Biblical Illustrator Finally, my brethren 1. What were the things not irksome and safe?(1) (2) (3) (4) 2. Since the apostle seems to be about to conclude, what occasioned the interruption? Probably some outbreak of Jewish proselytism respecting which he warns the Philippians in plain language. At the word "concision" he enters on a fresh line of thought which occupies the rest of the chapter. I. HE AFFIRMS THAT HE AND HIS GENTILE BRETHREN HAVE THE MOST VALID CLAIM TO WHAT THE JEWS SO DEARLY PRIZED. "We are the circumcision." He justifies his assertion by describing — 1. The nature of their worship. The one essential thing in worship is its spirit. The kind of worship the proselytizers offered rested largely on forms. If the form were only according to their pattern it was enough. The apostle, on the contrary, takes his stand on the requirement of our Lord: "God is a spirit," etc. Heart, not hand, lip, knee worship was the main thing, and in this respect they and he were more in harmony with the purpose of circumcision than those who submitted to the rite. 2. The ground of their trust. They rested in position rather than privilege. Circumcision was the sum of Jewish privilege. It was the main thing about which the Jews boasted. But their high privilege had not led them to a high morality, but had been made a cloak for sin. In contrast with this Paul puts Christian conduct. Christians rejoiced, or made their boast, in Christ Jesus, and had no confidence in the flesh. They looked to Him as the fulfiller of all righteousness for us and the example of all righteousness in us. Theirs was a prideless pride. II. HE ARGUES WITH THE JEW ON HIS OWN GROUND. The ground of their boasting might well be his as regards — 1. Inherited privileges.(1) The Jews make much of circumcision and the time of its performance. If before the eighth day it is nothing; if after, of less value. That, then, which the strictest Jews demand is true of me.(2) They also talk of the old stock. I belong to it.(3) They pride themselves on their tribe. What will compare with mine?(4) Nay, more; scattered among the Gentiles, exposed to taint, to loss of language and custom, yet my ancestors remained pure in every sense. I am a Hebrew of the Hebrews. 2. Personal acts.(1) What of the law? I belonged by choice to the separated sect.(2) What of zeal? These men are making much of that; but did not I persecute the Church?(3) And as for righteousness, when was I a defaulter? 3. Here surely was ground for boasting had he been so disposed. But — III. THE WHOLE OF THESE MOST COVETED THINGS HE NOW COUNTS LOSS. He relinquished them all to win Christ. He changes the figure. He had been speaking of gain and loss; he now speaks of entering on a race. 1. He divests himself of all self-righteous robes. He felt himself disqualified for the contest in any such dress. 2. He desires to lay firmest hold of Christ. 3. He seeks to feel the full meaning of the resurrection power, the propulsion to a higher and nobler purpose. 4. He asks to share the sufferings of Christ. Note this, inasmuch as many talk as though the sufferings of Christ had dispensed with their own. 5. He would be fashioned to the likeness of His death. 6. And so he would reach the goal — resurrection, i.e., complete newness of life through Christ Jesus. Conclusion:This delineation has its practical bearing on ourselves. 1. It puts privileges in their true place. They increase our obligation to serve God. 2. External religiousness is put in its right place. 3. We are shown where we shall only find the true safeguard against modern delusions on religious questions — in Christ. (J. J. Goadby.) Rejoice in the Lord He who would rejoice in the Lord must —I. II. III. (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. REJOICE IN THE LORD is the text of the whole chapter. After a long chapter on the suppression of self and the absorption of every faculty in the service of Christ, here seems to be the reward. Observe — 1. It is "in the Lord." There are two estates of men, "in the flesh," and "in the Lord." To be in the latter estate is to possess all that can minister to happiness. So we are here reminded that we can command our own happiness. It is enforced as a duty. Joy is a feeling that ranges over all life and time. It remembers from what it has been rescued; it rejoices in present security; it hopes for more than it can conceive in the future. 2. But if the Christian is seduced from Christ the joy departs, and gives place to a deeper desolation than the soul has ever known. It was this danger that the apostle dreaded, arising from two errors; one doctrinal, which would teach them to cease to trust in Christ alone: another practical, which would make them selfish and carnal, and so enemies of the Cross. II. CHRISTIAN REJOICING "DEFENDED AGAINST ITS JUDAIZING" ENEMIES. The apostle bids the Philippians beware of the dogs, evil workers, concision, suggestive phrases, the last implying that circumcision having served its purpose had become dishonoured as well as disused; the word was now but a synonym of a Christian profession (Colossians 2:11; Romans 2:29). Those were the true circumcision who — 1. Worship God in the spirit, i.e., they offer a worship which is ordered, prompted, released from ceremony and made acceptable by the Spirit of God.(1) The Holy Ghost is the Master of all Christian worship.(2) The object of that worship or service is included in the term and not expressed (Romans 9:4; Acts 26:1.-7; Romans 12:1).(3) The worship presented is "in spirit and in truth," because the communism of man's spirit with God through the indwelling spirit (Romans 8:26; Jude 1:20) is His own temple. But this must be external also. The word "circumcision" indicates the fellowship of those who, by this symbolic rite, were dedicated to God. And Christian public worship is the common spiritual homage of men who are serving God in their spirits while they are serving Him in His house.(4) But the Spirit unites no human spirit to God which is not holy; and so the cutting off of sin was what circumcision always signified (Romans 2:29). 2. Rejoice in Christ Jesus, i.e., confide or glory. They have learned that circumcision has given place to baptism; but they put trust in neither. They trust only in Christ, and as they trust they glory. 3. Have no confidence in the flesh.(1) In the fleshly ordinance which cannot be retained without dishonouring Christ.(2) In the "fleshly," i.e., personal and national prerogatives of the circumcised members of the old covenant. They renounced Judaism with all its advantages.(3) In anything that human nature can do to win the Divine favour. (W. D. Pope, D. D.)
1. Bodily or sensitive called pleasure, which proceeds from some impression made by a suitable object upon the senses. Of which note —(1) This in itself is not sinful, because both the sense and the object and the suitableness of them were all made by God.(2) Hence it is permitted by God (Ecclesiastes 3:22; Ecclesiastes 5:19).(3) But corrupt man is too apt to sin in these sensitive pleasures, either — (a) (b) 2. Rational or spiritual joy, seated in the soul itself. II. WHAT IS IT TO REJOICE IN THE LORD? 1. God was pleased at first to order the soul of man so that it bad a natural tendency and suitableness to the nature of God. 2. But the soul being disordered by sin is apt to rejoice in nothing but externals. 3. It is therefore God's will that we labour after our primitive perfections and joys, so as to delight ourselves —(1) In Him as God and our God (Psalm 28:7; Deuteronomy 12:12, 18).(2) In His — (a) (b) (c) III. HOW DOTH IT APPEAR THAT WE OUGHT AND MAY THUS REJOICE? 1. From Scripture.(1) God commands it (Psalm 32:11; Philippians 4:4).(2) Christ prays for it (John 17:13).(3) This is one great end of His promises (Romans 15:4).(4) It is one great end of the ministry (Isaiah 52:7; Romans 10:15; 2 Corinthians 1:24).(5) It is the end of Christ's sending the Spirit (John 16:7). The Spirit comforts us by — (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) 2. From reason. We should rejoice because —(1) God hath given us that power.(2) There is nothing in this world that we can have any solid joy in, because not suitable to the soul.(3) There is none but God we can rationally rejoice in. 3. But doth not God sometimes command us to mourn? (Ecclesiastes 3:4; Isaiah 22:12; Joel 2:12-13). (1) (2) (3) IV. Uses. 1. Information.(1) Observe God's goodness to His creatures in making it their duty to rejoice.(2) The privilege of Christians above all others (John 16:22).(3) The false calumny that is laid on holiness as depriving us of joy (John 14:1).(4) Our misery is all from ourselves (Hosea 13:9).(5) In the excellency of Christian joy above all others; it is in the Lord. 2. Exhortation: Rejoice.(1) Consider the necessity. God commands it for His glory and the credit of religion.(2) Consider the excellency, above all other joy. (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) V. MEANS AND DIRECTIONS. 1. Labour after a right know ledge of God (Psalm 9:10). 2. Endeavour to get an interest in Him. 3. Get thy evidences clear and keep them so (Job 19:25; Psalm 27:1). 4. Convince thyself it is thy duty to rejoice. 5. Live above the temperature of the body. 6. Study well the nature of justification (Romans 4:5; Romans 5:1). (1) (2) 7. Have frequent recourse to the promises (Hebrews 13:5-6). 8. Let the eye of faith be constantly fixed on the attributes of God (Isaiah 45:24; Psalm 57:1, 7). 9. Have a care of what will damp thy joys. (1) (2) (3) 10. Often meditate on a Christian's privileges. (1) (2) (3) (4) VI. OBJECTIONS. 1. My sins are many and great. Answer: (1) (2) (3) 2. My corruptions are strong. Answer: (1) (2) (3) 3. The devil oft tempts me. Answer: (1) (2) (3) 4. God hath forsaken me. Answer: (1) (2) 5. I have many losses and crosses. Answer: (1) (2) (3) (4) (Bishop Beveridge.) I. Rejoice in the Lord AS YOUR SAVIOR. When Candace's treasurer found that Jesus had suffered for him on the cross, "he went on his way rejoicing." Our acceptance with God makes heaven rejoice — the return of the prodigal affords the greatest happiness to himself and all others. II. Rejoice in the Lord AS YOUR GUIDE. They were journeying on in comparative fear. In tribulation even the saints rejoice because their Saviour will deliver them. III. Rejoice in the Lord AS YOUR REWARD. (Weekly Pulpit.)
II. Its SOURCE AND SECURITY. Christ supplies — sustains it. III. Its PERPETUITY. it is an apostle's last injunction — must endure forever. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
I. THE APPELLATION — "Brethren." By loving compellation he labours to enter into their hearts. If exhortation comes from the pride of man, the pride of man will beat it back. Why are Christians brethren? 1. They have the same beginning of life from the same Father; the same common brother Christ; the same food, the Word of God; the same promises and inheritance. 2. The word is indicative of equality. This should fill up the valleys of hearts dejected here in regard to mean estates; as also pull down the mountains of proud hearts. 3. It is a name of dignity belonging to the heirs of heaven. 4. It is a word of love. II. THE EXHORTATION. 1. It is the Christian's duty to rejoice. It is commanded here. 2. It is reasonable that they should rejoice. They are free from the spiritual Egypt; why should they not sing as the delivered Israelites. They have peace with God and an assured hope. 3. It belongs only to Christians to rejoice. Others have neither cause nor commandment to do so. III. THE LIMITATION — "In the Lord." 1. In whom? Christ is our Lord — (1) (2) (3) 2. How? (1) (2) IV. THE MEANS. 1. Faith. It is the sense of our reconciliation that makes us rejoice (Romans 5:2; 1 Peter 1:6). Whatever strengthens or weakens faith, strengthens or weakens joy. 2. Peace. Whatever disturbs our peace disturbs our joy. 3. Prayer. Pray that your joy may be full. 4. Christian communion. As the two disciples' hearts did burn within them when they talked with Christ. V. QUESTIONS. 1. Why, then, are God's children sorrowful?(1) Their sorrow proceeds from the want of the perfections necessary to make them absolute Christians indeed.(2) They do not adorn their profession, and so God hides the comfortable presence of His Spirit.(3) The sorrow may only be apparent, for their joy is a hidden joy. The feast is kept in the conscience and not always manifest.(4) While they live here they have ever a mixture of joy and grief to temper one another. 2. Is not the Christian fuller of sorrow than of joy? If so, it arises from ignorance of the grounds of comfort or from want of application of them. Let him then —(1) Compare all discomforts with the joy he may have, and he will find that it countervails a world of sorrow, for it is endless, and one day will be full.(2) Take heed of the hindrances of this joy. Sins committed and not repented (1 Chronicles 2:7).(3) Take heed of negligence in good duties and to do them thoroughly. (R. Sibbes, D. D.)
I. TO THE UNREGENERATE MAN CHRISTIAN JOY IS UNINTELLIGIBLE. It belongs to a sphere with which he has no acquaintance. He sees the restraints which religion imposes, but of its blessed communion with God he sees nothing. Its hopes to him are visionary. He cannot think the yoke of Jesus to be easy. II. TO THE TRUE CHRISTIAN THIS JOY IS REASONABLE, and even when he is not happy he feels he ought to be. 1. It springs from love to Christ. Out in the world we find Marahs; its springs are full of bitterness. In Christ. "with joy we draw water from the wells of salvation." 2. The citizens of the spiritual Zion may well be joyful in their King. What city is like ours? Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth. God hath called her walls Salvation and her gates Praise. Prosperity is within her palaces. Through her midst flows the river of life, and there is the tree of life whose leaves are for the healing of the nations. The King abides amongst us. To all our petitions His ear is open; to all our wants His bounteous hand. His service is glorious liberty. 3. We have perfect security. No power can pluck us out of our Saviour's hand; for with His infinite goodness is conjoined an infinite grossness. 4. In the contemplation of providence there is an unfailing source of joy. The natural satisfaction which outward comforts bring is pervaded and glorified by the thankfulness of hearts rejoicing in their Father's goodness. Anxiety, pain, and bereavement may be appointed to us, but that they are a Father's appointment will prevent despondency and maintain peace. 5. Innocent enjoyments have a new charm "in the Lord." He who began His miracles by contributing to social pleasure, changes the common into the noble and refreshing. Friendship has one added sweetness, nature a new and glorious beauty, and study a satisfaction altogether peculiar, now that intellectual improvement is felt to be polishing a shaft for the Master's quiver. 6. Next to the ineffable delight of seeing Jesus as His Saviour is the delight which fills the believer's heart in helping others to see Him as theirs. III. THE REASONS WHY MANY CHRISTIANS HAVE LITTLE OF THIS JOY are various. In some it is due — 1. To temperament. Of this class the Apostle Thomas may be taken as a type. In many, the nervous tendency to religious melancholy developes insanity, as in the case of Cowper. The care of a physician and the watchful love of friends may be of service to joyless Christians. 2. To defective apprehension of the fulness and freeness of the gospel. The glorious liberty has been so little understood that while living in the air of freedom many have fallen back into "the spirit of bondage again to fear." 3. To feeble spirituality and indulgence in sin. Worldliness, like a killing parasite, has wreathed itself round the energies of the soul. The pleasures of life have stolen away the time from duty. Mists rise from a mind cherishing sinful desire and hide the face of God. We know why David had to pray, "Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation." And all that is well, and it is to be hoped that this gloom is the harbinger of repentance, and the opening of his heart to the Sun of Righteousness. (R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
(Knox Little.)
(Knox Little.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
(R. Johnstone, LL. B.)
I. DULL AND UNEXPERT UNDERSTANDINGS ARE MUCH HELPED. II. YOU ARE STIRRED UP INTO GREATER WARINESS THAN OTHERWISE YE WOULD. (H. Airay, D. D.)Dwelling on the same things is necessary even for the best Christians, because — I. TRUTH IS SUPERNATURAL, AND OUR MINDS ARE CARNAL. That therefore which is to keep our changeful minds must be assiduous, or else our minds will sink into their first estate. II. WE OFTEN DISREGARD THE TRUTH AT THE FIRST, SECOND, OR THIRD PRESENTATION (Job 33:14). III. THERE IS SUCH A BREADTH AND DEPTH IN THE WORD OF GOD, THAT ALTHOUGH WE OFTEN HEAR THE SAME THING WE NEVER COME TO UNDERSTAND THE FULL EXTENT. Our souls are narrow. Spiritual meat requires digestion, and therefore repetition. IV. CORRUPTIONS AND WORLDLY BUSINESS TEND TO THRUST OUT THE CONSIDERATION OF THE TRUTH. We cannot have two things in our mind at the same time in strength. Whence it comes to pass that the better being ever subject to be thrust out needs to be hammered in with often repetition. V. OUR MEMORIES ARE VERY WEAK TO RETAIN ANYTHING THAT IS GOOD. Good things sink through them as water through a sieve; there is need therefore of remembrances. After this manner God hath dealt with man in renewing the promises, and Christ in His parables (Matthew 13), although with variety, teaching ministers to avoid tediousness. Conclusion: 1. Let it not be grievous to ministers to do what is for the safety of God's children. Peter cast often and got nothing, yet at Christ's word he cast again. God, that blesseth not every cast, may bless the cast to the catching of many. 2. If we hear the same things often, let us hear them as an impression which may carry force and work upon our hearts more strongly than before. (R. Sibbes, D. D.)
1. A story we have often heard or read, however fascinating at first, will gradually lose much of its interest. If read for amusement it would be quite out of the nature of things that a book should please us so much on the second or third perusal as on the first: but if read for instruction the case is somewhat altered. We are conscious that many parts are imperfectly mastered, and we do not hesitate to apply ourselves again and again to the study. But even when instruction is the object, a truth which has once settled in our minds will lose its power of gaining our attention. 2. When we pass from human literature to Divine, we carry our dispositions and habits with us, and we shall be tempted to reckon ourselves so well acquainted with certain portions of the Bible as to reckon further study of them superfluous. Now there is no truth of Christianity that will not repay further outlay of time and attention. Whatever our progress, we are only beginners. Yet while the text sets itself against that craving for novelties in religion which is the mark of a mind diseased, it does not circumscribe the range of inquiry. "The same things" were confined to no narrow groove. I. THE NATURE OF SCRIPTURAL TRUTH DEMONSTRATES THAT REPETITION CAN NEVER BE USELESS. It is a property of the truths of the Bible that the simplest involve the most difficult, while the more sublime and mysterious prove, under some shape or another, the plain and the elementary. It is a simple truth, e.g., that the Eternal Son of God died as the Surety of the lost human race, but you introduce with it a whole library of divinity, for there is not one truth of our religion that is not contained in it — the guilt of sin, the love of God, the Trinity, etc. And if the most elementary doctrine is virtually a summary of the Bible, then to ply men with it is virtually to ply men with the whole system of Christianity. And then if I have the fact that Christ died for sin put continually before me, it is a mistake to suppose that it will always call up the selfsame idea. I shall sometimes view the atonement as demonstrative of Christ's love; sometimes of the greatness of man's sin, etc., etc. And these doctrines derived from the atonement will gain power and clearness from their association with it. And so with the rest. II. THE AGENCY BY WHICH SCRIPTURAL TRUTH IS EXPOUNDED PROVES THE USEFULNESS OF REPETITION. That agency is the Spirit of God. Hence it comes to pass that a text may have been read or heard a hundred times without making any impression, and yet on the next occasion it may seem charged with electric light and the whole mind within disturbed. And what holds good in conversion holds good for the whole course of Christian experience, and thus the Bible, however diligently studied, is always a new book, and its best known portions instead of being exhausted will often seem to have been indicted again. We have, therefore, an incontrovertible reason why "the same things" should be always useful. (H. Melvill, B. D.)
II. NEVER WEARISOME. It is precious to those who believe it — who deliver it. III. ALWAYS SAFE. It quickens memory — stirs the heart — provokes effort — and helps to secure salvation. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
(J. Hutchison, D. D.)
I. II. III. (Professor Eadie.)
1. All the Philippians, and not merely the pastors. They must beware of false teachers. Christ's sheep can discern between a wolf and a shepherd (John 10:4-5), and therefore they are bidden to "try the spirits," and "prove all things." But how, say the Papists, should common people know the Word to be the Word of God? For answer I would ask such how they know the pope's canons to be the pope's? They will say their teachers bring them in the pope's name, and they believe their teachers. So we believe our teachers, who tell us this is and that is not the Word of God. But they object that this makes every man a judge. I answer, there is a manner of judging, viz., that by which we discern of anything, which every Christian must have, so that it cannot be a plea to him at the day of judgment to say, "My teacher did mislead me." Every. one must discern between good and bad. For he that knows not his Master's will shall be beaten. 2. Not only young and ordinary Christians are to beware, but also the best settled. The Philippians were a Church established in the truth. II. THE WARNING GIVEN — "Beware," which signifies to discern, and then to avoid. Those who are aware of evil will beware of it. The Church is even subject to danger; and God suffers it to be so. 1. To try those who are true and who false. 2. To try the good so as to make them better. III. THE PERSONS WARNED AGAINST. 1. Wicked men and dogs. (1) (2) 2. Evil workers. (1) (2) 3. The concision. They make divisions in the Church. IV. HOW TO TAKE THE WARNING. 1. Get fundamental truths into the heart and love them (2 Thessalonians 2:10). None are seduced but such as are cold in love. 2. Practice that we know, and God will give us a fuller measure of knowledge, whereby we shall know seducers. (John 7:17). 3. Pray to God for wisdom to discern of schisms and ill-disposed persons. 4. Let us look that we keep in us a holy fear and reverence of God (Psalm 25:12). (R. Sibbes, D. D.)
I. Their SNARLING AND BARKING, because as dogs they barked at him and snarled at his doctrine, and that, as dogs again, not upon reason but custom. Abishai called Shimei a dog in respect of his causeless barking against David (2 Samuel 16:9). II. Their GREEDINESS, making, as he afterwards said, "their belly their god" (Isaiah 56:11). III. Their ABSURDNESS, because as the dog returneth to his vomit, so they made the converted Jews return to their old Judaism. (H. Airay, D. D.)
(Bishop Lightfoot.)
I. OF THE WORKS THEY URGED; because by preaching the necessity of works unto salvation, and joining them with Christ as workers together with Him of our salvation, they made those works which in themselves were not evil, evil works. II. OF THE EVIL MIND WHEREIN THEY URGED THOSE WORKS, in hatred of him, and to cross that which he had taught touching the sole sufficiency of Christ's righteousness unto salvation. III. OF THEIR UNFAITHFUL WORKING IN THE LORD'S VINEYARD, because together with good seed they did sow tares, joining with Christ the works of the law in the work of our salvation. (H. Airay, D. D.)
I. BEWARE. This caveat shows us — 1. God's loathness to lose us. That we are here now is sufficient argument for this. Who of us has not done something since yesterday that has made him unworthy to be here today? If God were weary of me, and would fain be rid of me, He could find enough in me now and here to let me perish. Is not the spirit of slumber in me, the spirit of detraction in another, of impenitence and facility to admit temptations in others, enough to justify Him? But He would not have the death of any, but would have all men be saved, and so says, "beware." 2. Consider the way by which He leads us to Him. He declares His will towards us in a law. He bids and forbids. There had passed a contract between us and Him — Believe, do, and thou shalt live. We say, "Thy will be done," which supposes that that will is made known. And that will has been manifested in the law within, the Mosaic law, and the gospel, and not only does God thus speak to us, but He calls upon us; gives us a law and bids us "beware" of breaking it. 3. Nothing exalts God's goodness more than this, that He multiplies the means of mercy, so that no man can say, Once I might have been saved, once God opened to me a door, but I neglected that, and God never came more.(1) God hath spoken once in His Scriptures, and we have heard Him twice (Psalm 62:11) at home in our own reading, and again and again in His ordinances.(2) There is a language in the heavens (Psalm 19:2). This is the true harmony of the spheres which every man may hear. Though he understand no tongue but his own, he may hear God in the seasons, in the vicissitudes of Church and State, etc. This is God's English to thee, and His French, Latin, Greek, to others.(3) But then God translates Himself in particular works. Nationally: He speaks in particular judgments or deliverances to one nation. Domestically: He speaks that language to a particular family; and so personally. God will make a fever speak to me that there is no health in me; my adversity that there is no safe dependence but in Him; even my sin shall be a sermon to me.(4) God hath spoken to us in the death and resurrection of His Son. II. BEWARE OF THE CONCISION. There is a certain elegant and holy delicacy and juvenility in St. Paul's choosing the words of musical cadence — circumcision, concision; but then this presents matter of gravity. Language must wait upon matter, and words upon things. Concision is the severing of that which should be entire — in the state, the aliening of the head from the body; in the Church to constitute a monarchy, an universal head; in the family, to divide man and wife. But more particularly consider — 1. The concision of the body; disunion in doctrinal things.(1) This that should be kept entire is Jesus.(2) "Every spirit which dissolveth Jesus" (1 John 4:3), that makes religion serve turns, that admits so much gospel as may advance present businesses, every such spirit is not of God.(3) Not to profess the whole gospel, not to believe all the articles of faith, this is a breaking of what should be entire.(4) The advancement of a private interpretation to an article of faith mars the peace and rends the unity of the Church. Let us therefore (Psalm 137:6) prefer Jerusalem before our chief joy, love of peace by or forbearance on all sides, rather than cictory by wrangling and uncharitableness. 2. The concision of the garment; disunion in ceremonial things. To a circumcision of the garment, to a paring away such ceremonies as were superstitious and superfluous, we came at the beginning of the Reformation. But those churches that came to a concision of the garment, an absolute taking away of all ceremonies, neither provided so safely for the Church itself nor for her devotion. Ceremonies are nothing, but where there are none order and obedience, and, presently, religion, will vanish. 3. And therefore beware of tearing the body or the garment, lest the third be induced, the tearing of thine own spirit from that rest it should receive in God; for when thou has lost thy hold of those handles which God reaches out to thee in the ministry of His Church, and hast no means to apply the promises of God to thy soul, when anything falls upon thee to overcome thy moral constancy; thou wilt soon sink into desperation, which is the fearfullest concision of all. When God hath made me a partaker of the Divine nature, so that now in Christ Jesus He and I are one, this were a dissolving of Jesus of the worst kind imaginable to tear myself from Jesus, or by any suspicion of His mercy, or any horror of my own sins, to come to think myself to be none of His. 1. This is treason against the Father; a cutting off of the power of God. 2. Treason against the Son; a cutting off of the wisdom of God. 3. Treason against the Holy Ghost; the cutting off of comfort. (John Donne, D. D.)
2. This worship must be an inspiration of the Spirit of God. All worship requires some support. The formal worship of the Jew rested on ceremonies. When these were absent the worship perished. The Christian rests upon the influences of the Spirit, and where this is there is Divine life. II. CHRISTIAN ENTHUSIASM. The expression "glory in Christ Jesus," points to this. 1. The secret of the deepest religious life is personal devotion to Christ. Jesus at once demands adoration by His Spiritual greatness, and wins affection by His human sympathy. 2. This devotion is inspired by joyous enthusiasm. The Jew gloried in Abraham, but a greater than Abraham is here. III. FREEDOM FROM SUPERSTITION. For us, like Paul (see sequel),to cast off all confidence in privileged birth in a Christian home, membership in a historic Church, observance of venerable rites, and to trust wholly in spiritual religion, is a confirming sign of Divine sonship better than any rite such as circumcision. (W. F. Adeney, M. A.)
II. THE REALITY OF THAT WHICH SEDUCERS PRETEND TO, WILL MORE READILY BE FOUND IN THOSE THAT CONSCIENTIOUSLY OPPOSE THEM. These men ran down the apostle and others, giving out themselves only for the circumcised ones. But the apostle proves he had the better claim. Thus the works of holiness are to be found more with those that press justification by faith, than with others who would be looked on as great patrons of good works. Be not, then, deceived with fair speeches; examine matters to the bottom. Often those who have the highest pretences to right on their side go farthest from it. III. THE SIGN IN RELIGION WITHOUT THE THING SIGNIFIED IS LITTLE WORTH. 1. All it can do is to give a name before men which they lose before God (Romans 2:28-29). Christian may be an honourable title before men, and an empty title before God. 2. The sign is a mere external thing on which nothing of weight for salvation can hang, and therefore when the Lord comes to judgment, He throws down all together (Jeremiah 9:25-26). For He looks not to the outward appearance but to the heart. 3. It is an inefficacious thing; as a body without a spirit. He who has got the sign only, has only the meanest half of the sacrament. Sacraments are seals of the covenant; but where there is no covenant there can be no seal; and what avails a seal at a blank. 4. Men in Christ's livery may abide in the devil's service and meet with his doom (Luke 13:26-27). 5. To apply all this.(1) Baptism with water without the Holy Spirit is little worth. Many never reflect seriously on their baptism. Hence they live as though they had never sworn allegiance to the King of heaven, and were entirely their own, and will never renew it. Let me ask as touching this baptism:(a) Baptized ye were with water, but were ye ever baptized with the Holy Spirit and fire — the thing signified? Alas, in consequence of the want of this, the universal coldness in the things of God.(b) Hast thou realized that only the blood and Spirit of Christ can cleanse thee? In baptism is a profession of this. If not what avails thy baptism.(c) Wast thou ever made partaker of the washing of regeneration? (Titus 3:5-6). Unto what then were ye baptized? (Acts 19:2).(d) Where ye ever cut off from the old stock of Adam and ingrafted into Christ? (1 Corinthians 12:13). Baptized into the name of Christ, and yet not in Christ, but without Him makes sad work.(e) Are lusts reigning: or are they dying, and your souls living a new life? (Romans 6:5-6). Has the water been but as that thrown upon a corpse?(2) The Lord's supper without the thing signified is little worth. To be partakers of the bread of the Lord without the bread which is the Lord will go but small length (John 6:57). IV. BELIEVERS IN CHRIST ARE THE TRUE CIRCUMCISION. They have in spirit which the Jews, by this ordinance, only had in the letter. Circumcision was — 1. A token of God's covenant (Genesis 17:7-11). This honour have all God's saints to have God Himself to be ours. 2. A distinction between Jews and others, as God's people (Genesis 17:4). So believers are God's people, His garden, while others are but His out field. 3. A cutting off of part of the flesh, signifying the believer's privilege and duty (Colossians 2:11). Their hearts are circumcised to love the Lord; their ears to hear Him; their lips to speak for Him. (T. Boston, D. D.)
I. THE NATURE OF A BELIEVER'S WORSHIP. 1. The word worship may be taken in the larger sense which includes all religious service. From which we learn that the believer's life is to be one continued act of worship; his body is a living temple; his heart an altar for daily sacrifice; his calling that of "a priest unto God;" his whole conversation one hymn of praise. To worship God in the spirit, then, is to worship Him in the life. The fire of sacrifice is to come down on the domestic hearth, and "holiness unto the Lord" is to be written "on the bells of the horses." 2. Still the reference to the Old Testament ritual would suggest that "worship" points to certain religious actions. To worship God in the spirit, then, is to worship Him —(1) In simplicity as distinguished from hypocrisy. It is a fearful thing when a miser prays to be delivered from covetousness, a vindictive man from "malice, hatred," etc.(2) With reverence, as distinguished from all permitted indifference, deadness, reluctance, clockwork piety. Our heart and tongue should go together. Moses left his sandals at the foot of the mount, too many take their sandals and leave their hearts behind.(3) In earnestness, as if we felt that important interests were suspended. The two worships are distinguished in that in one case an end is looked for, in the other the only care is to get the work done. II. THE OBJECT OF THE BELIEVER'S JOY. We rejoice in Christ Jesus. 1. For the glory of His character. 2. For the dignity of His offices. 3. The blessedness of His work. 4. The completeness of His salvation. 5. The freedom of His service. 6. The reasonableness of His commands. 7. The unutterable recompences of His rewards. III. THE GROUND OF A BELIEVER'S TRUST. 1. By "the flesh" St. Paul means anything that we are or have. The flesh in its best estate is a corrupt thing, and can therefore be no proper ground for confidence. 2. The apostle would take away our confidence from everything that is not Christ. He not only excludes all outward distinctions, national privileges, moral excellencies and attainments, but he strikes at that refined and subtle fallacy of Romanism which would lead us to have confidence in some indwelling grace, which would give efficacy to tears and perfection to human sanctity. St. Paul knew that it was not grace in the saints, but grace in Christ, that was to save him, and in that he could feel unbounded confidence. (D. Moore, M. A.)
1. To worship God in the spirit is — (1) (2) (3) 2. To rejoice in Christ Jesus is not only to believe in Him and receive Him, but gladly and gratefully to accept all His work and gifts and services, being cleansed by His blood, made righteous by His obedience, and being reconciled by His mediation (1 Peter 1:8). And if we connect this with the former, then it means to worship, pleading Christ's sacrifice, trusting in His advocacy, and making Him in all respects our way to God. 3. Having no confidence, etc. What he means by flesh is evident from the words following — the administration of ordinances, birth of high noble blood, earnest external obedience. The flesh is the outward and material, not the inward and spiritual. Now, if we connect this third qualification with the first, to have no confidence in the flesh is to use the material without abusing it, making it secondary and subservient, to employ as much of the outward form in worship as is essential to spirit and life, but never as a substitute. II. THE LOFTY POSITION PAUL CLAIMS. The practice of circumcision existed, it may be, before it was imposed on Abraham, but it was ordained by God mainly with a spiritual object (Genesis 17:10, etc.), as the sign and seal of the Divine covenant; it testified to God's faithfulness. What advantages then, hath the Jew? or what profit is there of circumcision? (Romans 9:4-5). Like privileges are possessed by such as worship God in the spirit, etc. 1. They are the sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty. 2. They behold the bright ness of the Father's glory (John 1:14, 18). 3. They are the inheritors of great and precious promises. Even the promises made to Abraham are theirs (Romans 4:11-13, 16; Galatians 3:7-9). But the believer is interested in a better covenant, established in better promises.(1) A country was promised to Abraham — a good land; but Canaan shared in the universal curse. But the land promised to the Christian is a better country.(2) It was promised to Abraham that his seed should become a great nation — those who rejoice in Christ are a holy nation, a peculiar people.(3) God promised to Abraham to be his God, etc., and so (2 Corinthians 6:15) — 4. They are favoured with special Divine revelations (Hebrews 8:10-11; 2 Corinthians 3:18). 5. They are a royal priesthood. 6. They are connected with an ancient and sacred lineage. The Jew claimed Abraham as his father, and all the illustrious patriarchs and prophets as ancestors; but they whom Paul describes may claim as ancestors all who have like precious faith in every age. 7. While of the Israelites as concerning the flesh Christ came; of those, whom Paul describes, Christ comes as a gospel and a revelation to the world (2 Corinthians 2:14-15; 2 Corinthians 3:2-3).Conclusion: 1. Let us claim to be the circumcision in the presence of the Jew. To him, if he rejoice not in Christ Jesus we say, Your circumcision is counted uncircumcision: We are Abraham's seed, and he is an alien. We envy not his connection by blood; we have a tie less corruptible. 2, We claim this position as Christians of simple customs, in spite of some who would withhold it because we follow not with them. We notice the stress which such lay upon consecrated edifices, sacramental efficacy, an authorized ministry, uniformity. We affirm that spiritual worship consecrates any structure, constitutes the worshipper a priest, and renders the simplest forms full of power and life. 3. We claim this in the face of the world; and if men demand of us a style and order of worship which would undermine spirituality, divert our complacency from Christ, and foster confidence in the flesh, let us not only not conform to their requirements, but let us deny that conformity would secure any increase of acceptableness or power.(1) Of power! What is mightier than spiritual worship? What show of strength exceeds that manifest by rejoicing in Jesus? And is "no confidence in the flesh" loss of power (Jeremiah 17:5-8).(2) And is there no beauty in simplicity? The utmost and highest is to be found in an assembly which worships God, etc. 4. Let us in godly fellow ship with all true churches maintain this position. (S. Martin.)
2. Now to be able to say, "We are the circumcision," to be clearly conscious of standing in the right line of spiritual descent is no mean distinction, no unproductive element in our expectations, that we should alienate it without cause. I. THOUGHTFUL STUDENTS CAN HARDLY DOUBT THAT GOD HAS MEANT HIS CHURCH TO MAINTAIN AN HISTORIC UNITY. No bend in its growth has ever been so abrupt as to choke the sap or sever the commerce of any branch with the root. Each moral revolution no less than each theological variation proves that the essence of faith is not perishable. Something of primitive power goes into the least offshoot. The three dispensations lay their ordaining hands on its head, with patriarchal blessings, Levitical unction, and gospel baptism. Let any holy family pitch its tent where it will, it shall not be out of that Divine order; reaching backward and forward — Calvary, Sinai, Mamre. II. BUT BLENDED WITH THIS LAW OF ITS HISTORY, THE CHURCH HAS TO RECOGNIZE ANOTHER, constantly counterbalancing the gravitation towards indolence which might accrue from the former alone, and checking its complacency. For as it advances, some unexpected crisis is always breaking up the old distribution of forces; the original Providence readjusts the lines. Dismissing former tests of legitimacy, it brings fresh affiliations into the family, showing those often to be of "the circumcision" that had before been reckoned of the alienage; and disowning sons who forfeit favour by sinning against the Holy Ghost. Men claim to be Christians by birth; offer as a spiritual qualification, not a confession of faith, but a pedigree. Something like this has always been a presumption of religious majorities. And, as if to rebuff it, the propensity to proscription is no sooner settled, than a reformation is sent to disturb it. Some , some , or some Popish lineage is always secularizing the Church, and then some impracticable Wycliffe, dissenting Baxter, or erratic Huss, sloughs the form to act out the substance. Hypocrites vitiate the succession, and heretics ennoble the new blood. When the Jews refuse the apostle of their salvation, lo! he turns to the Gentiles. As if purposely to break up confidence in mere ecclesiasticism and clear the gospel of bondage, the visible Church is scarcely at any epoch suffered to enfold the Church spiritual with a clear circumference. And the instant any majority begins to be at ease in Zion, some terrible prophet comes crying out of the wilderness, "Repent!" shows what circumcision is, and turns the world of the Rabbis upside down. But always, observe, the old faith goes into the living body. (Bishop Huntington.)
1. Christ has respect to the whole of our service and obedience to God. The parts of it are two: holiness, or our duty to God; righteousness, or our duty to man (Luke 1:74-75). The Christian life is, as it were, one continued act of worship, where all our actions, natural, civil, and religious, meet in God (Acts 26:7; Revelation 7:15). 2. It has respect to those duties which are properly parts of worship. The Christian(1) worships God with his heart, soul, and spirit, and not with his body only (Romans 1:9; John 4:24). This implies(a) internal worship, called for by the first commandment. The true Christian's soul is a temple of God.(b) Outward joined to inward (1 Corinthians 6:20).(c) Spirituality — faith; love; goodwill; sincerity.(2) By assistance from and influence of the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 6:18; Jude 1:20).(a) The Spirit gives habitual grace to make men capable of spiritual worship (John 3:6).(b) He gives actual grace, influences to stir up grace (Romans 7:26). II. THIS WORSHIP IS A DISTINGUISHING MARK OF THE TRUE CHRISTIAN. 1. All true Christians have it, for —(1) All of them are spiritual (John 3:6). Everything that brings forth, brings forth its like.(2) All of them have the Spirit of God dwelling in them (Romans 8:9).(3) That worship which is merely outward is but the carcase of duties, unacceptable to God; and they who never perform more are hypocrites (Matthew 15:7-8).(4) External worship is properly but the means of worship. Prayer, hearing, etc., tend to the promotion of love, trust, etc., and the enjoyment of God can never be found but in worshipping Him in the Spirit. 2. That none but true Christians have this privilege is plain from this, that all others are in the flesh (Jude 1:19). (T. Boston, D. D.)
II. WITH REVERENCE. This sentiment is natural when we come before any superior, how much more when we come before God. This is no slavish or superstitious dread, but that by virtue of which God's children are distinguished from the wicked who have no fear of God before their eyes. God is a jealous God, and abominates levity. Reverence is the most prominent feature of angelic worship. How shocking then is familiarity in the worship of man. III. HUMILITY. Nothing is more odious to God than pride, and nothing more acceptable than the contrite spirit. He dwells with such. It is most proper in regard to man's moral and God's exalted state, and upon it Christ pronounced his beatitudes. IV. FAITH. Without this it is impossible to please God, and all worship must become an empty form. Its principal exercise has respect to Christ as the Mediator. V. CONCENTRATION. Spiritual worship is interrupted by nothing so much as the wandering of our thoughts, and is one of the accusations brought against God's ancient people. VI. FERVENCY. The crying defect of our worship is want of heart. VII. SCRIPTURAL, with such rites as God has appointed, and those only. As to external circumstances, time, place, attitude, these should be regulated by the apostle's rule, "Let all things be done decently and in order;" but as it relates to the worship itself, nothing should be introduced but what is authorized by the Scriptures, such as prayer, singing, reading, administering the sacraments. "In vain do they worship Me," etc. "Who hath required this at your hands." VIII. FREQUENCY. Men are not required to spend their whole time at it. But God should be worshipped morning and evening; and the Lord's day should be entirely devoted to the Lord's service. We cannot go to an excess here unless we make this duty exclude others which are equally incumbent. "Pray without ceasing." (A. Alexander, D. D.)
1. It is an act of love. The acts of love are desire and delight, and they both agree in this Chat they are conversant about good, and are founded in esteem. But they differ because desire is the motion and exercise of love, and delight the quiet and repose of it. All, however, meet in Christ. 2. It is an act of love begotten in us by the sense of the love of Christ (1 John 4:19). The object of love is goodness.(1) The goodness that is in Christ, moral and beneficial (Psalm 119:140; Psalm 100:5; Psalm 119:68).(2) The goodness that floweth from Him (Titus 3:4).(3) The goodness we expect from Him in this world and the next (Luke 7:47; Matthew 5:12). 3. This love of Christ —(1) Is revealed in the gospel (Acts 13:48).(2) Is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost (Romans 5:5).(3) Is received by faith (1 Peter 1:18; Romans 15:13), which faith is(a) assent, a certain belief of the truth of the gospel concerning Christ as the only sufficient Saviour (John 4:42; John 6:69).(b) Consent, a readiness to obey the gospel.(c) Affiance, a reposing of our hearts on God's promise of pardon and eternal life (Hebrews 3:6).(4) Is improved by meditation (Psalm 104:34).(5) Is enjoyed more than all other things whatsoever (Psalm 35:9; Psalm 63:5; Psalm 73:25). II. THE SPIRITUAL PROFIT OF IT. 1. It is such a joy as doth enlarge the heart in duty and strengthens us in the way of God (Nehemiah 8:10; Psalm 119:14; Psalm 40:8). The hardest services are sweetened by the love of Christ. 2. It is a cordial to fortify us against and to sweeten —(1) Common afflictions (Habakkuk 3:17-18; Romans 12:12; Hebrews 12:2).(2) Persecutions (Acts 5:41; Hebrews 10:34; Matthew 5:12; 1 Peter 4:13; James 1:2). 3. It draws off the heart from the delights of the flesh. III. THE HELPS BY WHICH IT IS RAISED IN US. 1. A sense of sin and misery. The grievousness of the disease makes recovery the more delightful. 2. An entire confidence in Christ (1 Peter 2:7; Philippians 3:8). 3. A constant use of the means. (1) (2) (3) 4. Sincerity of obedience (1 Corinthians 5:8). (T. Manton, D. D.)
1. A suitable ness to the Divine perfections concerned in the salvation of sinners that is sweetly discerned by the believer and acquiesced in (1 Corinthians 1:23-24). 2. A suitableness of Christ to the ease of the soul which the believer sees and is pleased with. If you lodge a starving man in a palace, clothe him with costly attire, and fill his pockets with gold, what good can these do him? They are not meat, and so are not suitable to his case. But Christ is to ours every way (1 Corinthians 1:30-31), and no one else is.(1) As He is God-man; the Mediator answering at once the honour of God and the sinner's necessities.(2) In His offices. As Prophet, the Interpreter of the Father's mind; as Priest, the Atonement and Intercessor; as King, the Conqueror and Ruler. 3. A suitableness to the mind, or we could not rejoice in Him. He is suited to every unbeliever's case, but alas! not to their minds. Give a natural man his idols, the drunkard his cups, the miser his gold, these are suitable to their mind, but as unsuitable to their case as a sword for a madman or poison for the sick. But the believer is made partaker of the Divine nature, and Christ is, therefore, suitable not only to his case but to his mind (1 Peter 2:4; Psalm 73:25). There is none beside Him, none like Him, none after Him — the altogether lovely. Believers are pleased at heart —(1) That He should build the temple of the Lord, and have the glory of it (Zechariah 6:12-13) as is appointed of God. But this suits not the minds of natural men (1 Peter 2:7-8).(2) With His laws (Isaiah 33:22). Christ's yoke is welcome to them because His law is suitable to them, and they to it (Psalm 119:128), for it is written on their hearts.(3) With the fulness of the spirit of sanctification which He communicates (1 Corinthians 1:30-31). There is nothing the true believer rejoices in more than the Christ-given spirit of holiness imparted, enjoyed, and acted out. II. A ROLLING OF THE SOUL OVER ON HIM FOR ALL. 1. Their weight of guilt — "through faith in His blood" (Romans 3:25). Christ is the city of refuge from the law. 2. Their weight of duties.(1) For performance. Christ lays His yoke upon the believer, and he receives it and lays himself and it again on Christ the fountain of strength. Hence it becomes an easy yoke, which before was insupportable. For duties are a dead weight while laid on by the hand of the law (John 15:5), but from Christ the believer receives a kind of derived omnipotency (Philippians 4:13; Philippians 2:13). He makes the will for the work, and the work for us when He has wrought the will for it.(2) For acceptance (Hebrews 11:4). Duties rightly done are the returns of influences from heaven which are communicated from Christ, and so go back through Him. III. A REST OF THE HEART IN CHRIST AS A FIT MATCH FOR THE SOUL. For as in marriage there is first a view of such a person as a fit match, whereupon follows choice and acceptance; and in case the person chosen answer the expectation, there ariseth a rest which is solid joy, so it is when the soul is pleased with Christ. There is found in Him — 1. Rest for the conscience: otherwise there is none except where it be lulled to sleep. Now Christ finds His elect seeking rest and finding none in the law; He gives it them through His blood (Hebrews 9:14; 1 John 1:7). 2. Rest for the heart.(1) Our hearts are full of desires of happiness which crave for satisfaction. Hence universal human restlessness.(2) The natural man goeth through the dry places of the creature seeking rest and finding none (Jeremiah 2:3; Ecclesiastes 10:15; Isaiah 55:2). Christ finds His elect thus wandering, and discovers Himself as the fountain of satisfaction, and the desires of the soul centreing and meeting in Christ abide in Him and are satisfied (Psalm 73:25; Philippians 4:18; 2 Samuel 23:5). IV. A CONFESSION OF CHRIST UNTO SALVATION. This is plainly intimated in the original "glorying in Christ." As the image of God impressed on man's soul at creation shone through his body, as a candle through a lantern, so that complacency, confidence, and rest of the heart in Christ will shine forth in the life. 1. With respect to the believer's ordinary conversation.(1) This inward rejoicing wears off the air of pride (1 Peter 5:5).(2) Grace will circumcise the self-commending lips.(3) Gracious souls will readily discover in their serious converse a tendency towards the grace of Christ.(4) Rejoicing in Christ will make men tender in their judgment of others (Galatians 6:1).(5) Such as rejoice in Christ will have familiar converse with the Word, and relish of it (Isaiah 59:21).(6) They will have a respect to the place where Christ's honour dwells, and to ordinances (Psalm 63:1-2). 2. With respect to suffering. (1) (2) (3) (T. Boston, D. D.)
1. In themselves. 2. In anything about themselves — circumcision or Abrahamic descent. 3. In Christ and something else — in Him and Moses. II. POSITIVELY. They gloried in Christ. 1. In His great condescension. 2. In His birth and its wonders. 3. In His life and its blessings. 4. In His death and its benefits. 5. In His resurrection and ascension, and their pledges. 6. In His return, and its stupendous and permanent results. (Professor Eadie.)
I. IN POINT OF JUSTIFICATION. 1. The saints have no confidence in external things.(1) Man's externals — things which God never made duty, but are made so by man (Matthew 15:9). All unscriptural institutions, opinions, and practices, under whatever pretensions of holiness, carry off men from Christ and are subservient to self (Matthew 15:4-6; Corinthians 18-21).(2) Nor even in God's externals. E.g.(a) In their external condition in the world which we receive by God's providence. The carnal poor think that thereby they will be relieved of eternal poverty, and the carnal rich in this world, that they will be before others in the world to come (Hosea 12:8; Romans 14:17). You may be miserable here and through eternity (Job 15:23-24); or fare sumptuously here and be in torment by and by (Luke 16).(b) In their external privileges (vers. 5, 7; 2 Corinthians 5:16; Luke 13:26-27).(c) In their external attainments (vers. 6-7). Great confidence have some in their negative holiness (Luke 18:11; Matthew 5:20).(d) In their external duties (ver. 8). There are two classes opposite to the Christian in this — the ignorant, who do little or nothing, and yet say they serve God as well as they can; and those who have the full form of godliness and rest in that. But as they are mere external duties they are abominable to God (Isaiah 1:11, etc.; Mark 10:20-21).(e) In their external sufferings. The glorified put nothing down to their tribulation, but all to Christ's blood. "Therefore are they before the throne." 2. The saints have no confidence for the favour of God in internals. There is no exception but one (Colossians 1:27). They have no confidence in internal —(1) dispositions (Proverbs 28:26). Many have a confidence in what they call their good hearts; but if God's testimony is to be believed, it is a false confidence (Jeremiah 17:9).(2) Exercises on their own spirits.(3) Attainments (Galatians 6:14; Philippians 3:8).(4) Graces. II. IN POINT OF SANCTIFICATION. As they have taken Him alone for justification, so for this (1 Corinthians 1:30). The saints have no confidence for this. 1. In their stock of natural and acquired abilities (2 Corinthians 3:51), knowledge, utterance, good temper, etc. 2. In the means, such as the Word, sacraments, prayer, etc. Knowing that it is the Spirit that quickeneth (John 6:63). 3. In their purposes and resolutions for holiness (2 Timothy 1:12). 4. In their vows and engagements to holiness (Isaiah 45:23-24). 5. In their own endeavours after holiness (Psalm 127:1). 6. In the good frame and disposition of their hearts, i.e., in actual grace, a most desirable thing, but no staff to lean upon (1 Chronicles 29:17-18). 7. In habitual grace. Paul had a good stock of it, but he did not venture to live on it (Galatians 2:20). Grace within the saints is a well whose springs are often dry; but the grace without them in Christ is an ever-flowing fountain (John 6:57). (T. Boston, D. D.)
1. The man who has been healed has a right to speak of the remedy, and ought to do so. St. Paul had been changed; the selfish man had become unselfish; the wild persecutor had been tamed. 2. The experience of St. Paul was very profitable. If you can do good by telling your experience, tell it. It is a delicate thing to speak of one's self; people who have little experience are often the greatest speakers; but there is a false delicacy which must be overcome. 3. Paul's purpose was also to glorify his Master. These verses resemble a tree with many branches, but they have but one root. The central thought is — I. FAITH. 1. It was of the right nature. There is a faith which never goes deeper than the intellect. It is like the smile of some people who do not know how to smile, and which only touches certain places on the face. There is another faith that breaks right through the soul, and moves the man to his very centre. Such was Paul's; it took possession of heart, soul, and mind. 2. It was a mighty faith. There is a faith right enough in its way, but very feeble. It resembles a man who is walking in a path about which he has some doubt. He looks to the right, to the left; behind and before; he proceeds slowly, hesitatingly, but he does proceed. But Paul received Christ with open arms, without caution or reserve. II. THE WORKING OF THIS FAITH and what it did in Paul. On faith taking possession of the heart two things are sure to follow. 1. Self-renunciation. If your faith has not made you cast anything away, you ought to look into it. Now Paul had three things of which he was very proud.(1) Jewish extraction. Men in all ages have been proud of their ancestors. The Jews had many things of which they could boast. They were the chosen people. They had Divine revelation. The worship of the true God was established among them. They had a great history. Angels walked their valleys; wondrous things were done on their mountain tops. They have had greater influence over the world than any other nation. It is a great thing to belong to such a stock, and to belong to it was regarded as being safe forever. St. Paul, however, cast it aside as loss for Christ.(2) Legal righteousness. Paul was a Pharisee, and as such — (a) (b) 2. Reception of Jesus Christ. Observe —(1) His estimate of the knowledge of Christ. There are three things in this which make all other knowledge dim, and all other possessions worthless; the Fatherhood of God, the mediation of Christ, and immortality with Christ in heaven. These destroy man's three great enemies. (a) (b) (c) (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (T. Jones, D. D.)
(R. Johnstone, LL. D.)
I. The ANSWER GIVEN BY THE WORLD. Examine the accounts of nine-tenths and you will find — 1. Health and money entered as clear gains, comfort, ease, tranquillity, prosperity, carried to the side of profit. 2. Sickness, disappointment, contraction of the means of pleasure, decay of trade, sorrow, bereavement, entered as unmixed loss. 3. And when we come to matters bearing on the interest of the soul we find that the natural heart has entered on the side of eternal gain, good character, punctuality of attendance at Christian ordinances, a conscience silent as to definite injuries against neighbours. And gain it is in a sense, for it is better to have a good conscience than a bad one, to be moral than immoral. St. Paul says no word about morality being a loss, or that he would have valued Christ more had he been a greater sinner. II. THE CHRISTIAN'S ANSWER. For Christ's sake Paul now accounts as loss all that he had once accounted gain. He was an Israelite of direct descent. Would he have been a better man had he been born a Gentile and an idolater? He had been blameless in his observance of the ceremonial, and, as he understood it, of the moral law — does he regret that he had not habitually broken it? None of these things. The loss was that he had trusted in these things, and looked to them for salvation. He thought that God must be satisfied with so unexceptionable a genealogy, so diligent a worshipper. 2. In this point of view many of us need instruction and warning. What are we trusting in?(1) Some of us are putting off the question altogether and saying, "I will live while I can and die when I must; I will not torment myself before the time — many years hence I hope."(2) But this childish and suicidal infatuation is not in all of us. There are those who have religion. What is it? Is it more than a moral life, a Sunday worship, a trusting in God's mercy? But where is Christ in all this? What know you of the thought, "What things were gain to me," etc? What of your own are you discarding in order to rest in Christ alone? Where are your transfers from one side of your reckoning to the other because of Christ? And many of us die in the strength of a gospel which has no Christ in it; no demolition of self, either of self-confidence or seeking, and no exaltation of Christ on the ruins of self, either as Saviour or Lord. We are at best what St. Paul was before his conversion — alas, without his good conscience or scrupulous obedience. (Dean Vaughan.)
I. THE APOSTLE'S CALCULATIONS. 1. His counting at the outset of his Christian life "What things were gain," etc.(1) He dwelt on the several items, noting each with great distinctness. The list reads like a catalogue. His Jewish advantages had been as precious pearls to him once.(2) What is there per contra. Nothing on the other side but one item; but that one outweighed the many. That one was not Christianity, the Church, or the orthodox faith, but Christ.(3) Not only after putting the one under the other and making a subtraction did he find that his earthly advantages were less than Christ; he found these gains transformed into a loss. There was not a plus on that side to stand in proportion to a plus on this; they were turned into a minus of actual deficit. Not that he meant that to be a "Hebrew of the Hebrews," etc., was in itself a loss — the advantage was "much every way;" but he meant that with respect to Christ those things became a disadvantage, because their tendency had been to keep him from trusting Christ. It is a grand thing to have led a virtuous life; but this blessing may, by our own folly, become a curse, if we place it in opposition to the righteousness of Christ, and dream that we have no need of a Saviour. 2. His estimate for the time then present. We are always anxious to hear what a man has to say about a thing after he has tried it. After twenty years of experience Paul had an opportunity of revising his balance sheet; and makes the strong affirmation — "Yea, doubtless I count," etc. He has made the original summary even more comprehensive, but he stands to the same estimate and uses not barely the word "Christ," but the fuller expression, "the excellency of the knowledge," etc. Now he has come to know the Christ in whom before he had trusted. Christ is better loved as he is better known.(1) The words show the points upon which he had fullest knowledge. He knew the Lord as — (a) (b) (c) 3. His third counting may be regarded as his life estimate. "For whom I have," etc. Here his estimate sets out with actual test and practical proof. He is a prisoner, with nothing in the world; he has lost caste, has no longer his own righteousness: Christ is his all and nothing else. Does he regret the loss of all things? No, he counts it an actual deliverance to have lost them.(1) In his first and second countings these things were "loss," now they are "dung."(2) In his second estimate he spoke of "knowing" Christ, but now he speaks of "winning" Him, or rather "gaining," for he keeps to the mercantile figure all through.(3) Further, his aim is to be "found in Him," as a bird in the air, a fish in the sea, a member in the body — as a fugitive shelters himself in his hiding place; so in Christ as never to come out of Him, so that whenever any one looks for him he may find him in Jesus.(4) Notice how Paul keeps to what he began with, viz., his unrobing himself of his boastings in the flesh, and his arraying himself with Christ — "not having mine own righteousness," etc. II. OUR OWN CALCULATIONS. 1. Do we join in Paul's earlier estimate. You will never be saved till you lose all your legal hopes. 2. After many years of profession do you still continue in the same mind and make the same estimate? Not if you have settled down on something other than Christ. 3. You cannot join Paul in the last calculation — "I have suffered the loss of all things," but do you think you could have done so if required for Christ's sake? Your fore. fathers did so. 4. Seeing God has left you your worldly comforts have you used all things for His sake. 5. If Christ be to you so that all things are dung and dross in comparison, do you not want Him for your children, your friends, etc. What a man values for himself he values for others. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. (J. Lyth, D. D.)
I. MUST NOT BE AN UNCERTAIN THING. Taken up and laid down at pleasure, by fits and starts, remembered and forgotten, but must be the result of deep conviction. To this end — 1. Consecrate your life to Christ in the most express and solemn way you can, on your knees. Lay the sacrifice upon the altar. Invest it with the sacredness of an irrevocable pledge. 2. Renew that act of self-dedication at not very long intervals. 3. Write it on everything you have and are, body, soul, time, talents, business, family, etc. II. MUST ENTER INTO YOUR TRIALS. When you are in bodily or mental distress, and when you are going through the discipline of bitter daily friction, think thus — "I will sanctify and ennoble this suffering by bearing it for Christ." He bore much more for me, and these are the "marks of the Lord Jesus" now laid upon me. III. MUST EATER INTO YOUR HAPPINESS. Christ is happy in your happiness and for His sake you must be happy: and your happiness must not fail to make others happy. IV. MUST BE A LIFE OF MINISTRY. 1. In defence of Christ. 2. In the extension of His cause. 3. In having some positive work to do for Him. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
(J. Hutchison, D. D.)
(L'Estrange.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(J. F. B. Tinling.)Raymond Lully, or Lullius, to whom the Arabic professorship at Oxford owes its origin, was the first Christian missionary to the Moslems. When shipwrecked near Pisa, after many years of missionary labour, though upwards of seventy, his ardour was unabated. "Once," he wrote, "I was fairly rich; once I had a wife and children; once I tasted freely of the pleasures of this life. But all these things I gladly resigned that I might spread abroad a knowledge of the truth. I studied Arabic, and several times went forth to preach the gospel to the Saracens. I have been in prison, I have been scourged, for years I have striven to persuade the princes of Christendom to befriend the common cause of converting the Mohammedans. Now, though old and poor, I do not despair; I am ready, if it be God's will, to persevere unto death." And he did so, being stoned to death at Bergia, in Africa, in 1314, after gathering a little flock of converts. (Sunday at Home.)
(J. F. B. Tinling.)
(J. Trapp.)
2. The knowledge of Christ, therefore, is hot the apprehension of what He is, simply by the intellect, but also a due apprehension of His glory, and involves not as a consequence merely, but as one of its elements, the corresponding feeling of adoration, delight, desire, and complacency. This knowledge — I. INCLUDES — 1. A knowledge of Christ's person as God and man. 2. The knowledge of this work in the redemption of man. 3. Of His relation to us, and of the benefits we derive from Him, justification, adoption, sanctification, eternal life. II. IS SUPERLATIVELY EXCELLENT: because — 1. He is Himself the perfect object of knowledge. 2. Because eternal life, the hope of the soul, consists in that knowledge. The possession of it enlightens and enlarges the intellect, purifies the heart, and renders perfectly blessed. 3. Without this knowledge we are not only ignorant of God, but of the way of salvation. We know not how to be justified or sanctified. We of necessity, therefore, are left to seek and trust in other ineffectual methods of obtaining these blessings.Conclusion: 1. All religion is included in this — to know Christ. To this we should concentrate all our attention and efforts. It is vain to seek the knowledge of God or His favour, to strive after holiness and peace in any other way. 2. The only test of Christian character is found here. Men may be benevolent, in a certain sense pious, but they cannot be Christians unless they know Christ, and find in that their spiritual life. 3. The only way to save men is not by preaching the doctrines of natural religion, nor by holding up the law, nor by expounding the anthropological doctrines of the Bible. These things are important in their place, but they are subordinate to preaching Christ, i.e., holding Him up in His person, His work, etc., as the great object of knowledge, and, as such, the great object of love, the only ground of confidence, and our only and all-sufficient portion. (C. Hodge, D. D.)
1. Speculative. 2. Experimental. 3. Practical. II. ITS EXCELLENCY in — 1. Itself. 2. Its use. 3. Its effect. III. ITS VALUE. Incomparable; all else but dung and dross. IV. ITS POWER. 1. To sway the judgment. 2. Induce sacrifice. 3. Excite effort. (J. Lyth, D. D.)The more we know of some things, the less we admire them; a minute inspection reveals deficiencies; but the reverse is true about Jesus Christ. So St. Paul felt, and so feels every genuine Christian. I. THE VALUE OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST JESUS. This knowledge — 1. Contains all that can satisfy the understanding. If we derive pleasure from the knowledge of art, science, literature, history, how much more may we derive from the discoveries of Divine truth? This leaves all the discoveries of scholars at an immense distance. If men were to propound to the wisest, "How shall man be just with God?" it would baffle them. But the knowledge of Christ solves this. The truths of the incarnation, death, etc., of Christ, while the profoundest are yet the most simple. To regard this knowledge, therefore, with indifference is a mark of a weak mind. And, besides, it is the constant study of the angels of heaven who behold the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. 2. Pacifies the conscience. Some men would give all the world for a peaceful conscience. Think of what they do to procure it — amusement, repentance, business, etc., alas, are only opiates. But let a man be alive to the discoveries of the gospel, see justice satisfied in the death of Christ, and know that God is reconciled through His Son, and the storm will be stilled. 3. Purifies the heart. In all the lessons of human wisdom there are two incurable defects. (1) (2) 4. Saves the soul. "This is life eternal," etc. II. THE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERS OF THE CHRISTIAN'S REGARD FOR THAT KNOWLEDGE. 1. It is personal — "I count." The error of the Jews was that they substituted relative for personal piety. They gloried in their relation to Abraham, etc. So now a great many depend upon the merits of others. The religion of some is hereditary, or by proxy. But neither the devil nor Christ will be served in this way. 2. Decided and unequivocal. "Yea, doubtless." The Christianity of many is very vacillating; but this Christ rejects, and even man contemns. 3. Rational — "I count." Men sometimes set up a blazing profession because their feelings have been wrought upon, and without any idea of what the profession involves. But the cost ought to be counted, and must be if there is to be any stability. 4. Supreme — "All things."(1) We are to count all things sinful as loss for this knowledge.(2) Things that are lawful. All that is valued on earth must be subordinated to this. (W. Henry.)
II. IN THE BENEFITS IT SECURES. 1. Righteousness. 2. Resurrection power. 3. A glorious hope. III. IN THE DISPOSITION IT CREATES. 1. A correct estimate of ourselves. 2. Earnest purpose. 3. Persevering effort. 4. Love and unity. (J. Lyth, D. D.) I. THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST IS SO EXCELLENT, THAT A GRACIOUS HEART COUNTETH ALL THINGS DUNG AND DROSS RATHER THAN MISS IT. 1. The knowledge here spoken of. Knowledge is two fold.(1) A bare speculative knowledge. Even this is a great privilege (1 Peter 1:12; Ephesians 3:10); but if we are content with it we shall perish. It was not those who saw the ark, but those who entered it who were saved.(2) A saving knowledge such as is accompanied by (a) (b) (c) 2. Why is this knowledge so prized?(1) It is valuable in itself; better than all other.(a) From the Author (Matthew 16:16; John 6:45; 1 John 2:20).(b) The matter to be known, Christ the Saviour of the world. This is comfortable knowledge if we consider our deep necessity (Colossians 1:21; Job 14:4; 2 Timothy 2:26; 1 Thessalonians 1:10), and His sufficiency to do us good (Acts 20:28; Colossians 1:20, 27).(c) The effect. It is a renewing and transforming knowledge (Colossians 3:10; 1 John 2:2).(2) The subjects who thus esteem Christ. (a) (b) 3. Uses.(1) Of reproof.(a) To those who study all things but Christ. If God hath laid out the riches of His grace and wisdom to do us good, surely it deserveth our best thoughts.(b) To those who content themselves with the form of knowledge (Romans 2:20). Christianity is not only to be believed, but felt (1 Peter 2:3). Experience is the best seal and confirmation (2 Peter 1:8).(2) Of exhortation. Consider — (a) (b) (c) (a) (b) II. JESUS CHRIST MUST BE KNOWN AS LORD. 1. What this Lordship of Christ is — the new light of propriety and government over all men which Christ now hath as being the Sovereign of the world.(1) It is superadded to the former sovereignty and dominion which the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost had as Creator (Revelation 5:12). 2. It is derivative, and cannot be supreme, but subordinate (Matthew 28:18; John 17:2; Philippians 2:11).(3) It is beneficial to us. Its end is to effect man's recovery to peace with and loyalty to God. 2. How this right accrueth to Christ. (1) (2) 3. How we come to be concerned in it. (1) (2) 4. What our concern is.(1) Our privileges and immunities. (a) (b) (c) 5. Use, to persuade us to own Christ as a Lord.(1) Let us enter into the state of servants and vassals to Him by renouncing the devil, the world, and the flesh, who were once our lords, but were, indeed, our enemies (Isaiah 26:13).(2) Be not subjects in name add by profession only (Colossians 1:10). III. THERE SHOULD BE SOME APPLICATION WHEN WE CONSIDER CHRIST AND ADDRESS OURSELVES TO KNOW HIM. 1. What is this application?(1) Some distinctions.(a) The application of comfort is when I respect Christ under such a term as implies some privilege to me, that He is my Saviour, etc. (Galatians 2:20); ,but the application that respects duty is when I apprehend Him under a term which inferreth my obligation to obedience — "my Lord."(b) The application of faith is a particular application of Christ and the promise to ourselves, so as to excite us to look after the benefits for which Christ is appointed: the application of assurance is when I actually determine that my own sins are pardoned and I adopted into God's family (1 John 3:19).(c) The application may be implicit, dark, and reserved, when we have not so full a persuasion of our good estate, but comfortable encouragement to wait upon God in the way of duty; it may also be explicit, clear, and open (Ephesians 1:6; 2 Corinthians 5:1: 2 Timothy 5:8).(2) Some observations. (a) (b) (c) 2. Why there should be such an application of Christ.(1) Because things that nearly concern us do most affect us. The love of God in general doth not so affect me as when I know "He loved me and gave Himself for me."(2) Without some application there can be no interest and benefit to us. General grace must be made particular. Christ's blood will not avail unless it be sprinkled.(3) The Scripture insisteth much on a personal entering into covenant with God (2 Chronicles 30:8).(4) Our personal interest in Christ is the ground of our comfort and confidence (Habakkuk 3:18; Luke 1:17). Application: 1. Resolve to give yourself up to Him to serve Him. A believer cannot always say, "Christ is mine"; but he can say "I am His" (Psalm 119:94). 2. In applying Christ seek necessary grace rather than comfort. 3. When God draweth — run (Song of Solomon 1:4). When He knocketh, open (Revelation 3:10). (T. Manton, D. D.)
I. CERTAINTY. Concerning moral and religious truth men have been most uncertain, and have bewildered themselves in endless speculations. And yet, on such subjects, certainty is of the utmost importance. The knowledge of Christ is certain. What God teaches must be absolute truth. He can neither deceive, nor be deceived. That Christianity is a system of Divine knowledge from God is proved — 1. By prophecy. 2. Miracles. 3. Experience (John 7:17). II. MAJESTY AND GRANDEUR. Great thoughts in religion are necessary for man; and true religion must in its own nature have them. It is one of the characteristics of false religion to inculcate low thoughts of God and Divine things. Take the Christian conception of God — eternal, just, merciful, redeeming. III. SUITABLENESS AND ADAPTATION. It is in all its parts knowledge for us. No kind of useful knowledge is to be undervalued. Many branches are of great importance. But all such is — 1. Partial. A king may be a criminal before God. 2. Temporary. But look at the knowledge of Christ. (1) (2) (3) (4) |