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WHAT IS
MAN?
"We
see Jesus,...crowned with glory and honor." {HEBREWS
ii.5-9.
IN the first great division of this
treatise, we have seen the incomparable superiority of the
Lord Jesus to angels, and archangels, and all the heavenly
host. But now there arises an objection which was very
keenly realized by these Hebrew Christians; and which, to
a certain extent, presses upon us all; Why did the Son of
God become man? How are the sorrows, sufferings, and death
of the Man of Nazareth consistent with the sublime glories
of the Son of God, the equal and fellow of the Eternal?
These questions are answered during the
remainder of the chapter, and may be gathered up into a
single sentence: he who was above all angels became lower
than the angels for a little time; that he might lift men
from their abasement, and set them on his own glorious
level in his heavenly Father's kingdom; and that he might
be a faithful and merciful High Priest for the sorrowful
and tempted and dying. Here is an act worthy of a God Here
are reasons which are more than sufficient to answer the
old question, for which Anselm prepared so elaborate a
reply in his book, "Cur Deus Homo?"
"What is man?"
Those three words in verse 6 are the fit starting point of
the argument. We need not only a true philosophy of God,
but a true philosophy of man, in order to right thinking
on the Gospel. The idolater thinks man inferior to birds
and beasts and creeping things, before which he prostrates
himself. The materialist reckons him to be the chance
product of natural forces which have evolved him; and
before which he is therefore likely to pass away. The
pseudo-science of the time makes him of one blood with ape
and gorilla, and assigns him a common origin with the
beasts. See what gigantic systems of error have developed
from mistaken conceptions of the true nature and dignity
of man!
From all such we turn to that noble
ideal of man's essential dignity, given in this sublime
paragraph, which corrects our mistaken notions; and,
whilst giving us an explanation that harmonizes with all
our experience and observation, opens up to us vistas of
thought worthy of God.
MAN AS GOD MADE HIM. The description
given here of the origin and dignity of man is taken from
Psalm viii., which is doubtless a reminiscence of the days
when David kept his father's sheep; even if it were not
composed on that very spot over which in after-years the
heavenly choirs broke upon the astonished shepherds
"abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock
by night."
Turn to that Psalm, and see how well it
expresses the emotions which must well up in devout hearts
to God as we consider the midnight heavens, the tapestry
work of his fingers, and the spheres lit by the moon and
stars, which he has ordained. How impossible it is for
those who are given to devout reflection to come in
contact with any of the grander forms of natural beauty,
the far-spread expanse of ocean, the outlines of the
mountains, the changing pomp of the skies without turning
from the handiwork to the great Artisan, with some such
expression as the apostrophe with which the Psalm opens
and closes: "0 LORD, our Lord, how excellent is thy
name in all the earth 1"
At first sight, man is utterly unworthy
to be compared with those vast and wondrous spectacles
revealed to us by the veiling of the sun. His life is but
as a breath; as a shadow careering over the mountain-side;
as the existence of the aphides on a leaf in the vast
forests of being. What can be said of his character,
sin-stained and befouled, in contrast with peaks whose
virgin snows have never been defiled; with sylvan scenes,
whose peace has never been ruffled; with silvery spheres,
whose chimes of perfect harmony have never been broken by
discord? Four times over is the question asked upon the
pages of Scripture, "What is man, that thou art
mindful of him?" (Psalm cxliv. 3; Job vii. 17, 20;
Psalm viii. 4; Heb. ii. 6.)
Yet it is an undeniable fact that God
is mindful of man, and that he does visit him.
"Mindful!" There is not a moment in God's
existence in which he is not as mindful of this world of
men as the mother of the babe whom she has left for a
moment in the next room, but whose slightest cry or moan
she is quick to catch. "I am poor and needy; yet the
Lord thinketh upon me." "How precious are thy
thoughts unto me, 0 God!" "Visiting!" No
cot is so lowly, no heart so wayward, no life so solitary,
but God visits it. No one shall read these lines, the path
around whose heart-door is not trodden hard by the feet of
him who often comes and stands and knocks. We speak as if
only our sorrows were divine visitations. Alas for us, if
it were only so! Every throb of holy desire, every gentle
mercy, every gift of Providence, is a visitation of God.
But there must be some great and
sufficient reason why the Maker of the universe should
take so much interest in man. Evidently bigness is
not greatness; a tiny babe is worth more
than the tallest mountain; and an empress-mother will
linger in the one room where her child is ill, though she
forsake the remainder of her almost illimitable domain.
What if earth shall turn out to be the nursery of the
universe! The true clew, however, to all speculation is to
be found in the declaration by the Psalmist of God's
original design in making man: "Thou crownedst him.
...Thou madest him to have dominion. . . . Thou hast put
all things under his feet " (Psalm viii. 5, 6, R.v.).
Nor was this lofty ideal first given to the
Psalmist's poetic vision. It had an earlier origin. It is
a fragment of the great charta of humanity, which God gave
to our first parents in Paradise.
Turn to that noble archaic record, Gen.
i. 26-28, which transcends the imaginings of modern
science as far as it does those legends of creation which
make the heathen literature with which they are
incorporated incredible. Its simplicity, its sublimity,
its fitness, attest its origin and authority to be divine.
We are prepared to admit that God's work in creation was
symmetrical and orderly, and that he worked out his design
according to an ever-unfolding plan. But science has
discovered nothing as yet to contradict the express
statements of Scripture, that the first man was not at all
inferior to ourselves in those intellectual and moral
faculties which are the noblest heritage of mankind.
"God created man in his
own image" (Gen. i. 27). -There we have the
divine likeness. Our mental and moral nature is made on
the same plan as God's: the divine in miniature. Truth,
love, and purity, like the principles of mathematics, are
the same in us as in him. If it were not so, we could not
know or understand him. But since it is so, it has been
possible for him to take on himself our nature-possible
also that we shall be one day transformed to the perfect
image of his beauty.
"And God said, Have
dominion" (Gen. i. 28). -There you have royal
supremacy. Man was intended to be God's viceregent and
representative. King in a palace stored with all to please
him: monarch and sovereign of all the lower orders of
creation. The sun to labor for him as a very Hercules; the
moon to light his nights, or lead the waters round the
earth in tides, cleansing his coasts; elements of nature
to be his slaves and messengers; flowers to scent his
path; fruits to please his taste; birds to sing for him;
fish to feed him; beasts to toil for him and carry him.
Not a cringing slave, but a king crowned with the glory of
rule, and with the honor of universal supremacy. Only a
little lower than angels; because they are not, like him,
encumbered with flesh and blood. This is man as God made
him to be.
MAN AS SIN HAS MADE HIM. "We
see not yet all things subjected to him" (Heb. ii. 8,
R.v.). His crown is rolled in the dust, his honor
tarnished and stained. His sovereignty is strongly
disputed by the lower orders of creation. If trees nourish
him, it is after strenuous care, and they often
disappoint. If the earth supplies him with food, it is in
tardy response to exhausting toil If the beasts serve him,
it is because they have been laboriously tamed and
trained; whilst vast numbers roam the forest glades,
setting him at defiance. If he catch the fish of the sea,
or the bird of the air, he must wait long in cunning
concealment.
Some traces of the old lordship are
still apparent in the terror which the sound of the human
voice and the glance of the eye still inspire in the lower
creatures, as in the feats of lion-tamer or snake-charmer.
But for the most part anarchy and rebellion have laid
waste man's fair realm.
So degraded has he become, that he has
bowed before the objects that he was to command; and has
prostrated his royal form in shrines dedicated to birds,
and four-footed beasts, and creeping things. It is the
fashion nowadays to extol heathen philosophy; but how can
we compare it for a moment with the religion of the Bible,
when its pyramids are filled with mummies of deified
animals, and its temples with the sacred bull!
Where is the supremacy of man? Not in
the savage cowering before the beasts of the forest; nor
in the civilized races that are the slaves of lust and
sensuality and swinish indulgence; nor in those who,
refusing to recognize the authority of God, fail to
exercise any authority themselves. "Sin hath
reigned," as the Apostle says most truly (Rom. v.21).
And all who bow their necks beneath its yoke are slaves
and menials and cowering subjects, in comparison with what
God made and meant them to be.
Do not point to the wretched groups
surrounding the doors of the gin-palaces in the metropolis
of the most Christian people of the world, and regard
their condition as a stain on the love or power of God.
This is not his work. These are the products of sin. An
enemy hath done this. Would you see man as God intended
him to be, you must go back to Eden, or forward to the New
Jerusalem. Sin defiles, debases, disfigures, and blasts
all it touches. And we may shudder to think that its virus
is working through our frame, as we discover the results
of its ravages upon myriads around.
MAN AS CHRIST CAN MAKE HIM. "
We behold Jesus crowned with glory and honor" (ver.
9). "What help is that?" cries an objector;
"of course he is crowned with glory and honor, since
he is the Son of God." But notice, the glory and
honor mentioned here are altogether different from the
glory of Heb. i. 3. That was the
incommunicable glory of his deity. This is
the acquired glory of his humanity.
In John xvii. our Lord himself
distinguishes between the two. In verse 5, the glory which
he had with the Father as his right before all worlds. In
verse 24, the glory given as the reward for his
sufferings, which he could not have had unless he had
taken upon himself the form of a servant, and had been
made in the fashion of man, humbling himself, and becoming
obedient to the death of the cross, "made a little
lower than the angels, because of the suffering of death;
crowned with glory and honor: that he, by the grace of
God, should taste death for every man" (Phil ii. 7,
8; Heb. ii. 10).
This is the crown wherewith his Father
crowned him in the day of the gladness of his heart, when,
as man, he came forth victorious from the last wrestle
with the Prince of hell. All through his earthly life he
fulfilled the ancient ideal of man. He was God's
image; and those who saw him saw the Father. He
was Sovereign in his commands. Winds and
waves did his bidding. Trees withered at his touch. Fish
in shoals obeyed his will. Droves of cattle fled before
his scourge of small cords. Disease and death and devils
owned his sway. But all was more fully realized when he
was about to return to his Father, and said, in a noble
outburst of conscious supremacy, "All power is
given unto me in heaven and in earth."
"We behold him."
Behold him, Christian reader! The wreaths of empire are on
his brow. The keys of death and Hades swing at his girdle.
The mysterious living creatures, representatives of
redeemed creation, attest that he is worthy. All things in
heaven and earth, and under the earth, and in the seas,
worship him; so do the bands of angels, beneath whom he
stooped for a little season, on our behalf.
And as he is, we too shall be.
He is there as the type and specimen and
representative of redeemed men. We are linked with him in
indissoluble union. Through him we shall get back our lost
empire. We too shall be crowned with glory and honor. The
day is not far distant when we shall sit at his
side-joint-heirs in his empire; comrades in his glory, as
we have been comrades in his sorrows; beneath our feet all
things visible and invisible, thrones and principalities
and powers; whilst above us shall be the unclouded
empyrean of our Father's love, forever and forever. Oh,
destiny of surpassing bliss! Oh, rapture of saintly
hearts! Oh, miracle of divine omnipotence!
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