The Death of the CrossChapter Four from the book Meditations on the Sacred Humanity of Our Blessed RedeemerWell might the apostle, as if in a burst of holy admiration, cry aloud, as with trumpet voice, that heaven and earth might hear, "Great is the mystery of godliness; God was manifest in the flesh." - 1Ti 3:16 A mystery indeed it is, a great, a deep, an unfathomable mystery; for who can rightly understand how the divine Word, the eternal Son of God, was made flesh, and dwelt among us? "Who shall declare his generation?" - Isa 53:8; either that eternal generation whereby he is the only-begotten Son of God, or the generation of his sacred humanity in the womb of the Virgin, when the Holy Ghost came upon her, and the power of the Highest overshadowed her? These are the things "which the angels desire to look into;" which they cannot understand, but reverently adore. And well may we imitate their adoring admiration, not attempting to understand, but believe, love, and revere; for well has it been said,
Nor, if rightly taught and spiritually led, shall we find this a barren, dry, or unprofitable subject. It is "the great mystery of godliness;" therefore all godliness is contained in it, and flows out of it. There never was, there never will or can be a truly godly thought, feeling, or desire - no, not one godly word or work, a godly heart or a godly life which does not arise out of, and is not sustained by, the great mystery of an incarnate God. There may be, indeed frequently is, as a legal holiness, a fleshly piety, a tithing of mint, anise, and cummin, and a profusion of good works, so called, independent of the grace that dwells in the Lord the Lamb; but godliness, as consisting in a new and heavenly birth, with all its attendant fruits and graces, can only flow from the fullness of a covenant Head, communicating life to the members of his mystical body. And this covenant Head, we know, is the Son of God, once manifest in the flesh and now exalted to the right hand of the Father. How clear on this point, that all life is in him and out of him, are his own words of grace and truth: "Because I live, ye shall live also;" "I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto the Father but by me;" "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, ye have no life in you;" "I am the vine, ye are the branches. He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit; for without me ye can do nothing." If, then, our hearts, as touched with an unction from above, are bent
after godliness, as a felt blessing; if, as made daily more and more sensible
of our miserable emptiness and destitution, and the drying up of all creature
springs of happiness and holiness, we long more and more to realise the
inward possession of that promised well of water, springing up into everlasting
life, we shall desire to look more and more into this heavenly mystery,
and to have its transforming power and efficacy more feelingly and experimentally
made known to our souls. "If any man thirst," said the blessed
Lord, "let him come unto me and drink;" and to show that not only
should he drink for his own soul's happiness, but for the benefit of
others, he graciously added, "He that believeth on me, as the scripture
hath said, out of his belly (or heart) shall flow rivers of living water."
- If blessed then with faith in living exercise, we may draw near and behold
the great mystery of godliness. To tread by faith upon this holy ground
is to come "unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the
heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general
assembly and church of the firstborn which are written in heaven, and to
God, the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and
to Jesus, the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling,
that speaketh better things than the blood of Abel;" - The last acts of the suffering obedience of our adorable Redeemer are
couched in the words of the apostle, "And became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross." - 1. That the blood of the victim should he shed, for "without shedding
of blood is no remission:" "It is the blood that maketh an atonement
for the soul;" - 1. His blood was shed upon the cross - the actual living blood of his
sacred humanity. It is therefore called "the precious blood of Christ
as of a lamb without blemish and without spot," - 2. But the death of the victim was also required. He who freely and voluntarily
stood in the sinner's place must die in his room, or the substitution
could not be effectual Here then, we see the mystery of the death of Jesus.
There was no natural mortality {1} in that sacred humanity which the Lord
assumed in the womb of the Virgin. And yet he took a nature which could
die by a voluntary act. The whole of his obedience in his state of humiliation
was voluntary. Therefore the last act of it was as voluntary as the first
the death on the cross as much as the assumption in the Virgin. The Lord's
own words are decisive here: "Therefore doth my Father love me, because
I lay down my life that I may take it again. No man taketh it from me, but
I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to
take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father."
- The very merit of his obedience unto death whereby it became capable
of being imputed for righteousness to the church of God consisted mainly
in two things: the dignity of the obedient Sufferer and the voluntariness
of the sacrifice as an act of obedience to the will of God. Had our blessed
Lord not been God, and that as the eternal Son of God, There would have
been no merit in his sufferings, bloodshedding, and death. As the brightness
of God' s glory and the express image of his Person, as his co-eternal
Son he thought it not robbery - no unhallowed, disallowable claim, to be
equal with God; - Again, if the life of the blessed Lord had been violently taken away,
contrary to his will, where would have been the obedience unto death? Had
he been killed, so to speak, by the cross - had died because he could not
help dying, had his life been violently torn from him, where would have
been the laying down of his life as the last act of his voluntary obedience?
What power could man have had over him? Had he so willed, he could have
freed himself from the hands of his enemies. Therefore he said unto Pilate, "Thou
couldest have no power at all against me except it were given thee from
above." - Thus truly was he "brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a
sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth."
- He as the eternal Son of God, who had lain in his bosom before all worlds,
had known all the blessedness and happiness of the love and favour of the
Father - his own Father, shining upon him, for he was "by him as one
brought up with him, and was daily his delight, rejoicing always before
him." - Let us ever bear in mind that the sufferings of the holy soul of Jesus
were as real, that is, as really felt, as the sufferings of his sacred body,
and a thousand times more intense and intolerable. Though beyond description
painful and agonising, yet the sufferings of the body were light indeed
compared with the sufferings of the soul. It is so with the saints of God
themselves, when the Lord lays judgment to the line and righteousness to
the plummet in their conscience, and lets down a sense of his anger and
displeasure into their soul. What is all bodily suffering compared to a
sense of God's displeasure and the arrows of his wrath sticking in the
conscience? So it was with our great High Priest, when both as sacrificer
and sacrificed, alike priest and victim, he was bound with the cords of
love and obedience to the horns of the altar. - When, then, the Lord had been fully baptized with his baptism of suffering and blood, when he had drunk the cup of sorrow and anguish to its last dregs, and had rendered all the obedience which the law demanded and the will of God required he cried out with a loud voice that heaven and earth might hear, "It is finished!" and then, and not till then, he meekly bowed his head, laid down his life, as the last act of his voluntary, suffering obedience, and gave up the ghost. Footnotes: {1} Though we have in our preceding chapters used the word "immortal" as applicable to the sacred humanity of the blessed Lord, we are well aware that it is a term not fully appropriate; for the word "immortal" strickly means "not capable of death." And is in this sense applied to the soul of man as not only not dying with the body, but not capable of dying. In this sense, the humanity of the blessed Lord was not immortal, for it could and did die. If such a word were admissible, "unmortal," or "non-mortal," would be a preferable term - denying that it was mortal, and yet not asserting that it could not die. The main difficulty arises from the inherent defect of human language as applied to heavenly mysteries. The mind naturally contemplates only two states of existence: 1. What must necessarily die; and, 2. What cannot possibly die. The first it terms "mortal," the second it calls, "immortal." A third idea, that of a body which does not necessarily die, and yet is capable of dying, as being a conception lying out of its reach, it has invented no word properly to express. {2} Those who deny the eternal Sonship of Jesus rob him of his grace as well as of his glory, by diminishing his sufferings, and thus really strip away the greatness, and consequently much of the merit of his sacrifice. It was because he was God's own true and proper Son he so deeply, so keenly felt his wrathful displeasure. A Son by office, by mere name - without any filial relationship but a bare title which might have been any other - could not feel towards his adopted Father what the true, the proper, the only-begotten Son of God felt to his heavenly Father. One error always lets in another, and thus we see that the denial of the eternal Sonship of Christ lowers and disparages the greatness and consequently the merit of the atonement. Let the deniers of the eternal Sonship look to this. {3} The margin reads, "for his piety." but the truer and more literal meaning is, "on account of his reverential fear" "Had God in honour"-Luther |