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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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ONCE
"Once in the end of the world hath he appeared, to
put away sin by the sacrifice of himself." HEBREWS
ix. 26. (See a130 ix. 27,28; x. 2, 10.)"
THERE is a word here which
recurs, like a note on an organ beneath the tumult of
majestic sound. Five times, at least, it rolls forth its
thunder, pealing through all ages, echoing through all
worlds, announcing the finality of an accomplished
redemption to the whole universe of God "ONCE!"
And there is another phrase which we
must couple with it, spoken by the parched lips of the
dying Saviour, yet with a loud voice, as though it were
the cry of a conqueror: "When Jesus, therefore, had
received the vinegar, he said, 'It is finished'; and he
bowed his head and gave up the ghost." It is very
seldom that man can look back on a finished life-work. The
chisel drops from the paralyzed hand ere the statue is
complete; the chilling fingers refuse to guide the pen
along another line, though the book is so nearly done; the
statesman must leave his plans and far-reaching schemes to
be completed by another, perhaps his rival. But as from
his cross Jesus Christ our Lord looked upon the work of
redemption which he had undertaken, and in connection with
which he had suffered even to the hiding of his Father's
face, he could not discover one stitch, or stone, or
particle deficient. For untold myriads for thee and me and
all there was done that which never needed to be done
again, but stood as an accomplished fact forevermore.
THE "ONCE" OF A COMPLETED
WORK (ix. 26). In these words there is a sigh of relief. A
thought had for a moment flashed across the sunlit page of
Scripture, which had suggested an infinite horror. In
pursuing the parallels between the incidents of the great
day of atonement and the great day when Jesus died, we had
been suddenly reminded of the fact that the solemn
spectacle was witnessed once a year " The high-priest
entereth into the holy place every year with blood of
others" (ver. 25). Every year the same rites
performed, the same blood shed, the same propitiation
made. Suppose that, after the same analogy, Jesus had
suffered every year! Every year the agony of the shadowed
garden! Every year the bitter anguish of the cross! Every
year the burial in the garden tomb! Then earth would have
been overcast with midnight, and life would have been
agony! Who could bear to see him suffer often!
But there was no necessity for him to
suffer more than once; because repetition means
imperfection, of which, in his work, there is no sign or
trace. There petition of the sacrifices of the Jewish law
meant that they could not take away sin, or make the
comers thereunto perfect. Again and again the crowd of
pious Jews gathered, driven to seek deliverance from the
conscience of sins, which brooded deeply and darkly over
their souls. Perhaps they would receive momentary respite
as they saw the elaborate ceremonial, and felt that they
were included in the high-priest's confession and
benediction. And so they wended their way homeward; but
ere long a weary sense of dissatisfaction would again
betake them: they would reflect on the inadequacy of the
atonement which stood only in the offering of the life of
slain beasts. Sins were remembered, but not put away; it
was impossible that the blood of bulls and goats could do
that (x. 4). And so, doubtless, in the more thoughtful,
hearts must have failed, and consciences moaned out their
weary plaint unsatisfied. Therefore the sacrifices had to
be presented continually.
On the other hand, Christ's work needs
no repetition. It is final because it is perfect. Its
perfection is attested, because it has never been
repeated. "In that he died, he died unto sin
once." Our Saviour set his hand to save us: he did
not mean to faith he came into our world with this
distinct purpose; he died to do it; and, having done it,
he went home to God. But if from the vantage-ground of the
throne, reviewing his work, he had discerned any
deficiency or flaw, he would have come back to make it
good; and, inasmuch as he has not done so, we may be sure
that the death of the cross is perfectly satisfactory.
"Now once, in the end of the ages, hath he appeared
to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself." Oh,
ponder these wondrous words! Once. He
liveth forevermore; and shall never again pass for a
moment under the dark shadow of death.
He hath appeared (or been
manifested). What then? He must have existed
previously. The incarnation was but the embodiment in
visible form of One who existed before all worlds; and the
death of the cross was the unfolding in a single act of
eternal facts in the nature of God. As the great sun-disk
may be mirrored in a tiny mountain tarn, so in the one day
of crucifixion, there were set forth to men, angels, and
devils, love, sacrifice, and redeeming mercy, which are
part of the very essence of God. Marvelous, indeed, the
rending of the veil, by which such marvels are revealed.
In the end of the world (or of
the ages). God is called the King of Ages. Time is
probably as much a creation as space or distance or
matter. It is an accommodation to finite thought; a
parenthesis in eternity; a rainbow flung across the mighty
age of deity. We break time into hours; God breaks it into
ages. There are ages behind us, and ages before. We stand
on a narrow neck of land between two seas. The first age
of which we know anything is that of creation. The second,
of Paradise. The third, of the world before the flood. The
fourth, of the Patriarchs. The fifth, of Moses, ending
with the fall of Jerusalem, and the death of the Messiah.
The sixth, of the Gentiles, in which we live. And before
us, we can dimly descry the forms of the Age of
Millennium; the Age of Regeneration and Restitution; the
Age of Judgment; and the Age in which the kingdom shall be
delivered to the Father. There is thus a complete analogy
between the creation of the material world, and the
creation of the new heavens and earth.
Geologists love to enumerate the strata
of the earth's formation through which the processes of
world -building were carried; and we shall probably
discover some day that God has been building up the new
creation through successive ages of history and
development. Christ's death is here said to have happened
at the end of the ages; and we should at once see the
force of this, even though there may remain several great
ages to be fulfilled, ere time run out its course, if only
we knew how many ages have preceded. Compared to the
number that have been, this is the end, the climax, the
ridge of the weary climb; what lies beyond are the miles
of level surface, to the sudden dip down of the cliffs in
face of the ocean of eternity.
He hath put away sin. Oh,
marvelous word! It might be rendered to annihilate, to
make as if it had never been. The wreath of cloud may
disappear, but the separated drops still float through
space. The bubble may break on the foam-tipped wave, but
the film of water has gone to add its attenuated addition
to the ocean depth. But Jesus has put sin away as when a
debt is paid, an obligation is canceled, or a sin-laden
victim was slain, burned, and buried in the old days of
Moses. All sin, the sin of the world, the accumulated sin
of mankind was made to meet in Jesus. He was made sin. He
stood before the universe as though he had drawn upon
himself all the human sin which has ever rent the air or
befouled the earth, or put the stars of night to the
blush; and, bearing the shame, the horror, the penalty
during those dread hours which rung from him the cry of
desolate forsakenness, he put it away, and wiped it out
forever; and, in doing this, he has put away the penal
results of Adam's fall.
The inherited tendencies to evil remain
in all the race; but the spiritual penalty which Adam
incurred for himself and all of us, as our representative
and head, has been canceled by the sufferings and death of
our glorious representative and head, the Second Adam, the
Lord from heaven. Men will still have to suffer the
penalty of sins which they voluntarily commit, and for
which they do not seek forgiveness and cleansing through
the blood; but men will not have to suffer the penalty
which otherwise must have accrued to them, as members of a
fallen race-fallen with their first parents and father,
because Jesus put away that when he died. And thus it is
that the multitudes of sweet babes, idiots, and others who
belong to Adam's race, but have had no opportunity of
personal transgression, are able to enter without let or
hindrance into the land where there entereth nothing which
defileth.
By the sacrifice of himself.
Not by his example, fair and lovely though it was. Not by
his teaching, though the food of the world. Not by his
works, the source and fountain-head of modern
philanthropy. But by his death, and by his death as a
sacrifice. If you want to understand a writer, you must
know the sense in which he uses his characteristic words,
and you must carefully study the definitions which he
gives of them. And if you would understand the meaning of
Christ's death, you must go back to the definitions, given
in minute detail in Leviticus, of the meaning of sacrifice,
atonement, and propitiation, by
which that death is afterward described; and Only so much
you dare to interpret. Whatever sacrifice meant
in Leviticus, it means when applied to the death of the
cross. And surely there can be no controversy that of old
it stood for the substitution of the innocent for the
guilty; the canceling of deserved penalty because it had
been borne by another; the wiping out of sin by the
shedding of blood. All this it must mean when applied to
the death of Christ, with this difference, that of old the
suffering was borne and death endured involuntarily; but
in the case of our blessed Redeemer, God in him took home
to himself, voluntarily and freely, the accumulated
results of a world's sin, and suffered them, and made them
as if they had never been. "He put away sin by the
sacrifice of himself."
What was the death of Christ? "A
martyrdom," cries modern thought. "A mischance
in an unenlightened age," replies the reviewer.
"An outcome of all such efforts to battle with
evil," says the broad-church teacher.
"A SACRIFICE!" thunders this
Book. A voluntary sacrifice! A voluntary sacrifice by
which sin has been borne and put away. Here we rest,
content to abide, in a world of mystery, at the foot of
one mystery more, which, despite all its mystery, answers
the cry of a convicted conscience, and sheds the peace of
heaven through our hearts.
THE "ONCE" OF MORTALITY (ix.
27). With a few exceptions mentioned on the page of
Scripture, where miracles of raising are recounted, men
die but once. For those there was one cradle, two coffins;
one birth, two burials. But for most it is mercifully
arranged that the agony and pain of dissolution should be
experienced only once. And this, which is the ordinary lot
of humanity, also befell Jesus Christ. He could not die
often, because he was literally man, and it would have
been inconsistent to violate in his case the universal
law. He must become man, because only through the portal
of birth could he reach the bourne of death; but, having
been born, and assumed our nature, he must obey the laws
of that nature, and die but once.
THE "ONCE" OF DEITY (ix. 28).
There must have been something more than mortal in him,
who in his one death could bear away the sins of many.
Good and great men have died, who would have done anything
to cancel or atone for the sins of their nation, their
family, and their beloved; but in vain. How marvelous then
must be his worth, whose sufferings and death will
counterveil for a world's sin!
And we can see the imperious necessity
that our Saviour should be God manifest in the flesh; and
that he who became obedient to the death of the cross
should be also he who was in the form of God, and thought
it not robbery to be God's equal. If it be true that his
death "once" has put away sin, then, bring
hither your songs of worship, your wreaths of empire, your
ascriptions of lowliest adoration; for he must be God. No
being of inferior make could do for man what, in that
brief but dreadful darkness, he has done once for all, and
forever.
THE "ONCE" OF A PURGED
CONSCIENCE (x. 2). We are not in the position of the Jews,
needing to repeat their sacrifices year by year, in sad
monotony; our sacrifice has been offered once for all.
Therefore, we have not, like them, the perpetual
conscience of sins. Our hearts are, once and forever,
sprinkled from an evil conscience (ver. 22).
There is no necessity to ask repeatedly
for forgiveness for the sins that have been once confessed
and forgiven. God does not accuse us of them; we need not
accuse ourselves. God does not remember them; we may well
forget them, save as incentives to gratitude and humility.
There is daily need for fresh confession of recent sin;
but when once the soul realizes the completeness of
Christ's work on its behalf, it cries with great joy:
"As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he
removed our transgressions from us."
THE "ONCE" OF A FULFILLED
PURPOSE (x. io). Space forbids our lingering longer. In
our next chapter we may show how completely the purpose of
God has been realized in Jesus, and, therefore, that there
is no necessity for a repetition of his sacrificial work.
The will or purpose of God for man's redemption asks for
nothing more than that which is given it in the life and
death of our Saviour. Nothing more is required for the
glory of God, for the accomplishment of the divine
counsels, or for the perfect deliverance and
sanctification of those who believe.
"Once for all, 0 sinner, receive it!
Once for all, 0 hrother, believe it! Cling
to the cross, the burden will fall; Christ
has redeemed us, once for all""
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