the, children of Israel, A
Prophet shall [the Lord your] God raise up unto you of your
brethren, like unto me;
[Him shall ye hear].
1 So
far as concerned His relation to the old dispensation Christ was
the last of the prophets; as the people said,
that a great prophet is risen up among
us. 2
Jesus accepted the woman's word:
Sir, I perceive that thou art a
prophet; 3
as also the
similar language of the Emmaus disciples. He intimated, indeed,
that all the prophets and
the law prophesied until John,
4 and
that even John was more than a
prophet. 5
How
much was He greater Himself! So also in the Epistle to the
Hebrews a distinction is made
between the prophets by Whom God spake to the fathers and the
Son by Whom or in
Whom He speaks to us.
6 But
all this does not interfere with the fact that our Lord was a
Minister of the Divine will to His own nation.
No prophet is accepted in his own
country:7
these words, spoken when He opened His
ministry, paralleled His own coming
with that of Elijah to Israel
1 Acts 7:37;
2 Luke
7:16; 3
John 4:19;
4 Luke
24:19; 5
Mat. 11:9;
6 Heb.
1:1; 7
Luke 4:24
2. Hence the Redeemer's mission was confined to the ancient
people: I am not sent but
unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
1 The
Light visited Galilee and Samaria, but it
did not go beyond Israel and its lost sheep: the Prophet of the
whole world took up His
abode in Galilee
of the Gentiles, 2
so that
the people which sat in darkness saw
great
light. 3
Anticipating the time when He would draw all
nations to Him, He nevertheless
strictly limited Himself to the Holy Land, and never had the
dust of heathenism to shake
from His feet. He was never called a Jew, nor did He so term
Himself, but He was a
Messenger to the Jews, a
MINISTER OF THE CIRCUMCISION,
and, in a sense, AS ONE OF THE
PROPHETS
1 Mat. 15:24;
2 Mat:
4:15,16; 3
Rom. 15:8
3. The Saviour's personal ministry was that of an extraordinary
Prophet raised up to
introduce a new dispensation of which He was Himself the herald.
He blended in His
own Person the ancient Prophet and the more modern Rabbi: sent
sometimes suddenly
under a Divine extraordinary afflatus, like a Zealot responsible
only to God; or lifting up
occasional burdens, subsequently written down, after the more
ordinary though still
extra-ordinary manner of the prophets; and also gathering around
Him a body of disciples
whom He taught out of the law, according to the usage of the
Rabbinical schools
4. The style and methods of our Lord's teaching were such as to
mark Him out from
every other teacher. Its characteristics were unshared: as His
form and features, for ever
lost to human knowledge, were His own and no other's, so was it
with His ordinary
communications. He possessed or rather condescended to assume in
its perfection the gift
of persuasive speech: as it was predicted that He should be
fairer than the children of
men, so also it was said
of Him, Grace is poured into Thy
lips. 1
They confessed; it who
were astonished
at His doctrine, for His word was with power,
2 as
also those who were
disarmed by its grace:
never man spake like This Man.
3
His method of teaching by
parable was original and unrivalled: there is scarcely any trace
of its use in the Old
Testament; and such allegories as are found in other Oriental
teaching and in the Talmud
are in perfect contrast to our Lord's. His illustrations from
nature and life are confessed to
be the most beautiful in literature even by those who are
unwilling to admit that they
sprang from One Who knew the mysterious symbols of nature
because He ordained them
and Who was perfectly acquainted with the human heart. His
method of dealing with
enemies, or captious censors, betrays the presence of every
element of dialectic or
Socratic skill. And, like almost all great teachers, He had the
esoteric instruction for the
more susceptible and humble, to unfold the mysteries which were
veiled from the
prejudiced in parabolic disguise. Moreover, He aptly
appropriated the good of the
Rabbinical theology, and knew how to accommodate Himself to
current delusions while
correcting them, as in the case of His appeal concerning the
casting out of the demons by
the children of His enemies. Jesus also was the supreme Master
of the symbol and
symbolical action; and to that Christianity owes much. But, on
this whole subject it is
difficult to speak with fullness or precision, as our Saviour's
personal instructions have
come to us through the medium of His servants. He has left us
nothing under the direct
impress of His own hand
1 Psa. 14:2;
2 Luke
4:32; 3
John 7:46
5. It is important to remember that throughout our Lord's
ministry He was at once the
Minister of the circumcision and the Revealer of all truth for
the world. The blending of
these gives an indescribable and most wonderful grace to His
teaching. But this leads us
to a higher view than that which has hitherto been taken
II. Jesus Christ was the last Lawgiver, and the First Evangelist
of His own glad tidings;
His whole ministry united the Law and the Gospel in their
essential elements
1. As the LAWGIVER,
like unto
Moses
1 but greater than he, our Lord assumed His
function on the Mount of Beatitudes. He rose up out of the Old
Testament as the Witness
and Embodiment of its truth, and was in no sense its destroyer.
He came not to abolish
but to fulfill ancient Scripture, and that in three senses:
first, to fulfill its meaning in
Himself as it was all one prophecy of Him; secondly, to
discharge it of its functions as it
was the law of a transient ceremonial economy which He appeared
to end; and, thirdly,
by republishing its moral teaching in harmony with the new
dispensation as a
dispensation of the Spirit and of love
1 Deu. 18:15
(1.) All previous lawgiving, whether engraven on the fleshly
tables of the heart of
universal mankind, or on the Mosaic tables and in the Mosaic
books, was fulfilled in the
revelation of Jesus, the Incarnate Expression of God's will to
man. Christ is the end of the
law: 1
and in this sense pre-eminently, that all
revelation, both of the wrath and of the
mercy of God, was complete and fulfilled in His Person. He came
as the Representative
of all written and unwritten revelation: so entirely to take its
place that in His presence
there was necessity for nothing more: whether He would or would
not supersede all, it
remained for Him to show. On earth as well as in heaven there
was no need of the sun,
the Lamb was the light thereof. He said, /
am the Light of the world,
2 and
I am the Way,
the Truth, and the Life.
3 But
He was pleased to continue still the dispensation of word
and ministry that He for a time suspended. The ancients gave Him
their books, and He resanctified
them for His Church. When He retired He continued His function
by a more
enlarged revelation through His Apostles
1 Rom. 10:4;
2 John
8:12; 3
John 14:6
(2.) Our Savior, the final Lawgiver, abolished the old law, and
all that it contained, so far
as it was the basis of a covenant between God and a peculiar
people. As a code of the
Theocracy, the law was political, ceremonial, and moral: three
in one and inseparably in
one. This law our Lord carne to abrogate: it was done away in
Him, because the new
covenant was to be no longer with one nation, and no longer
based upon types, but to be
confirmed in Christ with all nations on the basis of the
accomplished redemption. The
entire economy commonly called the Law, as one, and therefore as
such including the
moral law in its statutory form, was abolished in Christ, Who
established a new
legislation, known variously as the
perfect law of liberty,1
the
law of faith,
2 the
law of
the Spirit of life.3
1 James 1:25;
2 Rom.
3:27; 3
Rom. 8:2
(3.) But the moral law, written on the heart and on the two
tables, Jesus reuttered
Extracting it from its place in the Legal Economy He gave it all
its honors in the
Economy of Grace. Though He abolished it as a condition of
salvation, He confirmed it
as a rule of life. To be more particular: He renewed it first as
it was a schoolmaster, to
teach the sinner his sin, and bring him to his Savior; and then
as a rule and standard of
holy living; but, for both purposes, the whole law is exhibited
in its internal character as a
spiritual rule and in its great principle as perfect love. As
the Lawgiver our Lord
expanded ethical teaching into an infinite extent and breadth by
a spiritual interpretation;
and condensed it all again into a perfect simplicity by reducing
it to love. The spiritual
application multiplies the precept past any limits; the
reduction of all to charity makes it
simple and comparatively easy again. But the Savior as Lawgiver
presides over another
department of theology, that of Christian Ethics, to come
hereafter
2. The New Legislator opened His ministry on the Mount; but as
the Prophet, preaching
His own Gospel, greater than Isaiah but like him, our Lord
announced His function
formally in the Synagogue at Nazareth
where He had been brought up.1
1 Luke 4:16
(1.) The Gospel proper, as the glad tidings of redemption
through atonement and the
forgiveness of sins, could not be fully preached before the
Cross. Jesus, during His life on
earth, was rather a Lawgiver than an Evangelist. But when He
said in His own
synagogue, This
day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears,
1 He
began to preach the great
deliverance. The text He chose was the most comprehensive that
prophecy afforded for
the description of the effects of redemption as finally
administered to its objects
Concerning this opening stage of His ministry St. Matthew
records that Jesus went about
all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the
gospel of the kingdom. 2
From that time the re-publication of the Law and the
anticipation of the Gospel alternated
or were combined in the Saviour's works and words. He spoke of
the perfect law that
convinces of sin, and also of a free forgiveness: always being a
jealous assertor of the
Divine claims even while frankly and abundantly promising and
even imparting
remission. But it was not till the sacrifice had been offered
that our Lord preached
Himself as the perfect Lawgiver and the finished Savior. When He
sent His Apostles
forth He bade
that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name
among all nations,
3 who
were to be taught to observe all
things whatsoever I have
commanded.4
1 Luke 4:21;
2 Mat.
4:23; 3
Luke 24:47;
4 Mat.
28:20
(2.) The preaching of the future Gospel was always predictive;
but Christ was more
expressly the Prophet of His own kingdom in His
foreannouncements of its history and
destiny. As all prophecy from the beginning of the world had
respect, directly or
indirectly, to the kingdom of the Messiah, so the Great Prophet
and consummator of the
prophetic word constantly spoke of the future of His Church.
Towards the end of His
ministry almost all His discourses were directly prophetic; and
His last utterances were
almost entirely limited to predictions
(3.) Both the preaching and the prophecy of the Gospel kingdom
our Lord continued after
His departure by the ministry of His Apostles. As they wrought
greater works
1 than
He,
so they spoke greater words than His; but as in the former they
were only the instruments
of His higher and more spiritual energy, so they were only the
speakers of His words,
which could not be spoken until He had accomplished His work on
the cross. St. Luke
speaks of the Divine-human ministry as of
all that Jesus began both to do and
teach. 2
After His ascension He continued all His offices: all through
His own activity, but with a
difference. The High-priestly function He discharges alone: the
Kingly by the Holy
Ghost; the Prophetic by the Spirit through the Apostles. In the
nature of things He could
not perfectly preach His own Gospel; nor could He give explicit
prophecies of the last
dispensation until the former dispensation was fully ended. He
Himself in His own
Person only began: He perfected nothing. His words were seed in
the hearts of the
Apostles, to bear fruit in due season. The Spirit Whom He would
send was the Spirit of
truth, 3
and would guide them into all its developments; but
only as bringing their
Master's own words back to their memory. Precisely what the
Redeemer did for the old
Law—recall it to the people's remembrance with enlarged
interpretation—the Spirit did
for the Redeemer's own ministry. This has reference to every
part of His prophetic office
1 John 14:12;
2 Acts
1:1; 3
John 16:13
THE UNIVERSAL MINISTRY
Jesus never formally assumed the prophetic office in its highest
meaning, in that meaning
which was peculiar and unshared: which He could not indeed
assume because He was
never without it. He spoke as One who not only brought the final
revelation with Him,
but as being Himself that revelation ;
He distinguished Himself from all other
teachers by
the assertion of absolute personal authority; He accompanied His
teaching with
credentials of miraculous works wrought in His own name; and,
lastly, He came as the
Prophet of mankind, making provision for the continuance of His
doctrine for ever
1. While He appeared as a second Moses Jesus distinguished
Himself from human
teachers as being Himself the revelation of all truth. He never
appropriated the name
Prophet, or Rabbi, or Seer, though He did not decline these
titles when given to Him. But
again and again He asserted concerning Himself such prerogatives
as could belong to no
human agent of Divine instruction. He said of Himself,
I am the Way, the Truth, and the
Life. 1
All things pertaining to man's life, present and
future, to his salvation and spiritual
interests in time and eternity, our Lord connects with His own
Person and manifestation
Not only is He the Giver and the Medium of the gift: He is the
Gift itself. Receiving what
is His depends upon receiving Himself. He is all the truth, as
it respects our race, concrete
and personified. All revelation is in His Person: He is the
union of all that is God and all
that is man, and nothing beyond this has vital concern for
mankind. Here is the great
distinction between Christ and every other prophet. He is God
and He is Man; and His
Person is the compendium and substance of all that may and must
be known concerning
both. In this highest sense He is neither a prophet nor a seer:
He declares Himself. Even
God is revealed only as connected with Him: as His Father. This
glorious distinction
pervades our Lord's words. When He promises the Spirit to guide
His disciples, it is
Himself Whom the Spirit is to expound: we must connect
I am
THE TRUTH
with
the Spirit
of truth and
He will guide you into all truth.
2
I AM
THE TRUTH was the loftiest word of
Christ the Prophet
1 John 14:6;
2 John
14:6,17; 16:13
2. In His mediatorial person, however, our Lord condescended to
be literally a Prophet
He used His human nature as the organ of His revelation, and as
Man speaking to men
was the consummate agent of Divine counsel for mankind. He was
the perfect naabiy,
which means the Interpreter of God, or one who pours forth the
Divine words. Thus He
said of Himself,
My doctrine is not Mine, but His that sent Me:
1 not
meaning literally
that it was not His, but that it was not His as distinguished
from God. As My Father hath
taught Me, I speak these things:
2
words which must be connected with what follows,
and
He that sent Me is with Me.
He was also the perfect
chazah,
Seer, or, more poetically,
chazeen.
What He hath seen and heard, that He
testifieth: 3
this was declared by the
Baptist concerning Christ, of Whom he also said, He
that cometh from heaven is above
all. Through the eyes of
His human spirit the God-man saw the mysteries of His own
kingdom. As Prophet and Seer in His incarnate Person He was in
some sense limited. In
the unity of His Father and the Holy Spirit He was a Revealer to
Himself in His own
human faculties of
the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, hidden
4 in
Himself for a
season from His own humanity, and gave His mortal vision to
behold what He
communicated. In His prophetic knowledge and utterances we see
what the human mind
is capable of knowing in union with the Divine. After His
resurrection, or rather after His
ascension, there was no longer any restraint, and the human
faculties of the Divinehuman
person were the organ of the perfect revelation of all such
knowledge as man can
ever have on need
1 John 7:16;
2 John
7:28,29; 3
John 3:31,32;
4 Col.
2:3
3. The Credentials of our Lord's prophetic office were in
harmony with His twofold
character, as sent first to His own generation and thus raised
up for the world
(1.) As a Minister of the Circumcision He gave such
demonstration by miracle as became
an authoritative messenger from God: precisely so much and no
more. The leading
wonders and signs of the ancient prophets were types of His
miraculous works, which as
performed by Himself or His Apostles—for their works were
His—ended the reign of
evidential signs
(2.) But, as the Supreme Revealer, He did not lay stress on His
miracles, because He was
Himself the Miracle of miracles. All that preceded and followed
were only faint preludes
and echoes of His one great Wonder, the manifestation of God in
the flesh, His
resurrection from the dead, and His glorification of human
nature. If ye believe not that
I
AM,
ye shall die in your sins,
and,
when ye have lifted up the Son of Man, then shall ye
know that I
AM.
1
Here was the secret of the authority with which He
spoke. His words
and His actions had in them a Divine and irresistible
self-evidencing attestation. He never
used the language of an Old-Testament prophet,
The Word of the Lord came
unto me,
2 or
the Spirit of the Lord came
3 upon
me, but, Verily, verily, I say
unto you! 4
He did not lay
claim to inspiration, the influence under which the prophets
poured forth their words and
the seers saw their visions: He was not God-inspired but God
Incarnate. Hence the
constant tenor of His declaration to the effect that
every one that is of the truth heareth
My voice, 5
and that
if any man will do,
or
wills to do, His will he shall know of the
doctrine.6
HEAR HIM!
7
was spoken concerning the Revealer when His Divine
nature was
made more intensely
manifest in the flesh
at the Transfiguration
1 John 8:24,28;
2 2
Chro. 15:1; 3
John 10:7;
4 John
18:37; 5
John 7:17;
6 luke
9:35;
7 1 Tim. 3:16
4. Finally, the Ministry of Jesus as the Apostle of our
profession was the final revelation
for the world. It is important to mark this, as it has a close
connection with the ultimate
appeal on every theological subject and the rule of faith in the
Christian Church. In Him
all past, present and future teaching was one
(1.) Our Lord always assumes a tone of absolute finality. With
Him the prophetic office
ceased: prophecy, like the law, found its end in Christ. There
is no other revelation, no
other messenger from God after Him. Whatever other teachers
arose were simply men
from His feet, bearing His words and expounding them more fully
under the influence of
the Spirit. Nothing can be more express than His assertions that
every future word of
instruction should be only His own word continued and developed
(2.) Before He departed He made provision for the continuance of
His own function in
the Christian Church. Without doubt He executes His prophetic
office from His throne in
the heavens. His Apostolic company perpetuated such of His words
as were of permanent
value for mankind. One of that company was brought under
teaching who ever declared
that what of new or enlarged doctrine he had for the world was
given him by revelation
of Christ, and it was he who said,
Let the word of Christ dwell in you
richly. 1
Our Lord
Himself repeated from heaven His direct instructions: the Seven
Churches received them
for all By His last inspired Apostle, however, He has said that
all Christians have an
unction from the Holy One,
and so
know all things.
2 Thus
by His Spirit, who is this
Unction, the Supreme Revealer continues to execute His prophetic
office in the Church
generally, and in every individual Christian
1 Col. 3:16;
2 1
John 2:20
THE PRIESTLY OFFICE
The central and most important office of our Lord's mediatorship
is His priesthood, of
which the high priest, as the representative of the Levitical
system of expiations, was the
type. As Prophet our Lord predicted and asserted His sacrificial
work; but He more
formally assumed it on the eve of His passion, and after His
ascension revealed its full
import by the Apostles. According to their teaching the
Saviour's priestly office consists
of Offering and Presentation of Himself the sacrifice, answering
to His death and
ascension; also of Intercession and Benediction, both based upon
the sacrificial
Atonement, and connected with the administration of salvation
Much of our Lord's prophetic ministry as the Prophet of His own
dispensation was
occupied with the announcement, prediction and exposition of His
priestly atonement
1. When He began to preach He took up His forerunner's word,
which was twofold:
Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!
1 and,
Behold the Lamb of God, Which
taketh away the sin of the world!
2 Very
gradually, and by hints left for future enlargement,
He unfolded the doctrine both of His priesthood and of His
kingdom. Though He
never called Himself a Priest—not even indirectly, as He called
Himself Prophet and
King—He constantly used language which only this office
explains. He did not actually
say that He was the High Priest, the Sacrifice and the Offerer;
nevertheless He applied to
Himself and His mission almost every sacrificial usage and every
sacrificial idea. This
will appear evident from a cursory examination of the Gospel of
St. John, in which we
find the sacerdotal office made prominent: the Synoptists keep
rather in view the regal
1 Mat. 3:2;
2 John
1:29
2. It is observable that our Lord before the Transfiguration did
not dwell much on His
coming death. According to St. John He had spoken of Himself as
the Bread of God
which cometh down from heaven and giveth life unto the world;
1
this however was based
rather upon the
manna in the wilderness 2
than upon the sacrificial feasts, though the
transition to the latter is found in the words:
the bread that I will give is My flesh,
[which
I will give] for the life of the world.
3 On
the Holy Mount our Lord was evidently
prepared for the last stage of His mediatorial history on earth.
The subject of discourse
was the decease
which He should accomplish at Jerusalem.
4 The
decease referred to His
exodus or departure generally; but we may suppose that, as the
victim was anciently
examined by the priest, in order to ascertain its integrity, so
the glory of heaven searched
Jesus through and through: the result was,
This is My beloved Son, in Whom I am
well
pleased. 5
He was approved by the Father as the
Spotless Sacrifice for the world. From
that time our Lord began to predict the fact, the circumstances
and the results of His
death. Now He began to testify of His Cross, to those who much
wondered at His words
Still, while His language and teachings revolved around the
altar, they were not directly
sacrificial, even when He spoke of the Son of Man come
not to be ministered unto, but to
minister, and to give His life a ransom for many.6
1 John 6:33;
2 John
6:49; 3
John 6:51;
4 Luke
9:31; 5
Mat. 17:5;
6 Mat.
20:28
3. It was on the eve of the Sacrifice of the Cross that our Lord
solemnly assumed His
sacerdotal function: first, by the institution of the Supper,
the memorial sacrifice of
Christianity; and, secondly, by what is sometimes called the
High-priestly prayer; the
symbolical Feet washing having been interposed with an affecting
relation to both. The
sacramental institute is pervaded by sacrificial ideas: it
exhibits the true paschal Lamb
Whose blood is at the same time shed for the remission of sins
in virtue of a new
covenant ratified by blood of propitiation, and the benefit of
Whose death is celebrated in
a continual peace-offering feast. The High-priestly prayer was
the self-consecration of
Jesus to the final endurance of the sorrows of expiation. All
the Messianic offices are
hallowed in that supreme Prayer. The prophetic:
I have given them Thy word;
the regal:
as Thou hast given Him power over all flesh;
the priestly:
I sanctify Myself, that they also
may be sanctified.
1 But
it is pre-eminently the consecration prayer of the High Priest: the
formal assumption, in the presence of the cross, His altar, of
His atoning work
1 John 17:14,2,19
4. After Pentecost the sacerdotal office of Christ, previously
the least prominent, takes the
leading place. Its full exposition is mainly to be found in the
Epistle to the Hebrews; but
every other document of the New Testament contains explicit
references to some of its
relations. Taking that Epistle as the text, and the rest as
illustrative, we may view all
under the two aspects of Sacrifice followed by Presentation, and
Intercession followed by
Benediction. But first the mediatorial character of the Redeemer
as High Priest must be
viewed as the foundation of the whole, its leading elements
being these: in the
presentation of the sacrifice the High Priest represented the
people to God; in the
benediction He represented God to the people. He was in ancient
times, and is in Christ,
taken from among men;
1 but
then as now his function looked towards both heaven and
earth
1 Heb. 5:1
THE HIGH PRIEST AND CHRIST
The High Priest represented the priesthood generally, and was
the type of Christ as the
universal Antitype of all sacerdotal persons and ministries. We
need only observe the
points of correspondence, as also the points of difference,
between type and Antitype:
especially in regard to the high-priestly vocation,
consecration, and functions
1. The vocation of the priesthood generally, and of the high
priest in particular, was
connected with the Levitical typical service alone. Before the
time of Moses, the natural
head of every family was also its religious head: wherever Abram
went he built there an
altar unto the Lord;
1 and
when the paschal sacrifice was instituted, the father of the
family discharged the priest's function. Moses absorbed for a
season all offices into
himself, that they might be again distributed. He was not only
the lawgiver but the priest
also: as it is written,
and Moses took half of the blood, and
put it in basins; and half of the
blood he sprinkled on the altar.
2 He
assigned the priesthood to his brother Aaron, as the
head of an hereditary sacerdotal order: the rest of the same
tribe being set apart to
subordinate ministries. Hence there were Levites not priests;
ordinary priests of the
Levitical tribe; and the hereditary high priest or head of the
family of Aaron. This Chief
Priest was therefore the representative of all, called from out
of the people to represent
the people as seeking approach to God by sacrificial gifts. In
the New Testament we are
told that no man
taketh the honor unto himself, but when he is called of God, as was
Aaron. So Christ also glorified not Himself to be made a high
priest; but He that said
unto Him, Thou art My Son, to-day have I begotten Thee.
3
The eternal Son, begotten of
the Holy Ghost in human nature, was fully constituted the
Messiah, and given to the
world as such, in the Incarnation as finished in the
resurrection. Hence He was named
of
God a high priest after the order of Melchisedec:
4 his
high-priesthood was solely of
Divine origin, it was that of a king also and it was eternal
1 Gen. 13L18;
2 Exo.
24:6; 3
Heb. 5:4,5;
4 Heb.
5:10
2. The ceremonial of consecration, as used by Moses, began with
washing at the door of
the tabernacle; 1
followed by investiture with the
high-priestly array; and upon the sacred
person thus washed and clothed the oil of anointing was poured
forth. 2
In connection
with this a sin-offering was sacrificed for removal of guilt, a
burnt-offering to express
entire consecration, and a peace-offering to show God's
acceptance. But the oil was the
sanctification:
and he poured of the anointing oil upon Aaron's head, and anointed him,
to sanctify him.
3 The
high priest was wayimshach: the
priest who is higher than his
brethren, upon whose head the anointing oil was poured,
4
poured in abundance. Our
Lord was consecrated to His office by the Holy Ghost Whom He
received without
measure: Him
hath God the Father sealed. 5
All other particulars of the typical
consecration fell away, unless the baptism of Christ responded
to the washing of the High
Priest. But the essential difference was in this, that Christ,
while He received as incarnate
the Spirit of anointing, did also consecrate Himself:
for their sakes
I SANCTIFY MYSELF.6
By the Divine glory of His Sonship He dedicated His Person and
His being to the
propitiation of the sins of men
1 Exo. 29;
2 Lev.
8; 3
Lev. 8:12;
4 Lev.
21:10; 5
John 6:27;
6 John
17:19
3. The function of the High Priest requires careful
consideration in its typical reference to
the Great Antitype
(1.) As to his person and his office a mediator generally, for
all the people and for every
individual he was the one and only priest. He was the embodied
unity of the priesthood:
he alone virtually represented the people to God and God to the
people. His garments
indicated this: without his distinctive vestments he was a
common man. The breastplate,
as also the shoulder-pieces attached to the ephod, bore the
names of the tribes upon it: he
who wore this sacred symbol represented all the tribes of the
congregation, bearing them
as it were both on his heart and on his shoulders. Hence also
upon his diadem was the
inscription
HOLINESS TO THE LORD . . .
And it shall be upon Aaron's forehead,
that Aaron
may bear the iniquity of the holy things, which the children of
Israel shall hallow in all
their holy gifts; and it shall be always upon his forehead, that
they may be accepted
before the Lord.
1 The
antitypical High Priest, the Redeemer of mankind, was the
Representative of the whole world, bearing the sins of His
people upon His heart, and the
government of them upon His shoulders, presenting them before
God as expiated and
reconciled
1 Exo. 28:36-38
(2.) But the high priest represented God also to the
congregation: the breastplate with its
inscription was called the Urim and Thummim, that is, Lights and
Perfections; being the
same precious stones which bore the names of the tribes regarded
as pledges of light by
inspiration from above on all occasions of public appeal to God.
In this prerogative of the
high priest he was the type of the prophetic as well as priestly
office of Him who came as
the Apostle and
High Priest of our confession.
1 The office of blessing the congregation
was common to the priesthood, but in its highest annual
discharge on the day of
atonement, when the nation was accepted as a whole, it was the
high priest's act alone, as
will be hereafter seen. The Epistle to the Hebrews—the Temple
Epistle—shows at length
that Jesus is the supreme High Priest, the Antitype of Aaron,
not only for men in things
pertaining to God, but also for God in things pertaining to men,
the former and the latter
being included in one sentence:
A merciful and faithful High Priest in
things pertaining to
God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people.2
1 Heb. 3:1;
2 Heb.
2:17
THE GENERAL PRIESTLY FUNCTIONS
The offering of the sacrifice by the Christian High Priest
exhibits the unity and
consummation of all the sacrificial elements in the ancient
offering, as also of all the
kinds and seasons of sacrifice, including the whole economy of
the Levitical institute
THE RITES OF SACRIFICE
The Levitical sacrifice consisted of the presentation of a
victim, with imposition of hands;
the slaughtering, and sprinkling of the blood; the burning of
the victim, and the sacrificial
feast. These were not combined in every sacrifice; but they all
belonged to the expiatory
ceremonial, viewed as complete in itself and as hereafter to
find its perfection in Christ,
the Compendium of all oblations
I. The PRESENTATION
of the victim and
LAYING ON OF HANDS
were both the acts of the
guilty offerer of the sacrifice
1. The place was the court of the sanctuary, whither the
transgressor came indicating his
desire to find his offended God in His holy dwelling-place. The
victim was spotless,
examined and approved as such: it was provided by the offerer
himself, according to the
prescription of the law, as the substitute of his own forfeited
life. Its spotlessness was
simply typical of the perfect sinlessness of the
Lamb without blemish and without spot.
1
That Holy Victim
offered Himself without spot to God,
2
being Himself the representative
of the sinner who offered; but He was also
delivered up for us all
3 by
the Father, Who
provided a sacrifice for the guilty race. The New Testament does
not speak either of the
Church or of the individual as providing an oblation. It is the
prerogative of the Divine
love to furnish sinful man with his sin-offering: as on that
early typical mount it was said,
God will provide Himself a lamb for a burnt-offering.
4
JEHOVAH-JIREH
is the eternal law
of the atonement between God and man
1 1 Pet. 1:19;
2 Heb.
9:14; 3
Rom. 8:32;
4 Gen.
22:8
2. The imposition of hands was not so much symbolical of the
transfer of sin or guilt as
of submission to the Divine appointment and consequent
dedication of the animal to be
the medium of atonement. It was essentially therefore the deed
of the delinquent, who not
only touched but leaned on his victim:
and he shall put his hand upon the head
of the
burnt-offering; and it shall be accepted for him to make
atonement for him. 1
It was his
act of faith in the ordinance of God;
and has its fulfillment in the faith of
the sinner who
makes the death of Christ his own
1 Lev. 1:4
II. THE
SLAUGHTERING AND SPRINKLING OF THE BLOOD FOLLOWED:
these being universal
and always united
1. The Slaughtering, or
shechiyṭah
had for its object the obtaining of the blood, to
be
presented to God for expiation: it was perhaps also the
expression of a poena vicaria;
though it was the offerer himself who slew the victim, and not
the priest, except in the
case of offerings for the nation. The victim was slain by the
transgressor as the
acknowledgment of his own desert of death. Our Lord laid down
His life of Himself, and
gave up His spirit voluntarily as a sacrifice; but
by wicked hands
He was
crucified and
slain. 1
The sinful world consummated its sin by slaying the
sacrifice for its sin; its
greatest iniquity was in that deed, but the Savior made 'His
death His own act. He put
away sin by THE
SACRIFICE OF HIM-SELF.
2
Though it is only the apostates who
crucify to
themselves the Son of God afresh,
3 yet
every penitent believer presents the death of
Christ as representing His own death; and the Church in the Holy
Supper commemorates
it as suffered for all
1 Acts 2:23;
2 Heb.
9:26; 3
Heb. 6:6
2 The priest alone sprinkled the blood, or applied it to the
purpose of expiation, around
the altar, first towards the curtain that concealed the
mercy-seat, and then, in the highest
expression of the symbolical act, on the Kapporeth or mercy-seat
itself. For the life of the
flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar
to make an atonement for
your souls; for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the
soul. 1
Two terms-are here
observable,
lakacot,
to make atonement,
is literally to cover: that is either the soul of
the
offerer as guilty, so that he is seen as under the pure life
that on the altar screens him, or
the condemning sentence of the covenant-testimony deposited
beneath the mercy-seat
Again, the blood
maketh an atonement, kippur,
by means of
or
in virtue of the soul in it.2
This is the true rendering; and it signifies that the innocent
life which had been taken
before the altar as the vicarious representative of the offerer
is on the altar accepted of
God representatively. Thus the sprinkling was the second or more
effectual
PRESENTATION without which
the first was not perfect. The Redeemer's atonement was
fully accomplished when His blood was shed; but it was not
declared to be accepted until
He presented it in the heavens:
By His own blood He entered in once
into the holy place,
having obtained eternal redemption [for us].
3 And
He through the Eternal Spirit
OFFERED HIMSELF
without spot to God. The symbol of
sprinkling is used with two
applications; heavenward, for the propitiation of Divine
displeasure; earthward, for the
expiation of guilt. The sprinkling of the conscience signifies
the application of the virtue
of the expiation to the believer whose guilt is cancelled or
negatived for the sake of
Christ. Bat the term is sometimes varied in the evangelical use:
occasionally it is the
washing away of sin, or the purging of the conscience
1 Lev. 17:11;
2 Lev.
17:11; 3
Heb. 9:12,24
III. THE SACRIFICAL
IDEA WAS COMPLETED BY THE BURNING OF THE OFFERING AND THE
SACRIFICIAL MEAL OR FEAST,
which are closely united in their symbolical significance
1. The term used for burning is one that signifies to make to go
up in vapor: the essence
of the sacrifice ascends to God with acceptance. Therefore it
could not directly symbolize
the punishment of perdition: though as burning on the altar it
was a symbol of the
punitive justice as well as the sanctifying power of the Divine
Spirit. The fire that
consumed the offering, or parts of it, came from God: on that
great first day of Levitical
sacrifice there
came a fire out from before the Lord, and consumed upon the altar the
burnt-offering and the fat: which when all the people saw, they
shouted, and fell on their
faces. 1
It was kept up continually by the morning and
evening sacrifice: the fire
shall
ever be burning upon the altar; it shall never go out.
2
This signified that the entire
service of sacrifice was to be well-pleasing for ever, from
generation to generation, for
His sake Who
hath loved us, and hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to
God for a sweet-smelling savor.
3
Although the symbol had its highest fulfillment in the
perfect self-surrender of Jesus, it had reference also to us and
our oblation of ourselves
The beneficiary of Christ's atonement must be sprinkled with His
blood for the covering
of his person as guilty; and he must yield himself with Christ
as a whole burnt-offering
made acceptable by the Holy Ghost: the one without the other can
never avail. No less
than this is meant by,
I am crucified with Christ.4
1 Lev. 9:24;
2 Lev.
6:13; 3
Eph. 5:2;
4 Gal.
2:20
2. Every sacrifice surrendered its life in its blood; some
sacrifices were wholly destroyed;
but in the peace-offering part was burnt and part reserved for a
feast. This was the highest
result of the ceremonial as expressing the communion between
heaven and earth. In other
sacrifices Jehovah received through the priests part of His
portion: and what was burnt
was also the
bread of their God. 1
And the priest shall burn it upon the
altar: it is the food
of the offering made by fire unto the Lord.
2 St.
Paul tells us that we are all
partakers of
that one bread.
3 The
Lord's Supper is spread on the Lord's table: an altar to God, a table
to us. Jesus is our great Peace-offering, as well as our
Passover: and the highest
expression of Christian faith in the evangelical sacrifice is
thus to partake of the bread of
their God, and sup with
Him
1 Lev. 21:6;
2 Lev.
3:11; 3
1 Cor. 10:17
THE VARIOUS OFFERINGS
The various sacrifices themselves may be blended into unity.
They were divided
anciently into burnt-offerings, peace-offerings, and bloodless
gifts: to these were added,
in the Levitical economy, sin and trespass offerings. All
oblations of every kind were
under the jurisdiction of the high priest, and were consummated
and summed up in the
one sacrifice of Christ
I. The primitive sacrifices, which prefigured the Atonement long
before the Levitical
service, and corresponded therefore to the Gospel before the
Law, are to be traced up to
the earliest times, even to the very gate of Paradise
1. The origin of sacrifice is not matter of express revelation.
But the almost universal
prevalence of oblations, bloody and unbloody, indicates its
Divine appointment. The
primitive record in Genesis is as dim in its utterance on this
subject as it is upon sin
generally and the atoning Redeemer. We read of sacrifices
offered by Cain and Abel: by
the former unbloody gifts, by the latter slain victims.
The Lord had respect unto Abel and
to his offering: but unto Cain and to his offering He had not
respect. 1
The reason of the
difference lay in the disposition of the offerers.
By faith Abel offered unto God a more
excellent sacrifice than Cain:
2 his
offering was a gift, but it was also an expiatory typical
sacrifice, which Cain's was not. And there can be little doubt
that the faith which
rendered that primitive oblation acceptable was faith in the
Great Sacrifice of the future
Thus the first account of approach to the Supreme by sacrificial
offerings teaches, when
interpreted by the New Testament, that it was not enough to draw
nigh with gifts
betokening gratitude and self-surrender; but that every oblation
of thanksgiving must
needs have in it a propitiatory element. This primitive oblation
therefore gave the law for
all subsequent worship as culminating after long and various
developments in the
Christian atonement
1 Gen. 4:4,5;
2 Heb.
11:4
2. The BURNT-OFFERING,
laolaah,
was the earliest, most common, and most
comprehensive of the oblations dedicated to Heaven as Korban or
Gift. Its pre-eminence
was its symbolical meaning, that combined in one the expiatory
shedding of blood and
the perfect offering of the self: hence it underlay, surrounded,
and perfected all other
oblations from the beginning of sacrificial communion with God
down to the Perfect
Sacrifice. It was this which Noah presented at the second
beginning of propitiatory
oblations. He
offered burnt-offerings on the altar. And the Lard smelled a sweet savor;
and the Lord said in His heart, I will not again curse the
ground. 1
Jehovah accepted the
expiation of the Patriarch; and smelled afar off the sweet savor
of the Perfect Sacrifice for
the guilty world. Abraham was commanded to take his only son
Isaac into the land of
Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt-offering:
2 the
type of the same far distant
oblation of the Only-begotten. The covenant of Sinai was
ratified by burnt-offerings.3
They pervaded also the subsequent Levitical economy, constituted
the daily or continual
sacrifice which typified the eternal atonement, and always
maintained their preeminence
The double character assigned to them is stated at the outset of
Leviticus. And he shall
put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering; and it shall
be accepted for him to make
atonement for him
4
After the sprinkling of the blood fire was put upon the altar, the
wood laid in order, and it became
an offering made by fire, of a sweet
savor unto the
Lord. This twofold
character further gives it special significance as it respects the
Supreme Antitype and His people.
Christ also hath loved us, and hath
given Himself for
us an offering and a sacrifice to God for an odor of a sweet
smell. 5
Here the propitiatory
sacrifice of Christ is the freewill burnt-offering of His
perfect love. And in that it is the
example of the offering of His people: as the sin-offering
proper He does not admit us so
directly to share or continue or fill up His sacrifice
1 Gen. 8:20,21;
2 Gen.
22:2,7; 3
Exo. 24:8;
4 Lev.
1:4,9; 5
Eph. 5:2
3. The PEACE-OFFERINGS—whether
thank-offerings, vows, or freewill gifts—were
combinations of expiatory and dedicatory sacrifice: but they
represented the gifts of the
offerer rather than himself the giver. Like the burnt-offering
they signified at once the
consciousness of sin and the thankfulness for deliverance from
it. They were presented,
so far as they were expiatory, for the re-establishment of a
state of grace; and, that being
accomplished, as the joyful expression also of acceptance with
God. These all found their
antitype in the Paschal Lamb:
He is our Peace,
1
Whose oblation we present in faith for
the forgiveness of sins, and receive sacramentally as the pledge
of that forgiveness. It
may be added that the meat-offerings and drink-offerings which
were connected with the
daily burnt sacrifice, as also with the other peace-offerings,
belong to the general idea of
Divine acceptance and communion with the worshippers. Our
present purpose does not
require a minute investigation of them. Suffice that they in
some sense mitigated the
sternness of the ancient institute; and that they all find their
end and perfection in the
Christian Supper
1 Eph. 2:14
II. Peculiar to the Levitical economy were the
SIN-OFFERINGS,
and their modification, the
TRESPASS-OFFERINGS.
These were intimately connected with the giving of the law, as
containing the more express revelation of the nature of sin, and
as the basis of a preparatory
covenant of typical sacrifice for its expiation. We have here
chiefly to do with
these offerings, including their more stern and their more
joyful accompaniments, as the
preeminent type or prophetic symbolical foreshadowing of the
Christian Atonement
1. It is impossible to formulate with precision the difference
between the sin-offering and
the guilt-offering in the Levitical institute. Both were
expiatory sacrifices for SIN, as
being offence against positive law and ceremonial ordinances,
committed in ignorance
and inadvertence; that is, not with a high hand and in
deliberate rebellion. But the
trespass-offering was always presented for individual error: the
sin-offering not always
The former respected violation of the rights of the covenant,
the latter rather neglect of its
precepts. Hence the former had more to do with transgressions
touching property, the
latter with transgressions of law. The trespass-offering
connoted the idea of
SATISFACTION:
and he shall bring his guilt-offering
to the Lord, a ram without blemish
out of the flock, according to thy estimation, for a
guilt-offering, unto the priest; and the
priest shall make atonement for him before the Lord, and it
shall be forgiven him. 1
The
sin-offering connoted rather the idea of
EXPIATION
through the sacrifice of a pure life. But
in the supreme and universal oblation of Christ the distinction
is done away for ever. He
is at once the Satisfaction of every Divine claim, and the
Propitiation for every human
offence
1 Lev. 6:6,7
2. The sin-offering, of which the guilt-offering was only a
species, brought into distinct
prominence the expiatory character of the sacrificial institute,
which, before the giving of
the law, was to a certain extent veiled and hidden. It was from
the beginning itself called
SIN,
chataat,
LXX. amartia, peri ths amartias,
for sin; even as the guilt-offering was
itself called GUILT,
ASM.
Hence our Lord is said to have been made
sin for us, Who knew
no sin, 1
and, at His second coming, will
appear without sin unto salvation.
2
The
sacrifice was, so to speak, the embodiment or incarnation of
sin; and, where the offering
made atonement for all the people, the flesh was
burned without the camp.
3
No sin
offering, whereof any of the blood is brought into the
tabernacle of the congregation to
reconcile withal in the holy place, shall be eaten.
4 But
in the lower and more individual
grades of the sin-offering there was a marked difference.
In the place where the burnt
offering is killed shall the sin offering be killed before the
Lord: IT IS MOST HOLY.
The
priest that offereth it for sin shall eat it:
5
though not the transgressor himself. It might
seem that when the flesh was eaten by the priests their official
sanctity neutralized the
impurity of the victim. Our Great High Priest was
MOST HOLY
though bearing the sins of
the world; and, though He represented the sin-offering that must
not be eaten, He was
nevertheless the Offering of which we all partake as priestly
offerers. And the Lord hath
laid on Him the iniquity of us all.
6 This
gives the idea both of expiation and of
substitution. His soul was made
an offering for sin.
Jesus was the reality of that which the
sin-offerings only typified.
But in those sacrifices there is a
remembrance again made of
sins every year:
7 a
remembrance made, not only every year, but on every occasion of
their presentation. They only taught the evil of sin and the
need of atonement: there could
be nothing homogeneous between an animal victims and a human
transgressor. They
accustomed the people to the thought of a
SUBSTITUTE;
but we, in the Fulfillment, see that
the Supreme SIN-OFFERING
has expiated sin itself, and not merely
offence against the
Levitical institute; that He is the atonement even for those
offences with a high hand of
whose perpetrator it was said:
that soul shall he utterly cut off; his
iniquity shall be upon
him.8
In Him is all the virtue, and none of the defect,
of the ancient types
1 2 Cor. 5:21;
2 Heb.
9:28; 3
Heb. 13:11;
4 Lev.
6:30; 5
Lev. 6:25,26;
6 Isa.
53:6,10;
7 Heb. 10:3;
8 Num.
15:31
3. The distinction between two kinds of sin-offering, one for
the whole congregation, the
other for individual transgressions, must be constantly borne in
mind
(1.) The latter had less direct relation to the Christian
Sacrifice: being designed to make
atonement for offences against the Theocratic code not willfully
committed but through
ignorance or rashness or levity. This qualification perpetually
occurs as restricting the
efficacy of these offerings for sin.
If any one of the common people sin
through
ignorance, bishgaagaah, while he doeth somewhat against any of
the commandments of
the Lord concerning things which ought not to be done, and be
guilty; or if his sin, which
he hath sinned, come to his knowledge, then he shall bring his
offering . . ..
And the priest
shall make an atonement for him, and it shall be forgiven him.
1
Here it is to be observed
that the Hebrew word used signifies transgression or
ERRING
through the predominance of
the evil principle within, in contradistinction to sinning
presumptuously or with a high
hand, 2
bªyaad raamaah.
For the latter, class there was no sin-offering.
Hence the
Psalmist's prayer:
Who can understand his errors? cleanse Thou me from secret faults
Keep back Thy servant also from presumptuous sins.
3 For
the former there was
cleansing; from the latter the petitioner sought only restraint.
And in the Epistle to the
Hebrews it is said that the high priest offered
for the errors of the people,
4
for their
agnoeemátoon, and not
for their willful violations of the covenant. Herein the type fell
immeasurably below the Antitype. The expiation of Christ avails
for every sin that is
confessed over the Atonement:
if any man sin, we have an Advocate
with the Father,
Jesus Christ the Righteous:
5
and He is the propitiation for our
sins. Yet the severity of
the restriction in the type is also pressed into the service of
Christian caution. Though the
Great Sacrifice avails for all sin, there is no atonement for
the obstinate rejector of that
sacrifice. If we
sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there
remaineth no more sacrifice for sins.
6 As
there were sins unatoned for in the Theocracy,
so also there is
a sin unto death 7
under the Gospel
1 Lev. 4:27-31;
2 Num.
15:30; 3
Psa. 19:12,13;
4 Heb.
9:7; 5
1 John 2:1,2;
6 Heb.
10:26;
7 1 John 5:16
(2.) The daily and annual sacrifices for the sin of the people
covered the guilt of all the
congregation as such, and availed, on behalf of all who put
their trust in the Divine
ordinance, for the expiation of every kind of offence not
already punished by excision
The blood of these was sprinkled
before the Lord
towards the Holiest, and
upon the horns
of the altar of sweet incense;
1 on
the great day of atonement upon
the mercy-seat. 2
But
of this more hereafter
1 Lev. 4:6-17;
2 Lev.
16:16
4. The sin-offerings of the Levitical economy had sometimes
connected with them certain
peculiar Purifications of the individual and of the community,
regarded as having
contracted defilement: leprosy; contact with dead bodies;
suspected crimes, such as
adultery and murder; the blood guiltiness of the community when
the manslayer was not
discovered. The diversified ceremonies superadded to the
sacrifice which generally
accompanied them pertained to what the New Testament terms
the purifying of the flesh.1
They had mainly to do with the Theocratic relations of the
parties; but were all typical of
the defilement of sin, and are often referred to as
illustrations of the purifying effect of
the Atonement. They have done much to mould the phraseology of
the Christian
covenant; but of themselves belong rather to the archaeology of
the ancient people
1 Heb. 9:13
III. The Redeemer of mankind represented in Himself every
expiatory offering of every
kind, and in His one oblation offered once all other oblations
have found their end and
spiritual perfection. He is the One Sacrifice for sin presented
by Himself, the High Priest,
for and on behalf of mankind represented by Him. He is the
VICTIMA SACERDOTII SUI ET
SACERDOS SUAE VICTIMAE. As,
in the Epistle to the Romans, He is the
end of the law for
righteousness,
1 so, in the Epistle to the Hebrews, He is
the end of the sacrifices for
eternal redemption.
2 But
here two important cautionary suggestions must be made
1 Rom. 10:4;
2 Heb.
9:12
1. The entire system of ancient sacrifices was but the shadow of
an eternal substance. The
Epistle which gives us the authentic valuation of the old
economy tells us that it is not
possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away
sins; 1
that the law could
not make the
comers thereunto perfect 2
in freedom from the
conscience of sins.
They
sanctified only
to the purifying of the flesh.
3 On the one hand, they availed only for the
maintenance of a national and individual relation to the
Theocracy. On the other, they
made no provision for deliverance from guilt as violation of the
moral law. The true
secret of the peace which was pronounced upon penitent and
sincere offerings was
reserved: to be made known when
the figure for the time then present
4
should be
superseded by the Reality. And, with regard to this, the sincere
Hebrew and the sincere
Gentile were on a level: only that the former had the revelation
that constantly announced
a future Redeemer, and might mingle with his merely carnal
ordinances a dim faith in the
yet unrevealed Atonement
1 Heb. 10:4;
2 Heb.
10:1; 3
Heb. 9:13;
4 Heb.
9:9
2. But, this being true, the figurative and typical institute
gave profound suggestion of the
nature of that future propitiation. It told of the exceeding
sinfulness of sin, which in its
endless varieties was so rigorously watched by the Holy One of
Israel, and demanded
such varieties of sacrifice. The meaning of the sacrificial
phraseology must not be lost
when it is transferred to Christian times, as many vainly
affirm: that meaning is glorified
in the spirit, but its body and its letter is still of Christ.
Patterns only, they were still
patterns of things in the heavens.
1 Many
terms are given to oblivion in the Gospel; but
EXPIATION as the ground of
REMISSION
through the shedding of
SACRIFICIAL BLOOD
are
words to be had in everlasting remembrance. If the economy of
typical propitiations had
no permanent significance, but introduced a system in which no
atonement was offered to
justice, the New-Testament Epistles must have been written in a
totally different style
1 Hab. 9:23
THE SACRIFICIAL SEASONS
The various holy seasons and festivals of the old covenant were
also summed up and
abolished in the one High-priestly function of Christ. There
were the Daily Service; the
Sabbatic Days; the Three Feasts, and the Great Fast. In the year
there may be said to have
been two main cycles: the Passover, with the days of Unleavened
Bread, and the Feast of
Weeks or Pentecost for the spring; the Day of Atonement, the
Feast of Tabernacles, with
its Azereth for the autumn. All these were under the supervision
and control of the high
priest; and they were all done away by being glorified in the
mission and work of the
Redeemer. The Passover and the Day of Atonement will for our
purpose adequately
represent the entire series
THE PASSOVER
The Passover was at once a sacrifice for sin and a
peace-offering. Unless we admit this
combination we miss the design of the institute and lose its
profound connection with the
Christian Sacrifice
1. The Angel of the Lord passed over or spared all the houses
which were sprinkled with
the blood of the paschal lamb; but sprinkling generally, at
least sprinkling with blood,
connoted the idea of expiation. The representative of the
household confessed that
deliverance was of the grace of God alone; and the people as a
whole at the beginning of
every ecclesiastical year renewed the covenant with God by
sacrifice. As a sin-offering it
was also a peace-offering: celebrating as a national expression
of gratitude the
redemption from Egypt as well as the deliverance of Israel's
firstborn. Subordinate to this
was its acknowledgment of the goodness of Jehovah in the gifts
of the earth. The slaying
of the victim and the partaking of it went together from year to
year, and from generation
to generation: hence the Passover was a sin offering and a
peace-offering in one
2. Christ our
Passover is sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast.
1
These words,
though standing alone in this form, must be understood according
to their plain import as
throwing a flood of light on the ancient institute and on its
spiritual significance. In virtue
of the blood of Jesus the spiritual Israel are redeemed from
worse than Egyptian bondage
and blessed with a better inheritance than Canaan. In the first
reference to the Lord's
sacrifice the Baptist termed Him
the Lamb of God, Which taketh away the
sin of the
world, 2
where it is certainly the paschal lamb that is
referred to, but with the expiatory
and substitutionary idea of later prophecy added and made
prominent. The Lord's own
constant reference to the sacrificial and sacramental food of
His flesh would seem to
imply the presence in His thoughts of the paschal feast, which
indeed was the main
characteristic of the Passover. It was a communion, and in this
different from every other
sacrifice: not a feast in which the offerer partook with the
priest, but one in which the
families of Israel united. At the close of His life the Redeemer
instituted the Eucharist, as
the Evangelical Passover, in which His Church should for ever
keep the feast: first, as a
commemorative Sacrifice, celebrating the expiatory death;
secondly, as a symbolical
Sacrament, representing Christ, the Passover, as the nourishment
of His people; and,
thirdly, as an emblem of the unity of His New Israel in Himself
1 1 Cor. 5:7,8;
2 John
1:29
3. The Passover was prolonged for seven days to give the feast
the covenant character of
perfection: the seven days were the
FEAST OF UNLEAVENED BREAD
which gave it its name
On the first day after the proper Passover was the offering of
the wave-sheaf. Seven full
weeks after that wave-offering came the
FEAST OF WEEKS,
the celebration of the
completed harvest: hereafter to be abolished and glorified in
the outpouring of the Holy
Ghost on the day which was known as the Pentecost. With this
feast the fulfillment of the
Old-Testament paschal festival was complete. The characteristic
of the whole solemnity
was the festal commemoration of deliverance from Egypt; a
deliverance which typified
the Great Redemption. And its connection with the Eucharist, the
abiding sacramental
commemoration in the Christian Church, makes the Passover in a
certain sense the
preeminent typical institute of the Old Testament. The Lord's
Supper is, so to speak, the
antitype of the Paschal Feast as it included the whole cycle of
seven weeks: it therefore is
the Christian Feast which celebrates all the events of the Fifty
Days
THE DAY OF ATONEMENT
The Day of Atonement, on the tenth of Tisri, the seventh month,
effected an annual
reconciliation between God and the collective people; and was
the chief, inasmuch as it
was the most comprehensive, typical and symbolical Old-Testament
prefiguration of the
Christian mystery. As such it combined most of the other
elements of the sacrificial
economy, and added not a few of its own. It was the day of the
high priest pre-eminently,
when his function culminated. On other days acting by delegates,
on that day— THE DAY,
Bªyowm, of the Talmud—he
administered his office almost alone: the sublimest of all
typical figures
1. The sacrifices he first offered for himself showed the
distinction between the type and
the Antitype: as the representative of the people, and also one
of them, he needed
atonement for himself and his priestly order and the very
sanctuary that remaineth among
them in the midst of their uncleanness.
1 The
holy places however were purified by the
sprinkling of the blood of the victims offered for priest and
people, probably mingled,
and not by any distinct sacrifices ordained for that purpose:
their unclean ness resulted
from the sins of those who entered them
1 Lev. 16:16
2. The high priest's typical relation to Christ was shown in his
transaction with the two
goats respectively.
1 One,
chosen by lot, he offered for a sin-offering. Its blood availed
for universal expiation: for all the transgressions of all the
people, as sprinkled upon the
mercy-seat seven times; for the altar and sanctuary without as
sprinkled also upon them
The counterpart victim, the Scapegoat, was the symbolical
BEARER AWAY
of the iniquities
which the other goat
BORE.
Upon its head the high priest confessed
all the iniquities of
the children of Israel, and all their transgressions according
to all their sins, and it was
driven forth
unto a land not inhabited:2
into a separated land, 'erets
gªzeeraah, symbol of
that utter separation from God which is the punishment of sin.
Though the two goats were
distinct, they made up one expiatory idea. The victim which was
slain represented the
sacrifice for sin and the remission of penalty. The victim which
was not slain, but driven
into the desert to die, symbolized the absolute removal and
Divine oblivion of guilt:
la`ªzaa'zeel,
TO AZAZEL,
or for the Scapegoat,
means literally
to utter forgetfulness
or
complete dismissal. The
double symbol declared that all penalty was remitted and all sin
forgiven and forgotten: cancelled as though it were not
1 Lev. 16:8-34;
2 Lev.
16:21,22
3. But that which made this the Supreme Solemnity of the
Levitical economy was the fact
that then only was the blood of expiation, of which Jehovah
said, I have
GIVEN IT TO YOU
upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls,
1
brought within the veil, into the
very presence of God where the law within the ark testified
against the transgressors
Then were all the other forgivenesses of the year confirmed;
then all defects in
forgiveness repaired, saving only as touching those high-handed
acts of rebellion which
found no place of repentance. The assurance was
that ye may be clean from all your sins
before the Lord.
2
Hence in the Great Fulfillment the Christian High Priest hath entered
into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us.
3
But the typical high
priest went out again from the face of Jehovah. The process of
expiation must be repeated
annually. Jesus needs not to
offer Himself often:
His one oblation covers the whole sphere
of human sin from the beginning to the end of its continuance on
earth. And His abiding
within the Veil is our security
1 Lev. 17:11;
2 Lev.
16:30; 3
Heb. 9:24,25
THE PASSOVER AND DAY OF ATONEMENT COMBINED
The entire doctrine of the Atonement is based upon the Christian
fulfillment of the
prophetic and typical meaning of these two solemnities, the
Paschal Feast and the
Atoning Fast. A combination of their elements is necessary.
Neither is sufficient of itself
But, united, they furnish a most impressive and comprehensive
view of the central
Christian mystery
1. As the Passover predominates in the Gospels, so the Day of
Atonement takes the lead
in the later New Testament, especially in the Epistles to the
Romans 1
and the Hebrews,
neither of which alludes to the paschal solemnity. The former
points every allusion to the
subject with a reference to the great Fast day: it makes Christ
Himself the propitiatory, or
mercy-seat, or propitiation, set forth in the mind of God and
upon the scene of
transgression, for the remission of human sins in the past and
the present and the future:
while it does not exclude the intercession of Christ, it dwells
rather on the offering in the
outer court. Moreover, it connects the whole rather with the
idea of righteousness than
with the idea of sanctification: combining in one the
evangelical court and the evangelical
temple. In the Epistle to the Hebrews
2 the
great day of expiation occupies a very large
place. The sacrifice in the outer court and the presentation
within the veil fill up the
central chapters of the treatise
1 Rom. 3:21-28;
2 Heb.
9,10
2. As united they demonstrate typically what the Christian
atonement demonstrates
really, the absolute necessity of satisfaction to Divine justice
in order that the Divine love
may be glorified; that therefore the God who is offended Himself
provided the Supreme
Sacrifice; that the virtue of the atonement, apprehended by
faith, secures the perfect
abolition or canceling of sin and its punishment; that the one
Redeemer Who offered His
life on the altar of the cross ever liveth to present His
intercession for His people on earth
3. They further teach in their unity that the benefit of the
supreme expiation belongs to
the company of Christ's people as such. That is the general
lesson taught by the types of
the Levitical economy. If we would seek the universal effect and
influence of the
redeeming Sacrifice we must go behind and beyond the Mosaic
institute, to the primary
sacrificial oblations which were before the Law. There we find
Him in Whom should all
the nations of the earth be blessed.1
1 Gen. 22:18
4. When combined they also proclaim that the redeemed estate of
the people of God, the
children of redemption and of the sacrificial covenant, is one
of mingled fasting and
feasting. If the Passover was the Great Feast, the Day of
Atonement was the Great Fast:
but they are united in the Cross and its commemoration. In other
words, there is a
foreshadowing of the truth that stamps its solemn impress on the
writings of the Apostle
Paul: the Christian life is a union with Christ in His suffering
and in His joy, in His life
and in His death, in the process and in the result of His
atonement. The joy, however,
predominates; for
He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows;
1
borne them away
into the land of forgetfulness. The Day of Atonement has no
sacramental commemoration
as such: Christ
our Passover is sacrificed for us; let us keep the Feast.2
1 Isa. 53:4; 2
1 Cor.
5:7,8
INTERCESSION AND BENEDICTION
It was the preeminent function of the high priest to present the
blood of atonement, and
thus silently to intercede for the whole congregation once in
the year; though the priestly
service generally was one of perpetual mediation and
intercession. The Blessing of the
people was also the special office of the priests, to be
discharged after and on the ground
of the sacrificial offerings. Our Lord's Intercession is the
presentation of Himself in
heaven to the Father after His self-oblation on earth; not
without special prayer for its
objects. His Benediction is imparted by the Holy Ghost, and is
bound up with the
administration of all the blessings of the new covenant. While
Intercession is more
directly connected with the sacrificial office, Benediction is
linked with all the offices of
the Christ. It is the final consummation of each
INTERCESSION
I. The intercession of the high priest was expressed typically
by the incense before the
mercy seat in the Holiest on the day of atonement. David says
generally: Let my prayer
be set forth before Thee as incense;
1 and
in the New Testament we read generally again
of the golden
bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of saints.
2 But
the incense
offered by the high priest was strictly connected with his
typical mediatorial relation: 3
And Moses said unto Aaron, Take a censer, and put fire therein
from off the altar, and
put on incense, and go quickly unto the congregation, and make
an atonement for them. 4
Moses himself, without the incense, had interceded in words.
This was an extraordinary,
and, as it were, irregular procedure; and is the solitary
instance of the incense
representing the atonement. The prayer of Moses and the censer
of Aaron alike typified
the intercession of Christ, Who intercedes both by the
presentation of His sacrifice and by
the virtue of His prayer. At first the high priest himself burnt
sweet incense every
morning as also
at even . . . a perpetual incense
before the Lord on the altar for that
purpose which was
before the veil that is by the ark of the testimony.
5
Hence we read in
the Epistle to the Hebrews of the
Holiest of all, which had the golden
censer, and the ark
of the covenant.
6 This
discrepancy is to be explained by the fact of the intimate,
connection between the two. The daily incense was the symbol of
the intercession that
daily allayed the Divine displeasure; but it was on the day of
atonement that this symbol
had its highest meaning.
That the cloud of the incense may cover
the mercy seat that is
upon the testimony, that he die not:
7
these last words belonged to the type only, but the
general truth remains that the incense of intercession covered
the mercy seat simultaneously
with the blood of atonement, and blended with the thick cloud of
the Divine
glory. So the mystical temple of the Prophet's vocation
was fitted with smoke:
8 the
smoke of the same intercessory incense which fills the temple
where Jesus the High
Priest presents His eternal sacrifice
1 Psa. 141:2;
2 Rev.
5:8; 3
Num. 16:46;
4 Exo.
32:11,32; 5
Exo. 30:6,7,8;
6 Heb.
9:3,4;
7 Lev. 16:13;
8 Isa.
6:4
II. This antitypical intercession of Christ is variously set
forth in the New Testament,
especially in the Temple Epistle
1. It is the presentation of
HIMSELF
before the Father on our behalf.
By His own blood He
entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal
redemption: 1
ONCE FOR
ALL. He is not represented as carrying His atoning blood with
Him: the exhibition of His
Sacred Person is enough. A careful consideration of the
classical passage in the Epistle to
the Hebrews will shed much light upon this. The English
Authorized Version mentions
three appearances of Christ as marking the historical process of
the Atonement. The three
terms in the original are different and carefully chosen: the
middle one expressing the fact
that the Son of God in our humanity manifests Himself before His
Father and our Father
without a veil.
At the end of the ages He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of
Himself: 2
pefanérootai,
was manifested as God in the flesh. This is closely, indeed
indistinguishably, connected with His entering
into heaven itself, now to appear
before
the face of God for us: emfanistheénai,
to present Himself boldly and abidingly without
any protecting cloud of incense. This silent intercessory
appearance shall end when He
will appear a
second time without sin unto salvation: oftheésetai,
He will be seen of
angels and men in His majesty, without the humiliation of His
sacrificial connection with
sin. St. John expresses the same truth :
If any man sin, we have an Advocate
with the
Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous; and He is the propitiation
for our sins.3
He is
Himself the Propitiation and the Advocate: Himself, which is
more than His blood or His
life. The virtue of His sacrifice is the value of His Person.
The MERIT
of Christ is the
power of His intercession; and that merit is not simply the fact
of His voluntary selfsacrifice,
but His self-sacrifice as that of the Son of the Father's
infinite complacency. His
merit is the worthiness of His Incarnate Self. His Presence in
heaven is His all-effectual
plea. Three important truths arise here to our notice. (1.) The
intercessory presentation of
Himself in heaven is not, as the Socinians and those who follow
them assert, the
beginning of His priestly function.
Christ was once offered to bear the
sins of many:4
hápax prosenechtheís eis tó polloón anenengkeín hamartías,
sacrificial terms which had
their full meaning already in the Cross. (2.) There is, however,
no continuation of the
sacrifice in heaven; and there can be no continuation of it upon
earth. The Atonement is
gone up FOR A
MEMORIAL BEFORE GOD 5
for ever; and the Romanist Sacrifice of the Mass
has no sanction, but is utterly condemned, in the Epistle to the
Hebrews. As it is
appointed unto men once to die
6 for
their sins, so Christ was in the deepest truth
APPOINTED TO DIE ONCE for
expiation of sins, but only once. (3.) Lastly, the unity of the
Atonement on earth and the intercession based upon it in heaven
must be most carefully
maintained. The NOW
to appear
marks the whole period from Calvary to the Judgment
as
the Day of Grace, and of the
PUTTING AWAY OF SIN,
the athéteesin teés hamartías.
7
1 Heb. 9:12;
2 Heb.
9:24-28; 3
1 John 2:1;
4 Heb.
9:28; 5
Acts 10:4;
6 Heb.
9:27;
7 Heb. 9:24,26
2. The intercession of our Lord is also direct supplication on
behalf of its beneficiaries:
the words which describe it prove this.
He maketh intercession
1 for
us: the term
entungchánei generally
used of oral supplication either for or against its objects. And
Jesus Christ the Righteous
2 is
called our parákleeton with the
Father, our Advocatus or
Intercessor, fulfilling His promise that He would
pray the Father
3 for
His disciples, and
thus continuing in heaven the High-priestly prayer begun on
earth. As to the speech of the
glorified Son Incarnate, the tongue not of men nor of angels,
the unspeakable words
which it is not yet lawful either to hear or to utter, it is
needless to inquire. Suffice that
the Saviour's intercession has all the effect of what below is
called intercessory prayer
As we must not refine away the truth of His being
touched with the feeling of our
infirmities, 4
so we must not make the God-man above a
Silent Representative of our
humanity
1 Rom. 8:27;
2 1
John 2:1; 3
John 14:16;
4 Heb.
4:15
III. The objects of His intercession are the world, the mystical
Church of His people, and
every individual who appeals to Him
1. By His presence in heaven Christ is the Pleader for the
world, that is for the humanity,
human kind, or human nature, which He represents. The high
priest entered into the
inmost sanctuary of the temple on behalf of the covenant people:
the blood which he
sprinkled was accompanied by incense, which he waved, without a
word, not to protect
himself from the insufferable glory of God, already dimmed by
the thick darkness
1 of
the
cloud, but to prevent the Divine justice from causing his death
as the representative of the
people. This incense signified the intercession of Christ, whose
presence in heaven keeps
the sinful earth in being;
I bear up the pillars of it.
2
It availed from the beginning by
anticipation; on no ground can we understand how a guilty race
should be propagated
under the moral government of God save that the intercession of
the Second Adam began
when first it was said:
the plague is begun.
Hence Isaiah, going beyond the Levitical
economy, says that
He made intercession for the transgressors:
3 this
in the widest
meaning of the word
1 Psa. 75:3;
2 Num.
16:46; 3
Isa. 53:12
2. It is true, however, that the specific intercession of Christ
is limited to His prayer for
His own people. Before He departed He poured out an intercessory
supplication which
was the earnest and the type and the pledge of His future
pleading for His Church as
united by faith with its Living Head
(1.) This intercession is only for His own: not because the
Redeemer forgets the world
which He came to save, but because it is of a character
distinct, and appropriate only to
His people's relation to Him. It is not only request on their
behalf, but the sacred demand
of Christ on behalf of Himself as represented in His people.
They are His other Self, YET
NOT ANOTHER.
Father, I will that they also, whom
Thou hast given Me, be with Me where
1 am. 1
It is rather stipulation than intercession:
théloo
rather than
eroto.
Hence Jesus,
because He continueth ever, hath an unchangeable priesthood.
Wherefore He is able to
save them to the uttermost
(or perfectly and evermore)
that come unto God by Him,
seeing He ever liveth to make intercession for them.
2 He
hath brought them to God, but
also brought them to Himself; and only asks the portion that
falleth to Him. He demands
rather than asks for them, as united with Himself and part of
Himself, all that is His: that
the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in them, and I in
them. 3
The Father's love
is arrogated for them as of necessity, because the Beloved Son
of the Father is in them
both collectively and individually
1 John 17:24;
2 Heb.
7:24,25; 3
John 17:26
(2.) The Saviour's intercession as High Priest makes acceptable
both the persons and the
worship of His people. Grace is
given freely in the Beloved.
1
They
offer up spiritual
sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.
2 His
is the much incense, that He
should
add it unto the prayers of all saints:
3 the
angel to whom it was given was only a
ministering priest or Levite under this great High Priest. And
in order that all the service
of those who are priests with Christ may be well pleasing, the
Holy Ghost represents the
Supreme Intercessor within their hearts.
The Spirit Himself maketh intercession
for us
with groanings which cannot be uttered.
4
And He that searcheth the Hearts
knoweth
what is the mind of the Spirit, for He maketh intercession for
the saints according to the
will of God according to
the will of the High Priest also. There is no more impressive
view of the heavenly pleading within the veil than that which
makes the voice of the Holy
Ghost within our hearts its echo. This concert of the Two
Intercessors—the One within
the shrine above, the other within the shrine of our spirits,
but both agreeing in one—is
the infallible guarantee of our communion with God and
acceptable prayer
1 Eph. 1:6;
2 1
Pet. 2:5; 3
Rev. 8:3;
4 Rom.
8:26,27
(3.) This intercessory pleading is the Scriptural expression for
that perfect sympathy of
our Lord with His members on earth which His community of nature
gives Him, in virtue
of which He is their Paraclete or Advocate or Helper, succoring
them in temptation,
strengthening them for duty, and imparting to them seasonable
help. He knows the
secrets of all hearts as God: but His humanity gives Him a
knowledge that He could not
without it have, and the Scripture lays much stress on the
benefit of this. Wherefore in
all
things it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren . . ..
For in that He Himself hath
suffered being tempted, He is able to succor them that are
tempted. 1
His sympathy does
not spring from remembrance of sin or fall or danger of falling;
but from His human
experience of the devices of Satan haunting the accesses of our
nature. In His atoning
passion He Who knew no sin yet became acquainted with it as only
God incarnate could
become; so also in His administration of His atoning grace He
knows, as only God
incarnate can know, our need
1 Heb. 2:17,18
3. But this leads to the individual bearing of our Saviour's
intercession. The Head of every
man is Christ:
1 the High Priest over the whole house has a
special relation to every
worshipper. He is the Representative of the whole Church, and of
every several branch,
in His intercession: it was the Church of Laodicaea, neither hot
nor cold, concerning
which He said, I
will spue thee out of My mouth,
2 or
drop its name from His heavenly
Litany. But His heart is also the faithful Friend of sinners,
and faithful to every mortal
transgressor as his own High Priest. As surely as the Atonement
availed for the entire
family of Adam, so certainly the pleading of Christ on the
ground of the atonement may
be appealed to by every representative of that family
1 1 Cor. 11:3;
2 Rev.
3:16
(1.) This is the strength of the penitent's heart in approaching
the God of justice. The one
Mediator between God and men
1
makes intercession for all that
come unto God by Him
For through Him we both 2—Jews
and Gentiles, saved and unsaved—have
access by one
Spirit unto the Father.
3
Every man living and sinning on earth has, if he will only use it,
an introduction,
prosagoogeén, a right of humble
approach to God. He has not only the
ground of confidence that an accepted propitiation for his race
gives, but also the
assurance of a Divine-HUMAN
Representative who loves his own individual
soul, and has
left on record this unrevoked and irrevocable word:
him that cometh to Me I will in no
wise cast out.
4 If He will not cast him out, most surely
the Father behind Him will not
1 1 Tim. 2:5;
2 Heb.
7:25; 3
Eph. 2:18;
4 John
6:37
(2.) Especially is this true of the believer. On the basis of
the Atonement he is accepted in
Christ; but he might be tempted to think, nor would it be an
unreasonable temptation,
that, having sinned against the grace of that Atonement, his
hope must perish. But his
Head above is a living, unchangeable, ever available Pleader for
him. If any man—any
Christian man—sin,
we have an Advocate, 1
Who, in the court of heaven, vindicates the
rights of His sacrifice offered on earth. For every believer He
is at once a Propitiation and
a Paraclete in the presence of the Father
1 1 John 2:1
BENEDICTION
1. The solemn Benediction which attested Divine acceptance was
expressly provided for
in the Levitical service. It was an integral part of the high
priest's duty, which, like almost
all others, was committed in due time to the priesthood
generally. At the first
consecration of Aaron and his sons, after the offerings were
presented for the host, Aaron
lifted up his hand toward the people, and blessed them.... and
the glory of the Lord
appeared unto all the people.
1 The
evidence of that verbal blessing was that
there came
a fire out from before the Lord, and consumed upon the altar the
burnt-offering and the
fat: which when all the people saw, they shouted, and fell on
their faces. Of
the priests
the sons of Levi
2 it
was afterwards said, that them
the Lord thy God hath chosen to
minister unto Him, and to bless
IN THE NAME OF THE LORD.
The stress must be laid upon
these last words: God alone is to be blessed in Doxology, and
God alone blesses in
Benediction, whether in Old Testament or New. The blessing was
not only, however, in
the name of the Lord; it was also the name of the Triune God
Jehovah impressed upon
the people, making them His own.
Speak unto Aaron and unto his sons,
saying, On this
wise ye shall bless the children of Israel, saying unto them,
The Lord bless thee, and keep
thee: the Lord make His face shine upon thee, and be gracious
unto thee: the Lord lift up
His countenance upon thee, and give thee peace. And they shall
put MY NAME
upon the
children of Israel; and I will bless them.
3 Here
are united the blessings of universal
providential care, of mercy for sin, and of internal peace: for
the people generally and for
every individual worshipper prepared to receive it. Two things
are to be observed in
passing
1 Lev. 9:22-24;
2 Deu.
21:5; 3
Num. 6:23-27
1. As we have seen that the symbols of sacrifice within the veil
pointed mysteriously but
certainly to the Triune God, so also did the Benediction which
sealed to the worshippers
the acceptance of those sacrifices. Three names, yet to be
revealed, are alone wanting to
make the Levitical Blessing the distinct benediction of the Holy
Trinity. The benediction
IN ACT,
the effusion of the Divine glory, found its great realization, though itself a
reality,
when God shined
in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in
the face of [Jesus] Christ.
1 His
is the Face of God turned on the penitent in GRACE,
whether in this world or the next. The benediction
IN WORD
found its highest fulfillment
in the testimony of the Divine Spirit, giving
PEACE
through the assurance that we have
grace freely
bestowed on us in the Beloved.2
1 2 Cor. 4:6;
2 Eph.
1:6
2. The ancient Benediction was not only typical; it was more
than a mere form of words;
it was a reality, pronouncing over the people, and every
individual who sincerely
complied with the conditions of the old covenant, an acceptance
the true and eternal
ground of which was as yet not made known. It has already been
seen that the Levitical
economy, as such and in its specific prescriptions for the
atonement of individual and
national offences, aimed only at the maintenance of external
legal relations to the
Theocracy. But, underlying and surrounding all these, was the
great typical system of
sacrifice that was accepted for the sake of the Coming
Atonement, the undisputed virtue
of which secured the effectual acceptance of God. There was a
pretermission or páresin
of all sins for a season, until the fullness of time confirmed
this into an aphesis,
1
or full
forgiveness
1 Rom. 3:25
II. It is the prerogative of the One Mediator between God and
man that He is not only the
Minister of blessing, but that He is also its Source.
1 He
is God and the High Priest in one
He is the Antitype of Melchisedec, who
met Abraham,
higher than he, and
blessed him
and all the Levitical priesthood in him. The benediction of
Jesus is the benediction of
God Incarnate, and it is no less than the administration of all
the benefits of the evangelical
covenant: the
promise of eternal inheritance.2
1 Heb. 7:1-11;
2 Heb.
9:15
1. The blessing of our High Priest is deliverance from sin. It
is the blessing of Abraham,1
that is, the
righteousness of faith, 2
and
the promise of the Spirit through
faith: that Spirit
being the sanctifying power of the Gospel.
God, having raised up His Servant sent
Him
to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his
iniquities. 3
Comparing these
passages, which are one in the unity of the blessing of Abraham,
we gather that the
Christian High-priestly benediction is our deliverance from all
sin
1 Gal. 3:9-14;
2 Rom.
4:13; 3
Acts 3:26
2. Hence it is the impartation of
all spiritual blessings in heavenly
places in Christ. 1
The
term BLESSING
is one that cannot be defined: it is the
gracious mystery of the
manifestation of the Supreme to His people in grace. It is a
gift without a definition;
including all the individual benefits that may be put into
words, it surpasses each in
particular and surrounds the whole. It is the unbounded sum of
all that has been procured
for the redeemed children of men: first, as the restored
prerogative of the creature resting
in the Creator, and, secondly, as the superadded blessedness of
a nearer than creaturely
union with God in Christ
1 Eph. 1:3
3. This Benediction is imparted through the Holy Ghost. He is
the Vicar of Christ, and
the Agent of His will, and the Medium of every benefit of His
passion. Therefore the
more full consideration of this subject belongs to the next
department of our Theology
Meanwhile, it must be remembered that the Blessing of the Gospel
is obtained by Jesus
the Priest, announced by Jesus the Prophet, imparted by Jesus
the King, through the
Mediatorial Spirit of the new economy of grace
THE JEWISH AND THE CHRISTIAN TEMPLE
Before we pass to the Kingly Office of Christ we must linger for
a while on the scene of
His High-priestly function, which is, whether on earth or in
heaven, the Temple, or
Tabernacle: the place of special Divine revelation to man
I. In the Old Testament we see the progressive stages of the
history of sacrificial worship
converging towards the Christian Temple
1. Before the Levitical economy the Altar stood alone under the
heavens: the mizbach,
the first record of which is that
Noah builded an altar unto the Lord,
a
thusiasteérion,
1 so
termed from the burnt offerings
SLAIN
before it. From that time the patriarchs raised altars
where God revealed Himself, as Abram
builded an altar unto the Lord, Who
appeared
unto him. 2
When the law was given on Sinai Jehovah said
to His people: Ye have seen
that I have talked with you from heaven. Ye shall not make with
Me gods of silver, neither
shall ye make unto you gods of gold. An altar of earth thou
shalt make unto Me, and shalt
sacrifice thereon thy burnt offerings, and thy peace offerings,
thy sheep and thine oxen:
in all places where I record My name I will come unto thee, and
I will Mess thee. 3
From
that time there was to be no longer an altar in every tent
1 Gen. 8:20;
2 Gen.
12:7; 3
Exo. 20:22,24
2. The Mosaic Sanctuary was a Tabernacle,
'ohel mow`eed,
the Tent of congregation,
where God met His people; also the
mishkan haa`eedut,
the Tabernacle of Testimony, or
of Covenant revelation. The innumerable details of the economy
of this domain of the
high priest's function belong to archaeology: only the leading
points need to be referred
to here, and those only as pertaining to the Mosaic Sanctuary.
There was a threefold
division. In the Court, surrounding all, the Covenant People
assembled; and this, in the
later Temple, made silent provision for the future ingathering
of the Gentiles. Here was
the Altar of Burnt-offering. The sanctuary proper, the Holy
Place, haqodesh
admitted the
priests only; it had the Table of Shewbread, the twelve loaves
of which renewed every
sabbath were a permanent meat offering in acknowledgment of the
Divine gifts; opposite
to this the Golden Candlestick, with seven lamps, the symbol of
God in His Holy Spirit
for ever enlightening the Temple; and between them, over against
the ark of the covenant,
the Altar of Incense, representing the daily intercession of the
priesthood and the daily
prayers of the congregation. Into the Holiest of All, the Most
Holy Place, haqaadaashiym
qodesh the high priest
alone entered once in the year. There was the Ark, the most
comprehensive symbol in the ancient worship: the
Ark of the covenant,
1
which had in it
the tables of the covenant,
the conditions of God's good will towards His
people, and at
the same time the testimony of His people's sinfulness; the Ark
of the throne of God,
because His glory as a thick cloud rested on the Kapporeth or
Mercy-seat, which covered
the record of transgression from the Divine eyes. Over the
Propitiatory were the
Cherubim, so important in the symbolical drapery of the
curtains, of which it was said:
0
Shepherd of Israel, Thou that dwellest between the Cherubim,
shine forth! 2
These
represented all the Divine attributes in their universal
manifestations: barring the entrance
to Paradise and watching the way of return. But they have faded
away in Christ
1 Heb. 9:4,5;
2 Psa.
80:1
3. The Tabernacle, with all its divisions, was one under the
supremacy of the high priest
Every figure, symbol, and act within it—from the laver at the
entrance to the thick cloud
of the Divine glory never seen but by faith—paid its tribute to
the great Fact: there I will
meet with thee, and I will commune with thee from above, the
mercy-seat, from between
the two cherubims. 1 It
may not always be possible to trace the connection; nor is it
necessary. We must be content with observing the typical
allusion of the whole to the
Christian temple in which the Supreme Sacrifice was once offered
WITHOUT
the veil, and
then presented
WITHIN it
1 Exo. 25:22
II. The new temple is as conspicuous in the Evangelical
revelation as the old temple was
in the Levitical economy
1. It is the glory of the Christian Offerer that He is the
Antitype not only of the typical
high priest, and of all the offerings He presented, but of the
place itself in which He
offered. Nor is there anything more impressive in the Great
Fulfillment than the truth that
the Incarnate Son is as incarnate Himself the Temple. His first
prediction concerning His
own Person declared this:
destroy this temple, and in three days
I will raise it up: He
spake of the temple of His body.
1 His
human nature—our human nature—is the shrine in
which the Word,
Whose
Glory
was
as of the Only-begotten, became flesh and dwelt
among us. 2
This central truth throws its beams
backwards to Paradise and forwards to the
Consummation: giving unity to all the Scriptural records of
God's dwelling among men
In Eden the Divine Presence, with the guardian Cherubim, had its
ark. After the Fall the
Presence of the Lord
3 was
retained upon earth until the Flood. It then became the
Glory
of the Lord, kªbowd,
over the Ark of the Covenant: permanent, as distinguished from
occasional Theophanies, and as the type of the final indwelling
of God in our nature. The
later Jewish theology gave it the name
SHEKINAH,
as the tabernacle was formerly called
mishkan Yahweh, the
dwelling-place of Jehovah. But now in Christ Jesus, the Incarnate
Son, God is abidingly
manifest in the flesh.
4 The
ancient symbol was the object only of
faith: the Reality is object of faith also, but the Apostles
could say, We beheld His glory;5
and He Himself said,
he that hath seen Me hath seen the
Father. 6
When He appeared it
was already true that
the tabernacle of God is with men,
7
though another fulfillment was
in the future. The true theology of our Lord's Person holds that
He inhabited human
nature as His temple: He enters or
is come into
or
in8
the flesh. Not that the Divinity is
the High Priest and the flesh the temple. There are indeed two
passages that seem to
warrant such a view. Jesus is said to have consecrated for us a
new and living way of
access to God
through the veil, that is to say, His flesh:
9 in
His human nature He
suffered; and the rending of that veil opened the way into the
Holiest. But the rending of
His Holy Flesh did not rend asunder His one Personality: He
through the Eternal Spirit10
offered Himself in
heaven when that sacred curtain was repaired. But it must be
remembered that He
offered HIMSELF.
We must beware of the temptation to refine upon
these distinctions; and not think it necessary to harmonies all
the various sayings of
Scripture on the great mystery which rises above all figures and
analogies
1 John 2:19,21;
2 John
1:14; 3
Gen. 4:16;
4 1
Tim. 3:16; 5
John 1:14;
6 John
14:9; 7
Rev
21:3; 8
1 John 4:2;
9 Heb.
10:20; 10
Heb. 9:14
2. The Body of our Lord, in another view, is the mystical
fellowship of His saints. In that
Jesus is High Priest, and all who are His partake of His
priesthood. (1.) First, the Church
as such is the sphere of the High Priest's function. He is
Himself its Shekinah, whose
glory from the Holiest, blending with the Sevenfold Light of the
Spirit from the Holy
Place, is the
FULNESS OF GOD 1
for which the Apostle prays. Whosoever is in Christ
lives
and moves in Him as a Temple:
ye are the Temple of the living God.
2
In Him
all the
building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in
the Lord. 3
Thus is fulfilled
the mystic prophecy of the precious ointment
that ran down upon the beard, even
Aaron's
beard. 4
The unction of the High Priest descends upon all
His members, for He and they
are one; while, in the sublime confusion of figures, those who
form the spiritual house,
and holy
priesthood, offer up themselves as
spiritual sacrifices.
5
(2.) And every
individual Christian is said to be a temple in which our High
Priest dwells: the whole
economy of communion with heaven being translated into the
believer's heart, in which
he is exhorted to
sanctify the Lord Christ. 6
This indwelling of the High Priest is the
highest and deepest characteristic of personal religion: it is
that ABODE WITH HIM
7
which
the Savior reserved for His last promise to any individual on
earth, as well as His last
promise to any individual from heaven:
I will come in to him.8
1 Eph. 3:19;
2 2
Cor. 6:16; 3
Eph. 2:21;
4 Psa.
133:2; 5
1 Pet. 2:5;
6 1
Pet. 3:15; 7
John
14:23; 8
Rev. 3:20
3. But there is a yet wider view. Heaven and earth make the New
Temple in which our
High Priest ministers. It is a sanctuary
not made with hands.
1
Heaven is the Holy of
Holies, into which He has entered with the virtue of His
sacrifice. There are the
cherubims of glory without the symbol, beholding not the
mercy-seat sprinkled with
blood, but the Person of Jesus Who without blood and without the
incense presents
Himself boldly for us that we also may come with boldness.
Following out the symbol to
its issues, the expositor of the Christian temple says that it
was necessary that the
heavenly things themselves
2
should be purified with the
letter sacrifices: not that heaven
itself needs sprinkling, save through the One Propitiation of
its God. The Holy Place is
done away in a certain sense: there is but one Priest, and all
believers are a royal
priesthood who offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God
through Jesus Christ. In
that outer court our Lord's altar, the Cross, was once erected.
It is gone, and yet the
Apostle says, We
have an altar! 3
disguising, and yet scarcely disguising, his
allusion to
the cross. In this outer court there is no distinction of Jew
and Gentile: Christ hath broken
down the middle wall of partition.
4 Nor
is there any other distinction. The whole family
of believers as yet in probation occupies the
GREAT HOUSE
5 in
which there are many
mansions. 6
But the strange paradox remains that, while
Christian men in the militant
church are on the pavement of the outer court, they are at the
same time in heavenly
places in Christ.
7
Hence they are exhorted with
boldness to enter into the Holiest
8
above
almost in the same sentence that speaks
of our not forsaking the assembling of
ourselves
together 9
below. But these subjects belong rather to
the doctrine of the Church
1 Heb. 9:11;
2 Heb.
9:23; 3
Heb. 8:10;
4 Eph.
2:14; 5
2 Tim. 2:20;
6 John
14:2; 7
Eph. 1:3;
8 Heb. 10:19;
9 Heb.
10:25
4. There is one other application of the High-priestly function
of our Lord to which it is
important in this place to refer, however slightly. The entire
scheme of the Christian
atonement belongs to this office of the Messiah. Not as the
Teacher, nor as the Ruler,
does He save the world: save as teaching the principles of His
sacrificial work, and
administering the blessings it has purchased. It will hereafter
be seen how much the
doctrine of the Atonement is bound up with the Divine government
of a Lawgiver Who
administers His law in a new court, the Court Mediatorial. There
He exacts and receives
what theological language terms satisfaction. But it must always
be remembered that the
Temple is the true sphere of atoning sacrifice. The evangelical
Hall of judgment is no
other than a Court of the Temple. And it is something more than
a mystical fancy which
regards the Veil as separating between the outer sanctuary where
the oblation that
satisfies justice is offered, and the Holiest where it is
presented for Divine acceptance
Our Lord's Atonement is the
SACRIFICIAL OBEDIENCE
or the
OBEDIENT SACRIFICE
which
hath put away sin: the Obedience was rendered in the outer court
where blood reigns unto
death, the Sacrifice was offered in the inner shrine where mercy
reigns unto life. In Christ
all these things are one. And this unity is the main object of
the Evangelical discussion of
the Epistle to the Hebrews. On all other matters, even of an
economy that was Divine, it
is very brief and never solicitous to expatiate:
of which we cannot now speak severally.1
1 Heb. 9:5
THE REGAL OFFICE
The Kingly authority of Christ is grounded on His sacrificial
death: as its high reward; as
the medium of carrying out its ends; and in its highest exercise
the bestowment of the
blessings purchased by His Atonement. This mediatorial dignity
was arrogated by
Himself on earth by anticipation and in virtue of the Divinity
of His Person. After the
resurrection He formally assumed it on the Mountain in Galilee;
He then ascended to His
throne in heaven for its exercise; and thence sends forth His
Apostles to declare and
enforce His royal prerogatives. The Kingdom of Christ is
exhibited in their writings as
the kingdom of grace: administered in the world by His
Providence, in the Church, and in
the hearts of believers. As such it will terminate with the
final judgment; but as the
kingdom of glory, already begun, and to be consummated at the
great day, it will be
everlasting
I. Understanding by the title King the Redeemer’s mediatorial
government generally, we
may say that it occupies the foremost place in the Old-Testament
prediction, and was
accordingly assumed by our Lord as His own from the beginning.
The earliest and most
glorious prophecies which, went before on the Deliverer
proclaimed His supreme
authority. Such were the Protevangelium; 1
the promise to Abraham;2
the blessing of
Jacob;3
and the predictions to David.4
The Psalms open with the kingly supremacy of
the
Christ, and make this their ever recurring keynote.5
The Prophets set out with this theme:
it begins prophecy proper in Isaiah, and, as has been seen, runs
through the whole series
of the Messianic prophets, who invariably connect the
announcement of the Saviour's
SUFFERINGS with
THE GLORY THAT SHOULD FOLLOW.
The teachers in Judaism, after the
Captivity, introduced a different view. They took the sufferings
of the Servant of
Jehovah6,7
to themselves and their own nation, and a carnal
view of the reign of their
Christ predominated: their favorite name for Him was
KING MESSIAH.8
The Jews of Egypt
differed from those of Palestine in not localizing the scene of
the Messiah's government
in Jerusalem, and generally in understanding His kingdom to be
moral and spiritual
1 Gen. 3:15;
2
Gen.22:17; 3
Gen. 49:10;
4 2
Sam. 7:16; 5
Psa. 2,45,72,110;
6 Luke
24:26;
7 1 Pet. 1:11;
8 Isa.
52;53
II Our Lord opened His mission by proclaiming, not His own
kingdom, but the kingdom
of heaven and of God. On the nature of that spiritual government
He discoursed largely;
but it was not until the close of His ministry that He
represented Himself as the Supreme
Ruler in it. His authority till then was that of the Teacher
only: as exercised upon the
Mount of Beatitudes ,
and vindicated for Him on the Mount of
Transfiguration. His
mediatorial kingdom as such was to be specially based upon His
atoning death as the
Divine-human Representative of Mankind. The relation between His
regal government
and His expiatory humiliation was declared by Himself on the eve
of His passion, and is
much dwelt upon by His Apostles. It is placed before us under
two aspects
1. By undergoing a substitutionary death for mankind the
Redeemer obtained both a
judicial and a moral right to the human race. (1.) He redeemed
it from the bondage of sin
and the doom of death. But in His own language and in His
servants' Satan represents that
bondage as the
god of this world. 1
Approaching His cross our Lord said:
Now is the
judgment of this world; now shall the Prince of this world be
cast out. And I, if I be lifted
up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself.
2 The
alien power was cast out in the court
of judgment, and it was decided that the world belonged to Him
Who died and revived,
that He might be Lord both of the dead and of the living.
3
But this was only the vindication
of an authority which had been virtually His from the beginning;
since He had been
the King uncrowned, because
the Lamb slain, from the foundation of
the world. 4
(2,) His
moral right is that which the infinite benefit of His passion
confers; and it is this which
draws men to His feet. It is the gracious and effectual sway of
the atoning sacrifice on all
who accept its propitiation:
ye are bought with a price.5
1 2 Cor. 4:4;
2 John
12:31,32; 3
Rom. 14:8,9;
4 Rev.
13:8; 5
1 Cor. 6:20
2. The self-renunciation of Jesus receives universal government
as its reward. He
obtained as a gift the dominion over mankind:
Glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may
glorify Thee: as Thou hast given Him power over all flesh, that
He should give eternal
life to as many as Thou hast given Him.1
But He also received the mediatorial
government of the universe:
Wherefore God also hath highly exalted
Him, and given Him
the name which is above every name.
2
Whether or not the virtue of His passion extended
to other worlds, certainly its reward and honor extends to them
1 John 17:1,2;
2
Phil. 2:9
III. After His resurrection He formally assumed His regal sway
1. It was on the Mountain of Galilee, to which He summoned His
Apostles and disciples,
and virtually the whole company of believers, that He for the
first time announced His
absolute authority in human affairs. Above He had said,
All Mine are Thine, and Thine
are Mine, 1
with a wider and deeper meaning; but now He
declares, All power is given
unto Me in heaven and in earth:
2 all
power in heaven AND
earth, in heaven
FOR
earth
Having already proclaimed His rule below as
Lord of the dead,
3 and
having declared it in
the midst of His brethren on earth, He then ascended up to
exercise it for ever
1 John 27:10;
2 Mat.
28:18; 3
Rom. 14:9
2. Hence it is obvious that the regal office of Christ must not
include His government of
the universe as the eternal Son. And further we are prepared for
the doctrine of St. Paul,
that the jurisdiction obtained by the Mediator will, after all
its designs are subserved in
the salvation of the saints and the subjection of His enemies,
be surrendered to the Father,
and mediatorial authority shall cease. It began after the Cross,
and will therefore end
when the redeeming design is fulfilled
IV. The formal analysis of the Redeemer's regal office, set
forth in the Acts as exercised
on earth, in the Apocalypse as exercised in heaven, and in the
Epistles theologically
described, can only be summarized here. Almost every topic finds
its more appropriate
place hereafter in the Administration of Redemption
1. The kingdom of Christ is the Christian Church or the kingdom
of grace. As such its
treatment must be reserved for a later stage. Meanwhile, some
points of importance
require brief notice
(1.) This kingdom is in its widest meaning the re-establishment
of the Divine authority
over man. It is
the kingdom of heaven, because its Ruler
is ascended into heaven, and
there sits upon the throne of saving authority; because its
object is to restore the
principles of heavenly obedience upon earth, according to our
first great prayer: Thy
kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth, as it is done in
heaven; 1
and because it will be
consummated when earth becomes heaven and heaven earth to
mankind. It is the
kingdom of God, because
the Incarnate Ruler is Himself Divine; and it is thus also
distinguished from
the kingdoms of this world 2
which are ordained of God to be the types
and reflections of His supreme rule. Hence the Church, as the
kingdom of Christ, is
essentially a spiritual authority over spiritual subjects.
Whatever relation it may sustain to
the transitory governments of time, it is entirely independent
of them. And, whatever
externality it may assume for a season, its profound and abiding
character is the internal
and spiritual reconstruction of the
THEOCRACY
in which God, now the God-man, rules
over a saved mankind. (2.) It has indeed an outward
organization: laws and
administration of law, rulers and submission to rulers, terms of
admission and penalties
of excommunication. But all these are connected rather with the
Visible Church, or
visible Churches, than with the Kingdom of Christ, which is the
glorious restoration of
Divine authority over man: one, spiritual, ever enlarging and
tending to its consummation
in heaven. The
KINGDOM has a meaning which the
CHURCH
has not
1 Mat. 6:10;
2 Rev.
11:15
2. This will be further apparent if we consider how habitually
the kingdom of our Lord is
declared to be set up within the individual heart. It is the
interior life of religion, and
coincides with the imparted blessings of personal salvation
under the New Covenant, and
the ethical relations which result from them. There is no view
of personal religion more
comprehensive than that which makes it the absolute sway of One
Ruler within the heart
3. It is the jurisdiction over the world for the sake of the
Christian Church. The New
Testament abounds with testimonies, which find their highest
expression in St. Paul's
words concerning the mighty power that
hath put all things under His feet, and
gave Him
to be the Head over all things to the church, which is His body,
the fullness of Him that
filleth all in all.
1 The
providential government of human affairs is in the hands of Christ
for the sake of the Body of a new mankind which He is gathering
and sanctifying to
Himself. (1.) Hence the kingly office of the
LORD OF ALL
2 is
exercised in the protection
of His people; He is the
Captain of their salvation:
3
He hath on His vesture and on His
thigh a name written:
KING
or KINGS,
AND LORD OF LORDS.
4
(2.) It is the Headship of a
conquering Gospel which must in some sense win the world,
subjugate and suppress
Satanic powers, and rescue mankind as such. When our Lord first
announced His
authority He added the words:
Make disciples of all the nations,
baptizing them into the
name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost;
teaching them to observe all
things whatsoever I have commanded you; and, lo, I am with you
alway even unto the end
of the world. 5
He Whose Name is
ABOVE EVERY NAME6
here pays fealty to the Holy
Trinity whose Representative He is. But the final accomplishment
of the designs of
heaven is bound up with obedience to Himself. For that He waits
on His throne. With this
Lo we may connect another in the Old Testament:
Lo, My Servant, Whom I uphold! He
shall not fail nor be discouraged, till He have set judgment in
the earth.7
1 Eph. 1:22,23;
2 Acts
10:36; 3
Heb. 2:10;
4 Rev.
19:16; 5
Mat. 28:19;
6
Phil. 2:9;
7 Isa. 42:1
4. The last function of mediatorial sway will be the final
judgment; when the High Priest
shall no longer intercede for the world nor the Prophet teach
mankind, but the Son of
Man, Who is also
the King,
shall
sit upon the throne of His glory, and before Him shall
be gathered all nations:
1
gathered for the first and last time that He may
separate them
again to be united no more
1 Mat. 25:31,32
5. While the Mediatorial King will lay down His authority, the
same King, as Head of the
Church, shall reign for ever.
And of His kingdom—as
the indwelling of the supreme glory
of the Godhead in mankind—there
shall be no end. 1
But these are subjects that belong to
Eschatology
1 Luke 1:33 |