Biyernes, Disyembre 8, 2017

Christ's Marvelous Giving (Charles H. Spurgeon, 1866)

Titus 2:14

“Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.” 

We have once more, you see, the old subject. We still
     have to tell the story of the love of God towards man
     in the person of his only begotten Son, Jesus Christ.
     When you come to your table you find a variety there.
     Sometimes there is one dish upon it, and sometimes
     another; but you are never at all surprised to find the
     bread there every time, and, perhaps, we might add that
     there would be a deficiency if there were not salt
     there every time too. So there are certain truths which
     cannot be repeated too often, and especially is this
     true of this master-truth, that "God was in Christ,
     reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their
     trespasses unto them." Why, this is the bread of life;
     "God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten
     Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish,
     but have everlasting life." This is the salt upon the
     table, and must never be forgotten, This is a faithful
     saying, and worthy of all acceptation, "that Jesus
     Christ came into the world to save sinners, even the
     chief."
     
     Now we shall take the text, and use it thus: first of
     all we shall ask it some questions; then we shall
     surround it with a setting of facts; and when we have
     done that, we will endeavour to press out of it its
     very soul as we draw certain inferences from it. First
     then:-
     
     I. WE WILL PUT THE TEXT INTO THE WITNESS-BOX, AND ASK
     IT A FEW QUESTIONS.
     
     There are only five words in the text, and we will be
     content to let it go with four questions. "Who gave
     himself for us" The first question we ask the text is,
     Who is this that is spoken of? and the text gives the
     answer. It is "the great God and our Saviour, Jesus
     Christ, who gave himself for us." We had offended God;
     the dignity of divine justice demanded that offenses
     against so good and just a law as that which God had
     promulgated should not be allowed to go unpunished. But
     the attribute of justice is not the only one in the
     heart of God. God is love, and is, therefore, full Of
     mercy. Yet, nevertheless, he never permits one quality
     of his Godhead to triumph over another. He could not be
     too merciful, and so become unjust; he would not permit
     mercy to put justice to an eclipse. The difficulty was
     solved thus: God himself stooped from his loftiness and
     veiled his glory in a garb of our inferior clay. The
     Word-that same Word without whom was not anything made
     that was made-became flesh, and dwelt amongst us; and
     his apostles, his friends, and his enemies, beheld
     him-the seed of the woman, but yet the Son of God, very
     God of very God, in all the majesty of deity, and yet
     man of the substance of his mother in all the weakness
     of our humanity, sin being the only thing which
     separated us from him, he being without sin, and we
     being full of it. It is, then, God, who "gave himself
     for us"; it is, then, man, who gave himself for us. It
     is Jesus Christ, co-equal and co-eternal with the
     Father, who thought it not robbery to be equal with
     God; who made himself of no reputation, and took upon
     himself the form of a servant, and was made in the
     likeness of sinful flesh, and, being found in fashion
     as a man, humbled himself and became obedient unto
     death, even the death of the cross. It is Christ Jesus,
     the man, the God, "who gave himself for us." Now I hope
     we shall not make any mistakes here, for mistakes here
     will be fatal. We may be thought uncharitable for
     saying it, but we should be dishonest if we did not say
     it, that it is essential to be right here.

                 "Ye cannot be right in the rest
                Unless ye think rightly of him."
     
     You dishonour Christ if you do not believe in his
     deity. He will have nothing to do with you unless you
     accept him as being God as well as man. You must
     receive him as being, without any diminution,
     completely and wholly divine, and you must accept him
     as being your brother, as being a man just as you are.
     This, this is the person, and, relying upon him, we
     shall find salvation; but, rejecting his deity, he will
     say to us, "You know me not, and I never knew you!"
     
     The text has answered the question "Who?" and now,
     putting it in the witness-box again, we ask it another
     question-"What? What did he do?" The answer is, "He
     gave himself for us." It was a gift. Christ's offering
     of himself for us was voluntary; he did it of his own
     will. He did not die because we merited that, he should
     love us to the death; on the contrary, we merited that
     he should hate us; we deserved that he should cast us
     from his presence obnoxious things, for we were full of
     sin. We were the wicked keepers of the vineyard, who
     devoured for our own profit the fruit which belonged to
     the King's Son, and he is that King's Son, whom we
     slew, with wicked hands ousting him out of the
     vineyard. But he died for us who were his enemies.
     Remember the words of Scripture, "Scarcely for a
     righteous man will one die; peradventure, for a good, a
     generous man, one might even dare to die; but God
     commendeth his love towards us, in that while we were
     yet sinners, Christ died for the ungodly." He gave
     himself. We cannot purchase the love of God. This
     highest expression of divine love, the gift of his own
     Son, was, in the nature of things, unpurchaseable. What
     could we have offered that God should come into this
     world, and be found in fashion as a man, and should
     die? Why, the works of all the angels in heaven put
     together could not have deserved one pang from Christ.
     If for ever the angels had continued their ceaseless
     songs, and if all men had remained faithful, and could
     have heaped up their pile of merit to add to that of
     the angels, and if all the creatures that ever were, or
     ever shall be, could each bring in their golden hemp of
     merit-yet could they ever deserve you cross? Could they
     deserve that the Son of God should hang bleeding and
     dying there? Impossible! It must by a gift, for it was
     utterly unpurchaseable; though all worlds were coined
     and minted, yet could they not have purchased a tear
     from the Redeemer; they were not worth it. It must be
     grace; it cannot be merit; he gave himself.
     
     And the gift is so thoroughly a gift that no prep of
     any kind was brought to bear upon the Saviour. There
     was no necessity that he should die, except the
     necessity of his loving us. Ah! friends, we might have
     been blotted out of existence, and I do not know that
     there would have been any lack in God's universe if the
     whole race of man had disappeared. That universe is too
     wide and great to miss such chirping grasshoppers as we
     are. When one star is blotted out it may make a little
     difference to our midnight sky, but to an eye that sees
     immensity it can make no change. Know ye not that this
     little solar system, which we think so vast, and those
     distant fixed stars, and yon mighty masses of nebulae,
     if such they be, and yonder streaming comet, with its
     stupendous walk of grandeur-all these are only like a
     little corner in the field of God's great works? He
     taketh them all up as nothing, and considereth them
     mighty as they be, and beyond all human conception
     great-to be but the small dust of the balance which
     does not turn the scale; and if they were all gone to-
     morrow there would be no more loss than as if a few
     grains of dust were thrown to the summer's wind. But
     God himself must stoop, rather than we should die. Oh!
     what magnificence of love! And the more so because
     there was no need for it. In the course of nature God
     would have been as holy and as heavenly without us as
     he is with us, and the pomp of yonder skies would have
     been as illustrious had we been dashed into the flames
     of hell as it will be now. God hath gained nought,
     except the manifestation of a love beyond an angel's
     dream; a grace, the heights, and depths, and lengths,
     and breadths of which surpass all knowledge of all
     creatures. God only knows the love of God which is
     manifested in Jesus Christ. He gave himself. We will
     leave this point now, when it is fully understood that
     Christ's dying to save sinners, and giving himself for
     the ungodly, was a pure act of gratuitous mercy. There
     was nothing to compel God to give his Son, and nothing
     to lead the Son to die, except the simple might of his
     love to men. He would not see us die. He had a Father's
     love to us. He seemed to stand over our fallen race, as
     David stood over Absalom, and we were as bad as
     Absalom; and there he fled, and said, "My son, my son!
     Would God I had died for thee, my son, my son!" But he
     did more than this, for he did die for us. and all for
     love of Us who were his enemies!

             "So strange, so boundless was the love,
                     Which pitied dying man;
                  The Father sent his equal Son
                    To give them life again."
     
     'Twas all of love and of grace!
     
     The third question is, "What did he give?" "Who gave
     himself for us," and here lies the glory of the text,
     that he gave not merely the crowns and royalties of
     heaven, though it was much to leave these, to come and
     don the humble garb of a carpenter's son; not the songs
     of seraphs, not the shouts of cherubim: 'twas something
     to leave them to come and dwell amongst the groans and
     tears of this poor fallen world; not the grandeur of
     his Father's court, though it was much to leave that to
     come and live with wild beasts, and men more wild than
     they, to fast his forty days and then to die in ignomy
     and shame upon the tree. No; there is little said about
     all this. He gave all this, it is true, but he gave
     himself. Mark, brethren, what a richness there is here!
     It is not that he gave his righteousness, though that
     has become our dress. It is not even that he gave his
     blood, though that is the fount in which we wash. It is
     that he gave himself-his Godhead and manhood both
     combined. All that that word "Christ" means he came to
     us and for us. He gave himself. Oh! that we could dive
     and plunge into-this unfathomed sea-himself!
     Omnipotence, Omniscience, Infinity-himself. He gave
     himself-purity, love, kindness, meekness,
     gentleness-that wonderful compound of all perfections,
     to make up one perfection-himself. You do not come to
     Christ's house and say, "He gives me this house, his
     church, to dwell in." You do not come to his table and
     merely say, "He gives me this table to feast at," but
     you go farther, and you take him by faith into your
     arms, and you say, "Who loved me, and gave himself for
     me." Oh! that you could get hold of that sweet
     word-himself! It is the love of a husband to his wife,
     who not only gives her all that she can wish, daily
     food and raiment, and all the comforts that can nourish
     and cherish her, and make her life glad, but who gives
     himself to her. So does Jesus. The body and soul of
     Jesus, the deity of Jesus, and all that that means, he
     has been pleased to give to and for his people. "Who
     gave himself for us."
     
     There is another question which we shall ask the text,
     and that is, "For whom did Christ give himself?" Well,
     the text says, "For us." There be those who say that
     Christ has thus given himself for every man now living,
     or that ever did or shall live. We are not able to
     subscribe to the statement, though there is a truth in
     it, that in a certain sense he is "the Saviour of all
     men," but then it is added, "Specially of them that
     believe." At any rate, dear hearer, let me tell thee
     one thing that is certain. Whether atonement may be
     said to be particular or general, there are none who
     partake in its real efficacy but certain characters,
     and those characters are known by certain infallible
     signs. You must not say that he gave himself for you
     unless these signs are manifest in you, and the first
     sign is that of simple faith in the Lord Jesus. If thou
     believest in him, that shall be a proof to thee that he
     gave himself for thee. See, if he gave himself for all
     men alike, then he did equally for Judas and for Peter.
     Care you for such love as that? He died equally for
     those who were then in hell as for those who were then
     in heaven. Care you for such a doctrine as that? For my
     part, I desire to have a personal, peculiar, and
     special interest in the precious blood of Jesus; such
     an interest in it as shall lead me to his right hand,
     and enable me to say, "He hath washed me from my sins,
     in his blood." Now I think we have no right to conclude
     that we shall have any benefit from the death of Christ
     unless we trust him, and if we do trust him, that trust
     will produce the following things:-"Who gave himself
     for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity"-we
     shall hate sin; we shall fight against it; we shall be
     delivered from it- "and purify unto himself ,a peculiar
     people, zealous of good works." I have no right.
     therefore, to conclude that I shall be a partaker of
     the precious blood of Jesus unless I become in my life
     "zealous of good works," My good works cannot save me,
     cannot even help to save me; but they are evidences of
     my being saved, and if I am not zealous for good works,
     I lack the evidence of salvation, and I have no right
     whatever to conclude that I shall receive one jot of
     benefit from Christ's sufferings upon the tree. Oh! my
     dear hearer, I would to God that thou couldest trust
     the Man, the God, who died on Calvary! I would that
     thou couldest trust him so that thou couldest say, "He
     will save me; he has saved me." The gratitude which you
     would feel towards him would inspire you with an
     invincible hatred against sin. You would begin to fight
     against every evil way; you would conform yourselves,
     by his grace, to his law and his Word, and you would
     become a new creature in him! May God grant that you
     may yet be able to say, "Who gave himself for me"! I
     have asked the text enough questions, and there I leave
     them. For a few minutes only I am now going to use the
     text another way, namely:-
     
     II. PUT THE TEXT INTO A SETTING OF FACTS.
     
     There was a day before all days when there was no day
     but the Ancient of Days; a time when there was no time,
     but when Eternity was all. Then God, in the eterna1
     purpose, decreed to save his people. If we may speak so
     of things too mysterious for us to know them, and which
     we can only set forth after the manner of men, God had
     determined that his people should be saved, but he
     foresaw that they would sin. It was necessary,
     therefore. that the penalty due to their sins should be
     borne by someone. They could not be saved except a
     substitute were found who would bear the penalty of sin
     in their place and stead. Where was such a substitute
     to be found? No angel offered. There was no angel, for
     God dwelt alone, and even if there had then been
     angels, they could never have dared to offer to sustain
     the fearful weight of human guilt. But in that solemn
     council-chamber, when it was deliberated who should
     enter into bonds of suretyship to pay all the debts of
     the people of God, Christ came and gave himself a
     bondsman and a surety for all that was due-from them,
     or would be due from them, to the judgment-seat of God.
     In that day, then, he "gave himself for us."
     
     But Time began, and this round world had made, in the
     mind of God, a few revolutions. Men said the world was
     getting old, but to God it was but an infant. But the
     fulness of time was come, and suddenly, amidst the
     darkness of the night, there was heard sweeter singing
     than ere had come from mortal lips, "Glory to God in
     the highest; on earth peace; good will to men!" What
     lit up the sky with unwonted splendour and what had
     filled the air with chorales at the dead of night? See
     the Babe upon its mother's breast, there in Bethlehem's
     manger! "He gave himself for us." That same one who had
     given himself a surety has come down to earth to be a
     man, and to give himself for us. See him! For thirty
     years he toils on, amidst the drudgery of the
     carpenters shop! What is he doing? The law needed to be
     fulfilled, and he "gave himself for us," and fulfilled
     the law. But now the time comes when he is thirty-two
     or thirty-three years of age, and the law demands that
     the penalty shall be paid. Do you see him going to meet
     Judas in the garden, with confident, but solemn step?
     He "gave himself for us." He could with a word have
     driven those soldiers into hell, but they bind him-he
     "gave himself for us." They take him before Pilate, and
     Herod and Caiaphas, and they mock at him, and jeer him,
     and pluck his cheeks, and flagellate his shoulders! How
     is it that he will smart at this rate? How is it that
     he bears so passively all the insults and indignities
     which they heap upon him? He gave himself for us. Our
     sins demanded smart; he bared his back and took the
     smart; he have himself for us. But do you see that
     dreadful procession going through the streets of
     Jerusalem, along the rough pavement of the Via
     Dolorosa? Do you see the weeping women as they mourn
     because of him? How is it that he is willing to be led
     a captive up to the hill of Calvary? Alas! they throw
     him on the around! They drive accursed iron through his
     hands and feet. They hoist him into the air! They dash
     the cross into its appointed place, and there he hangs,
     a naked spectacle of scorn and shame, derided of men,
     and mourned by angels. How is it that the Lord of
     glory, who made all worlds, and hung out the stars like
     lamps, should now be bleeding and dying there? He gave
     himself for us. Can you see the streaming fountains of
     the four wounds in his hands and feet' Can you trace
     his agony as it carves lines upon his brow and all down
     his emaciated frame? No you cannot see the griefs of
     his soul. No spirit can behold them. They were too
     terrible for you to know them. It seemed as though all
     hell were emptied into the bosom of the Son of God, and
     as though all the miseries of all the ages were made to
     meet upon him, till he bore:-

              "All that incarnate God, could bear,
            With strength enough, but none to spare."
     
     Now why is all this but that he gave himself for us
     till his head hung down in death, and his arms, in
     chill, cold death, hung down by his side, and they
     buried the lifeless Victor in the tomb of Joseph of
     Arimethea? He gave himself for us!
     
     What more now remaineth? He lives again; on the third
     day he cometh from the tomb, and even then he still
     gave himself for us! Oh! yes, beloved, he has gone up
     on high but he still gives himself for us, for up there
     he is constantly engaged in pleading the sinner's
     cause. Up yonder, amidst the glories of heaven, he has
     not forgotten us poor sinners who are here below, but
     he spreads his hands, and pleads before his Father's
     throne and wins for us unnumbered blessings, for he
     gave himself for us.
     
     And I have been thinking whether I might not use the
     text in another way. Christ's servants wanted a subject
     upon which to preach, and so he "gave himself for us,"
     to be the constant topic of our ministry. Christ's
     servants wanted a sweet companion to be with them in
     their troubles, and he gave himself for us. Christ's
     people want comfort; they want spiritual food and
     drink, and so he gave himself for us-his flesh to be
     our meat, and his blood to be our spiritual drink. And
     we expect soon to go home to the land of the hereafter,
     to the realms of the blessed, and what is to be our
     heaven? Why, our heaven will be Christ himself, for he
     gave himself for Us. Oh! he is all that we want, all
     that we wish for! We cannot desire anything greater and
     better than to be with Christ, and to have Christ, to
     feed upon Christ, to lie in Christ's bosom, to know the
     kisses of his mouth, to look at the gleamings of his
     loving eyes, to hear his loving words, to feel him
     press us to his heart, and tell us that he has loved us
     from before the foundation of the world, and given
     himself for us.
     
     I think we have put the text now into a setting of
     certain facts; do not forget them, but let them be your
     joy! And now the last thing we have to do is to:-
     
     III. TURN THE TEXT TO PRACTICAL ACCOUNT BY DRAWING FROM
     IT A FEW INFERENCES.
     
     The first inference I draw is this-that be who gave
     himself for his people will cat deny them anything.
     This is a sweet encouragement to you who practice the
     art of prayer. You know how Paul puts it, "He that
     spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us
     all, how shall he not, with him, also freely give us
     all things?" Christ is all. If Christ gives himself to
     you, he will give you your bread and your water, and he
     will give you a house to dwell in. If he gives you
     himself, he will not let you starve on the road to
     heaven. Jesus Christ does not Give us himself and then
     deny us common things. Oh! child of God, go boldly to
     the throne of grace! Thou hast got the major; thou
     shalt certainly have the minor; thou hast the greater,
     thou canst not be denied the less.
     
     Now I draw another inference, namely, that if Christ
     has already given himself in so painful a way as I have
     described, since there is no need that he should suffer
     any more, we must believe that he is willing to give
     himself now unto the hearts of poor sinners. Beloved,
     for Christ to come to Bethlehem is a greater stoop than
     for him to come into your heart. Had Christ to die upon
     Calvary? That is all done, and he need not die again.
     Do you think that he who is willing to die is unwilling
     to apply the results of his passion? If a man leaps
     into the water to bring out a drowning child, after he
     has brought the child alive on shore, if he happens to
     have a piece of bread in his pocket, and the child
     needs it, do you think that he who rescued the child's
     life will deny that child so small a thing as a piece
     of bread? And come, dost thou think that Christ died on
     Calvary, and yet will not come into thy heart if thou
     seekest him? Dost thou believe that he who died for
     sinners will ever reject the prayer of a sinner? If
     thou believest that thou thinkest hardly of him, for
     his heart is very tender. He feels even a cry. You know
     how it is with your children; if they cry through pain,
     why, you would give anything for someone to come and
     heal them; and if you cry because your sin is painful,
     the great Physician will come and heal you. Ah! Jesus
     Christ is much more easily moved by our cries and tears
     than we are by the vies of our fellow-creatures. Come,
     poor sinner, come and put thy trust in my Master! Thou
     canst not think him hard-hearted. If he were, why did
     he die? Dost thou think him unkind? Then why did he
     bleed? Thou art inclined to think so hardly of him!
     Thou art making great cuts at his heart when thou
     thinkest him to be untender and ungenerous. "As I live,
     saith the Lord, I have no pleasure in the death of him
     that dieth, but rather that he would turn unto me and
     live." This is the voice of the God whom you look upon
     as so sternly just! Did Jesus Christ, the tender one,
     speak in even more plaintive tones, "Come unto me, all
     ye that labour and are heavy-laden, and I will give you
     rest"? You working men, you labouring men, Christ bids
     you come to him "all ye that labour." And you who are
     unhappy, you who know you have done wrong, and cannot
     sleep at nights because of it; you who are troubled
     about sin, and would fain go and hide your heads, and
     get:-

             "Anywhere, anywhere out of the world,"
     
     -your Father says to you one and all, "Run not from me,
     but come to me, my child!" Jesus, who died, says, "Flee
     not from me, but come to me, for I will accept you; I
     will receive you; I cast out none that come unto me.
     "Sinner, Jesus never did reject a coming soul yet, and
     he never will. Oh! try him! Try him! Now come, with thy
     sins about thee just as thou art, to the bleeding,
     dying Saviour, and he will say to thee, "I have blotted
     out thy sins; go and sin no more; I have forgiven
     thee." May God grant thee grace to put thy trust in him
     "who gave himself for us"!
     
     There are many other inferences which I might draw if I
     had time, but if this last one we have drawn be so
     applied to your hearts as to be carried out, it will be
     enough. Now do not you go and try to do good worlds in
     order to merit heaven. Do not go and try to pray
     yourselves into heaven by the efficacy of praying.
     Remember, he "gave himself for us." The old proverb is
     that "there is nothing freer than a gift," and surely
     this gift of God, this eternal life, must be free, and
     we must have it freely, or not at all. I sometimes see
     put up at some of our doctors that they receive "gratis
     patients." That is the sort of patients my Master
     receives. He receives none but those who come gratis.
     He never did receive anything yet, and he never will,
     except your love and your thanks after he has saved
     you. But you must come to him empty-handed; came just
     as you are, and he will receive you now, and you shall
     live to sing to the praise and the glory of his grace
     who has accepted you in the Beloved, and "who gave
     himself for us" God help you to do it. Amen.

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