Faith's Standing Ground
Faith's Standing Ground
by
J. C. Philpot
Preached at Gower Street Chapel, London,
on June 8, 1862,
"What shall we then say to these things? If God is for us, who can be
against us? He who spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for
us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?"
Romans 8:31, 32
But having enumerated these ample estates, and given us so full and
clear a catalogue of the possessions of the heir of promise, the
apostle, as if in a transport of heavenly joy, breaks out with the
inquiry, "What shall we then say to these things? If God is for us, who
can be against us?" And then filled, as it were, with a glorious view of
the surpassing grace of God in the gift of his dear Son, he puts to
himself and to us that decisive, all-satisfying question, "He who
spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he
not with him also freely give us all things?"
First, Faith's forcible Inquiry– "What shall we, then, say to these
things?"
Secondly, Faith's firm Standing-ground– "If God is for us, who can be
against us?"
Thirdly, Faith's solid Argument– "He who spared not his own Son,
but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely
give us all things?"
I. Faith's forcible inquiry– "What shall we, then, say to these things?"
You will observe that when the apostle had given us this choice list of
heavenly blessings, and especially that glorious cluster, so richly
heaped together, like the Pleiades in the sky, of eternal fore-
knowledge, predestination, calling, justification, and glorification, he
then asks the question, which I have named Faith's forcible Inquiry,
"What shall we then say to these things?"
A. May I not well urge the same question upon ourselves? What shall
we say to these things, or rather what shall faith in our breast say to
them?
1. First, shall we say that they are not true? But can this question be
necessary? One would certainly think not, when they are so clearly
revealed in every part of the inspired volume; and yet we know that in
every age the glorious truths of election, predestination, fore-
knowledge, effectual calling, and the certainty of salvation to God's
elect people have been not only denied but fought against with bitter,
unrelenting enmity. But shall we say that these things are not true
because thus denied and opposed, when they shine as with a ray of
light, not only through the whole word of God, but especially meet our
believing eye in this chapter as if illuminated with the very light of
God's countenance beaming upon them? May we not indeed say that
they shine forth in it as bright and as glittering as the stars in the
midnight sky, so that to read it in faith is like looking up into the very
face of heaven all radiant with the heavenly effulgence of a thousand
constellations? Blind indeed must those be who can read this chapter
and see no beauty or glory in it! And worse than blind must those be
who see the truths contained in it, and hate them.
But I hope there are some here present who have seen them as clearly
and as plainly as Abraham saw the stars in the sky on that memorable
night when the Lord brought him forth abroad and said, "Look now
toward heaven, and count the stars, if you be able to number them;"
no, have believed in their divine Giver with the same faith as Abraham
then "believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for
righteousness." (Gen. 15:5, 6.)
2. But shall we say that though true, they ought to be kept back– that
they are truths which may be believed in the closet, but should never
be proclaimed in the pulpit, lest they should stumble weak believers,
offend many very serious professors of religion, damp the
earnestness of the inquiring, or add gloom to the troubled spirit of the
depressed children of God? Shall we listen to such objections, viewing
these heavenly truths as deep mysteries which should never be
examined or searched into, as being among the secret things which
belong unto God? Shall we, I say, give ear to such subtle arguments
which men have so frequently employed to keep back what they
cannot deny, and to throw a veil over that which their heart inwardly
abhors?
No! faith cannot act so treacherous a part. On the contrary, faith says
that they are revealed in the word of God for the express purpose that
they might be believed, and if believed that they might be spoken of,
and as if proclaimed upon the house top. Is not this both the faith and
the expression of the apostle? "We having the same spirit of faith,
according as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken; we
also believe, and therefore speak." (2 Cor. 4:13.) What faith, then,
inwardly believes the mouth outwardly speaks; for "with the heart
man believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is
made unto salvation." (Rom. 10:10.) They are then to be proclaimed
by all the ambassadors of God as a heavenly message; and surely they
are worthy of being borne, as with the voice of cherubim and
seraphim, to the very ends of the earth, that they may be sounded far
and wide as with the trumpet of God.
3. But are they not dangerous? Will they not lead to presumption?
May they not inspire a vain confidence? May they not harden the
heart, and make it careless how we work out our salvation with fear
and trembling? Yes, they may, unless the Spirit of God reveals them to
the soul. They may, if taken by a presumptuous hand; they may, if laid
hold of by fingers unsanctified by the Holy Spirit, be made very
injurious; as no doubt has been the case in very many instances. But
the abuse of a thing does not disprove its use. Are not God's best gifts
in providence abused by ungodly men? If then the doctrines of grace
are abused to licentiousness, that does not disprove either their truth
or their influence, if used rightly. But the question may perhaps be
best settled by your own experience, if indeed you have received them
into a believing heart under the teaching and testimony of God the
Holy Spirit. Have you found them dangerous– you who have received
them from the mouth of God, and felt the savor and sweetness of his
Spirit bedewing them to your inmost soul? Have they made you
presume? Have they inspired vain confidence in your breast? Have
they hardened your conscience, made sin less sinful, drawn you into
evil, or made you rush, in daring rebellion, upon God's shield? "No,"
you say, "I have felt them to produce in me just the contrary effects. I
have found that, as they were made spirit and life to my soul, they
softened my heart, made my conscience tender, gave me a holy
reverence of the name of God, and a dread of sinning against him;
and, so far as I felt their power, they humbled, melted, and broke me
down in love and sorrow at his dear feet." Then, how can we say they
are dangerous as tending to presumption, if we have felt anything of
their efficacy and power, and know, by experience, that they produce
self-distrust, humility, brokenness, and godly fear?
4. But may they not lead to sin? If we believe we are elect, may we not
live as we wish, and walk in all manner of ungodliness and evil, as
being certain of our salvation, whatever we do or whatever we leave
undone? Here, again, we must come to spiritual experience. Does the
child of grace find them to have this licentious tendency, when a
powerful impression of their truth and blessedness rests upon his
soul as with a cloud of grace and glory? When he views a bleeding
Lamb upon the cross; when he sees by the eye of faith the bloody
sweat falling in big drops from the dear Redeemer's brow in the
gloomy garden; when love and mercy unfold their treasures through
the groans, sighs, and agonies of the suffering Son of God– for this is
the channel through which these mercies come– it is at the foot of the
cross these blessings are learned; I ask, when the child of God has a
view of these precious truths as sealed by a Savior's blood and
witnessed by the Spirit's testimony, does he find that they encourage
him to live sinfully, and thus trample upon the blood of the cross,
crucify the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame? Do
these living truths harden his heart, make sin less hateful, and
holiness less desirable? No; on the contrary, every child of grace who
has ever felt the presence and power of God in his soul, can truly and
feelingly say that these precious truths have a sanctifying influence, a
holy tendency, that they draw from sin instead of leading into sin; and
that the more he sees and feels of a Savior's dying love, the more he
hates sin and the more he hates himself as a sinner.
What then shall we say of, or to these things? We dare not say they are
not true; we dare not say they are not to be proclaimed; we dare not
say they are dangerous; we dare not say they are licentious. But what
shall we say? I have shown the negative side– have I nothing to say on
the affirmative? Must we be put wholly upon the defensive? Let us
see.
B. We say then that they are blessedly true. But how do we know they
are blessedly true? Is it because we see them, read them, study them
as written by the pen of the Holy Spirit in God's word? That is one
reason I freely admit. There they are revealed as with a ray of light–
there they shine in all their own effulgence, beaming forth with a
clearness with which no human pen could have invested them. But
will that suffice? Do I want no more no better evidence? I am glad, so
far, of that; I highly prize that, and am often obliged to fall back upon
it as a firm support against unbelief or infidelity. But will that satisfy
me, fully satisfy me? It will not. I want something more strong, more
powerful, more convincing, more confirming than that. Then what do
I want? I want to know that they are the truths of God in a peculiar
way– a very peculiar way, one so peculiar that none can know it but by
the power of the Spirit. I want, then, to know that they are the truths
of God by one of these three peculiar ways. I call them peculiar ways,
because they differ from each other; not in nature but in degree, and
thus are so far distinct.
1. The highest, the best, and the most blessed way of knowing them is
by the INTERNAL WITNESS of the Spirit to my spirit that they are
God's own truths, and that I, even I, have a personal, eternal, and
indisputable interest in them. If then the Lord the Spirit graciously
speaks them into my heart, and reveals them with power, unction,
and savor to my soul, that is God's own express testimony to their
reality and blessedness; and this is the highest witness we can have of
the truth as it is in Jesus, for it is the Spirit's inward teaching,
testimony, and seal; as we read, "The Spirit himself bears witness
with our spirit that we are the children of God" (Rom. 8:16); and,
again, "In whom also, after you believed, you were sealed with that
holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance."
(Ephes. 1:13, 14.)
But is there no other knowledge of the truth but this? Can all rise up
into this firm security and full certainty? Do all receive the full
witness of the Spirit? Are all favored with the sweet assurance of
faith? Do all know the sealing testimony of the Spirit of God? Surely
not. There are many who really fear God who cannot and do not rise
up into the sweet assurance of faith, nor have the sealing witness of
the Spirit in their breast, and yet do know the truth so far as the Lord
has shown it them. How then do they know it? Are there two kinds of
knowledge? No; not in kind, but there are in degree, as the apostle
speaks of their being "differences of administrations, but the same
Lord; and diversities of operations, but the same God which works all
in all." (1 Cor. 12:5, 6.) They may know it then by one or both of those
two things, which always attend God's truth as made known to the
soul by divine power.
2. The first is, that whenever truth comes with divine power into the
heart, it LIBERATES. "You shall know the truth, and the truth shall
make you free." (John 8:32.) Thus there may be here present some
that have not received the Spirit as sealing home the word of God with
his own heavenly witness upon their breast, who yet may have so far
received the love of the truth into their hearts as to experience
something of its sweet liberating power. Have you never, at the throne
of grace, felt the power of God's truth upon your heart
communicating liberty of access, encouraging you to pour out your
soul before the Lord with some inward testimony that your prayers
were accepted? This was just what Hannah felt when a word from
Eli's mouth dropped with power into her heart. It liberated her from
her sadness, and gave her a testimony that the God of Israel would
grant her the petition which she had asked of him. This gave her rest
and peace.
Again, have you never, as you have sat under the sound of the gospel,
felt an inward testimony that it was true by the liberty it gave you
from your many pressing doubts and fears, your discouragements
and hard bondage and guilty apprehensions, under which you for the
most part labor? The feeling might not last long, but while it lasted, it
was in you a spirit of liberty; for "where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is liberty." And though you might not rise up to the full assurance of
faith, so as to be filled with all joy and peace in believing, yet, having
experienced a measure of the liberating influence of God's truth upon
your heart, you could set to your seal that it was the truth, and that
you had received the love of it into your soul.
3. But there is another way also whereby we may know these precious
truths in vitality and power; and that is, by the SANCTIFYING
influence which they produce upon the soul under the anointing of
the Holy Spirit. "Sanctify them through your truth," said our blessed
Lord to his heavenly Father, in his intercessory prayer for his
disciples; "your word is truth." (John 17:17.) Whenever the word of
truth comes home with power to the heart, it carries with it a
sanctifying influence. It draws the affections upwards; it fixes the
heart upon heavenly things; Jesus is viewed by the eye of faith at the
right hand of God, and every tender desire of a loving bosom flows
forth toward him as "the chief among ten thousand and the altogether
lovely one." This view of Christ, as the King in his beauty, has a
sanctifying influence upon the soul, communicating holy and
heavenly feelings, subduing the power of sin, separating from the
world and worldly objects, and bringing into captivity every thought
to the obedience of Christ.
Now just see whether you know anything of the power and
preciousness of heavenly truth by an experience of it in any of these
three different ways– the witness of the Spirit to your spirit in his
sealing testimony; or having felt its liberating influence; or knowing
its sanctifying effects? Not indeed that these three evidences can ever
be separated, but there may be in them different degrees, and as it
were stages of divine testimony. But if you can find these three
evidences, or any one of them, in your bosom, what shall you say to
these things? "Say of them?" you reply– "That they are blessedly true,
for I have felt their power in my own breast." Whatever then others
may say to them, or of them, that they are false, or should be kept
back, or are dangerous, or pernicious, you can stand up before God
and man with an honest conscience and undaunted front and testify
to their divine reality.
C. But, again, what more shall we say to these things? Why, we shall
say of them that they are exceedingly SUITABLE to the wants and
woes of a needy sinner; that in this chapter there is everything
adapted to the necessities of one truly convinced of his sins and
thoroughly sensible of his lost and ruined condition; who is drawn by
the power of God to the footstool of mercy, and comes unto the throne
of grace that he may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of
need. How suitable to such a guilty, condemned sinner is the
declaration, that "there is no condemnation to those who are in Christ
Jesus." How suitable to such is the testimony that the law of the Spirit
of life in Christ Jesus makes him free from the law of sin and death.
How suitable to such that as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they
are the sons of God. How suitable to such that the Spirit helps his
infirmities, teaches him how to pray, and himself intercedes for him
and in him with groanings which cannot be uttered. How suitable to
such that all things work together for good to those who love God, and
are called according to his purpose. I do not mean that the poor,
convinced sinner can lay hold of these blessings until they are brought
into his heart by the power of God; but I am showing you their
suitability to his wants and woes; and if his faith cannot rise up into
the spiritual enjoyment of them, he can yet believe in their exceeding
suitability to his forlorn, miserable condition.
D. But faith goes beyond their suitability when drawn forth into living
exercise upon them, and is able in some measure to realize and
appropriate them. Faith, then, views them as rich in comfort and
filled with sweet consolation. For how consoling it is to a cast-down
soul to believe that there is no condemnation for him from a broken
law, from the holiness of God, from his tremendous justice and his
dreadful indignation, as being in Christ Jesus safe from every storm.
What consolation to the poor, broken-hearted child of God, to find
and feel that the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus makes him free
from that law of sin and death in his carnal mind, which is his
constant plague and hourly vexation. How comforting to believe that
he is under the guidings and leadings of the blessed Spirit, and thus
has an evidence of being a son of God. How full too of consolation to
find the Spirit helping his infirmities, and interceding for him with
groanings which cannot be uttered.
And is not this, too, replete with consolation to every one who loves
God, to believe that all things, however painful or distressing to the
flesh, are working together for his good? What consolation also is
there in the belief that he, being called according to God's purpose,
has a saving interest in his eternal fore-knowledge, his fixed and
immutable predestination, so that nothing can change the purposes of
mercy and grace which God has towards him! How blessed too is the
thought and sweet assurance that he is justified freely by the
imputation of Christ's righteousness, and is in a sense already
glorified by having received into his bosom a measure of Christ's
glory!
E. But, again, faith says, "How GLORIFYING are these divine truths to
God!" How they put the crown upon the Mediator's head, to whom
alone it rightly belongs, and whose glory fills the heavens. Rightly
viewed, every link in this heavenly chain brings glory to the God and
Father of the Lord Jesus Christ. How glorious in God to set the sinner
free from all condemnation, as being in Christ Jesus. How glorious in
God to give him the Spirit to help his infirmities and to teach him how
to pray. How glorious in God to make all things work together for his
good. So might I run through the whole chain from beginning to end
and show how the glory of God is reflected, as with a heavenly
radiance from every part; but I forbear, and yet cannot but mention
the last link which binds the Church of God fast on to the throne of
glory; for how glorious it is that neither death nor life, nor things
present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other
creature shall be able to separate her from the love of God which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord.
Faith has found in these heavenly truths firm ground on which she
can plant her foot; for only as faith can stand upon this firm ground
can she lift up her mighty voice and send the challenge throughout all
creation, "If God is for us, who can be against us?"
What words are these! How the apostle here seems to throw the
gauntlet down– to hurl defiance against sin, Satan, and the world– to
stand with his foot firm upon the ground of God's eternal love, and, in
the confidence of faith, undauntedly look in the face every foe and
every fear, and boldly say to them all, as if bidding them do their
worst, "If God is for us, who can be against us?"
A. But the question may arise in many a throbbing breast, "Is God for
ME? I know if God is for me, none can be against me. But I know
also," the trembling heart adds, "if God is against me, then none can
be for me." You speak right. If God is for you, not all the men on earth
nor all the fiends of hell can keep your soul out of heaven. And if God
is against you, not all the men on earth nor all the absolution of
priests can keep your soul out of hell. This, therefore, is the point– the
narrow point to be decided in each man's conscience, "If God is for us,
who can be against us?" But O, if God is against us, who can be for us?
Take both sides; look at each face of the medal. There is a pro and
there is a con; there is a victory and there is a defeat; there is a
winning the crown and there is a losing it forever. Examine, then,
both sides– see on which you stand; and before you lift up your voice
and say, "If God is for us, who can be against us?" get good ground for
your feet, that they may be on the rock and not on the sand. Have
some clear testimony that God is for you; and then you can look a
frowning world in the face, hurl defiance at Satan, and appeal to the
gospel against the law, and to the blood of sprinkling against an evil
conscience. I shall, then, as the Lord may enable, look at both these
sides, and show what it is for God to be against you, and for God to be
for you; and then you will be able to see how far you can join hand in
hand with Faith as she stands upon the vantage-ground of the text,
and lift up your voice on high in union with hers, "If God is for us,
who can be against us!"
1. Are you in the world? Then God is not for you, for you are not for
God. We may lay this down as a broad principle, that those who are
for God, God is for them; and that those who are against God, God is
against them. That is the broad principle, which is laid down in the
unerring word of truth as a rigid criterion, from which there is no
deviation. But let me explain myself a little more clearly. By being in
the world, I do not mean being engaged in business or in any lawful
calling, for we have all, or at least most of us, to earn our daily bread
either by the sweat of our brow or the sweat of our brain. We may be
in the world, and yet not of the world; for as the apostle speaks, we
must needs go out of the world, if we are to have nothing whatever to
do with it. But I mean being in the world with our heart and affections
so as to love it and feel it to be our very home and element. Does not
John say? "If any man loves the world, the love of the Father is not in
him" (1 John 2:15); and does not James declare in the strongest
language what the friendship of the world is? "You adulterers and
adulteresses, know you not that the friendship of the world is enmity
with God? whoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the
enemy of God." (James 4:4.) If, then, you are a friend of the world,
you are an enemy of God; and if you are an enemy of God, you are
against God; and certainly, in your present state, God is against you.
But what will you do in the day of visitation? how will it be with you
on the bed of death? and how will you stand before the tribunal of the
Most High in the great and terrible day, if you live and die an enemy
of God?
2. Are you living in sin? Are you guilty of ungodly practices secretly or
openly? Is the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life
prevalent, not only in your bosom but in your conduct? Then,
certainly God is not for you; for you are against God. For all these
things "are not of the Father, but of the world, and the world passes
away, and the lust thereof– but he who does the will of God abides
forever."
3. Are you dead in trespasses and sins? Has no work of grace ever
passed upon your heart? Then you are an enemy and an alien, and
that by wicked works; and if an enemy and an alien, God is not for
you, for you are not for God. You are in league with God's enemies,
for what is such an enemy to God as sin– that evil thing which he
hates? If, then, bound hand and foot in carnality and death, you are
lying in all the guilt and ruin of the Adam fall, God is against you, and
will ever be against you, unless he has some secret purpose of mercy
toward you not yet revealed; but in your present state, God is
certainly against you; for what friendship or union can there be
between a living God and a soul dead in sin?
4. Are you an enemy to God's truth? Are the things I have brought
forward this evening hateful to your heart? Have they kindled enmity,
dislike, and rebellion in your breast as I brought them forward, and
made you almost hate me for sounding them in your ears? How then
can you believe that God is for you, if you hate God's truth, and are so
bold as actually to deny, which you must do to justify yourself, what is
written in the word of God as with a ray of divine light? Are you not
manifesting yourself as an enemy of God if you are an enemy to God's
truth, and fighting with malice in your breast against his holy word?
Then God is against you.
5. Are you displaying any enmity against the people of God, the
servants of God, or the ways of God? Then God is against you, for all
these things are dear to him as the apple of his eye; and if God is
against you, how can you dream for a moment that he will ever be for
you, unless there be a mighty change, so mighty that all these old
things shall pass away, and all things become new?
B. But I will leave this part of our subject. It is a part, and a very
necessary part, of my ministry that I should urge these things upon
the conscience, and thus rightly divide the word of truth and "take
forth the precious from the vile," and so be as God's mouth, if perhaps
the Lord may apply the warning word with power to some poor
sinner's heart. But let me rather come to a more pleasing part of the
subject, and show who are on God's side, for whom God is, and who,
as thus favored and blessed, can stand upon that firm ground of faith
of which I have been already speaking.
Taking, then, the broad line of truth which I have just laid down, we
may draw from it this conclusion, that if you are for God, God is for
you.
This primary truth being laid down as a broad principle, I have now to
work it out in harmony with the Scriptures and the experience of the
saints, for otherwise we may fall into some dangerous mistakes. Do
not many believe that they are for God both whose principles and
practice contradict every part of God's word? The blessed Lord
himself told his disciples that the time would come that whoever
killed them would think that he did God service. When the Ziphites
came to Saul promising to deliver David into the king's hand, he
blessed them in the name of the Lord. (1 Sam. 23:21.) And did not his
persecuting namesake verily think with himself that he ought to do
many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth? (Acts 26:9.)
Thus men's thoughts are no guide and men's zeal no guarantee that
they are doing the Lord's work or are for God, for when we come to
work the problem out and show it up in all its various bearings, we
soon see what room there is for self-deception, religious delusion,
and superstitious zeal, none of which stand before the light of truth or
the teaching of God in the heart. Let us, then, look at this important
matter in the light of the testimony of the word without and of the
Spirit within. I may almost use Jehu's words here, when he came as
the avenging servant of the Lord, and, lifting up my voice, say, "Who
is on the Lord's side? Who?" Or, to speak in simpler language, "Who
among you are for God?" Let me give you some marks by which you
may know the state of the case.
1. Has the Lord ever by his own lips given you a testimony that he is
for you? But look at the connection of our text– "If God is for us, who
can be against us?" You will observe that he is speaking not generally
and universally, but of a certain number whom he calls "we" and "us."
Now, if you will trace the connection, you will see that by "we" and
"us" he means those who love God; those who were foreknown of God
in eternal prescience, predestinated by eternal decree, called by
awakening grace, justified by the imputation of Christ's obedience,
and glorified by receiving of his Spirit. These are the "we" and the
"us" for whom God is.
Then look at these things in the light of the testimony as God has here
revealed them, and take the following as your first mark and
evidence– "And we know that all things work together for good to
those who love God." To love God is, then, a grand and essential
evidence that he is for us. Now look and see whether, in the light of
this outward testimony, you can find any evidence in your bosom in
the light of the inward testimony that you love God. You say, perhaps,
"I hope I do;" or "I would be very sorry if I did not;" or "What do you
take me for to think that I do not love God?" But this may be only
fencing with the question and evading the point of the sword.
Let me then further ask, Was his love ever shed abroad in your heart?
Was Jesus ever made precious to your soul? Can you say, with Peter–
it may be with a trembling and yet with sincere heart– "Lord, you
know all things; you know that I love you?" Was his name ever to you
like the ointment poured forth? Were your affections ever fixed upon
him as the chief among ten thousand and the altogether lovely one?
And though this may have been more deeply and powerfully felt years
ago, and you may have left your first love, yet have the impressions of
his beauty and blessedness been so wrought into the very substance of
your soul, that you do from time to time feel the flowing of affection
towards him under those gracious revivals with which the Lord may
be pleased to favor you? If you can lay your hand upon that evidence,
God is for you.
2. But all cannot lay their hand with equal firmness upon this grand
distinguishing evidence. Take another, then, in connection with our
test– "Called according to God's purpose." Have you any testimony
that God has called you by his grace, quickened your soul into divine
life, brought you under the curse of a condemning law, given you
repentance for your sins, raised up a sigh and a cry in your breast for
a sense of his pardoning love, brought you to the footstool of mercy,
given you faith to believe in his dear Son, with any sweet hope that he
has begun a gracious work upon your heart? Can you look back upon
any never-to-be-forgotten period when the Lord, by his special and
omnipotent grace, quickened your soul into life divine? for I do
believe we can never forget the first sensations of the Spirit of God in
his quickening movements upon the soul; when he, to use the figure
of Moses, flutters over it as an eagle which stirs up her nest, infusing
and communicating a new and heavenly life, as when in creation he
moved upon the face of the waters, communicating life and energy to
dead chaos.
Surely if we ever felt the mighty hand of the Lord upon us, we can
never forget the memorable time when he was first pleased to
communicate divine light and life to our dead souls, to pour out upon
us the Spirit of grace and of supplications, to separate us from the
world, to bring us to his feet with confessions and supplications,
opening up and revealing eternal realities with a weight and a power
that they entered into our deepest and most inward thoughts and
feelings. Can you look back to such a time? I hope I can now, more
than thirty-five years ago. Then God is for you; and if God is for you,
then you can, as he is pleased to strengthen your faith, look right
through that blessed chain with all its heavenly links, and see how he
foreknew you before the foundation of the world, and wrote your
name in the Book of Life.
3. But so far as you can clearly see your call by grace you can also see
your justification, for "whom he called them he also justified," which
brings us to another evidence to point out those for whom God is. This
is a point which needs some examination, for on it depends your title
to heaven. Have you, then, ever seen Christ by the eye of faith as
justifying you from all things "from which you could not be justified
by the law of Moses?" What are your views and feelings on this
important point? Did you ever believe in Christ's righteousness and
see it by the eye of faith as the obedience active and passive of the
incarnate Son of God? Did you ever receive it as your justifying robe;
and casting aside and renouncing your own as filthy rags, did you ever
stretch forth the right hand of your faith and bring it down, so to
speak, upon you as your covering garment? Did you ever feel the
sentence of justification in your bosom, so as to see yourself complete
in Christ without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing? Then God is for
you.
4. Have you ever felt any measure of glorification? for this follows
upon justification– "Whom he justified, them he also glorified." But
you will perhaps say, "I thought that this was future; that now we are
to suffer with Christ that we might hereafter be glorified together."
That is true; and yet, in a sense, God glorifies his people even here.
Did not the Lord say of his disciples to his heavenly Father? "And the
glory which you gave me I have given them;" not "I will give them,"
but "I have given," already given. Does not Peter also say? "If you be
reproached for the name of Christ happy are you; for the Spirit of
glory and of God rests upon you." (1 Pet. 4:14.) Do we not also read?
"The Lord will give grace and glory" (Psalm. 84:11); as if they were so
connected that they are given together– as has been well said, "Grace
is glory begun, and glory is grace finished."
1. The world is against them; but this cannot hurt them, for it is
already a beaten foe. "In the world you shall have tribulation– but be
of good cheer; I have overcome the world." (John 16:33.) And we, too,
shall overcome it in and by him. "For whoever is born of God
overcomes the world– and this is the victory that overcomes the
world, even our faith." (1 John 5:4.) If we come out of the world, give
ourselves to Christ, and manifest our faith by a godly life, the world
will not, cannot be our friend. And why? Because we condemn it. This
was the offence of Noah, that, "moved with fear, he prepared an ark to
the saving of his house, by the which he condemned the world"
(Heb.11:7); for every nail which he drove into the ark testified to his
separation from and condemnation of it, as being under the wrath of
God. If then, like Noah, moved with fear, we are preparing an ark–
the ark Christ– to the saving of our soul, we shall thereby condemn
the world; and as this is an offence which the world cannot endure, it
will rise up in arms against us, and to the utmost of its power,
slander, persecute, and, if it could, destroy us. We are not to expect
better treatment from it than our Lord and Master. "If they have
called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they
call them of his household?"
2. But are all the professed children of God for us? Why, we know that
some of the bitterest enemies we have had to encounter have been
those who profess to be on the Lord's side. Professors of religion have
always been the deadliest enemies of the children of God. Who were
so opposed to the blessed Lord as the Scribes and Pharisees? It was
not the people generally, but their religious teachers and leaders who
crucified the Lord of glory. And so in every age the religionists of the
day have been the hottest and bitterest persecutors of the Church of
Christ. Nor is the case altered now. The more the children of God are
firm in the truth, the more they enjoy its power, the more they live
under its influence, and the more tenderly and conscientiously they
walk in godly fear, the more will the professing generation of the day
hate them with a deadly hatred.
Let us not think that we can disarm it by a godly life; for the more that
we walk in the sweet enjoyment of heavenly truth and let our light
shine before men as having been with Jesus, the more will this draw
down their hatred and contempt.
3. But what is far harder to bear, the very saints of God sometimes
may even be against us; and against us sometimes justly and rightly,
sometimes unjustly and wrongly. We may be left in an evil moment to
say or do things that may bring the frown of God's saints upon us, and
their just frown too. From an inconsistent walk, from unfitting
conduct, we must justly incur the displeasure and disapprobation of
the saints of God; and thus the very family of God may be justly
against us, and would not act faithfully to God or faithfully to their
own consciences if they were for us. Religion is no party thing. Its
very character, as being "from above," is to be "without partiality and
without hypocrisy." We must not expect, therefore, that the saints of
God will approve of our bad doings and side with us against the Lord–
they have higher claims than our friendship or favor, and can only be
on our side as we are on the Lord's side. If our conscience be tender,
we shall feel this acutely; and though our flesh may shrink from their
reproofs, yet shall we find it in the end a kindness and "an excellent
oil, which shall not break our head" (Psalm. 141:5), but rather soften
our heart into contrition and confession.
But sometimes the saints are unjustly and wrongly against us.
Prejudice, pride, envy, jealousy, groundless suspicion, ill-will, and the
wretched enmity of the carnal mind may work in the breast of the
saint of God, and vent itself in acts of unkindness or words that deeply
cut and wound our spirit. For, as Deer says, "From sinner and from
saint, he meets with many a blow." Still, still faith may take up the
word, "If God is for us who can be against us?"
4. But again, is not the law of God against its? Does not that require
perfect obedience? Does not that curse and condemn not only every
ungodly word and action, but even every ungodly thought, for "the
thought of foolishness is sin." (Prov. 24:9.) But shall that be so against
the saint of God as to condemn him to hell? If our blessed Lord has
fulfilled the law, endured the curse, obeyed it in all its demands, and
is "the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that believes"
(Rom. 10:4), what charges can it bring against the saint of God for his
eternal condemnation? Can it demand a debt already paid, "First at
my bleeding Surety's hands, and then again at mine?"
What is the very first sound of the gospel trumpet which discourses
such sweet music all through this chapter? "There is therefore now no
condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus;" and if "no
condemnation," the law cannot be heard when it would speak against
him in the court of Justice before the Sovereign Majesty of heaven.
5. But is not even his own conscience often against him? I freely and
honestly confess that I often have a guilty conscience; and I know that
when this is the case it is more against us than anybody in the world.
Its inward voice speaks louder than any outward one. Few ministers,
in our day at least, have had more evil things said and written against
them than myself; and yet none of their hard speeches have troubled,
though they might have vexed me, when my own conscience did not
add its silent testimony. And the reason is, because when conscience
is against me I cannot believe that God is for me. I much admire what
the Holy Spirit speaks by the pen of John. He assumes two cases– one
where conscience condemns us, and the other where it condemns us
not; and he makes a gracious provision for each case– "For if our
heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and knows all
things. Beloved, if our heart condemns us not, then have we
confidence toward God." (1 John 3:20, 21.)
What, then, remains, if neither the world, nor the professor, nor even
the saint, nor a broken law, nor a guilty conscience; if none of these
singly, nor all of them collectively are or can be against us, who or
what remains that we should dread? May we not, if we know anything
of these truths by divine teaching and divine testimony, stand with
faith upon her own firm standing-ground; and not in bold
presumption, but in holy, humble trust and confidence, meekly and
quietly say, "If God is for us, who can be against us?"
As regards my own experience, since I have been called into the field
of action to fight the good fight of faith, I have not been much afraid of
man. I hope the Lord has, in some measure at least, in my contending
earnestly for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints, set
me free from that fear of man which brings a snare. But I frankly
confess to one fear– I have often been terribly afraid of God. I hope he
has planted in my heart a filial fear of his great name, but, mixed with
that, I have often found and felt much slavish fear– that wretched fear
of which John truly says that "it has torment;" for I believe it more or
less torments all the family of God. But there is also a blessed remedy
for this– the love of God which casts it out; not so as never to return,
but from its seat of prevailing influence and power. In the sight, then,
of all those enemies subdued or silenced, may we not say, "If the Lord
be for us, who, who on earth or in hell, can be against us?"
III. But we now come to FAITH'S SOLID ARGUMENT; for faith can
argue– not indeed according to the logic of the schools; not according
to the system of Aristotle which I learned at Oxford, nor according to
the mathematical demonstrations studied at Cambridge, but with that
heavenly logic of which Job speaks when he says, "Oh that I knew
where I might find him! that I might come even to his seat! I would
order my cause before him, and fill my mouth with arguments." (Job
23:3, 4.) Here, then, is faith's argument– "He who spared not his own
Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall not he with him also
freely give us all things?"
A. Let us see whether we cannot, with God's help and blessing, gather
up the substance of faith's convincing argument here. What is its firm
basis! The gift of God's own Son. But do observe with me the way in
which the Holy Spirit, by the pen of the apostle, expresses this gift,
and mark his language– "He who spared not his own Son." I do not
wish to dwell upon these words in the spirit of controversy, but in the
spirit of truth; yet I cannot help drawing your attention to the striking
way in which our blessed Lord is here described; and who, I ask, that
reads those words with an impartial eye can deny that the Lord Jesus
is spoken of here as God's own Son? Mark the beauty, the force, the
exquisite pathos which reaches the very heart in the words "His own
Son!" Deny that our blessed Lord is God's own Son; take him with
unhallowed hands out of the Father's bosom; say that he is not his
own peculiar, as the word literally means, his own proper and only-
begotten Son, and where is the force and beauty of the argument?
where the tender pathos which drops, as with heaven's dew, into a
believing breast, "He who spared not his own Son?"
How this word of grace and truth seems to carry up our believing
thoughts into the very courts of bliss before time was, or the
dayspring knew its place! How it gives us a view of the Son of God
lying in his Father's bosom from the foundation of the world! And
how it gives us to see, if I may so speak, the struggle in the bosom of
the Father between holding his own Son in his bosom and giving him
up. "He who spared not his own Son"– as though, so to speak, there
was that in the bosom of God which would have spared him, if he
could possibly have done so. Had there been any other way whereby
the Church could have been saved, sin pardoned, the law magnified,
and God's justice glorified, that Son would have been spared. But
there was no other possible way but by giving up his Son; and
therefore, sooner than the law should be violated, his attributes
infringed, and the Church eternally lost, "He spared not his own Son."
Look at the consequences which the fall introduced into the creation
of God. See how it broke in upon his righteous character; how it
tarnished, so to speak, the Majesty of heaven in his sovereign
supremacy. Is not disobedience to a command, especially if wanton
and willful, a casting contempt upon it? When a father bids a child, or
a master a servant, do a thing, and the child or servant refuses to obey
or does the exact contrary– is not this act of undeniable disobedience
cool contempt of, if not a decided insult to lawful authority? Thus
Adam's disobedience, of which the guilt and consequences stretch
down to us, was an insult to the supreme authority of heaven's
Lawgiver. If this were not atoned for, and as it were avenged and
remedied, how could the supremacy of God is vindicated?
See, then, the impossibility of man being saved unless justice could be
amply satisfied– unless the law could be fully obeyed– unless every
perfection of Deity should be thoroughly harmonized. The angels had
witnessed the fall of their apostate brethren; they had seen 'wrath
without mercy' poured out upon those once bright and glorious
spirits, who had become leagued together in the great transgression.
Now if fallen men were to be spared, justice disregarded, and the law
broken with impunity, what would have been the thought of those
angelic beings who stood when their brethren fell? That God was
partial; that he sacrificed his justice to his mercy; that he was
overborne with compassion to fallen man, though not to fallen angels,
and did not care whether his attributes were sacrificed or not.
1. First, that he should endure the deep humiliation and bitter pangs
of the cross. A sacrifice was to be offered, blood to be shed, and he
was to be the victim. Think of a tender father delivering with his own
hands an only son to death. No less was it for God to deliver his own
Son to bear our sins in his own body on the tree.
4. But there is something deeper and more wondrous still, what far
exceeds all human thought to enter into the sacred mystery– he was
to be delivered to endure the tremendous wrath of his Father, the
hidings of his face, and that bitter forsaking of the light of his
countenance which wrung from his bosom that dolorous cry which
shook the very foundations of earth– "My God, my God, why have you
forsaken me?" Now when we look at these solemn mysteries by the
eye of faith, and see what God the Father delivered up his Son unto,
when he spared him not, O what a view it gives us of the eternal,
infinite love of God to a guilty race, to give up his Son, thus freely to
die for their sins and to save them in himself with an everlasting
salvation.
This, then, is faith's argument– If God did all this, what will he deny?
He who has given the greater, will he withhold the less? How faith
rises up here, and, drawing herself up to her full stature, speaks aloud
for all the family of God, and says, "What? did God the Father spare
not his own Son? Did he give him up freely to die for our sins? Will he,
after this display of his super-abounding grace and infinite mercy,
keep back anything from us that is really for our good? Will he not
with him also freely give us all things?" What! "all things?" Yes; all
things that shall be for our good and for his glory; all things in
providence that shall be for our good while we journey through this
valley; all things in grace that shall be for our spiritual profit and
consolation. Do we need faith in larger measure? He will give us that.
Do we need hope to anchor more strongly within the veil? Will he not
give us that also? Do we want to love him more who first loved us?
Will he withhold that? Do we need support in affliction, deliverance
out of temptation, consolation under the sorrows of life? Will he not
freely give us all these things? Will he not be with us upon a dying bed
when we shall need his presence most, and give us then and there
what shall bear us up in the dark valley? Thus faith, standing upon
this elevated ground, may look upon the wide horizon and say, "What
is there which God will withhold from us when he has not spared his
own Son?"
But it is not always or often that faith can use these arguments. Faith
is sometimes very weak and can scarcely lift up her voice to use
language like this. Still, faith's argument is the same, though she may
not be able to use it with equal force; for the ground is still the same,
whether faith be weak or strong, that if God has not spared his Son,
but given him up for us all, he surely will freely, liberally, graciously,
unreservedly give us all things.
Let us, then, gather up the fragments that nothing be lost; gather
together the threads of this discourse, and see how it bears upon our
experience and our hopes. The grand thing is to have this testimony
sealed upon our breast, whose we are and whom we serve; on whose
side we stand, and who is for us. If we can get that clearly settled in
our bosom by the work and witness of the Holy Spirit, then everything
follows. But while we are held in doubt and fear on whose side we
stand and whether God is against us or for us, we cannot stand upon
faith's ground, nor can we use faith's argument. How desirable then it
is for every saint of God to have some inward testimony that God is
for him. And how is this to be gained if not already possessed? By
prayer and supplication; by looking to the Lord, wrestling with him,
pouring out the heart before him, seeking his face, and begging of him
from time to time to make it clear that God the Spirit has begun that
sacred work upon the soul which he will never leave nor forsake until
he has completed it.
As, then, the child of grace is favored with a sweet evidence that God
is his Father and friend, he can take up first Faith's forcible Inquiry,
"What shall we then say to these things?" then Faith's firm Standing-
ground, "If God is for us, who can be against us?" and then Faith's
solid Argument, "He who spared not his own Son, but delivered him
up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?"