THE END OF THE INCARNATION
by
Benjamin B. Warfield
[A sermon preached in the chapel of Princeton Theological
Seminary on October 9, 1892 and published by Anson D.F. Randolph &
Co., 1893]
John 6:38-39: For I am come down from
heaven, not to do mine own will but the will of Him that sent me;
and this is the will of Him that sent me, that of all that He hath
given me, I should lose nothing, but should raise it up at the last
day.
In the miracle of the feeding of the five thousand our Lord
presented Himself symbolically to man as the food of the soul. For,
as Augustine reminds us, though the miracles wrought by our Lord are
divine works, intended primarily to raise the mind from visible
things to their invisible author, yet their message is not exhausted
by this. They are to be interrogated also as to what they tell us
about Christ, and they will be found to have a tongue of their own
if we have skill to understand it. " For," he adds, "since Christ is
Himself the Word of God, even a deed of the Word is a word to us."
One of His miracles is accordingly not to be treated as a mere
picture, which we may be satisfied to look upon and praise; but
rather as a writing, which we are not content to praise though we
delight in its beauty, but find no satisfaction until we have read
and understood it. We may possibly consider somewhat fanciful
Augustine's detailed decipherment of the signs in which this miracle
is written. He discovers in it a complete parable of the salvation
of man and of men. But we can scarcely refuse, as we read it in the
pregnant record of John, to say in Pauline phrase, "these things
contain an allegory."
As such, indeed, John presents it. This is the meaning of his
care to tell us, as he introduces his recital, that "the passover
was at hand": not a mere chronological note, we may be sure; nor yet
merely an explanation of the presence of the multitude, gathered for
the pilgrimage to Jerusalem; but a premonition of what is to come,
John's account of the occasion and meaning of the miracle, which
itself was the occasion of the great discourse on the bread of life.
Christ, the true passover, chose the passover time, when men's minds
were upon the type, to present the anti-type to them in symbol and
open speech. It was therefore also that He tested His disciples with
searching questions, designed to bring them to the discovery of
whether they yet knew Him; and that He taxed the people that "signs"
were wasted upon them (verse 26), and that while they were demanding
a sign that they might see and believe (verse 30), the sign had been
given them, and though they had seen, they did not believe (verse
36). It was therefore above all, that Christ followed up the miracle
with the wonderful discourse in which He explains the sign, and
declares Himself openly to be "the bread of God that cometh down
from heaven and giveth life to the world." This is the tremendous
truth which miracle and discourse united to proclaim to the
multitudes gathered on the shores of Gennesaret at that passover
season; but which, despite type and sign and teaching - each a
manifest word from God, - they could neither receive nor understand.
And this is the blessed truth which our text, - taken from the
center of the discourse and constituting, indeed, its kernel, -
presents to our apprehension and belief anew to-day. May the Spirit
of truth, who searches all things, even the deep things of God,
illuminate our minds and prepare our hearts, that we may understand
and believe.
I. Let us begin by observing the testimony borne by our Lord and
Master here to His heavenly original and descent: "I am come down
from heaven," He says. And the truth here declared is the foundation
of the entire discourse : the whole gist of which is to represent
Jesus as the "bread out of heaven," "the true bread out of heaven,"
"the bread of God that cometh down out of heaven," which the Father
hath given for the life of the world. I need not remind you how this
representation pervades John's Gospel, from the testimony of the
Baptist (iii. 31), that He who was to supplant him "cometh from
above," and is therefore "above all," to Jesus' own triumphant
declaration at the close of His life, that, His work being finished,
He is ready to return to the Father who sent Him, and to the glory
that He had with Him before the world was (xvii. 5, II). Our
present asseveration is but a single instance of the constant
self-testimony of the Son of Man to His heavenly original and
descent.
The older Unitarianism was prodigal of miracle. It was not the
supernatural, but the mysteries of the Holy Trinity and the God-man
that were its scandal. When brought face to face with such passages
as these, it was wont, therefore, to explain that Jesus, born
miraculously of His virgin mother, but a mere man, was taken up to
heaven by the divine power to learn the things of God; whence He
again descended to bring divine teaching to men. To the newer
Unitarianism, on the other hand, it is precisely the supernatural
which is the offence. Its philosophical forms might hospitably
receive such mysteries as the Trinity and the God-man, if only they
may be permitted to run freely into their moulds. But divine
interventions of any kind, and most of all the descent of a personal
God from heaven to earth, to be incased in flesh and to herd for a
season among men, it cannot allow. It, therefore, attacks our
passages with a theory of ideal, not real, preexistence, and teaches
that Jesus means only that, in the thought and intention of God, His
advent into the world had long been provided for, and that, in that
sense, He was with God and came forth from God.
How weak, how inconceivable, all such expedients are before the
majesty of Christ's self-witness: " I am come down from heaven." And
when we turn over the pages of this Gospel, - the leading idea of
which it has been said, inadequately indeed, but so far truly, is
the Divine glory of Christ in the incarnation, - and observe our
Lord's constant witness in the discourses recorded in it, not merely
to His descent from the Father, but to His essential equality and
oneness with God, to His eternal preexistence with Him, and to His
prospective return to His primal glory with the Father, after His
task on earth is accomplished, - how our spirits bow in worship
before that God only-begotten who is in the bosom of the Father, who
became flesh and tabernacled among us for a season full of grace and
truth, and "declared" to us by His very existence among us that God,
not only whom He came forth from, but whom He is.
II. We should not fail to observe, however, that the incarnation
is not spoken of in our text, as an end in itself, but rather as a
means to an end. The object of our Lord here is not to present the
bare fact of His having come down from heaven to the wonder of men,
but to expound the purpose of His coming down from heaven. "I am
come down from heaven," He declares, "in order that I may do
the will of Him that sent me." You will scarcely need to be reminded
that this, too, is the representation, not of our text only, but of
the whole body of relevant deliverances recorded by John from the
mouth of the Master, and indeed of the entire Gospel itself.
Everywhere and always, it is not the coming down from heaven itself,
but the purpose of the coming, that receives the emphasis. And this
is why it is inadequate to say that the leading idea of John's
Gospel is the glory of Christ in the incarnation. Its leading idea
is, rather, the sufficient end of the incarnation, or, in other
words, its leading purpose is to present what we may call a
satisfactory philosophy of the incarnation.
And this is the precise amount of truth that lies behind the
assertion so freely made by those who are stumbled by the heights of
John's theology, that his Gospel is not a simple narrative of fact,
but an ideological treatise, which, in their view, is equivalent to
saying that it does not give us fact but fancy, and is to be looked
upon not as a sober history but as a metaphysical essay. But does
history cease to be history when it passes beyond the mere
tabulation of events, and essays to marshal them according to their
relations and under the categories of cause and effect ? -when it
ceases to be a mere chronicle, in a word, and becomes what we have
learned to call philosophical history? And is it to be made a
reproach to a writer of history that he has sought not merely to
collect, but also to understand his facts; and to record them in
such a way as to bring out their internal nature as well as their
external form?
Bishop Alexander, in his delightful little book on The
Leading Ideas of the Gospels, places the matter relatively to
John's Gospel in a very clear light. "A great life," he reminds us,
" cannot be rendered by a simple agglomeration of facts," "A great
life, - a life whose words and works influence mankind profoundly, -
is not sufficiently told by merely relating its facts and dates.
What an enigma, for instance, is the life of Napoleon! How many of
his biographies are mere masks, concealing those bronze features! We
cannot understand any great and complicated life, good or evil, by
merely recording the isolated events along which it moved. It is an
organic whole, and must be reconstructed as such. . . . . This,
then, is the great Leading Idea of St. John's Gospel. Given
the facts of Christ's life, how shall we bind them into unity, and
read them as a whole? What theory of His Person and Nature will give
us a logical and consistent view ? What Christ did and
said becomes explicable only by knowing what Christ is. . . . .
Some who have not lost all reverence for Christianity speak as if
St. John's prologue added a difficulty for faith ; as if St. Matthew
or St. Luke on the incarnation were comparatively easy to receive.
Is it so for those who think? Place side by side these statements.
On the one side - 'when as His Mother Mary was espoused to Joseph,
before they came together she was found with child of the Holy
Ghost.' On the other side, the four oracular propositions - 'in the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God. And the Word was made flesh.' Which is easier to receive? . . .
. In St. John the fact of the Incarnation is lifted up and flooded
with the light of a divine idea. If in the Unity of the Divine
existence there be a Trinity of Persons; if the Second Person of
that Trinity is to assume the reality of flesh, and the likeness of
sinful flesh, we can in some measure see why He needed the
tabernacle of a body, framed and moulded by the Eternal Spirit, to
be His fitting habitation. The mystery of a Virgin Mother is the
correlative of the mystery of the Word made flesh."
1
Surely this is most admirably said. To be made quite perfect, it
needs only the removal of the emphasis from the nature of Christ to
the work of Christ. "If the Second Person of that Trinity is to
assume the reality of flesh, and the likeness of sinful flesh." . .
. . Aye, if . . . . . Dr. Alexander leaves this "'if"
hanging in the air. But not so John. To give an adequate account of
it is just the object and chief end of his Gospel. We need to amend
the postulation of the problem, therefore, so far as not only to
insert, but to emphasize this element. " Given the facts of
Christ's life, how shall we bind them together into unity, and read
them as a whole? What theory of His Person and Nature, and
Purpose and Work, will give us a logical and consistent
view?" This is the problem that John's Gospel answers. And in
answering it, it gives us a philosophy of the incarnation, and thus
renders not only the incarnation itself, but all that Incarnated
Life, not only credible but natural, and not only natural, may we
not even say? but almost inevitable - impossible to be otherwise.
And thus John fulfils the end of his writing: "These are written,
that ye may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and
that believing ye may have life in His name."
III. What, then, is the account of the incarnation which this
Gospel thus commends to us as its philosophy? We note at once that
in our text our Lord states it, in the first instance, relatively
not to man, but to God. The reason of the incarnation, rendering it
credible, natural, inevitable, is traced back into the councils of
the Godhead. "I am come down from heaven, not to do my own will, but
the will of Him that sent me."
The purpose of the incarnation is therefore primarily to please
God the Father, and to perform His will. We cannot avoid the
implication that the incarnated one comes, therefore, in a
subordinate capacity. He came down from heaven not to do His own
will, but the will of Him that sent Him. He was sent. He was given a
commission, a work, to do. How this conception is repeated over and
over again in the discourses recorded by John! Even to John the
Baptist He is the "sent of God" (John iii. 34). When Nicodemus
approached Him as a teacher come from God, He explained that He was
not come primarily as a teacher, but as one sent by God (iii. 17) to
do a work. And this is the burden of the great discourses at the
pool of Bethesda (v.23, 36), at the feast of Tabernacles (vii. 16,
18, 28, 29), on the Light of the World (viii. 16, 18, 29,
43), and as well of the closing discourses at the last passover
(xvi. 5, xvii. 16, xviii. 33). In all alike Jesus is the sent of
God, come not of Himself (vii. 28, xviii. 43) to seek His own will,
but to do the will of Him that sent Him (v.30); and only when He had
"accomplished the work given Him to do" (xvii. 4) to return to the
Father who sent Him (xvii. 16).
Now this subordinate relation in which Jesus thus pervasively
represents Himself to have stood to the Father, so as to have been
sent by Him, must be a matter either of nature or of arrangement. It
must be either essential or economic. It must find its account and
origin either in the necessity of nature or else in the provisions
of a plan. But side by side with this perfectly pervasive
proclamation of His subordination to the Father, in the whole matter
of the incarnation itself, and the purpose or "will" that lies
behind that incarnation and gives it its justification and its
philosophical account, there runs an equally pervasive assertion by
Jesus Himself and by His historian as well, of His essential
equality and oneness with God. He was not only in the beginning with
God: He was God. He is the only-begotten God, who is in the bosom of
the Father. To have seen Him is to have seen the Father also. He
draws and receives from Thomas, the worshipping cry, "My Lord and my
God." He declares to the Jews, "I and the Father are One." It seems
to be clear, therefore, that the subordination in which the Father
is recognized as greater than He, prescribing a "will " for Him to
come into the world to perform, is economic, not essential ; a
matter of arrangement, not of necessity of nature.
By such a representation we are, of course, carried at once back
into the darkness, or, what is equally blinding, into the blaze of
mystery. It may be thought that it is enough to be asked to believe
in the mysteries of the God-man and of the Trinity, - that within
the unity of the Godhead there exists such a distinction of persons
that of each we may assert in turn that from the beginning he has
been with God, and has been God. Are we to add this additional
mystery of fancying the persons of the Godhead, though numerically
one in essence and sharers in all the divine attributes, " acting,"
as Dr. Martineau puts it, "each on the other as outside beings and
conducting a divine drama among themselves," - imposing tasks on one
another, requiring conditions of one another, and earning favors
from one another? No doubt it is past our comprehension. But do we
gain or lose by denying its possibility, its reality? What does the
Trinity mean, if it does not mean such a distinction of persons that
each may say relatively to the other, " I," and "Thou," and" He"?
What can the incarnation of the Second Person mean, if the persons
may not stand over against one another in a measure far transcending
our power to comprehend? And let us remember that John presents this
conception to us, not as an added difficulty to faith, but as the
philosophy, the explanation of the incarnation. It may well happen
here, too, that two mysteries support and render credible each the
other, - as two beams of wood, neither of which could easily stand
alone, when bowed together not only support each other but provide a
firm foundation upon which you may safely pile the weight of a
slated roof. To adopt Bishop Alexander's mode of statement,- "If in
the Unity of the Divine Existence there be a Trinity of Persons, and
if the Second Person of that Trinity is to assume the reality of
flesh and the likeness of sinful flesh," - is it an additional
difficulty or an aid to faith in this supernal mystery to be further
told that this colossal humiliation of the Son of God was not an
objectless display of arbitrary power, nor yet a tentative and
unconsidered effort of divine compassion to do somewhat, as yet
undetermined in kind or amount, for sinful mankind, but the
execution in time of an eternal plan, - a plan born of, and redolent
in its every part with the infinite compassion of God, shaped in all
its details from all eternity by brooding love, and now remaining
only to be executed by each person involved taking and completing
his appointed part in its tremendous work? The mystery of the
covenant is the correlative of the mystery of the incarnation.
Without its postulation the incarnation would present increased
difficulties of belief. Without the added words, "In order to do the
will of Him that sent me," the declaration, "I am come down from
heaven," would remain a simple marvel and prove a strain on faith.
And now let us not fail to observe that it results from what we
have said, that John's Gospel is the Gospel of the Covenant. If its
leading idea is not merely the glory of the incarnation, but the
philosophy of the incarnation; and if that philosophy runs back into
an economic arrangement or plan between the Persons of the Trinity,
by which the Second Person comes to perform a work committed to Him
by the Father, not to do His own will, but the will of Him that sent
Him this is but another way of saying that the leading idea of
John's Gospel is the idea of the Covenant. And is it not so? Search
and look, and you will find not only that this covenant idea recurs
again and again throughout the Gospel, with a frequency and an
emphasis which throw it well into the foreground, but that the book,
as a whole, is moulded in its form and contents upon it. The burden
of its first chapters is Christ's testimony that He has come because
sent by the Father; the burden of the last chapters is His
approaching return to the Father who sent Him ; the accomplished
work lies between. And therefore it is that when Nicodemus came to
Him at the opening of His ministry and asked for teaching, Jesus
pointed him rather to His work, and declared the doctrine of
regeneration itself "an earthly thing" compared with the heavenly
mysteries He had to tell, - those mysteries of His descent from
heaven (iii. 13), sent by the Father (iii. 17) to save the
world (iii. 16). And therefore it is that in the midst of His
ministry He opens this great discourse from which our text is taken,
by declaring that the Son of Man has been "sealed," appointed and
set apart, by the Father for the work of giving eternal life to men
; and when His disciples stumbled at the height of the great truth
involved, - that He had come down from heaven to give His flesh as
the food of the soul, - He sorrowfully added, "What, then, if you
should see the Son of Man ascending where He was before?" And
therefore it is that at the end of His life He compares His finished
work with the joy a woman has after travail, when at length the
child is born (xvi. 21); and declares that, having
accomplished the work which the Father gave Him to do (xvii. 21),
the covenant condition is fulfilled, and the covenanted reward
is at hand, and He is about to return to His primal glory. John's
Gospel, - we ought not to miss it, - is the Gospel of the Covenant.
IV. How our hearts should burn within us as we approach the last
and most central question of all, and ask what is our Lord's account
of the nature and terms of this mysterious but most blessed
covenant, to fulfil the conditions of which He came down from
heaven. We observe at once, - and with what emotions of gladness we
ought to observe it, - that it concerns the salvation of men. And
equally at once we observe, with still swelling emotion, that it is
complete and perfect in its provisions, - that it provides for an
entire and finished, for a sure and unfailing salvation. And we
observe that this involves - as of course it must involve - the
consequence that it is definite and precise in its terms, - that it
contemplates a definite and particularly designated body of men.
"And this is the will of Him that sent me, that of all that He hath
given me, I should lose nothing, but should raise it up at the last
day." The will of the Father which Christ came down from heaven to
do, concerned, then, not all men, but some men "All that He hath
given me." And His will with reference to these, which He sent the
Son to perform, was not the making of some indefinite provision
looking toward their rescue from sin and shame, but the definite,
actual, complete, and final saving of them : that "I should lose
nothing of it, but should raise it up at the last day."
Let our hearts stand still while we read these great provisions.
It is the testimony of the covenanted Son Himself, as to the terms
of the covenant which He came to fulfil, that it had a definite and
well-defined subject, - a restricted subject if you will, a
"limited" subject, - not all mankind, but a given body of men, - a
given body of men who, in the text, are brought into explicit
contrast with those who, though they saw, yet believed not, because
they could not come to Him except the Father drew them, and He
draweth none but those whom He hath given the Son and for the saving
of whom the Son came down from heaven: a precisely determined body,
therefore, "particularly and unchangeably designed, and their number
so definite that it cannot be either increased or diminished." But
it is as well - and it could not be so at all, unless it were "as
well" - the testimony of the covenanted Son Himself to the terms of
the covenant which He came to fulfil, that it had a definite and
fully-determined end, - not merely the rendering the salvation of
men possible; nor merely the removing of the legal obstacles in the
way of the salvation of men; nor merely the breaking down of
whatever difficulties may stand in the path of the free outflow of
God's love to men ; much less merely the introduction into the world
of a better example of life than had hitherto been before men, or of
a new divine force making for righteousness; or the impressing of
men with a deeper sense of the love of God for them, or of His
hatred of sin; but the actual, complete, and sure salvation of all
that the Father had given the Son: "This is the will of Him that
sent me, that all that He hath given me, I should lose nothing of
it, but should raise it up at the last day."
In a word, we have presented to us here, in these pregnant
words, not only in outline, but in all its essential details, what
has come to be known among us as the Covenant of Redemption. Men
may, no doubt, find fault with this doctrine. They may say, as they
have said, that thus our Lord, the Saviour of the world, is made not
the Saviour of men, but only of a small, select company of men. It
does not appear with what justification the number of those
purchased by His precious blood is represented as small, when John
represents them as an immense multitude whom no man can number. But
when the alternative is - as the logical alternative assuredly is -
limitation of the saving work of Christ, either in its subjects or
in its substance, who, on either Biblical grounds or on grounds of
Christian hope and love, can hesitate one moment in his decision ?
If the work of Christ is not complete, if it did not purchase for us
a sure salvation, the charter of our redemption is gone. It has
sometimes been thoughtlessly said that this doctrine of the Covenant
of Redemption is an invention of the Reformed Theology. A
distinguished professor at Andover, Dr. Park, was accustomed to tell
his pupils that the Covenant was made in Holland in the middle of
the seventeenth century. And a distinguished Baptist teacher, Dr. E.
G. Robinson, has lately assured the religious public that the
Covenant theology has been finally entombed in the grave of Charles
Hodge. But not only had the doctrine of the covenants already come
to its rights and been made the architectonic principle of theology,
long before Cocceius published his Sum of the Doctrine of the
Covenants, (1648) - for to him was Dr. Park alluding, - and
indeed been so used, before his supposed discovery of it, in so
representative a symbol as the Westminster Confession : - but from
the beginning of that new discovery of the way of salvation which we
call the Reformation, it had been a prominent feature in the
teaching of Reformed theologians in every land. And we may well
believe that it is destined to remain the central stronghold of
faith to the end of time, among all who in simplicity of heart draw
the matter of their teaching out of this record of our Saviour's
words. For what element of the doctrine is lacking here? "I am come
down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of Him that
sent me": there is the assertion of an economic arrangement as the
precondition of the incarnation, and of the prestipulation of the
incarnated work. "And this is the will of Him that sent me, that of
all that He hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it
up at the last day": there is the revelation of the contents of the
pre-incarnation arrangement, and the provision through the
incarnation for the certain salvation of a chosen body of lost men.
"All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me"; "No man can come
unto me except the Father which sent me, draw Him": there is the
twin definition of the subjects of the salvation. Or, if we desire
further witness than this one passage, it is spread fully on the
pages of this Gospel. Let us attend only to those calm and final
words which, as His work was accomplishing, our blessed Redeemer
addressed, not to us men, but to His Father, in a divinely assured
assertion of His righteous claims upon the fruit of His work.
"Father, the hour is come: glorify thy Son, that the Son may glorify
thee: even as thou gavest Him authority over all flesh, that to all
that thou hast given Him, He should give to them eternal life. . . .
. I glorified thee on the earth, having accomplished the work which
thou hast given me to do. And now, O Father, glorify thou me with
thine own self, with the glory which I had with thee before the
world was. I manifested thy name unto the men whom thou didst give
me out of the world: thine they were, and thou didst give them to
me. . . . . I pray for them; I pray not for the world, but for those
whom thou hast given me. All His work is in fulfilment of an
arrangement with the Father; and the whole of it, down to this
High-Priestly prayer itself, making intercession for His own,
concerns, primarily and in its chief import, not the world, but
those whom the Father gave Him out of the world, and secures beyond
failure their complete salvation. This is the whole doctrine of the
Covenant of Redemption : the Reformed theology has grasped it, and
teaches it; but it has not added one single thought to it.
And now let us bask a little, before we close, in the comforting
assurances of this blessed teaching.
1. How the love of God is magnified to us by this teaching. It
is not from a yesterday only that He has busied Himself with our
salvation. In the depths of eternity our foreseen miseries were a
cause of care to Him. In that mysterious intercourse between Father
and Son, which is as eternal as the essence of Godhead itself, we -
our state, our sin, our helplessness, and the dreadfulness of our
condition and end, - were a subject of consideration and solicitude.
What a God this is that is unveiled before us here. A God of
holiness : a God so holy that even in the abyss of eternity-past He
could not rest indifferent to the sin which was only after the lapse
of innumerable ages, to dawn in this corner of the as yet unexistent
universe. A God of justice : a God so just that already His
indignation burned against the as yet uncommitted sin of such petty
creatures of His will as man. But a God of love: a love so
inconceivably vast as already in the profundity of the unlimited
past to brood over unimaginable plans of mercy toward these few
guilty wretches among the numberless multitudes of His contemplated
creatures. When the Psalmist raised his eyes to the heavens above,
the work of the fingers of the Almighty, and considered the moon and
stars which He had ordained, he was lost in a natural wonder that so
great a Creator should concern Himself with so puny a creature:
"What is man that Thou art mindful of him? And the son of man that
Thou shouldst visit him?" But how much greater a marvel is before us
now. It is not man as man, - a weak and puny creature - that we have
to consider; but man as sinner, - this weak and puny creature become
vile and filthy, offensive and hateful to a holy and just God. It is
not in contrast even with the grandeur of the worlds circling about
worlds which crowd the depths of the heavens and dwarf the
consequence of this speck of earth on the skirts of the universe
which is our home, that we are to consider him but in contrast with
the majesty of the increate Triune maker of all that is. It is not
simply that God has taken notice of this sinful, puny creature, that
we have to consider; but that the All-Holy and All-Blessed God has
felt care and solicitude for his fate and looked not at His own
things in comparison with his. What indeed is sinful man that God
should love him; and before the foundations of the world should
prepare to save him by so inconceivable a plan as to give His
only-begotten Son as a ransom for his life! My brethren, this is not
to the glory of man, but to the glory of God; it is not the
expression of our dignity and worth, but raises our wondering hearts
to the contemplation of the breadth and length, and height and depth
of the love of God that passeth knowledge.
2. And how our appreciation of the perfection of the work of our
Saviour is enhanced by this teaching. As it was upon no sudden
caprice that He came into the world, but in execution of a
long-cherished and thoroughly laid plan, so it was no partial work
which He performed, but the whole work of salvation. "This is a
faithful saying. and worthy of all acceptation, That Christ Jesus
came into the world to save sinners." And this He has
accomplished, even to the uttermost. When He cried upon the cross,
as His agony went out in the darkness of death, - a death for us -
in those words of deepest import and of mighty power, "It is
finished!" - when in His great sacerdotal prayer, he proleptically
declared that He had "accomplished the work" which the Father "had
given Him to do," and was now ready to lay aside His humiliation and
reenter His glory: the precise thing which He published as
"finished" and "accomplished," was salvation. All has been done by
Him. His saving work neither needs nor admits of supplementary
addition by any needy child of man, - even to the extent of an iota.
When we look to Him we are raising grateful eyes, not to one who
invites us to save ourselves; nor merely to one who has broken out a
path, in which walking, we may attain to salvation; nor yet merely
to one who offers us a salvation wrought out by Him, on a condition;
but to one who has saved us, - who is at once the beginning
and the middle and the end of our salvation, the author and the
finisher of our faith.
What can we possibly need that we do not find provided in Him?
Do we hopelessly groan under the curse of the broken law, hanging
menacingly over us? Christ has "redeemed us from the curse of the
law, having been made a curse for us" (Gal. iii. 13). Do we
know that only he that worketh righteousness is acceptable to God,
and despair of attaining life on so unachievable a condition? Christ
Jesus "hath of God been made unto us righteousness" (I Cor. i. 30).
Do we loathe ourselves in the pollution of our sins, and know that
God is greater than we, and that we must be an offence in His holy
sight? The blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin (I John i. 7).
But do we not need faith, that we may be made one with Him and so
secure these benefits? Faith, too, is the gift of God: and that we
believe on Him is granted by God in the behalf of Christ (Phil. i.
29). Nothing has been forgotten, nothing neglected, nothing left
unprovided. In the person of Jesus Christ, the great God, in His
perfect wisdom and unfailing power, has taken our place before the
outraged justice of God and under His perfect law, and has wrought
out a complete salvation.
3. What an indefectible certitude of salvation is given by this
great teaching. If Christ Jesus came to save and has saved, how can
salvation fail? If the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord (Ro. vi. 23), how can this eternal life thus freely
given go out in time, and fail to accord with its very designation
as eternal? If Christ has undertaken not merely to open a way of
salvation to us, but to save us; if He came into the world for the
precise purpose of performing this will of God, "that of all
that He hath given Him, He should lose nothing, but should raise it
up at the last day," - what possibility lies open of the failure of
this great design, framed in eternity by Triune Godhead, and
executed in time by none other than the strong Son of God? Therefore
our gracious Lord assures us: "All that the Father giveth me
shall come unto me, and him that cometh unto me I will in no
wise cast out." And, therefore, His servant, condescending to the
weakness of our fears, argues with us: "God commendeth His love
towards us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Much more, then, being justified by His blood, shall we be saved
from wrath by Him." Oh, the certitude in that "much more." "If God
be for us," he argues again, "who can be against us? He that spared
not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not
also with Him, freely give us all things ? . . . . Who shall
separate us from the love of Christ ?" O weak and trembling soul,
can you not find, not courage merely, but certitude in this? What
matters your weakness? Your salvation rests not on it, but on God's
strength. He loves you; He determined to save you; He sent His Son
to save you; He has come to do it: He has done it. You are saved :
it cannot fail, unless God's set purpose can fail; unless Christ's
power to save can fail; unless His promises of love can fail.
4. What a clear ground of assurance of salvation is furnished by
this great teaching. Does some wayward spirit say : "All this is
true only of the elect, those whom the Father gave to Christ. And I,
alas! how may I know that I am of the elect?" Ah, self-tormenting
soul, why expend strength in prying into God's secrets, instead of
taking Him at His word? It is true indeed that it is only those whom
He has given to Christ that Christ has saved; and the comfort, as
the salvation, is for them alone. But it is not true that God
requires of you election for salvation, or offers you predestination
as the way of life. He offers you not predestination, but Christ;
and He requires of you not election, but faith. Do you make election
itself a ground of doubt and despair? This, says an old Puritan, is
indeed to gather poison out of the sweetest of herbs. "God," says
he, "layeth it as a duty upon every one to repent and believe, to
come to Him and he shall have rest to his soul. . . . . If, then,
thou believest, thou repentest, this may be a sure testimony unto
thee of thy everlasting glory." So, then, "it's no wonder," he
continues, "that Paul doth often run out in large expressions
concerning God's love, his predestination from all eternity" - note
how he identifies the two - "when he hath occasion to praise God for
the calling and conversion of any in time ; for this is to trace the
stream till we find its well-head."2
"Madmen" is what John Calvin calls those "who seek their salvation
in the whirlpool of predestination ; not keeping the way of
salvation which is exhibited to them." " To every man," he explains,
his faith is the sufficient proof of the eternal election of God
; and it would be a shocking sacrilege to carry the inquiry behind
it: for an aggravated insult is offered the Holy Spirit if we refuse
to assent to His simple testimony."3
Election does indeed lie at the root of our salvation but faith
is the proof of election. Are we saved? The question is resolved in
this: Do we believe in Jesus Christ? Christ indeed says, "This is
the will of Him who sent me, that of all that He hath given me,
I should lose nothing, but should raise it up at the last day."
Here is election the root of the saving work of Christ. Bur have you
failed to note or to remember that he immediately adds: "For, this
is the will of my Father, that every one that beholdeth the Son
and believeth on Him should have eternal life, and that I should
raise him up at the last day." Here is the work of Christ received
in faith the ground of salvation: and here is faith, laying hold of
Christ, the evidence of salvation. And, therefore, it is not only
said, "All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me," but it is
immediately added: "And him that cometh to me I will in no
wise cast out." These words are gracious enough in their
broadest sense to send a thrill of joy through the heart. But there
lies hid within them a further delicate grace which is lost in the
English translation. The word for "come" is so varied in the two
clauses as to lay the stress in the first instance "upon the
successful issue of the coming, the arrival," and in the second "on
the process of the coming and the welcome."4
"All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me " - shall
certainly and unfailingly reach me. "And him that cometh unto me I
will in no wise cast out" - "him that is in the process of coming,"
- yea, even though he is but just begun, with weak and faltering
steps, even such an one as this who is but beginning to come - " I
will in no wise east out."
What a blessed assurance, when faith is made thus not the ground
of salvation, not the condition of salvation, but its evidence ! It
is here that the sweet herb of election begins to pour forth its
refreshing cordial Men may tell us, indeed, "Believe and you shall
be saved," while still making faith the ground or the condition of
salvation. And, then, with what dreadful solicitude will we pluck up
our faith over and over again by the roots, to examine it with
anxious fear: Is it the right faith? Is it a strong enough faith? Do
I believe aright? Do I believe enough? Shall I abide in my belief
until the end? Dreadful uncertainty ! Inexpressible misery of
ineradicable doubt ! It is only when we have learned from such words
of our Master as those before us to-day, that we dare say to our
souls not only Believe and ye shall be saved ! but those other words
of deeper meaning and fuller comfort, caught from the Master's own
blessed lips: Believe and ye are saved! "Verily, verily, I
say unto you," says our Saviour in words which sum up previous
teachings (John iii. 18, 36): "He that heareth my words and
believeth Him that sent me, hath eternal life, and cometh not
into judgment but hath passed out of death into life."
Blessed John, who so caught his Master's words and recorded them for
us. When faith is thus made not the ground or the condition, but the
evidence of salvation, our eternal bliss is no longer suspended in
any sense on aught that we are or do, but hangs solely on the work
of Christ, doing His Father's will. Faith, even faith, as the ground
or condition of salvation, may be also the ground of despair: but
faith as the proof of salvation is the charter of assured though
humble hope. It takes hold of the "strong Son of God, immortal
love," and of the indefectible purpose of Almighty grace which
cannot fail or know any shadow of turning. This we owe to that
doctrine of the eternal covenant which our blessed Saviour reveals
to us in the words on which we have meditated to-day. Because of its
blessed provisions we can cry joy to our souls, though they tremble
with natural fear and can scarce believe that Christ will save such
faithless souls as they. Though they have faith but as a grain of
mustard-seed, they are saved already. For, this is the will
of Him who sent our Redeemer, that of all that He gave Him, He
should lose nothing, but should raise it up at the last day : for
this is the will of the Father that every one that beholdeth the Son
and believeth on Him should have eternal life and He should raise
him up at the last day.
1 pp.182-186.
2 A. Burgess, Spiritual Refining, ed. 1652, pp.644, 595.
3 Com.on John vi. 46.
4 Westcott in loc
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