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THE GLORY
OF CHRIST'S OFFICE
"He hath by inheritance obtained a more
excellent name." Hebrews i. 4.
APART from Scripture, we should
have been disposed to infer the existence of other orders
of intelligent and spiritual beings besides man. As the
order of creation climbs up to man from the lowest living
organism through many various stages of existence, so
surely the series must be continued beyond man, through
rank on rank of spiritual existence up to the very steps
of the eternal throne. The divine mind must be as prolific
in spiritual as it has been in natural forms of life.
But we are not left to conjecture. From
every part of Scripture come testimonies to the existence
of angels. They rejoiced when the world was made, and they
are depicted as ushering in with songs that new creation
for which we long. They stood sentries at the gate of a
lost paradise; and at each of the twelve gates of the New
Jerusalem an angel stands (Rev. xxi. 12). They trod the
plains of Mamre, and sang over the fields of Bethlehem.
One prepared the meal on the desert sands for Elijah;
another led Peter out of gaol and a third flashed through
the storm to stand by the hammock where the Apostle Paul
was sleeping (Acts xxvii. 23,24).
But in the mind of the pious Hebrew the
greatest work which the angels ever wrought was in
connection with the giving of the law. The children of
Israel received the law "as it was ordained by
angels" (Acts vii. 53, R.v.). It was necessary,
therefore, in showing the superiority of the Gospel to the
Law, to begin by showing the superiority of him through
whom the Gospel was given, over all orders of bright and
blessed spirits, which, in their shining ranks and their
twenty thousand chariots, went and came during the giving
of the decalogue from the brow of Sinai (Psalm lxviii.
17).
It is not difficult to prove the Lord's
superiority to angels. It is twofold: in Nature and in
Office.
In Nature.
"He hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent
name than they" (ver. 4). In verse 7, quoted from
Psalm civ. 4 (R.v. marg.), where they are
distinctly spoken of as messengers and ministers, they are
compared to winds and flames.-winds, for
their swiftness and invisibility; flames, because
of their ardent love. But how great the gulf between their
nature, which may thus be compared to the elements of
creation, and the nature of that glorious Being whom they
are bidden to worship, and who is addressed in the sublime
title of Son! (Heb.i.6; Psalm xcvii. 7.)
In Offce. In verse
14 they are spoken of as ministering spirits, "sent
forth to do service for the sake of them that shall
inherit salvation" (R.v.). This liturgy of service is
a literal fact. When struggling against overwhelming
difficulties; when walking the dark, wild mountain-pass
alone; when in peril or urgent need-we are surrounded by
invisible forms, like those which accompanied the path of
Jesus, ministering to him in the desert, strengthening him
in the garden, hovering around his cross, watching his
grave and accompanying him to his home. They keep pace
with the swiftest trains in which we travel. They come
unsoiled through the murkiest air. They smooth away the
heaviest difficulties. They garrison with light the
darkest sepulchers. They bear us up in their hands, lest
we should strike our foot against a stone. Many an escape
from imminent peril; many an unexpected assistance; many a
bright and holy thought whispered in the ear, we know not
whence or how-is due to those bright and loving spirits.
"The good Lord forgive me," says Bishop Hall,
"for that, amongst my other offenses, I have suffered
myself so much to forget the presence of his holy
angels." But valuable as their office is, it is not
to be mentioned in the same breath as Christ's, which is
set down for us in this chapter.
He Is The Organ of Creation.
"By whom also he made the worlds." To make that
which is seen out of nothing, that is creation: it
is a divine work; and creation is attributed to Christ.
"By him were all things created that are in heaven
and that are in earth." "All things were made by
him; and without him was not anything made that was
made" (Col.i.16; John i.3). But the word here and in
xi. 3 translated worlds means ages.
Not only was the material universe made by him, but
each of the great ages of the world's story has been
instituted by Jesus Christ.
When genius aspires to immortality, it
leaves the artist's name inscribed on stone or canvas: and
so Inspiration, "dipping her pen in indelible truth,
inscribes the name of Jesus on all we see-on sun and
stars, flower and tree, rock and mountain, the unstable
waters and the firm land; and also on what we do not see,
nor shall, until death has removed the veil-on angels and
spirits, on the city and heavens of the eternal
world."
This thought comes out clearly in the
sublime quotation made in verse 10 from Psalm cii. That
inspired poem is obviously inscribed to Jehovah:
"Thou, Jehovah, in the beginning hast laid the
foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the work of
thy hands." But here, without the least apology, or
hint of accommodating the words to an inferior use, it is
applied directly to Christ. Mark the certainty of this
inspired man that Jesus is Jehovah! How sure of the Deity
of his Lord! And what a splendid tribute to his
immutability!
Mark how the Epistle rings
with the unchangeableness of Jesus, in his
human love (xiii. 8), in his priesthood (vii. 24), and
here in his divine nature (vv. 10-12). We live in a world
of change. The earth is not the same today as it was ages
ago, or as it will be ages on. The sun is radiating off
its heat. The moon no longer as of yore burns and glows;
she is but an immense opaque cinder, reflecting the
sunlight from her disk. Stars have burnt out, and will.
The universe is waxing old, as garments which from
perpetual use become threadbare. But the wearing out of
the garment is no proof of the waning strength or
slackening energy of the wearer. Nay, when garments wear
out quickest, it is generally the time of robustest youth
or manhood. You wrap up and lay aside your clothes when
they have served their purpose; but you are the same in
the new suit as in the old. Creation is the vesture of
Christ. He wraps himself about in its ample folds. Its
decay affects him not. And, when he shall have laid it all
aside, and replaced it by the new heavens and the new
earth, he will be the same forevermore.
With what new interest may we not now
turn to the archaic record, which tells how God created
the heavens and the earth. Those sublime syllables,
"Light, be!" were spoken by the voice that
trembled in dying anguish on the cross. Rolling rivers,
swelling seas, waving woods, bursting flowers, caroling
birds, innumerable beasts, stars sparkling like diamonds
on the pavilion of night-all newly made; all throbbing
with God's own life; and all very good: but, mainly and
gloriously, all the work of those hands which were
nailed helplessly to the cross, which itself, as well as
the iron that pierced him, was the result of his creative
will.
He Is The God of Providence.
"Upholding all things by the word of his
power" (ver. 3). He is the prop which underpins
creation. Christ, and not fate. Christ, and not nature.
Christ, and not abstract impersonal law. Law is but the
invariable method of his working. "In him all things
live, and move, and have their being." "By him
all things consist." He is ever at work repeating on
the large scale of creation the deeds of his earthly life.
And if he did not do them, they must be forever undone. At
his word rainwater and dew become grape-juice; tiny
handfuls of grain fill the autumn barns; storms die away
into calm; fish are led through the paths of the sea;
rills are sent among the mountains; and stars are
maintained in their courses, so that "not one faileth."
All power is given unto him in heaven
and on earth. Why, then, art thou so sad? Thy best Friend
is the Lord of Providence. Thy Brother is Prime Minister
of the universe, and holds the keys of the divine
commissariat. Go to him with the empty sacks of thy need;
he will not only fill them, but fill them freely, without
money and without price; as Joseph did in the old story of
the days of the Pharaohs.
He Is The Saviour of Sinners. "He
purged our sins." We shall have many opportunities of
dwelling on this glorious fact. Jesus is Saviour,
Redeemer, and the High-Priest. This is his proudest title;
in this work no angel or created spirit can bear him
rivalry. In the work of salvation he is alone. No angel
could atone for sin, or plead our cause, or emancipate us
from the thrall of evil.
But notice the finality of this
act. "He made purging of sins
" (see Greek). It is finished; forever complete; done
irrevocably and finally. If only we are one with him by a
living faith, our sins, which were many, are washed out;
as an inscription from a slate, as a stain from a robe, as
a cloud from the azure of heaven. Gone-as a stone into the
bottomless abyss! Gone-never to confront us here or
hereafter! "Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ
that died, yea, rather, that is risen again; who is even
at the right hand of God; who also maketh intercession for
us" (Rom. viii. 34).
He Is Also King.
And on what does his kingdom rest? What is the basis
of that Royalty of which we constantly sing, in the noble
words of the primitive Church? "Thou art
the King of Glory, 0 Christ." It is a double basis.
He is King by right of his
divine nature. "Thy throne, O God, is
forever and ever." Well might Psalm xlv. be entitled
the poem of the lilies, as if to denote its pure and
choice and matchless beauties. It celebrated the marriage
of Solomon: but, after the manner of those inspired
singers, its authors soon passed from the earthly to the
heavenly; from the transient type of the earthly realm to
the eternal and imperishable realities of the divine
royalty of Christ.
He is also King as the reward
of his obedience unto death. "He became
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross:
wherefore, God also hath highly exalted him" (Phil.
ii.8,9). Satan offered him sovereignty in return for one
act of homage, and Christ refused, and descended the
mountain to poverty and shame and death; but through these
things he has won for himself a Kingdom which is yet in
its infancy, but is destined to stand when all the
kingdoms of this world have crumbled to dust.
As Christ emerged from the cross and
the grave, where he had purged our sins, it seemed as if
words were addressed to him which David had caught ages
before: "The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit on my right
hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool" (ver.
13; Psalm cx. I). This is the interpretation which the
Apostle Peter, in the flush of Pentecostal inspiration,
put upon these words (Acts ii. 34). And, accordingly, we
are told, "He was received up into heaven, and sat on
the right hand of God " (Mark xvi. 19). "He sat
down on the right hand of the Majesty on high" (ver.
3).
"He sat down."
Love is regnant. The Lamb is in the midst of the
Throne. Behold his majesty, and worship him with angels
and archangels, and all the throng of the redeemed.
Prostrate yourself at his feet, consecrating to him all
you are and all you have. Comfort yourself also by
remembering that he would not sit to rest from his labors
in redemption, and in the purging away of sins, unless
they were so completely finished that there was nothing
more to do. It is all accomplished; and it is all very
good. He has ceased from his works, because they are done;
and therefore he is entered into his rest. And that word
"until" is full of hope. God speaks it, and
encourages us to expect the time when he shall have put
down all rule and all authority and power; and when death
itself, the last enemy, shall be destroyed (1 Cor. xv.
24-26).
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