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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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IMPOSSIBLE
TO RENEW TO REPENTANCE
"It Is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and
were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted
the good word of God, and the powers of the world to
come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto
repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of
God afresh, and put him to an open shame."-HEBREWS
vi. 4-6.
The sacred writer
enumerates four fundamental principles: Repentance from
dead works, which in the old dispensation was symbolized
by divers baptisms, or washings; Faith toward God,
typified by the laying of hands on the head of the
victim-sacrifices; the Resurrection of the dead; and
Eternal Judgment. And then he proposes not to lay them
again, but to leave them. There is no
thought, however, of deserting them. The great principles
on which God saves the soul are identical in every age,
and indispensable.
We can only leave them as the child
leaves the multiplication-table, when it is well learnt,
but which lies at the root of all after-study; as the
plant leaves the root, when it towers into the majestic
shrub, which draws all its life from that low origin; and
as the builder leaves the foundation, that he may carry up
stone on stone, and leans on the foundation most heavily,
when he has left it at the furthest distance below him.
And we are taught the reason why these principles are not
laid afresh. It would be useless to do so; it would serve
no good purpose; it would leave in the same state as it
found them those who had apostatized from the faith. And
so we are led to one of those passages which sensitive
spirits have turned to their own torment and anguish; just
as men will distil the rankest poison from some of the
sweetest flowers.
HOW FAR WE MAY GO, AND YET FALL AWAY.
These apostate disciples had been enlightened (ver.
4). They had been led to see their sin and danger, the
temporary nature of Judaism, the dignity and glory of the
Saviour. Other Hebrews might be ignorant, the folds of the
veil hanging heavily over their sight; but it could never
be so with them, since they had stood in the midst of the
Gospel's meridian light, and had been enlightened.
So may it be with us. Not like the
savage, crouching before his fetish, or roaming over the
wild; not like the follower of Confucius, Buddha, or
Mahomet, groping in the twilight of nature or religious
guess-work; not like myriads in our own land, whose hearts
are as dark as the chaos into which God commanded the
primeval beam to shine: we have been enlightened. We may
know that we are sinners; we may have learnt from
childhood the scheme of salvation; we may be familiar with
the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, into which angels
desire to look: and yet we may fall away.
These Hebrews, here referred to, had
also tasted of the heavenly gift. What gift
is that? I hear a voice, which we know well, speaking from
the well of Sychar, and saying: "The water that I
shall give shall be in thee, springing up into everlasting
life." It is the life of God in the soul; it is
Christ himself; and he is willing to be in us, like a
perennial spring, unstanched in drought, unfrozen in
frost, leaping up, in fresh and living beauty, like some
warm spring that makes a paradise in the arctic circle.
But some are content not to receive it,
only to taste it. This is what these persons did. They
sipped the sweetness of Christ. They had a passing
superficial glimpse into his heart. Like Gideon's
soldiers, they caught up a few drops in their hands from
the river of God, and hastened on their way. So we may
have some pleasure in thoughts of Christ. His sufferings
touch; his beauty attracts; his history moves and
inspires. But it is only a taste; and yet we may fall
away. They had also been made partakers of the Holy
Ghost. It is not said that they had been
converted, regenerated, or filled by the Holy Ghost. The
expression is a very peculiar one, and it is used because
the sacred writer could not affirm any of these things of
them, and yet Was anxious to show that they had been
brought under his gracious influences. For instance, he
had convinced them of sin, had striven with them, had
plied them with warning and entreaty, with fear and hope.
And they had so far yielded to him as to give up some of
their sins and assume the outward guise of Christianity.
Moreover, they had tasted the
good Word of God, and the powers of the world to come.
The first of these is obviously the Scriptures; and the
second is the usual expression for the age in which we
live, and which, with all its spiritual forces, was
beginning to thrill the hearts of men when these words
were penned. They liked a good sermon; the Bible was full
of interest and charm; they had heard the prophets, and
seen the apostles of the Pentecostal age. All these had
been analyzed, weighed, and counted; and yet they were in
peril of going back. Let us, therefore, beware!
WHAT 1S IT TO FALL AWAY? It is
something more than to fall. The real child of God
may fall, as David or as Peter did; but there is a vast
difference between falling and falling
away. This latter experience can no more come to a
real believer than a second flood of waters to the earth;
but it will certainly find out the counterfeit and the
sham.
To fall away is to go back from the
outward profession of Christianity, not temporarily, but
finally; not as the result of some sudden sin, but because
the first outward stimulus is exhausted, and there is no
true life beating at the heart, to repair or reinvigorate
the wasting devotion of the life. It is to resemble those
wandering planets, which never shone with their own light,
but only in the reflected light of some central sun; but
which, having broken from its guiding leash, dash further
and further into the blackness of darkness, without one
spark of life or heat or light. It is to return as a dog
to its vomit, and as a sow to her filth; because the
reformation was only outward and temporary, and the dog or
sow natures were never changed through the gracious work
of the Holy Spirit. It is to be another Judas; to commit
the sin against the Holy Ghost; to lose all earnestness of
feeling, all desire for better things, all power of tender
emotion; and to become utterly callous and dead, as the
pavement on which we walk, or the rusty armor hanging on
the old castle's walls.
WHY IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO RESTORE SUCH TO
REPENTANCE. Notice, there is nothing said here of what God
can do. The only question is as to the limits of human
power, and the ordinary methods of influencing human
wills. Also notice, we are not told that God could not
save those who had fallen away; but that it is impossible
to hope that a man who has passed through the experiences
just described, and has nevertheless apostatized, can be
reached or touched by any of those arguments or motives
which are familiar weapons in the Gospel armory. If the
mightiest arguments have been brought to bear on the
conscience in vain; if after some slight response, which
gave hopes of better things, it has relapsed into the
stupor and insensibility of its former state, there
remains nothing more to be done. There is nothing more
potent than the wail of Calvary's broken heart, and the
peal from Sinai's brow; and, if these have been tried in
vain, no argument is left which can touch the conscience
and arouse the heart. If these people had never been
exposed to these appeals, there would have been some hope
for them; but what hope can there be now, since, in having
passed through them without permanent effect, they have
become more hardened in the process than they were at
first?
Here is a man dragged from an ice-pond,
and brought into the infirmary. Hot flannels are at once
applied; the limbs are chafed; every means known to modern
science for restoring life is employed. At first it seems
as if these appliances will take effect, there are
twitchings and convulsive movements; but, alas! they soon
subside, and the surgeon gravely shakes his head.
"Can you do nothing else?" "Nothing,"
he replies; "I have used every method I can devise;
and if these fail, it is impossible to renew again to
life."
This passage has nothing to do with
those who fear lest it condemns them. The presence of that
anxiety, like the cry which betrayed the real mother in
the days of Solomon, establishes beyond a doubt that you
are not one that has fallen away beyond the possibility of
renewal to repentance. If you are still touched by Gospel
sermons, and are anxious to repent, and are in godly fear
lest you should be a castaway, take heart! these are signs
that this passage has no bearing on you. Why make yourself
ill with a sick man's medicine? But if you are growing
callous and insensible under the preaching of the Gospel,
look into this passage and see your doom, unless you
speedily arrest your steps.
THE NATURAL ILLUSTRATION (ver. 7).
Behold that field, well situated, prepared by careful
culture and arduous toil: the good seed is scattered with
lavish hand; the rain comes oft upon it; the sunshine
kisses it; the seasons, as they pass, woo it to bear
fruit. At first it would appear as if it were about to
answer the expectations freely entertained. But see, the
show of green which covers its face turns out to be a crop
of briars and thorns. The owner for whom it was dressed
comes to visit it. "What," cries he, "have
you done all you could, this, and that, and the
other?" "All," is the reply. Then the
decision comes back, stern and sad, "It is useless to
expend more time or care. Leave it to its fate. Let no
fruit grow on it henceforth and forever."
We may resemble that field; and yet,
whilst there is a spark of devotion, a thrill of holy
longing, a sigh after a better life, a yearning to be
penitent and holy, there is still hope. The great
Husbandman will not cast us off, so long as there is one
redeeming feature in our condition. He will not break the
bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax. He will not
fail, nor be discouraged, until he has made the desert
into a garden, and the wilderness like the paradise of
God.
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