The Cross: A Call to the Fundamentals of
Religion
Ryle reminds us of what we should
be thinking about as Christians.
THE
CROSS:
A
Call to the Fundamentals
of Religion
By
Bishop J.C. Ryle
“By
thy cross and passion, good Lord deliver us.”
“God
forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our
Lord
Jesus Christ.” –Galatians 6:14
Reader,
What
do you think and feel about the cross of Christ? You live in a Christian
land. You probably attend the worship of a Christian Church. You have
perhaps been baptized in the name of Christ. You profess and call
yourself a Christian. All this is well. It is more than can be said of
millions in the world. But all this is no answer to my question, “What
do you think and feel about the cross of Christ?”
I
want to tell you what the greatest Christian that ever lived thought of
the cross of Christ. He has written down his opinion. He has given his
judgment in words that cannot be mistaken. The man I mean is the Apostle
Paul. The place where you will find his opinion, is in the letter which
the Holy Ghost inspired him to write to the Galatians. And the words in
which his judgment is set down, are these, “God forbid that I should
glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Now
what did Paul mean by saying this? He meant to declare strongly, that he
trusted in nothing but Jesus Christ crucified for the pardon of his sins
and the salvation of his soul. Let others, if they would, look elsewhere
for salvation. Let others, if they were so disposed, trust in other
things for pardon and peace. For his part, the apostle was determined to
rest on nothing, lean on nothing, build his hope on nothing, place
confidence in nothing, glory in nothing, except “the cross of Jesus
Christ.”
Reader,
let me talk to you about this subject. Believe me, it is one of the
deepest importance. This is no mere question of controversy. This is not
one of those points on which men may agree to differ, and feel that
differences will not shut them out of heaven. A man must be right on
this subject, or he is lost forever. Heaven or hell, happiness or
misery, life or death, blessing or cursing in the last day,—all hinges
on the answer to this question, “What do you think about the cross of
Christ?”
I.
Let me show you what the Apostle Paul did not glory in.
II.
Let me explain to you what he did glory in.
III.
Let me show you why all Christians should think and feel about the cross
like Paul.
I.
What did the Apostle Paul not glory in?
There
are many things that Paul might have gloried in, if he had thought as
some do in this day. If ever there was one on earth who had something to
boast of in himself, that man was the great apostle of the Gentiles.
Now, if he did not dare to glory, who shall?
He
never gloried in his national privileges. He was a Jew by birth,
and as he tells us himself,— “An Hebrew of the Hebrews.” He might
have said, like many of his brethren, “I have Abraham for my
forefather. I am not a dark, unenlightened heathen. I am one of the
favored people of God. I have been admitted into covenant with God by
circumcision. I am a far better man than the ignorant Gentiles.” But
he never said so. He never gloried in anything of this kind. Never for
one moment!
He
never gloried in his own works. None ever worked so hard for God
as he did. He was more abundant in labors than any of the apostles. No
living man ever preached so much, traveled so much, and endured so many
hardships for Christ’s cause. None ever converted so many souls, did
so much good to the world, and made himself so useful to mankind. No
father of the early Church, no Reformer, no Missionary, no Minister, no
Layman—no one man could ever be named, who did so many good works as
the Apostle Paul. But did he ever glory in them, as if they were in the
least meritorious, and could save his soul? Never! never for one moment!
He
never gloried in his knowledge. He was a man of great gifts
naturally, and after he was converted, the Holy Spirit gave him greater
gifts still. He was a mighty preacher, and a mighty speaker, and a
mighty writer. He was as great with his pen as he was with his tongue.
He could reason equally well with Jews and Gentiles. He could argue with
infidels at Corinth, or Pharisees at Jerusalem, or self-righteous people
in Galatia. He knew many deep things. He had been in the third heaven,
and heard unspeakable words. He had received the spirit of prophecy, and
could foretell things yet to come. But did he ever glory in his
knowledge, as if it could justify him before God? Never! never! never
for one moment!
He
never gloried in his graces. If ever there was one who abounded
in graces, that man was Paul. He was full of love. How tenderly and
affectionately he used to write! He could feel for souls like a mother
or a nurse feeling for her child. He was a bold man. He cared not whom
he opposed when truth was at stake. He cared not what risks he ran when
souls were to be won. He was a self-denying man,—in hunger and thirst
often, in cold and nakedness, in watchings and fastings. He was a humble
man. He thought himself less than the least of all saints, and the chief
of sinners. He was a prayerful man. See how it comes out at the
beginning of all his Epistles. He was a thankful man. His thanksgivings
and his prayers walked side by side. But he never gloried in all this,
never valued himself on it, never rested his soul’s hopes in it. Oh!
no! never for a moment!
He
never gloried in his churchmanship. If ever there was a good
churchman, that man was Paul. He was himself a chosen apostle. He was a
founder of churches, and an ordainer of ministers. Timothy and Titus,
and many elders, received their first commission from his hands. He was
the beginner of services and sacraments in many a dark place. Many a one
did he baptize. Many a one did he receive to the Lord’s table. Many a
meeting for prayer, and praise, and preaching, did he begin and carry
on. He was the setter up of discipline in many a young church. Whatever
ordinances, and rules, and ceremonies were observed in them, were first
recommended by him. But did he ever glory in his office and church
standing? Does he ever speak as if his churchmanship would save him,
justify him, put away his sins, and make him acceptable before God? Oh!
no! never! never! never for a moment!
And
now, reader, mark what I say. If the apostle Paul never gloried in any
of these things, who in all the world, from one end to the other, has
any right to glory in them in our day? If Paul said, “God forbid that
I should glory in anything whatever except the cross,” who shall dare
to say, “I have something to glory of—I am a better man than
Paul?”
Who
is there among the readers of this tract, that trusts in any goodness of
his own? Who is there that is resting on his own amendments, his own
morality, his own performances of any kind whatever? Who is there that
is leaning the weight of his soul on anything whatever of his own in the
smallest possible degree? Learn, I say, that you are very unlike the
Apostle Paul. Learn that your religion is not apostolical religion.
Who
is there among the readers of this tract that trusts in his
churchmanship for salvation? Who is there that is valuing himself on his
baptism, or his attendance at the Lord’s table—his church-going on
Sundays, or his daily services during the week—and saying to himself,
What lack I yet? Learn, I say, this day, that you are very unlike Paul.
Your Christianity is not the Christianity of the New Testament.
Paul would not glory in anything but the cross. Neither ought you.
Oh!
reader, beware of self-righteousness. Open sin kills its thousands of
souls. Self-righteousness kills its tens of thousands. Go and study
humility with the great apostle of the Gentiles. Go and sit with Paul at
the foot of the cross. Give up your secret pride. Cast away your vain
ideas of your own goodness. Be thankful if you have grace, but never
glory in it for a moment. Work for God and Christ with heart and soul,
and mind and strength, but never dream for a second of placing
confidence in any work of your own.
Think,
you who take comfort in some fancied ideas of your own goodness—think,
you who wrap up yourselves in the notion, “all must be right, if I
keep to my church,”—think for a moment what a sandy foundation your
are building upon! Think for a moment how miserably defective your hopes
and pleas will look in the hour of death, and in the day of judgment!
Whatever men may say of their own goodness while they are strong and
healthy, they will find but little to say of it, when they are sick and
dying. Whatever merit they may see in their own works here in this
world, they will discover none in them when they stand before the bar of
Christ. The light of that great day of assize will make a wonderful
difference in the appearance of all their doings. It will strip off the
tinsel, shrivel up the complexion, expose the rottenness, of many a deed
that is now called good. Their wheat will prove nothing but chaff. Their
gold will be found nothing but dross. Millions of so-called Christian
actions, will turn out to have been utterly defective and graceless.
They passed current, and were valued among men. They will prove light
and worthless in the balance of God. They will be found to have been
like the whitened sepulchres of old, fair and beautiful without, but
full of corruption within. Alas! for the man who can look forward to the
day of judgment, and lean his soul in the smallest degree on anything of
his own![1]
Reader,
once more I say, beware of self-righteousness in every possible shape
and form. Some people get as much harm from their fancied virtues as
others do from their sins. Take heed, lest you be one. Rest not, rest
not till your heart beats in tune with St. Paul’s. Rest not till you
can say with him, “God forbid that I should glory in anything but the
cross.”
II.
Let me explain, in the second place, what you are to understand by
the cross of Christ.
The
cross is an expression that is used in more than one meaning in the
Bible. What did St. Paul mean when he said, “I glory in the cross of
Christ,” in the Epistle to the Galatians? This is the point I now wish
to make clear.
The
cross sometimes means that wooden cross, on which the Lord Jesus was
nailed and put to death on Mount Calvary. This is what St. Paul had in
his mind’s eye, when he told the Philippians that Christ “became
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross” (Phil 2:8). This is
not the cross in which St. Paul gloried. He would have shrunk with
horror from the idea of glorying in a mere piece of wood. I have no
doubt he would have denounced the Roman Catholic adoration of the
crucifix, as profane, blasphemous, and idolatrous.
The
cross sometimes means the afflictions and trials which believers in
Christ have to go through if they follow Christ faithfully, for their
religions’ sake. This is the sense in which our Lord uses the word
when He says, “He that taketh not his cross and followeth after me,
cannot be my disciple” (Matt 10:38). This also is not the sense in
which Paul uses the word when he writes to the Galatians. He knew that
cross well. He carried it patiently. But he is not speaking of it here.
But
the cross also means in some places the doctrine that Christ died for
sinners upon the cross—the atonement that He made for sinners by his
suffering for them on the cross—the complete and perfect sacrifice for
sin which He offered up when he gave His own body to be crucified. In
short, this one word, “the cross,” stands for Christ crucified, the
only Saviour. This is the meaning in which Paul uses the expression,
when he tells the Corinthians, “the preaching of the cross is to them
that perish foolishness” (1 Cor 1:18). This is the meaning in which he
wrote to the Galatians, “God forbid that I should glory, save in the
cross.” He simply meant, “I glory in nothing but Christ crucified,
as the salvation of my soul.”[2]
Jesus
Christ crucified was the joy and delight, the comfort and the peace, the
hope and the confidence, the foundation and the resting place, the ark,
and the refuge, the food and the medicine of Paul’s soul. He did not
think of what he had done himself, and suffered himself. He did not
meditate on his own goodness, and his own righteousness. He loved to
think of what Christ had done, and Christ had suffered,—of the death
of Christ, the righteousness of Christ, the atonement of Christ, the
blood of Christ, the finished work of Christ. In this he did glory. This
was the sun of his soul.
This
is the subject he loved to preach about. He was a man who went to
and fro on the earth, proclaiming to sinners that the Son of God had
shed His own heart’s blood to save their souls. He walked up and down
the world, telling people that Jesus Christ had loved them, and died for
their sins upon the cross. Mark how he says to the Corinthians, “I
delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that
Christ died for our sins” (1 Cor 15:3). “I determined not to know
anything among you, save Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Cor 2:2).
He, a blaspheming, persecuting Pharisee, had been washed in Christ’s
blood. He could not hold his peace about it. He was never weary of
telling the story of the cross.
This
is the subject he loved to dwell upon when he wrote to believers.
It is wonderful to observe how full his epistles generally are of the
sufferings and death of Christ,—how they run over with “thoughts
that breathe, and words that burn,” about Christ’s dying love and
power. His heart seems full of the subject. He enlarges on it
constantly. He returns to it continually. It is the golden thread that
runs through all his doctrinal teaching and practical exhortations. He
seems to think that the most advanced Christian can never hear too much
about the cross.[3] This is what he lived upon all his
life, from the time of his conversion. He tells the Galatians, “The
life that I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of
God, who loved me, and gave himself for me” (Gal 2:20). What made him
so strong to labor? What made him so willing to work? What made him so
unwearied in endeavors to save some? What made him so persevering and
patient? I will tell you the secret of it all. He was always feeding by
faith on Christ’s body and Christ’s blood. Jesus, crucified, was the
meat and drink of his soul.
And,
reader, you may rest assured that Paul was right. Depend upon it, the
cross of Christ,—the death of Christ on the cross to make atonement
for sinners,—is the center truth in the whole Bible. This is the truth
we begin with when we open Genesis. The seed of the woman bruising the
serpent’s head, is nothing else but a prophecy of Christ crucified.
This is the truth that shines out, though veiled, all through the law of
Moses and the history of the Jews. The daily sacrifice, the passover
lamb, the continual shedding of blood in the tabernacle and
temple,—all these were emblems of Christ crucified. This is the truth
that we see honored in the vision of heaven before we close the book of
Revelation. “In the midst of the throne and of the four beasts,” we
are told, “and in the midst of the elders, stood a lamb as it had been
slain” (Rev 5:6). Even in the midst of heavenly glory we get a view of
Christ crucified. Take away the cross of Christ, and the Bible is a dark
book. It is like the Egyptian hieroglyphics, without the key that
interprets their meaning,—curious and wonderful, but of no real use.
Reader,
mark what I say. You may know a good deal about the Bible. You may know
the outlines of the histories it contains, and the dates of the events
described, just as a man knows the history of England. You may know the
names of the men and women mentioned in it, just as a man knows Caesar,
Alexander the Great, or Napoleon. You may know the several precepts of
the Bible, and admire them, just as a man admires Plato, Aristotle, or
Seneca. But if you have not yet found out that Christ crucified is the
foundation of the whole volume, you have read your Bible hitherto to
very little profit. Your religion is a heaven without a sun, an arch
without a keystone, a compass without a needle, a clock without spring
or weights, a lamp without oil. It will not comfort you. It will not
deliver your soul from hell.
Reader,
mark what I say again. You may know a good deal about Christ, by a kind
of head knowledge, as the dead Oriental churches know the facts of
Christianity as well as we do. You may know who Christ was, and where He
was born, and what He did. You may know His miracles, His sayings, His
prophecies, and his ordinances. You may know how He lived, and how he
suffered, and how He died. But unless you know the power of Christ’s
cross by experience—unless you have reason to know that the blood shed
on that cross has washed away your own particular sins,—unless you are
willing to confess that your salvation depends entirely on the work that
Christ did upon the cross,—unless this be the case, Christ will profit
you nothing. The mere knowing Christ’s name will never save you. You
must know His cross, and His blood, or else you will die in your sins.[4]
Reader,
as long as you live, beware of a religion in which there is not much
of the cross. You live in times when the warning is sadly needful.
Beware, I say again, of a religion without the cross.
There
are hundreds of places of worship, in this day, in which there is every
thing almost except the cross. There is carved oak and sculptured stone.
There is stained glass and brilliant painting. There are solemn services
and a constant round of ordinances. But the real cross of Christ is not
there. Jesus crucified is not proclaimed in the pulpit. The Lamb of God
is not lifted up, and salvation by faith in him is not freely
proclaimed. And hence all is wrong. Beware of such places of worship.
They are not apostolical. They would not have satisfied St. Paul.[5]
There
are thousands of religious books published in our times, in which there
is everything except the cross. They are full of directions about
sacraments and praises of the church. They abound in exhortations about
holy living, and rules for the attainment of perfection. They have
plenty of fonts and crosses both inside and outside. But the real cross
of Christ is left out. The Saviour and His dying love are either not
mentioned, or mentioned in an unscriptural way. And hence they are worse
than useless. Beware of such books. They are not apostolical.
They would never have satisfied St. Paul.
Dear
reader, remember that St. Paul gloried in nothing but the cross. Strive
to be like him. Set Jesus crucified fully before the eyes of your soul.
Listen not to any teaching which would interpose anything between you
and Him. Do not fall into the old Galatian error. Think not that any one
in this day is a better guide than the apostles. Do not be ashamed of
the old paths, in which men walked who were inspired by the Holy Ghost.
Let not the vague talk of men who speak great swelling words about
catholicity, and the church, and the ministry, disturb your peace, and
make you loose your hands from the cross. Churches, ministers, and
sacraments, are all useful in their way, but they are not Christ
crucified. Do not give Christ’s honor to another. “He that glorieth,
let him glory in the Lord.”
III.
Let me show you why all Christians ought to glory in the cross of
Christ.
I
feel that I must say something on this point, because of the ignorance
that prevails about it. I suspect that many see no peculiar glory and
beauty in the subject of Christ’s cross. On the contrary, they think
it painful, humbling, and degrading. They do not see much profit in the
story of His death and sufferings. They rather turn from it as an
unpleasant thing.
Now
I believe that such persons are quite wrong. I cannot hold with them. I
believe it is an excellent thing for us all to be continually dwelling
on the cross of Christ. It is a good thing to be often reminded how
Jesus was betrayed into the hands of wicked men, how they condemned Him
with most unjust judgment, how they spit on Him, scourged Him, beat Him,
and crowned Him with thorns; how they led Him forth as a lamb to the
slaughter, without His murmuring or resisting; how they drove the nails
through His hands and feet, and set Him up on Calvary between two
thieves; how they pierced His side with a spear, mocked Him in His
sufferings, and let Him hang there naked and bleeding till He died. Of
all these things, I say, it is good to be reminded. It is not for
nothing that the crucifixion is described four times over in the New
Testament. There are very few things that all the four writers of the
Gospel describe. Generally speaking, if Matthew, Mark, and Luke tell a
thing in our Lord’s history, John does not tell it. But there is one
thing that all the four give us most fully, and that one thing is the
story of the cross. This is a telling fact, and not to be overlooked.
Men
forget that all Christ’s sufferings on the cross were fore-ordained.
They did not come on Him by chance or accident. They were all planned,
counselled, and determined from all eternity. The cross was foreseen in
all the provisions of the everlasting Trinity, for the salvation of
sinners. In the purposes of God the cross was set up from everlasting.
Not one throb of pain did Jesus feel, not one precious drop of blood did
Jesus shed, which had not been appointed long ago. Infinite wisdom
planned that redemption should be by the cross. Infinite wisdom brought
Jesus to the Cross in due time. He was crucified by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God.
Men
forget that all Christ’s sufferings on the cross were necessary for
man’s salvation. He had to bear our sins, if ever they were to be
borne at all. With His stripes alone could we be healed. This was the
one payment of our debt that God would accept. This was the great
sacrifice on which our eternal life depended. If Christ had not gone to
the cross and suffered in our stead, the just for the unjust, there
would not have been a spark of hope for us. There would have been a
mighty gulf between ourselves and God, which no man ever could have
passed.[6]
Men
forget that all Christ’s sufferings were endured voluntarily
and of His own free will. He was under no compulsion. Of His own choice
He laid down His life. Of His own choice He went to the cross to finish
the work He came to do. He might easily have summoned legions of angels
with a word, and scattered Pilate and Herod and all their armies, like
chaff before the wind. But he was a willing sufferer. His heart was set
on the salvation of sinners. He was resolved to open a fountain for all
sin and uncleanness, by shedding His own blood.
Now,
when I think of all this, I see nothing painful or disagreeable in the
subject of Christ’s cross. On the contrary, I see in it wisdom and
power, peace and hope, joy and gladness, comfort and consolation. The
more I look at the cross in my mind’s eye, the more fulness I seem to
discern in it. The longer I dwell on the cross in my thoughts, the more
I am satisfied that there is more to be learned at the foot of the cross
than anywhere else in the world.
Would
I know the length and breadth of God the Father’s love
towards a sinful world? Where shall I see it most displayed? Shall I
look at His glorious sun shining down daily on the unthankful and evil?
Shall I look at seed-time and harvest returning in regular yearly
succession? Oh! no! I can find a stronger proof of love than anything of
this sort. I look at the cross of Christ. I see in it not the cause of
the Father’s love, but the effect. There I see that God so loved this
wicked world, that He gave His only begotten Son—gave Him to suffer
and die—that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
eternal life. I know that the Father loves us because He did not
withhold from us His Son, His only Son. Ah! reader, I might sometimes
fancy that God the Father is too high and holy to care for such
miserable, corrupt creatures as we are. But I cannot, must not, dare not
think it, when I look at the cross of Christ.[7]
Would
I know how exceedingly sinful and abominable sin is in the sight
of God? Where shall I see that most fully brought out? Shall I turn to
the history of the flood, and read how sin drowned the world? Shall I go
to the shore of the Dead Sea, and mark what sin brought on Sodom and
Gomorrah? Shall I turn to the wandering Jews, and observe how sin has
scattered them over the face of the earth? No! I can find a clearer
proof still. I look at the cross of Christ. There I see that sin is so
black and damnable, that nothing but the blood of God’s own Son can
wash it away. There I see that sin has so separated me from my holy
Maker, that all the angels in heaven could never have made peace between
us. Nothing could reconcile us short of the death of Christ. Ah! if I
listened to the wretched talk of proud men, I might sometimes fancy sin
was not so very sinful. But I cannot think little of sin, when I look at
the cross of Christ.[8]
Would
I know the fulness and completeness of the salvation God has
provided for sinners? Where shall I see it most distinctly? Shall I go
to the general declarations in the Bible about God’s mercy? Shall I
rest in the general truth that God is a God of love? Oh! no! I will look
at the cross of Christ. I find no evidence like that. I find no balm for
a sore conscience, and a troubled heart, like the sight of Jesus dying
for me on the accursed tree. There I see that a full payment has been
made for all my enormous debts. The curse of that law which I have
broken has come down on One who there suffered in my stead. The demands
of that law are all satisfied. Payment has been made for me, even to the
uttermost farthing. It will not be required twice over. Ah! I might
sometimes imagine I was too bad to be forgiven. My own heart sometimes
whispers that I am too wicked to be saved. But I know in my better
moments this is all my foolish unbelief. I read an answer to my doubts
in the blood shed on Calvary. I feel sure that there is a way to heaven
for the very vilest of men, when I look at the cross.
Would
I find strong reasons for being a holy man? Whither shall I turn
for them? Shall I listen to the ten commandments merely? Shall I study
the examples given me in the Bible of what grace can do? Shall I
meditate on the rewards of heaven, and the punishments of hell? Is there
no stronger motive still? Yes! I will look at the cross of Christ. There
I see the love of Christ constraining me to live not unto myself, but
unto Him. There I see that I am not my own now;—I am bought with a
price. I am bound by the most solemn obligations to glorify Jesus with
body and spirit, which are His. There I see that Jesus gave Himself for
me, not only to redeem me from all iniquity, but also to purify me and
make me one of a peculiar people, zealous of good works. He bore my sins
in His own body on the tree, that I being dead unto sin should live unto
righteousness. Ah! reader, there is nothing so sanctifying as a clear
view of the cross of Christ! It crucifies the world unto us, and us unto
the world. How can we love sin when we remember that because of our sins
Jesus died? Surely none ought to be so holy as the disciples of a
crucified Lord.
Would
I learn how to be contented and cheerful under all the cares and
anxieties of life? What school shall I go to? How shall I attain this
state of mind most easily? Shall I look at the sovereignty of God, the
wisdom of God, the providence of God, the love of God? It is well to do
so. But I have a better argument still. I will look at the cross of
Christ. I feel that He who spared not His only begotten Son, but
delivered Him up to die for me will surely with Him give me all things
that I really need. He that endured that pain for my soul, will surely
not withhold from me anything that is really good. He that has done the
greater things for me, will doubtless do the lesser things also. He that
gave His own blood to procure me a home, will unquestionably supply me
with all really profitable for me by the way. Ah! reader, there is no
school for learning contentment that can be compared with the foot of
the cross.
Would
I gather arguments for hoping that I shall never be cast away?
Where shall I go to find them? Shall I look at my own graces and gifts?
Shall I take comfort in my own faith, and love, and penitence, and zeal,
and prayer? Shall I turn to my own heart, and say, “This same heart
will never be false and cold?” Oh! no! God forbid! I will look at the
cross of Christ. This is my grand argument. This is my main stay. I
cannot think that He who went through such sufferings to redeem my soul,
will let that soul perish after all, when it has once cast itself on
Him. Oh! no! what Jesus paid for, Jesus will surely keep. He paid dearly
for it. He will not let it easily be lost. He died for me when I was yet
a dark sinner. Ah! reader, when Satan tempts you to doubt whether Christ
is able to keep his people from falling, bid Satan look at the cross.
And
now, reader, will you marvel that I said all Christians ought to glory
in the cross? Will you not rather wonder that any can hear of the cross
and remain unmoved? I declare I know not greater proof of man’s
depravity, than the fact that thousands of so-called Christians see
nothing in the cross. Well may our hearts be called stony,—well may
the eyes of our mind be called blind,—well may our whole nature be
called diseased,—well may we all be called dead, when the cross of
Christ is heard of, and yet neglected. Surely we may take up the words
of the prophet, and say, “Hear O heavens, and be astonished O earth; a
wonderful and a horrible thing is done,”—Christ was crucified for
sinners, and yet many Christians live as if He was never crucified at
all!
Reader,
the cross is the grand peculiarity of the Christian religion.
Other religions have laws and moral precepts,—forms and
ceremonies,—rewards and punishments. But other religions cannot tell
us of a dying Saviour. They cannot show us the cross. This is the crown
and glory of the Gospel. This is that special comfort which belongs to
it alone. Miserable indeed is that religious teaching which calls itself
Christian, and yet contains nothing of the cross. A man who teaches in
this way, might as well profess to explain the solar system, and yet
tell his hearers nothing about the sun.
The
cross is the strength of a minister. I for one would not be
without it for all the world. I should feel like a soldier without
arms,—like an artist without his pencil,—like a pilot without his
compass,—like a laborer without his tools. Let others, if they will,
preach the law and morality. Let others hold forth the terrors of hell
and the joys of heaven. Let others be ever pressing upon their
congregations the sacraments of the church. Give me the cross of Christ.
This is the only lever which has ever turned the world upside down
hitherto, and made men forsake their sins. And if this will not, nothing
will. A man may begin preaching with a perfect knowledge of Latin, Greek
and Hebrew. But he will do little or no good among his hearers unless he
knows something of the cross. Never was there a minister who did much
for the conversion of souls who did not dwell much on Christ crucified.
Luther, Rutherford, Whitfield, Cecil, Simeon, Venn, were all most
eminently preachers of the cross. This is the preaching that the Holy
Ghost delights to bless. He loves to honor those who honor the cross.
The
cross is the secret of all missionary success. Nothing but this
has ever moved the hearts of the heathen. Just according as this has
been lifted up missions have prospered. This is the weapon that has won
victories over hearts of every kind, in every quarter of the globe.
Greenlanders, Africans, South-Sea Islanders, Hindus, Chinese, all have
alike felt its power. Just as that huge iron tube which crosses the
Menai Straits, is more affected and bent by half an hour’s sunshine
than by all the dead weight that can be placed in it, so in like manner
the hearts of savages have melted before the cross when every other
argument seemed to move them no more than stones. “Brethren,” said a
North American Indian after his conversion, “I have been a heathen. I
know how heathens think. Once a preacher came and began to explain to us
that there was a God; but we told him to return to the place from whence
he came. Another preacher came and told us not to lie, nor steal, nor
drink; but we did not heed him. At last another came into my hut one day
and said, ‘I am come to you in the name of the Lord of heaven and
earth. He sends to let you know that He will make you happy, and deliver
you from misery. For this end he became a man, gave his life a ransom,
and shed his blood for sinners.’ I could not forget his words. I told
them to the other Indians, and an awakening begun among us. I say,
therefore, preach the sufferings and death of Christ, our Saviour, if
you wish your words to gain entrance among the heathen.” Never indeed
did the devil triumph so thoroughly, as when he persuaded the Jesuit
missionaries in China to keep back the story of the cross!
The
cross is the foundation of a church’s prosperity. No church
will ever be honored in which Christ crucified is not continually lifted
up. Nothing whatever can make up for the want of the cross. Without it
all things may be done decently and in order. Without it there may be
splendid ceremonies, charming music, gorgeous churches, learned
ministers, crowded communion tables, huge collections for the poor. But
without the cross no good will be done. Dark hearts will not be
enlightened. Proud hearts will not be humbled. Mourning hearts will not
be comforted. Fainting hearts will not be cheered. Sermons about the
Catholic Church and an apostolic ministry,—sermons about baptism and
the Lord’s supper,—sermons about unity and schism,—sermons about
fast and communion,—sermons about fathers and saints,—such sermons
will never make up for the absence of sermons about the cross of Christ.
They may amuse some. They will feed none. A gorgeous banqueting room and
splendid gold plate on the table will never make up to a hungry man for
the want of food. Christ crucified is God’s grand ordinance for doing
good to men. Whenever a church keeps back Christ crucified, or puts
anything whatever in that foremost place which Christ crucified should
always have, from that moment a church ceases to be useful. Without
Christ crucified in her pulpits, a church is little better than a
cumberer of the ground, a dead carcass, a well without water, a barren
fig tree, a sleeping watchman, a silent trumpet, a dumb witness, an
ambassador without terms of peace, a messenger without tidings, a
lighthouse without fire, a stumbling-block to weak believers, a comfort
to infidels, a hot-bed for formalism, a joy to the devil, and an offence
to God.
The
cross is the grand center of union among true Christians. Our
outward differences are many without doubt. And what may be the
importance of those differences which now in a measure divide such as
faithfully hold the head, even Christ, we cannot here enquire. But,
after all, what shall we hear about most of these differences in heaven?
Nothing most probably: nothing at all. Does a man really and
sincerely glory in the cross of Christ? That is the grand question.
If he does he is my brother; we are travelling in the same road. We are
journeying towards a home where Christ is all, and everything outward in
religion will be forgotten. But if he does not glory in the cross of
Christ, I cannot feel comfort about him. Union on outward points only is
union only for time. Union about the cross is union for eternity. Error
on outward points is only a skin-deep disease. Error about the cross is
disease at the heart. Union about outward points is a mere man-made
union. Union about the cross of Christ can only be produced by the Holy
Ghost.
Reader,
I know not what you think of all this. I feel as if I had said nothing
compared to what might be said. I feel as if the half of what I desire
to tell you about the cross were left untold. But I do hope that I have
given you something to think about. I do trust that I have shown you
that I have reason for the question with which I began this tract,
“What do you think and feel about the cross of Christ?” Listen to me
now for a few moments, while I say something to apply the whole subject
to your conscience.
Are
you living in any kind of sin?
Are you following the course of this world, and neglecting your soul?
Hear, I beseech you, what I say to you this day: “Behold the cross of
Christ.” See there how Jesus loved you! See there what Jesus suffered
to prepare for you a way of salvation! Yes! careless men and women, for
you that blood was shed! For you those hands and feet were pierced with
nails! For you that body hung in agony on the cross! You are those whom
Jesus loved, and for whom He died! Surely that love ought to melt you.
Surely the thought of the cross should draw you to repentance. Oh! that
it might be so this very day. Oh! that you would come at once to that
Saviour who died for you and is willing to save. Come and cry to Him
with the prayer of faith, and I know that He will listen. Come and lay
hold upon the cross, and I know that He will not cast you out. Come and
believe on Him who died on the cross, and this very day you will have
eternal life. How will you ever escape if you neglect so great
salvation? None surely will be so deep in hell as those who despise the
cross!
Are
you inquiring the way toward Heaven?
Are you seeking salvation but doubtful whether you can find it? Are you
desiring to have an interest in Christ but doubting whether Christ will
receive you? To you also I say this day, “Behold the cross of
Christ.” Here is encouragement if you really want it. Draw near to the
Lord Jesus with boldness, for nothing need keep you back. His arms are
open to receive you. His heart is full of love towards you. He has made
a way by which you may approach Him with confidence. Think of the cross.
Draw near, and fear not.
Are
you an unlearned man? Are
you desirous to get to heaven and yet perplexed and brought to a
stand-still by difficulties in the Bible which you cannot explain? To
you also I say this day, “Behold the cross of Christ.” Read there
the Father’s love and the Son’s compassion. Surely they are written
in great plain letters, which none can well mistake. What though at
present you cannot reconcile your own corruption and your own
responsibility? Look, I say, at the cross. Does not that cross tell you
that Jesus is a mighty, loving, ready Saviour? Does it not make one
thing plain, and that is that if not saved it is all your own fault? Oh!
get hold of that truth, and hold it fast.
Are
you a distressed believer?
Is your heart pressed down with sickness, tired with disappointments,
overburdened with cares? To you also I say this day, “Behold the cross
of Christ.” Think whose hand it is that chastens you. Think whose hand
is measuring to you the cup of bitterness which you are now drinking. It
is the hand of Him that was crucified. It is the same hand that in love
to your soul was nailed to the accursed tree. Surely that thought should
comfort and hearten you. Surely you should say to yourself, “A
crucified Saviour will never lay upon me anything that is not for my
good. There is a needs be. It must be well.”
Are
you a believer that longs to be more holy?
Are you one that finds his heart too ready to love earthly things? To
you also I say, “Behold the cross of Christ.” Look at the cross.
Think of the cross. Meditate on the cross, and then go and set
affections on the world if you can. I believe that holiness is nowhere
learned so well as on Calvary. I believe you cannot look much at the
cross without feeling your will sanctified, and your tastes made more
spiritual. As the sun gazed upon makes everything else look dark and
dim, so does the cross darken the false splendor of this world. As honey
tasted makes all other things seem to have no taste at all, so does the
cross seen by faith take all the sweetness out of the pleasures of the
world. Keep on every day steadily looking at the cross of Christ, and
you will soon say of the world as the poet does,—
Its
pleasures now no longer please,
No
more content afford;
Far
from my heart be joys like these,
Now
I have seen the Lord.
As
by the light of opening day
The
stars are all conceal’d,
So
earthly pleasures fade away
When
Jesus is reveal’d.
Are
you a dying believer?
Have you gone to that bed from which something within tells you you will
never come down alive? Are you drawing near to that solemn hour when
soul and body must part for a season, and you must launch into a world
unknown? Oh! look steadily at the cross of Christ, and you shall be kept
in peace. Fix the eyes of your mind firmly on Jesus crucified, and he
shall deliver you from all your fears. Though you walk through dark
places, He will be with you. He will never leave you, never forsake you.
Sit under the shadow of the cross to the very last, and its fruit shall
be sweet to your taste. “Ah!” said a dying missionary, “there is
but one thing needful on a death-bed, and that is to feel one’s arms
round the cross.”
Reader,
I lay these thoughts before your mind. What you think now about the
cross of Christ I cannot tell; but I can wish you nothing better than
this, that you may be able to say with the apostle Paul, before you die
or meet the Lord, “God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of
our Lord Jesus Christ.”
FOOTNOTES
[1]
“Howsoever men when they sit at ease, do vainly tickle their
own hearts with the wanton conceit of I know not what proportionable
correspondence between their merits and their rewards, which in the
trance of their high speculations, they dream that God hath measured and
laid up as it were in bundles for them; we see notwithstanding by daily
experience, in a number even of them that when the hour of death
approacheth, when they secretly hear themselves summoned to appear and
stand at the bar of that Judge, whose brightness causeth the eyes of
angels themselves to dazzle, all those idle imaginations do then begin
to hide their faces. To name merits then, is to lay their souls upon the
rack. The memory of their own deeds is loathsome unto them. They forsake
all things wherein they have put any trust and confidence. No staff to
lean upon, no rest, no ease, no comfort then, but only in Christ
Jesus.”—Richard Hooker.
[2]
“By the cross of Christ the apostle understandeth the all-sufficient,
expiatory, and satisfactory sacrifice of Christ upon the cross, with the
whole work of our redemption: in the saving knowledge of, whereof he
professeth he will glory and boast.”—Cudworth on Galatians.
“Touching
these words, I do not find that any expositor, either ancient or modern,
Popish or Protestant, writing on this place, doth expound the cross here
mentioned of the sign of the cross, but of the profession of faith in
Him that was hanged on the cross.”—Mayer’s Commentary.
“This
is rather to be understood of the cross which Christ suffered for us,
than of that we suffer for Him.”—Leigh’s Annotations.
[3]
“Christ crucified is the sum of the Gospel, and contains all the
riches of it. Paul was so much taken with Christ that nothing sweeter
than Jesus could drop from his pen and lips. It is observed that he hath
the word ‘Jesus’ five hundred times in his Epistles.”—Charnock.
[4]
“If our faith stop in Christ’s life, and do not fasten upon his
blood, it will not be a justifying faith. His miracles which prepared
the world for his doctrines; his holiness, which fitted himself for his
sufferings, had been insufficient for us without the addition of the
cross.”—Charnock.
[5]
“Paul determined to know nothing else but Jesus Christ, and him
crucified. But many manage the ministry as if they had taken up a
contrary determination, even to know anything save Jesus Christ and him
crucified.”—Traill.
[6]
“In Christ’s humiliation stands our exaltation; in his weakness
stands our strength; in his ignominy our glory; in his death our
life.”—Cudworth.
“The
eye of faith regards Christ sitting on the summit of the cross, as in a
triumphal chariot; the devil bound to the lowest part of the same cross,
and trodden under the feet of Christ.”—Bishop Davenant on
Colossians.
[7]
“The world we live in had fallen upon our heads, had it not been
upheld by the pillar of the cross; had not Christ stepped in and
promised a satisfaction for the sin of man. By this all things consist:
not a blessing we enjoy but may put us in mind of it; they were all
forfeited by sin, but merited by his blood. If we study it well we shall
be sensible how God hated sin and loved a world.”—Charnock.
[8]
“If God hateth sin so much that he would allow neither man nor angel
for the redemption thereof, but only the death of his only and
well-beloved Son, who will not stand in fear thereof?”—Homily for
Good Friday.
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