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The Excellency Of Christ
by Jonathan Edwards
Dated August 1736. 3 sermons.
Revelation 5:5-6, "And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not:
behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, hath
prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof. And I
beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne, and of the four beasts, and
in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it had been slain."
INTRODUCTION
THE visions and revelations the apostle John had of the future events of
God’s providence, are here introduced with a vision of the book of God’s
decrees, by which those events were fore-ordained. This is represented
in verse1 as a book in the right hand of him who sat on the throne,
“written within and on the back side, and sealed with seven seals.”
Books, in the form in which they were wont of old to be made, were broad
leaves of parchment or paper, or something of that nature, joined
together at one edge, and so rolled up together, and then sealed, or
some way fastened together, to prevent their unfolding and opening.
Hence we read of the roll of a book Jer. 36:2. It seems to have been
such a book that John had a vision of here, and therefore it is said to
be “written within and on the back side,” i. e. on the inside pages, and
also on one of the outside pages, viz. that which it was rolled in, in
rolling the book up together. And it is said to be “sealed with seven
seals,” to signify that what was written in it was perfectly hidden and
secret, or that God’s decrees of future events are sealed, and shut up
from all possibility of being discovered by creatures, till God is
pleased to make them known. We find that seven is often used in
Scripture as the number of perfection, to signify the superlative or
most perfect degree of anything, which probably arose from this, that on
the seventh day God beheld the works of creation finished, and rested
and rejoiced in them, as being complete and perfect.
When John saw this book, he tells us, he “saw a strong angel proclaiming
with a loud voice, ‘Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the
seals thereof?’ And no man in heaven, nor in earth, neither under the
earth, was able to open the book, neither to look thereon.” And that he
wept much, because “no man was found worthy to open and read the book,
neither to look thereon.” (Rev. 5:2-4) And then tells us how his tears
were dried up, namely, that “one of the elders said unto him, “Weep not,
Behold the Lion of the tribe of Judah hath prevailed” etc. as in the
text. Though no man nor angel, nor any mere creature, was found either
able to loose the seals, or worthy to be admitted to the privilege of
reading the book, yet this was declared, for the comfort of this beloved
disciple, that Christ was found both able and worthy. And we have an
account in the succeeding chapters how he actually did it, opening the
seals in order, first one and then another, revealing what God had
decreed should come to pass hereafter. And we have an account in this
chapter, of his coming and taking the book out of the right hand of him
that sat on the throne, and of the joyful praises that were sung to him
in heaven and earth on that occasion.
Many things might be observed in the words of the text, but it is to my
present purpose only to take notice of the two distinct appellations
here given to Christ.
1.He is called a Lion. Behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah. He seems
to be called the Lion of the tribe of Judah, in allusion to what Jacob
said in his blessing of the tribe on his death-bed, who when he came to
bless Judah, compares him to a lion, Gen. 49:9, “Judah is a lion’s
whelp; from the prey, my son, thou art gone up: he stooped down, he
couched as a lion, and as an old lion; who shall rouse him up?” And also
to the standard of the camp of Judah in the wilderness, on which was
displayed a lion, according to the ancient tradition of the Jews. It is
much on account of the valiant acts of David that the tribe of Judah, of
which David was, is in Jacob’s prophetical blessing compared to a lion,
but more especially with an eye to Jesus Christ, who also was of that
tribe, and was descended of David, and is in our text called “the Root
of David.” Therefore Christ is here called “the Lion of the tribe of
Judah.”
2. He is called a Lamb. John was told of a Lion that had prevailed to
open the book, and probably expected to see a lion in his vision. But
while he is expecting, behold a Lamb appears to open the book, an
exceeding diverse kind of creature from a lion. A lion is a devourer,
one that is wont to make terrible slaughter of others, and no creature
more easily falls a prey to him than a lamb. And Christ is here
represented not only as a Lamb, a creature very liable to be slain, but
a “Lamb as it had been slain,” that is, with the marks of its deadly
wounds appearing on it.
That which I would observe from the words, for the subject of my present
discourse, is this, viz. —
“There is an admirable conjunction of diverse excellencies in Jesus
Christ.”
The lion and the lamb, though very diverse kinds of creatures, yet have
each their peculiar excellencies. The lion excels in strength, and in
the majesty of his appearance and voice: the lamb excels in meekness and
patience, besides the excellent nature of the creature as good for food,
and yielding that which is fit for our clothing and being suitable to be
offered in sacrifice to God. But we see that Christ is in the text
compared to both, because the diverse excellencies of both wonderfully
meet in him, — In handling this subject I would
I. Show wherein there is an admirable conjunction of diverse
excellencies in Christ.
II. How this admirable conjunction of excellencies appear in Christ’s
acts.
And then make application.
I. I would show wherein there is an admirable conjunction of diverse
excellencies in Jesus Christ. Which appears in three things:
First, there is a conjunction of such excellencies in Christ, as in our
manner of conceiving, are very diverse one from another.
Second, there is in him a conjunction of such really diverse
excellencies, as otherwise would have seemed to us utterly incompatible
in the same subject.
Third, such diverse excellencies are exercised in him towards men that
otherwise would have seemed impossible to be exercised towards the same
object.
First, there is a conjunction of such excellencies in Christ, as, in our
manner of conceiving, are very diverse one from another. Such are the
various divine perfections and excellencies that Christ is possessed of.
Christ is a divine person; and therefore has all the attributes of God.
The difference between these is chiefly relative, and in our manner of
conceiving them. And those which, in this sense, are most diverse, meet
in the person of Christ. I shall mention two instances.
1. There do meet in Jesus Christ infinite highness and infinite
condescension. Christ, as he is God, is infinitely great and high above
all. He is higher than the kings of the earth, for he is King of kings,
and Lord of lords. He is higher than the heavens, and higher than the
highest angels of heaven. So great is he, that all men, all kings and
princes, are as worms of the dust before him. All nations are as the
drop of the bucket, and the light dust of the balance, yea, and angels
themselves are as nothing before him. He is so high, that he is
infinitely above any need of us, above our reach that we cannot be
profitable to him, and above our conceptions that we cannot comprehend
him. Pro. 30:4 “What is his name, and what is his Son’s name, if thou
canst tell?” Our understandings, if we stretch them never so far, cannot
reach up to his divine glory. Job 11:8 “It is high as heaven, what canst
thou do?” Christ is the Creator and great Possessor of heaven and earth.
He is sovereign Lord of all. He rules over the whole universe, and does
whatsoever pleaseth him. His knowledge is without bound. His wisdom is
perfect, and what none can circumvent. His power is infinite, and none
can resist him. His riches are immense and inexhaustible. His majesty is
infinitely awful.
And yet he is one of infinite condescension. None are so low or
inferior, but Christ’s condescension is sufficient to take a gracious
notice of them. He condescends not only to the angels, humbling himself
to behold the things that are done in heaven, but he also condescends to
such poor creatures as men, and that not only so as to take notice of
princes and great men, but of those that are of meanest rank and degree,
“the poor of the world,” Jam. 2:5. Such as are commonly despised by
their fellow creatures, Christ does not despise. 1 Cor. 1:28 “Base
things of the world, and things that are despised, hath God chosen.”
Christ condescends to take notice of beggars (Luke 16:22) and people of
the most despised nations. In Christ Jesus is neither “Barbarian,
Scythian, bond nor free” Col. 3:11. He that is thus high condescends to
take a gracious notice of little children, Mat. 19:14, “Suffer little
children to come unto me.” Yea, which is more, his condescension is
sufficient to take a gracious notice of the most unworthy, sinful
creatures, those that have no good deservings, and those that have
infinite ill-deservings.
Yea, so great is his condescension, that it is not only sufficient to
take some gracious notice of such as these, but sufficient for
everything that is an act of condescension. His condescension is great
enough to become their friend, to become their companion, to unite their
souls to him in spiritual marriage. It is enough to take their nature
upon him, to become one of them, that he may be one with them. Yea, it
is great enough to abase himself yet lower for them, even to expose
himself to shame and spitting; yea, to yield up himself to an
ignominious death for them. And what act of condescension can be
conceived of greater? Yet such an act as this, has his condescension
yielded to, for those that are so low and mean, despicable and unworthy!
Such a conjunction of infinite highness and low condescension, in the
same person, is admirable. We see, by manifold instances, what a
tendency a high station has in men, to make them to be of a quite
contrary disposition. If one worm be a little exalted above another, by
having more dust, or a bigger dunghill, how much does he make of
himself! What a distance does he keep from those that are below him! And
a little condescension is what he expects should be made much of, and
greatly acknowledged. Christ condescends to wash our feet, but how would
great men (or rather the bigger worms), account themselves debased by
acts of far less condescension!
2. There meet in Jesus Christ, infinite justice and infinite grace. As
Christ is a divine person, he is infinitely holy and just, hating sin,
and disposed to execute condign punishment for sin. He is the Judge of
the world, and the infinitely just Judge of it, and will not at all
acquit the wicked, or by any means clear the guilty.
And yet he is infinitely gracious and merciful. Though his justice be so
strict with respect to all sin, and every breach of the law, yet he has
grace sufficient for every sinner, and even the chief of sinners. And it
is not only sufficient for the most unworthy to show them mercy, and
bestow some good upon them, but to bestow the greatest good. Yea, it is
sufficient to bestow all good upon them, and to do all things for them.
There is no benefit or blessing that they can receive, so great but the
grace of Christ is sufficient to bestow it on the greatest sinner that
ever lived. And not only so, but so great is his grace, that nothing is
too much as the means of this good. It is sufficient not only to do
great things, but also to suffer in order to do it, and not only to
suffer, but to suffer most extremely even unto death, the most terrible
of natural evils, and not only death, but the most ignominious and
tormenting, and every way the most terrible that men could inflict; yea,
and greater sufferings than men could inflict, who could only torment
the body. He had sufferings in his soul, that were the more immediate
fruits of the wrath of God against the sins of those he undertakes for.
Second, there do meet in the person of Christ such really diverse
excellencies, which otherwise would have been thought utterly
incompatible in the same subject: such as are conjoined in no other
person whatever, either divine, human, or angelical; and such as neither
men nor angels would ever have imagined could have met together in the
same person, had it not been seen in the person of Christ. I would give
some instances.
1. In the person of Christ do meet together infinite glory and lowest
humility. Infinite glory, and the virtue of humility, meet in no other
person but Christ. They meet in no created person, for no created person
has infinite glory, and they meet in no other divine person but Christ.
For though the divine nature be infinitely abhorrent to pride, yet
humility is not properly predicable of God the Father, and the Holy
Ghost, that exists only in the divine nature, because it is a proper
excellency only of a created nature. For it consists radically in a
sense of a comparative lowness and littleness before God, or the great
distance between God and the subject of this virtue. But it would be a
contradiction to suppose any such thing in God.
But in Jesus Christ, who is both God and man, those two diverse
excellencies are sweetly united. He is a person infinitely exalted in
glory and dignity. Phil. 2:6, “Being in the form of God, he thought it
not robbery to be equal with God.” There is equal honor due to him with
the Father. John 5:23. — “That all men should honor the Son, even as
they honor the Father.” God himself says to him, “Thy throne, O God, is
for ever and ever,” Heb. 1:8. And there is the same supreme respect and
divine worship paid to him by the angels of heaven, as to God the
Father, verse 6, “Let all the angels of God worship him.”
But however he is thus above all, yet he is lowest of all in humility.
There never was so great an instance of this virtue among either men or
angels, as Jesus. None ever was so sensible of the distance between God
and him, or had a heart so lowly before God, as the man Christ Jesus.
Mat. 11:29. What a wonderful spirit of humility appeared in him, when he
was here upon earth, in all his behavior! In his contentment in his mean
outward condition, contentedly living in the family of Joseph the
carpenter and Mary his mother for thirty years together, and afterwards
choosing outward meanness, poverty, and contempt, rather than earthly
greatness: in his washing his disciples’ feet, in all his speeches and
deportment towards them, in his cheerfully sustaining the form of a
servant through his whole life, and submitting to such immense
humiliation at death!
2. In the person of Christ do meet together infinite majesty and
transcendent meekness. These again are two qualifications that meet
together in no other person but Christ. Meekness, properly so called, is
a virtue proper only to the creature. We scarcely ever find meekness
mentioned as a divine attribute in Scripture, at least not in the New
Testament. For thereby seems to be signified, a calmness and quietness
of spirit, arising from humility in mutable beings that are naturally
liable to be put into a ruffle by the assaults of a tempestuous and
injurious world. But Christ, being both God and man, has both infinite
majesty and superlative meekness.
Christ was a person of infinite majesty. It is he that is spoken of, Psa.
45:3, “Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, O most mighty, with thy glory and
thy majesty.” It is he that is mighty, that rideth on the heavens, and
his excellency on the sky. It is he that is terrible out of his holy
places, who is mightier than the noise of many waters, yea, than the
mighty waves of the sea; before whom a fire goeth and burneth up his
enemies round about; at whose presence the earth quakes and the hills
melt; who sitteth on the circle of the earth and all the inhabitants
thereof are as grasshoppers; who rebukes the sea and maketh it dry and
drieth up the rivers; whose eyes are as a flame of fire; from whose
presence, and from the glory of whose power, the wicked shall be
punished with everlasting destruction; who is the blessed and only
Potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords; who has heaven for his
throne and the earth for his footstool and is the high and lofty One who
inhabits eternity; whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and of whose
dominion there is no end.
And yet he was the most marvelous instance of meekness, and humble
quietness of spirit, that ever was, agreeable to the prophecies of him,
Mat. 21:4, 5, “All this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was
spoken by the prophet, saying, Tell ye the daughter of Sion, Behold, thy
King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the
foal of an ass.” And, agreeable to what Christ declares of himself, Mat.
11:29, “I am meek and lowly in heart.” And agreeable to what was
manifest in his behavior, for there never was such an instance seen on
earth of a meek behavior, under injuries and reproaches, and towards
enemies, who when he was reviled, reviled not again. He had a wonderful
spirit of forgiveness, was ready to forgive his worst enemies, and
prayed for them with fervent and effectual prayers. With what meekness
did he appear in the ring of soldiers that were contemning and mocking
him. He was silent, and opened not his mouth, but went as a lamb to the
slaughter. Thus is Christ a Lion in majesty and a Lamb in meekness.
3. There meet in the person of Christ the deepest reverence towards God
and equality with God. Christ, when on earth, appeared full of holy
reverence towards the Father. He paid the most reverential worship to
him, praying to him with postures of reverence. Thus we read of his
“kneeling down and praying,” Luke 22:41. This became Christ, as one who
had taken on him the human nature, but at the same time he existed in
the divine nature, whereby his person was in all respects equal to the
person of the Father. God the Father has no attribute or perfection that
the Son has not, in equal degree, and equal glory. These things meet in
no other person but Jesus Christ.
4. There are conjoined in the person of Christ infinite worthiness of
good, and the greatest patience under sufferings of evil. He was
perfectly innocent, and deserved no suffering. He deserved nothing from
God by any guilt of his own, and he deserved no ill from men. Yea, he
was not only harmless and undeserving of suffering, but he was
infinitely worthy — worthy of the infinite love of the Father, worthy of
infinite and eternal happiness, and infinitely worthy of all possible
esteem, love, and service from all men. And yet he was perfectly patient
under the greatest sufferings that ever were endured in this world. Heb.
12:2, “He endured the cross, despising the shame.” He suffered not from
his Father for his faults, but ours. He suffered from men not for his
faults, but for those things on account of which he was infinitely
worthy of their love and honor, which made his patience the more
wonderful and the more glorious. 1 Pet. 2:20, etc. “For what glory is
it, if when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently,
but if when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently; this is
acceptable with God. For even hereunto were ye called; because Christ
also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that we should follow his
steps: who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth: who when he
was reviled, reviled not again, when he suffered, he threatened not; but
committed himself to him that judgeth righteously: who his own self bare
our sins in his own body on the tree, that we being dead to sin, should
live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed.” There is no
such conjunction of innocence, worthiness, and patience under
sufferings, as in the person of Christ.
5. In the person of Christ are conjoined an exceeding spirit of
obedience, with supreme dominion over heaven and earth. Christ is the
Lord of all things in two respects: he is so as God-man and Mediator,
and thus his dominion is appointed, and given him of the Father. Having
it by delegation from God, he is as it were the Father’s vicegerent. But
he is Lord of all things in another respect, viz. as he is (by his
original nature) God. So he is by natural right the Lord of all, and
supreme over all as much as the Father. Thus, he has dominion over the
world, not by delegation, but in his own right. He is not an under God,
as the Arians suppose, but to all intents and purposes, supreme God.
And yet in the same person is found the greatest spirit of obedience to
the commands and laws of God that ever was in the universe, which was
manifest in his obedience here in this world. John 14:31 “As the Father
gave me commandment, even so I do.” John 15:10, “Even as I have kept my
Father’s commandments, and abide in his love.” The greatness of his
obedience appears in its perfection, and in his obeying commands of such
exceeding difficulty. Never anyone received commands from God of such
difficulty, and that were so great a trial of obedience, as Jesus
Christ. One of God’s commands to him was, that he should yield himself
to those dreadful sufferings that he underwent. See John 10:18, “No man
taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself.” — “This commandment
received I of my Father.” And Christ was thoroughly obedient to this
command of God. Heb. 5:8, “Though he were a Son, yet he learned
obedience by the things that he suffered.” Phil. 2:8, “He humbled
himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.”
Never was there such an instance of obedience in man or angel as this,
though he was at the same time supreme Lord of both angels and men.
6. In the person of Christ are conjoined absolute sovereignty and
perfect resignation. This is another unparalleled conjunction. Christ,
as he is God, is the absolute sovereign of the world, the sovereign
disposer of all events. The decrees of God are all his sovereign
decrees, and the work of creation, and all God’s works of providence,
are his sovereign works. It is he that worketh all things according to
the counsel of his own will. Col. 1:16, 17, “By him, and through him,
and to him, are all things.” John 5:17, “The Father worketh hitherto,
and I work.” Mat. 8:3, “I will, be thou clean.”
But yet Christ was the most wonderful instance of resignation that ever
appeared in the world. He was absolutely and perfectly resigned when he
had a near and immediate prospect of his terrible sufferings, and the
dreadful cup that he was to drink. The idea and expectation of this made
his soul exceeding sorrowful, even unto death, and put him into such an
agony that his sweat was as it were great drops or clots of blood,
falling down to the ground. But in such circumstances he was wholly
resigned to the will of God. Mat. 26:39, “O my Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless, not as I will, but as
thou wilt.” verse 42, “O my Father, if this cup may not pass from me,
except I drink it, thy will be done.”
7. In Christ do meet together self-sufficiency, and an entire trust and
reliance on God, which is another conjunction peculiar to the person of
Christ. As he is a divine person, he is self-sufficient, standing in
need of nothing. All creatures are dependent on him, but he is dependent
on none, but is absolutely independent. His proceeding from the Father,
in his eternal generation or filiation, argues no proper dependence on
the will of the Father. For that proceeding was natural and necessary,
and not arbitrary. But yet Christ entirely trusted in God: his enemies
say that of him, “He trusted in God that he would deliver him,” Mat.
27:43. And the apostle testifies, 1 Pet. 2:23, “That he committed
himself God.”
Third, such diverse excellencies are expressed in him towards men, that
otherwise would have seemed impossible to be exercised towards the same
object, as particularly these three, justice, mercy, and truth. The same
that are mentioned in Psa. 85:10, “Mercy and truth are met together,
righteousness and peace have kissed each other.” The strict justice of
God, and even his revenging justice, and that against the sins of men,
never was so gloriously manifested as in Christ. He manifested an
infinite regard to the attribute of God’s justice, in that when he had a
mind to save sinners, he was willing to undergo such extreme sufferings,
rather than that their salvation should be to the injury of the honor of
that attribute. And as he is the Judge of the world, he does himself
exercise strict justice, he will not clear the guilty, nor at all acquit
the wicked in judgment. Yet how wonderfully is infinite mercy towards
sinners displayed in him! And what glorious and ineffable grace and love
have been and are exercised by him, towards sinful men! Though he be the
just Judge of a sinful world, yet he is also the Savior of the world.
Though he be a consuming fire to sin, yet he is the light and life of
sinners. Rom. 3:25, 26, “Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation,
through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the
remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; to
declare, I say, at this time his righteousness, that he might be just,
and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.”
So the immutable truth of God, in the threatenings of his law against
the sins of men, was never so manifested as it is in Jesus Christ. For
there never was any other so great a trial of the unalterableness of the
truth of God in those threatenings, as when sin came to be imputed to
his own Son. And then in Christ has been seen already an actual complete
accomplishment of those threatenings, which never has been nor will be
seen in any other instance, because the eternity that will be taken up
in fulfilling those threatenings on others, never will be finished.
Christ manifested an infinite regard to this truth of God in his
sufferings. And in his judging the world, he makes the covenant of
works, that contains those dreadful threatenings, his rule of judgment.
He will see to it, that it is not infringed in the least jot or tittle.
He will do nothing contrary to the threatenings of the law, and their
complete fulfillment. And yet in him we have many great and precious
promises, promises of perfect deliverance from the penalty of the law.
And this is the promise that he has promised us, even eternal life. And
in him are all the promises of God, yea, and Amen.
Having thus shown wherein there is an admirable conjunction of
excellencies in Jesus Christ, I now proceed,
II. To show how this admirable conjunction of excellencies appears in
Christ’s acts.
First, it appears in what Christ did in taking on him our nature. In
this act, his infinite condescension wonderfully appeared, that he who
was God should become man, that the word should be made flesh, and
should take on him a nature infinitely below his original nature! And it
appears yet more remarkably in the low circumstances of his incarnation:
he was conceived in the womb of a poor young woman, whose poverty
appeared in this, when she came to offer sacrifices of her purification,
she brought what was allowed of in the law only in case of poverty, as
Luke 2:24, “According to what is said in the law of the Lord, a pair of
turtle-doves, or two young pigeons.” This was allowed only in case the
person was so poor that she was not able to offer a lamb. Lev. 12:8.
And though his infinite condescension thus appeared in the manner of his
incarnation, yet his divine dignity also appeared in it. For though he
was conceived in the womb of a poor virgin, yet he was conceived there
by the power of the Holy Ghost. And his divine dignity also appeared in
the holiness of his conception and birth. Though he was conceived in the
womb of one of the corrupt race of mankind, yet he was conceived and
born without sin, as the angel said to the blessed Virgin, Luke 1:35,
“The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee, therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of
thee, shall be called the Son of God.”
His infinite condescension marvelously appeared in the manner of his
birth. He was brought forth in a stable because there was no room for
them in the inn. The inn was taken up by others, that were looked upon
as persons of greater account. The blessed Virgin, being poor and
despised, was turned or shut out. Though she was in such necessitous
circumstances, yet those that counted themselves her betters would not
give place to her. Therefore, in the time of her travail, she was forced
to betake herself to a stable, and when the child was born, it was
wrapped in swaddling-clothes, and laid in a manger. There Christ lay a
little infant, and there he eminently appeared as a lamb. But yet this
feeble infant, born thus in a stable, and laid in a manger, was born to
conquer and triumph over Satan, that roaring lion. He came to subdue the
mighty powers of darkness, and make a show of them openly: so to restore
peace on earth, to manifest God’s goodwill towards men, and to bring
glory to God in the highest. According[ly] the end of his birth was
declared by the joyful songs of the glorious hosts of angels, who
appeared to the shepherds at the same time that the infant lay in the
manger, whereby his divine dignity was manifested.
Second, this admirable conjunction of excellencies appears in the acts
and various passages of Christ’s life. Though Christ dwelt in mean
outward circumstances, whereby his condescension and humility especially
appeared, and his majesty was veiled, yet his divine divinity and glory
did in many of his acts shine through the veil, and it illustriously
appeared, that he was not only the Son of man, but the great God.
Thus, in the circumstances of his infancy, his outward meanness
appeared, Yet there was something then to show forth his divine dignity,
in the wise men’s being stirred up to come from the east to give honor
to him, their being led by a miraculous star, and coming and falling
down and worshipping him, and presenting him with gold, frankincense,
and myrrh. His humility and meekness wonderfully appeared in his
subjection to his mother and reputed father when he was a child. Herein
he appeared as a lamb. But his divine glory broke forth and shone when,
at twelve years old, he disputed with doctors in the temple. In that he
appeared, in some measure, as the Lion of the tribe of Judah.
And so, after he entered on his public ministry, his marvelous humility
and meekness was manifested in his choosing to appear in such mean
outward circumstances; and in being contented in them, when he was so
poor that he had not where to lay his head, and depended on the charity
of some of his followers for his subsistence, as appears by Luke 8 at
the beginning. How meek, condescending, and familiar his treatment of
his disciples. His discourses with them, treating them as a father his
children, yea, as friends and companions. How patient, bearing such
affliction and reproach, and so many injuries from the scribes and
Pharisees, and others. In these things he appeared as a Lamb. And yet he
at the same time did in many ways show forth his divine majesty and
glory, particularly in the miracles he wrought, which were evidently
divine works, and manifested omnipotent power, and so declared him to be
the Lion of the tribe of Judah. His wonderful and miraculous works
plainly showed him to be the God of nature, in that it appeared by them
that he had all nature in his hands, and could lay an arrest upon it,
and stop and change its course as he pleased. In healing the sick, and
opening the eyes of the blind, and unstopping the ears of the deaf, and
healing the lame, he showed that he was the God that framed the eye, and
created the ear, and was the author of the frame of man’s body. By the
dead’s rising at his command, it appeared that he was the author and
fountain of life, and that “God the Lord, to whom belong the issues from
death.” By his walking on the sea in a storm, when the waves were
raised, he showed himself to be that God spoken of in Job 9:8, “That
treadeth on the waves of the sea.” By his stilling the storm, and
calming the rage of the sea, by his powerful command, saying, “Peace, be
still,” he showed that he has the command of the universe, and that he
is that God who brings things to pass by the word of his power, who
speaks and it is done, who commands and it stands fast; Psa. 65:7, “Who
stilleth the noise of the seas, the noise of their waves.” And Psa.
107:29, “That maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof are
still.” And Psa. 89:8, 9, “O Lord God of hosts, who is a strong Lord
like unto thee, or to thy faithfulness round about thee? Thou rulest the
raging of the sea: when the waves thereof arise, thou stillest them.”
Christ, by casting out devils, remarkably appeared as the Lion of the
tribe of Judah, and showed that he was stronger than the roaring lion,
that seeks whom he may devour. He commanded them to come out, and they
were forced to obey. They were terribly afraid of him: they fall down
before him, and beseech him not to torment them. He forces a whole
legion of them to forsake their hold, by his powerful word, and they
could not so much as enter into the swine without his leave. He showed
the glory of his omniscience, by telling the thoughts of men, as we have
often an account. Herein he appeared to be that God spoken of, Amos
4:13, “That declareth unto man what is his thought.” Thus, in the midst
of his meanness and humiliation, his divine glory appeared in his
miracles, John 2:11, “This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of
Galilee, and manifested forth his glory.”
And though Christ ordinarily appeared without outward glory, and in
great obscurity, yet at a certain time he threw off the veil, and
appeared in his divine majesty, so far as it could be outwardly
manifested to men in this frail state, when he was transfigured in the
mount. The apostle Peter (2 Pet. 1:16, 17) was an “eye-witness of his
majesty, when he received from God the Father honor and glory, when
there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory, This is my
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; which voice that came from
heaven they heard, when they were with him in the holy mount.”
And at the same time that Christ was wont to appear in such meekness,
condescension, and humility, in his familiar discourses with his
disciples, appearing therein as the Lamb of God, he was also wont to
appear as The Lion of the tribe of Judah, with divine authority and
majesty, in his so sharply rebuking the scribes and Pharisees and other
hypocrites.
Third, this admirable conjunction of excellencies remarkably appears in
his offering up himself a sacrifice for sinners in his last sufferings.
As this was the greatest thing in all the works of redemption, the
greatest act of Christ in that work, so in this act especially does
there appear that admirable conjunction of excellencies that has been
spoken of. Christ never so much appeared as a lamb, as when he was
slain: “He came like a lamb to the slaughter,” Isa. 53:7. Then he was
offered up to God as a lamb without blemish, and without spot: then
especially did he appear to be the anti-type of the lamb of the passover:
1 Cor 5:7, “Christ our Passover sacrificed for us.” And yet in that act
he did in an especial manner appear as the Lion of the tribe of Judah.
Yea, in this above all other acts, in many respects, as may appear in
the following things.
1. Then was Christ in the greatest degree of his humiliation, and yet by
that, above all other things, his divine glory appears. Christ’s
humiliation was great, in being born in such a low condition, of a poor
virgin, and in a stable. His humiliation was great, in being subject to
Joseph the carpenter, and Mary his mother, and afterwards living in
poverty, so as not to have where to lay his head, and in suffering such
manifold and bitter reproaches as he suffered, while he went about
preaching and working miracles. But his humiliation was never so great
as it was, in his last sufferings, beginning with his agony in the
garden, till he expired on the cross. Never was he subject to such
ignominy as then, never did he suffer so much pain in his body, or so
much sorrow in his soul. Never was he in so great an exercise of his
condescension, humility, meekness, and patience, as he was in these last
sufferings. Never was his divine glory and majesty covered with so thick
and dark a veil. Never did he so empty himself and make himself of no
reputation, as at this time. And yet, never was his divine glory so
manifested, by any act of his, as in yielding himself up to these
sufferings. When the fruit of it came to appear, and the mystery and
ends of it to be unfolded in its issue, then did the glory of it appear,
[and] then did it appear as the most glorious act of Christ that ever he
exercised towards the creature. This act of his is celebrated by the
angels and hosts of heaven with peculiar praises, as that which is above
all others glorious, as you may see in the context (Rev. 5:9-12) “And
they sang a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book, and to
open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God
by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation;
and hast made us unto our God kings and priests: and we shall reign on
the earth. And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round
about the throne, and the beasts, and the elders: and the number of them
was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands, saying
with a loud voice Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power,
and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and
blessing.”
2. He never in any act gave so great a manifestation of love to God, and
yet never so manifested his love to those that were enemies to God, as
in that act. Christ never did anything whereby his love to the Father
was so eminently manifested, as in his laying down his life, under such
inexpressible sufferings, in obedience to his command, and for the
vindication of the honor of his authority and majesty; nor did ever any
mere creature give such a testimony of love to God as that was. And yet
this was the greatest expression of his love to sinful men who were
enemies to God, Rom. 5:10, “When we were enemies, we were reconciled to
God, by the death of his Son.” The greatness of Christ’s love to such,
appears in nothing so much as in its being dying love. That blood of
Christ which fell in great drops to the ground, in his agony, was shed
from love to God’s enemies, and his own. That shame and spitting, that
torment of body, and that exceeding sorrow, even unto death, which he
endured in his soul, was what he underwent from love to rebels against
God to save them from hell, and to purchase for them eternal glory.
Never did Christ so eminently show his regard to God’s honor, as in
offering up himself a victim to justice. And yet in this above all, he
manifested his love to them who dishonored God, so as to bring such
guilt on themselves, that nothing less than his blood could atone for
it.
3. Christ never so eminently appeared for divine justice, and yet never
suffered so much from divine justice, as when he offered up himself a
sacrifice for our sins. In Christ’s great sufferings, did his infinite
regard to the honor of God’s justice distinguishingly appear, for it was
from regard to that that he thus humbled himself. And yet in these
sufferings, Christ was the mark of the vindictive expressions of that
very justice of God. Revenging justice then spent all its force upon
him, on account of our guilt, which made him sweat blood, and cry out
upon the cross, and probably rent his vitals — broke his heart, the
fountain of blood, or some other blood vessels — and by the violent
fermentation turned his blood to water. For the blood and water that
issued out of his side, when pierced by the spear, seems to have been
extravasated blood, and so there might be a kind of literal fulfillment
of Psa. 22:14, “I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of
joint: my heart is like wax, it is melted in the midst of my bowels.”
And this was the way and means by which Christ stood up for the honor of
God’s justice, namely, by thus suffering its terrible executions. For
when he had undertaken for sinners, and had substituted himself in their
room, divine justice could have its due honor no other way than by his
suffering its revenges. — In this the diverse excellencies that met in
the person of Christ appeared, viz. his infinite regard to God’s
justice, and such love to those that have exposed themselves to it, as
induced him thus to yield himself a sacrifice to it.
4. Christ’s holiness never so illustriously shone forth as it did in his
last sufferings, and yet he never was to such a degree treated as
guilty. Christ’s holiness never had such a trial as it had then, and
therefore never had so great a manifestation. When it was tried in this
furnace, it came forth as gold, or as silver purified seven times. His
holiness then above all appeared in his steadfast pursuit of the honor
of God, and in his obedience to him. For his yielding himself unto death
was transcendently the greatest act of obedience that ever was paid to
God by anyone since the foundation of the world.
And yet then Christ was in the greatest degree treated as a wicked
person would have been. He was apprehended and bound as a malefactor.
His accusers represented him as a most wicked wretch. In his sufferings
before his crucifixion, he was treated as if he had been the worst and
vilest of mankind. Then he was put to a kind of death, that none but the
worst sort of malefactors were wont to suffer, those that were most
abject in their persons, and guilty of the blackest crimes. And he
suffered as though guilty from God himself, by reason of our guilt
imputed to him. For he who knew no sin, was made sin for us. He was made
subject to wrath, as if he had been sinful himself. He was made a curse
for us.
Christ never so greatly manifested his hatred of sin, as against God, as
in his dying to take away the dishonor that sin had done to God. Yet
never was he to such a degree subject to the terrible effects of God’s
hatred of sin, and wrath against it, as he was then. In this appears
those diverse excellencies meeting in Christ, viz. love to God, and
grace to sinners.
5. He never was so dealt with, as unworthy, as in his last sufferings,
and yet it is chiefly on account of them that he is accounted worthy. He
was therein dealt with as if he had not been worthy to live: they cry
out, “Away with him! away with him! Crucify him.” John 19:15. And they
prefer Barabbas before him. And he suffered from the Father, as one
whose demerits were infinite, by reason of our demerits that were laid
upon him. And yet it was especially by that act of his subjecting
himself to those sufferings, that he merited, and on the account of
which chiefly he was accounted worthy of the glory of his exaltation.
Phil. 2:8, 9, “He humbled himself, and became obedient unto death;
wherefore God hath highly exalted him.” And we see that it is on this
account chiefly, that he is extolled as worthy by saints and angels in
the context: “Worthy,” say they, “is the Lamb that was slain.” This
shows an admirable conjunction in him of infinite dignity, and infinite
condescension and love to the infinitely unworthy.
6. Christ in his last sufferings suffered most extremely from those
towards whom he was then manifesting his greatest act of love. He never
suffered so much from his Father (though not from any hatred to him, but
from hatred to our sins), for he then forsook him, or took away the
comforts of his presence. Then “it pleased the Lord to bruise him, and
put him to grief.” as Isa. 53:10. And yet he never gave so great a
manifestation of love to God as then, as has been already observed. So
Christ never suffered so much from the hands of men as he did then, and
yet never was in so high an exercise of love to men. He never was so
ill-treated by his disciples, who were so unconcerned about his
sufferings that they would not watch with him one hour in his agony. And
when he was apprehended, all forsook him and fled, except Peter, who
denied him with oaths and curses. And yet then he was suffering,
shedding his blood, and pouring out his soul unto death for them. Yea,
he probably was then shedding his blood for some of them that shed his
blood, for whom he prayed while they were crucifying him; and who were
probably afterwards brought home to Christ by Peter’s preaching.
(Compare Luke 23:34; Acts 2:23, 36, 37, 41, and chap. 3:17. and chap.
4:4.) This shows an admirable meeting of justice and grace in the
redemption of Christ.
7. It was in Christ’s last sufferings, above all, that he was delivered
up to the power of his enemies, and yet by these, above all, he obtained
victory over his enemies. Christ never was so in his enemies’ hands, as
in the time of his last sufferings. They sought his life before, but
from time to time they were restrained, and Christ escaped out of their
hands. This reason is given for it: that his time was not yet come. But
now they were suffered to work their will upon him, he was in a great
degree delivered up to the malice and cruelty of both wicked men and
devils. And therefore when Christ’s enemies came to apprehend him, he
says to them, Luke 22:53, “When I was daily with you in the temple, ye
stretched forth no hand against me: but this is your hour, and the power
of darkness.”
And yet it was principally by means of those sufferings that he
conquered and overthrew his enemies. Christ never so effectually bruised
Satan’s head, as when Satan bruised his heel. The weapon with which
Christ warred against the devil, and obtained a most complete victory
and glorious triumph over him, was the cross, the instrument and weapon
with which he thought he had overthrown Christ, and brought on him
shameful destruction. Col. 2:14, 15, “Blotting out the handwriting of
ordinances, — nailing it to his cross: and having spoiled principalities
and powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it.”
In his last sufferings, Christ sapped the very foundations of Satan’s
kingdom. He conquered his enemies in their own territories, and beat
them with their own weapons; as David cut off Goliath’s head with his
own sword. The devil had, as it were, swallowed up Christ, as the whale
did Jonah. But it was deadly poison to him: he gave him a mortal wound
in his own bowels. He was soon sick of his morsel, and was forced to do
by him as the whale did by Jonah. To this day he is heart-sick of what
he then swallowed as his prey. In those sufferings of Christ was laid
the foundation of all that glorious victory he has already obtained over
Satan, in the overthrow of his heathenish kingdom in the Roman empire,
and all the success the gospel has had since, and also of all his future
and still more glorious victory that is to be obtained in the earth.
Thus Samson’s riddle is most eminently fulfilled, Jdg. 14:14, “Out of
the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth sweetness.”
And thus the true Samson does more towards the destruction of his
enemies at his death than in his life, in yielding up himself to death,
he pulls down the temple of Dagon, and destroys many thousands of his
enemies, even while they are making themselves sport in his sufferings.
So he whose type was the ark, pulls down Dagon, and breaks off his head
and hands in his own temple, even while he is brought in there as
Dagon’s captive. (1 Sam. 5:1-4)
Thus Christ appeared at the same time, and in the same act, as both a
lion and a lamb. He appeared as a lamb in the hands of his cruel
enemies, as a lamb in the paws and between the devouring jaws of a
roaring lion. Yea, he was a lamb actually slain by this lion: and yet at
the same time, as the Lion of the tribe of Judah, he conquers and
triumphs over Satan, destroying his own devourer, as Samson did the lion
that roared upon him, when he rent him as he would a kid. And in nothing
has Christ appeared so much as a lion, in glorious strength destroying
his enemies, as when he was brought as a lamb to the slaughter. In his
greatest weakness he was most strong; and when he suffered most from his
enemies, he brought the greatest confusion on his enemies. — Thus this
admirable conjunction of diverse excellencies was manifest in Christ, in
his offering up himself to God in his last sufferings.
Fourth, it is still manifest in his acts, in his present state of
exaltation in heaven. Indeed, in his exalted state, he most eminently
appears in manifestation of those excellencies, on the account of which
he is compared to a lion; but still he appears as a lamb; Rev. 14:1,
“And I looked, and lo, a Lamb stood on mount Sion;” as in his state of
humiliation he chiefly appeared as a lamb, and yet did not appear
without manifestation of his divine majesty and power, as the Lion of
the tribe of Judah. Though Christ be now at the right-hand of God,
exalted as King of heaven, and Lord of the universe, yet as he still is
in the human nature, he still excels in humility. Though the man Christ
Jesus be the highest of all creatures in heaven, yet he as much excels
them all in humility as he does in glory and dignity, for none sees so
much of the distance between God and him as he does. And though he now
appears in such glorious majesty and dominion in heaven, yet he appears
as a lamb in his condescending, mild, and sweet treatment of his saints
there. For he is a Lamb still, even amidst the throne of his exaltation,
and he that is the Shepherd of the whole flock is himself a Lamb, and
goes before them in heaven as such. Rev. 7:17, “For the Lamb, which is
in the midst of the throne, shall feed them, and shall lead them unto
living fountains of waters, and God shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes.” Though in heaven every knee bows to him, and though the angels
fall down before him adoring him, yet he treats his saints with infinite
condescension, mildness, and endearment. And in his acts towards the
saints on earth, he still appears as a lamb, manifesting exceeding love
and tenderness in his intercession for them, as one that has had
experience of affliction and temptation. He has not forgot what these
things are, nor has he forgot how to pity those that are subject to
them. And he still manifests his lamb-like excellencies, in his dealings
with his saints on earth, in admirable forbearance, love, gentleness,
and compassion. Behold him instructing, supplying, supporting, and
comforting them, often coming to them and manifesting himself to them by
his Spirit, that he may sup with them, and they with him. Behold him
admitting them to sweet communion, enabling them with boldness and
confidence to come to him, and solacing their hearts. And in heaven
Christ still appears, as it were, with the marks of his wounds upon him,
and so appears as a Lamb as it had been slain. [This is] as he was
represented in vision to St. John, in the text, when he appeared to open
the book sealed with seven seals, which is part of the glory of his
exaltation.
Fifth, and lastly, this admirable conjunction of excellencies will be
manifest in Christ’s acts at the last judgment. He then, above all other
times, will appear as the Lion of the tribe of Judah in infinite
greatness and majesty, when he shall come in the glory of his Father,
with all the holy angels, and the earth shall tremble before him, and
the hills shall melt. This is he (Rev. 20:11) “that shall sit on a great
white throne, before whose face the earth and heaven shall flee away.”
He will then appear in the most dreadful and amazing manner to the
wicked. The devils tremble at the thought of that appearance, and when
it shall be, the kings, and the great men, and the rich men, and the
chief captains, and the mighty men, and every bond-man, and every
free-man, shall hide themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the
mountains. [They] shall cry to the mountains and rocks to fall on them,
to hide them from the face and wrath of the Lamb. And none can declare
or conceive of the amazing manifestations of wrath in which he will then
appear towards these, or the trembling and astonishment, the shrieking
and gnashing of teeth, with which they shall stand before his
judgment-seat, and receive the terrible sentence of his wrath.
And yet he will at the same time appear as a Lamb to his saints. He will
receive them as friends and brethren, treating them with infinite
mildness and love. There shall be nothing in him terrible to them, but
towards them he will clothe himself wholly with sweetness and
endearment. The church shall be then admitted to him as his bride: that
shall be her wedding-day. The saints shall all be sweetly invited to
come with him to inherit the kingdom, and reign in it with him to all
eternity.
APPLICATION
I. From this doctrine we may learn one reason why Christ is called by
such a variety of names, and held forth under such a variety of
representations, in Scripture. It is the better to signify and exhibit
to us that variety of excellencies that meet together and are conjoined
in him. Many appellations are mentioned together in one verse Isa. 9:6,
“For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government
shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful,
Counselor, the mighty God, the everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.”
It shows a wonderful conjunction of excellencies, that the same person
should be a Son, born and given, and yet be the everlasting Father,
without beginning or end, [and] that he should be a Child and yet be he
whose name is Counselor, and the mighty God. Well may his name, in whom
such things are conjoined, be called Wonderful.
By reason of the same wonderful conjunction, Christ is represented by a
great variety of sensible things, that are on some account excellent.
Thus in some places he is called a Sun, as Mal. 4:2, in others a Star,
Num. 24:17. And he is especially represented by the morning star, as
being that which excels all other stars in brightness, and is the
forerunner of the day, Rev. 22:16. And, as in our text, he is compared
to a lion in one verse, and a lamb in the next, so sometimes he is
compared to a roe or young hart, another creature most diverse from a
lion. So in some places he is called a rock, in others he is compared to
a pearl. In some places he is called a man of war, and the Captain of
our Salvation, in other places he is represented as a bridegroom. In the
second chapter of Canticles, the first verse, he is compared to a rose
and a lily, that are sweet and beautiful flowers; in the next verse but
one, he is compared to a tree bearing sweet fruit. In Isaiah 53:2 he is
called a Root out of a dry ground, but elsewhere, instead of that, he is
called the Tree of Life, that grows (not in a dry or barren ground, but)
“in the midst of the paradise of God.” Rev. 2:7.
II. Let the consideration of this wonderful meeting of diverse
excellencies in Christ induce you to accept of him, and close with him
as your Savior. As all manner of excellencies meet in him, so there are
concurring in him all manner of arguments and motives, to move you to
choose him for your Savior, and everything that tends to encourage poor
sinners to come and put their trust in him: his fullness and
all-sufficiency as a Savior gloriously appear in that variety of
excellencies that has been spoken of.
Fallen man is in a state of exceeding great misery, and is helpless in
it. He is a poor weak creature, like an infant cast out in its blood in
the day that it is born. But Christ is the Lion of the tribe of Judah:
he is strong, though we are weak; he has prevailed to do that for us
which no creature else could do. Fallen man is a mean despicable
creature, a contemptible worm, but Christ, who has undertaken for us, is
infinitely honorable and worthy. Fallen man is polluted, but Christ is
infinitely holy; fallen man is hateful, but Christ is infinitely lovely.
Fallen man is the object of God’s indignation, but Christ is infinitely
dear to him. We have dreadfully provoked God, but Christ has performed
that righteousness which is infinitely precious in God’s eyes.
And here is not only infinite strength and infinite worthiness, but
infinite condescension, and love and mercy, as great as power and
dignity. If you are a poor, distressed sinner, whose heart is ready to
sink for fear that God never will have mercy on you, you need not be
afraid to go to Christ, for fear that he is either unable or unwilling
to help you. Here is a strong foundation, and an inexhaustible treasure,
to answer the necessities of your poor soul. Here is infinite grace and
gentleness to invite and embolden a poor, unworthy, fearful soul to come
to it. If Christ accepts of you, you need not fear but that you will be
safe, for he is a strong Lion for your defense. And if you come, you
need not fear but that you shall be accepted, for he is like a Lamb to
all that come to him, and receives then with infinite grace and
tenderness. It is true he has awful majesty, he is the great God, and
infinitely high above you. But there is this to encourage and embolden
the poor sinner, that Christ is man as well as God. He is a creature, as
well as the Creator, and he is the most humble and lowly in heart of any
creature in heaven or earth. This may well make the poor unworthy
creature bold in coming to him. You need not hesitate one moment; but
may run to him, and cast yourself upon him. You will certainly be
graciously and meekly received by him. Though he is a lion, he will only
be a lion to your enemies, but he will be a lamb to you. It could not
have been conceived, had it not been so in the person of Christ, that
there could have been so much in any Savior, that is inviting and
tending to encourage sinners to trust in him. Whatever your
circumstances are, you need not be afraid to come to such a Savior as
this. Be you never so wicked a creature, here is worthiness enough; be
you never so poor, and mean, and ignorant a creature, there is no danger
of being despised, for though he be so much greater than you, he is also
immensely more humble than you. Any one of you that is a father or
mother, will not despise one of your own children that comes to you in
distress: much less danger is there of Christ despising you, if you in
your heart come to him. Here let me a little expostulate with the poor,
burdened, distressed soul.
1. What are you afraid of, that you dare not venture your soul upon
Christ? Are you afraid that he cannot save you: that he is not strong
enough to conquer the enemies of your soul? But how can you desire one
stronger than the “mighty God”? as Christ is called, Isa. 9:6. Is there
need of greater than infinite strength? Are you afraid that he will not
be willing to stoop so low as to take any gracious notice of you? But
then, look on him, as he stood in the ring of soldiers, exposing his
blessed face to be buffeted and spit upon by them! Behold him bound with
his back uncovered to those that smote him! And behold him hanging on
the cross! Do you think that he that had condescension enough to stoop
to these things, and that for his crucifiers, will be unwilling to
accept of you if you come to him? Or, are you afraid that if he does
accept you, that God the Father will not accept of him for you? But
consider, will God reject his own Son, in whom his infinite delight is,
and has been, from all eternity, and who is so united to him, that if he
should reject him he would reject himself?
2. What is there that you can desire should be in a Savior, that is not
in Christ? Or, wherein should you desire a Savior should be otherwise
than Christ is? What excellency is there wanting? What is there that is
great or good? What is there that is venerable or winning? What is there
that is adorable or endearing, or what can you think of that would be
encouraging, which is not to be found in the person of Christ? Would you
have your Savior to be great and honorable, because you are not willing
to be beholden to a mean person? And is not Christ a person honorable
enough to be worthy that you should be dependent on him? Is he not a
person high enough to be appointed to so honorable a work as your
salvation? Would you not only have a Savior of high degree, but would
you have him, notwithstanding his exaltation and dignity, to be made
also of low degree: that he might have experience of afflictions and
trials, [and] that he might learn by the things that he has suffered, to
pity them that suffer and are tempted? And has not Christ been made low
enough for you? and has he not suffered enough? Would you not only have
him possess experience of the afflictions you now suffer, but also of
that amazing wrath that you fear hereafter, that he may know how to pity
those that are in danger, and afraid of it? This Christ has had
experience of, which experience gave him a greater sense of it, a
thousand times, than you have, or any man living has. Would you have
your Savior to be one who is near to God, that so his mediation might be
prevalent with him? And can you desire him to be nearer to God than
Christ is, who is his only-begotten Son, of the same essence with the
Father? And would you not only have him near to God, but also near to
you, that you may have free access to him? And would you have him nearer
to you than to be in the same nature: united to you by a spiritual
union, so close as to be fitly represented by the union of the wife to
the husband, of the branch to the vine, of the member to the head — yea,
so as to be one spirit? For so he will be united to you, if you accept
of him. Would you have a Savior that has given some great and
extraordinary testimony of mercy and love to sinners, by something that
he has done, as well as by what he says? And can you think or conceive
of greater things than Christ has done? Was it not a great thing for
him, who was God, to take upon him human nature: to be not only God, but
man thenceforward to all eternity? But would you look upon suffering for
sinners to be a yet greater testimony of love to sinners, than merely
doing, though it be ever so extraordinary a thing that he has done? And
would you desire that a Savior should suffer more than Christ has
suffered for sinners? What is there wanting, or what would you add if
you could, to make him more fit to be your Savior? But further, to
induce you to accept of Christ as your Savior, consider two things
particularly.
(1.) How much Christ appears as the Lamb of God in his invitations to
you to come to him and trust in him. With what sweet grace and kindness
does he, from time to time, call and invite you, as Pro. 8:4, “Unto you,
O men, I call, and my voice is to the sons of men.” And Isa. 55:1-3,
“Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath
no money, come ye, buy and eat; yea come, buy wine and milk without
money, and without price.” How gracious is he here in inviting everyone
that thirsts, and in so repeating his invitation over and over, “Come ye
to the waters, come, buy and eat; yea come!” Mark the excellency of that
entertainment which he invites you to accept of; “Come, buy wine and
milk!” your poverty, having nothing to pay for it, shall be no
objection, — “Come, he that hath no money, come without money, and
without price!” What gracious arguments and expostulations he uses with
you! “Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your
labor for that which satisfieth not? Hearken diligently unto me, and eat
ye that which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness.” As
much as to say [that] it is altogether needless for you to continue
laboring and toiling for that which can never serve your turn, seeking
rest in the world, and in your own righteousness: — I have made abundant
provision for you, of that which is really good, and will fully satisfy
your desires, and answer your end, and stand ready to accept of you: you
need not be afraid. If you will come to me, I will engage to see all
your wants supplied, and you made a happy creature. As he promises in
the third verse, “Incline your ear, and come unto me: Hear, and your
soul shall live, and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even
the sure mercies of David.” And so Pro. 9 at the beginning. How gracious
and sweet is the invitation there! “Whoso is simple, let him turn in
hither;” let you be never so poor, ignorant, and blind a creature, you
shall be welcome. And in the following words, Christ sets forth the
provision that he has made for you, “Come, eat of my bread, and drink of
the wine which I have mingled.” You are in a poor famishing state, and
have nothing wherewith to feed your perishing soul; you have been
seeking something, but yet remain destitute. Hearken, how Christ calls
you to eat of his bread, and to drink of the wine that he has mingled!
And how much like a lamb does Christ appear in Mat. 11:28-30, “Come unto
me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in
heart, and ye shall find rest to your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my
burden is light.” O thou poor distressed soul! whoever thou art,
consider that Christ mentions thy very case, when he calls to them who
labor and are heavy laden! How he repeatedly promises you rest if you
come to him! In the 28th verse he says, “I will give you rest.” And in
the 29th verse, “Ye shall find rest to your souls.” This is what you
want. This is the thing you have been so long in vain seeking after. O
how sweet would rest be to you, if you could but obtain it! Come to
Christ, and you shall obtain it. And hear how Christ, to encourage you,
represents himself as a lamb! He tells you, that he is meek and lowly in
heart, and are you afraid to come to such a one! And again, Rev. 3:20,
“Behold, I stand at the door and knock: if any man hear my voice, and
open the door, I will come in to him, and I will sup with him and he
with me.” Christ condescends not only to call you to him, but he comes
to you. He comes to your door, and there knocks. He might send an
officer and seize you as a rebel and vile malefactor, but instead of
that, he comes and knocks at your door, and seeks that you would receive
him into your house, as your Friend and Savior. And he not only knocks
at your door, but he stands there waiting, while you are backward and
unwilling. And not only so, but he makes promises what he will do for
you, if you will admit him, what privileges he will admit you to; he
will sup with you, and you with him. And again, Rev. 22:16, 17, “I am
the root and the offspring of David, and the bright and morning star.
And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth, say,
come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take
of the water of life freely.” How does Christ here graciously set before
you his own winning attractive excellency! And how does he condescend to
declare to you not only his own invitation, but the invitation of the
Spirit and the bride, if by any means he might encourage you to come!
And how does he invite everyone that will, that they may “take of the
water of life freely,” that they may take it as a free gift, however
precious it be, and though it be the water of life.
(2.) If you do come to Christ, he will appear as a Lion, in his glorious
power and dominion, to defend you. All those excellencies of his, in
which he appears as a lion, shall be yours, and shall be employed for
you in your defense, for your safety, and to promote your glory; he will
be as a lion to fight against your enemies. He that touches you, or
offends you, will provoke his wrath, as he that stirs up a lion. Unless
your enemies can conquer this Lion, they shall not be able to destroy or
hurt you. Unless they are stronger than he, they shall not be able to
hinder your happiness. Isa. 31:4, “For thus hath the Lord spoken unto
me, Like as the lion and the young lion roaring on his prey, when a
multitude of shepherds is called forth against him, he will not be
afraid of their voice, nor abase himself for the noise of them; so shall
the Lord of hosts come down to fight for mount Zion, and for the hill
thereof.”
III. Let what has been said be improved to induce you to love the Lord
Jesus Christ, and choose him for your friend and portion. As there is
such an admirable meeting of diverse excellencies in Christ, so there is
everything in him to render him worthy of your love and choice, and to
win and engage it. Whatsoever there is or can be desirable in a friend,
is in Christ, and that to the highest degree that can be desired.
Would you choose for a friend a person of great dignity? It is a thing
taking with men to have those for their friends who are much above them,
because they look upon themselves honored by the friendship of such.
Thus, how taking would it be with an inferior maid to be the object of
the dear love of some great and excellent prince. But Christ is
infinitely above you, and above all the princes of the earth, for he is
the King of kings. So honorable a person as this offers himself to you,
in the nearest and dearest friendship.
And would you choose to have a friend not only great but good? In Christ
infinite greatness and infinite goodness meet together, and receive
luster and glory one from another. His greatness is rendered lovely by
his goodness. The greater anyone is without goodness, so much the
greater evil. But when infinite goodness is joined with greatness, it
renders it a glorious and adorable greatness. So, on the other hand, his
infinite goodness receives luster from his greatness. He that is of
great understanding and ability, and is withal of a good and excellent
disposition, is deservedly more esteemed than a lower and lesser being,
with the same kind inclination and good will. Indeed goodness is
excellent in whatever subject it be found. It is beauty and excellency
itself, and renders all excellent that are possessed of it, and yet most
excellent when joined with greatness. The very same excellent qualities
of gold render the body in which they are inherent more precious, and of
greater value, when joined with greater than when with lesser
dimensions. And how glorious is the sight, to see him who is the great
Creator and supreme Lord of heaven and earth, full of condescension,
tender pity and mercy, towards the mean and unworthy! His almighty
power, and infinite majesty and self-sufficiency, render his exceeding
love and grace the more surprising. And how do his condescension and
compassion endear his majesty, power, and dominion, and render those
attributes pleasant, that would otherwise be only terrible! Would you
not desire that your friend, though great and honorable, should be of
such condescension and grace, and so to have the way opened to free
access to him, that his exaltation above you might not hinder your free
enjoyment of his friendship? — And would you choose not only that the
infinite greatness and majesty of your friend should be, as it were,
mollified and sweetened with condescension and grace, but would you also
desire to have your friend brought nearer to you? Would you choose a
friend far above you, and yet as it were upon a level with you too?
Though it be taking with men to have a near and dear friend of superior
dignity, yet there is also an inclination in them to have their friend a
sharer with them in circumstances. Thus is Christ. Though he be the
great God, yet he has, as it were, brought himself down to be upon a
level with you, so as to become man as you are, that he might not only
be your Lord, but your brother, and that he might be the more fit to be
a companion for such a worm of the dust. This is one end of Christ’s
taking upon him man’s nature, that his people might be under advantages
for a more familiar converse with him, than the infinite distance of the
divine nature would allow of. And upon this account the church longed
for Christ’s incarnation, Song 8:1, “O that thou wert my brother that
sucked the breast of my mother! when I should find thee without, I would
kiss thee, yea, I should not be despised.” One design of God in the
gospel, is to bring us to make God the object of our undivided respect,
that he may engross our regard every way, that whatever natural
inclination there is in our souls, he may be the center of it: that God
may be all in all. But there is an inclination in the creature, not only
to the adoration of a Lord and Sovereign, but to complacence in some one
as a friend, to love and delight in some one that may be conversed with
as a companion. And virtue and holiness do not destroy or weaken this
inclination of our nature. But so has God contrived in the affair of our
redemption, that a divine person may be the object even of this
inclination of our nature. And in order hereto, such a one is come down
to us, and has taken our nature, and is become one of us, and calls
himself our friend, brother, and companion. Psa. 122:8, “For my brethren
and companions’ sake, will I now say, Peace be within thee.”
But is it not enough in order to invite and encourage you to free access
to a friend so great and high, that he is one of infinite condescending
grace, and also has taken your own nature, and is become man? But would
you, further to embolden and win you, have him a man of wonderful
meekness and humility? Why, such a one is Christ! He is not only become
man for you, but far the meekest and most humble of all men, the
greatest instance of these sweet virtues that ever was, or will be. And
besides these, he has all other human excellencies in the highest
perfection. These, indeed, are no proper addition to his divine
excellencies. Christ has no more excellency in his person, since his
incarnation, than he had before, for divine excellency is infinite, and
cannot be added to. Yet his human excellencies are additional
manifestations of his glory and excellency to us, and are additional
recommendations of him to our esteem and love, who are of finite
comprehension. Though his human excellencies are but communications and
reflections of his divine. Though this light, as reflected, falls
infinitely short of the divine fountain of light in its immediate glory,
yet the reflection shines not without its proper advantages, as
presented to our view and affection. The glory of Christ in the
qualifications of his human nature, appears to us in excellencies that
are of our own kind, and are exercised in our own way and manner, and so
in some respects, are peculiarly fitted to invite our acquaintance and
draw our affection. The glory of Christ as it appears in his divinity,
though far brighter, more dazzles our eyes, and exceeds the strength of
our sight or our comprehension. But as it shines in the human
excellencies of Christ, it is brought more to a level with our
conceptions, and suitableness to our nature and manner, yet retaining a
semblance of the same divine beauty, and a savor of the same divine
sweetness. But as both divine and human excellencies meet together in
Christ, they set off and recommend each other to us. It tends to endear
the divine majesty and holiness of Christ to us, that these are
attributes of one in our nature, one of us who is become our brother,
and is the meekest and humblest of men. It encourages us to look upon
these divine perfections, however high and great; since we have some
near concern in and liberty freely to enjoy them. And on the other hand,
how much more glorious and surprising do the meekness, the humility,
obedience, resignation, and other human excellencies of Christ appear,
when we consider that they are in so great a person, as the eternal Son
of God, the Lord of heaven and earth!
By your choosing Christ for your friend and portion, you will obtain
these two infinite benefits.
1. Christ will give himself to you, with all those various excellencies
that meet in him, to your full and everlasting enjoyment. He will ever
after treat you as his dear friend, and you shall ere long be where he
is, and shall behold his glory, and dwell with him, in most free and
intimate communion and enjoyment.
When the saints get to heaven, they shall not merely see Christ, and
have to do with him as subjects and servants with a glorious and
gracious Lord and Sovereign, but Christ will entertain them as friends
and brethren. This we may learn from the manner of Christ’s conversing
with his disciples here on earth: though he was their sovereign Lord,
and did not refuse, but required, their supreme respect and adoration,
yet he did not treat them as earthly sovereigns are wont to do their
subjects. He did not keep them at an awful distance, but all along
conversed with them with the most friendly familiarity, as a father
amongst a company of children, yea, as with brethren. So he did with the
twelve, and so he did with Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. He told his
disciples that he did not call them servants, but friends. We read of
one of them that leaned on his bosom, and doubtless he will not treat
his disciples with less freedom and endearment in heaven. He will not
keep them at a greater distance for his being in a state of exaltation,
but he will rather take them into a state of exaltation with him. This
will be the improvement Christ will make of his own glory, to make his
beloved friends partakers with him, to glorify them in his glory, as he
says to his Father, John 17:22, 23, “And the glory which thou hast given
me, have I given them, that they may be one, even as we are one I in
them,” etc. We are to consider, that though Christ is greatly exalted,
yet he is exalted, not as a private person for himself only, but as his
people’s head. He is exalted in their name, and upon their account, as
the first fruits, and as representing the whole harvest. He is not
exalted that he may be at a greater distance from them, but that they
may be exalted with him. The exaltation and honor of the head is not to
make a greater distance between the head and the members, but the
members have the same relation and union with the head they had before,
and are honored with the head. Instead of the distance being greater,
the union shall be nearer and more perfect. When believers get to
heaven, Christ will conform them to himself, as he is set down in his
Father’s throne, so they shall sit down with him on his throne, and
shall in their measure be made like him.
When Christ was going to heaven, he comforted his disciples with the
thought that after a while, he would come again and take them to
himself, that they might be with him. And we are not to suppose that
when the disciples got to heaven, they found him keeping a greater
distance than he used to do. No, doubtless, he embraced them as friends,
and welcomed them to his and their Father’s house, and to his and their
glory. They who had been his friends in this world, who had been
together with him here, and had together partaken of sorrows and
troubles, are now welcomed by him to rest, and to partake of glory with
him. He took them and led them into his chambers, and showed them all
his glory, as he prayed, John 17:24, “Father, I will that they also whom
thou hast given me, be with me, that they may behold the glory which
thou hast given me.” And he led them to his living fountains of waters,
and made them partake of his delights, as he prays John 17:13, “That my
joy may be fulfilled in themselves,” and set them down with him at his
table in his kingdom, and made them partake with him of his dainties,
according to his promise, Luke 22:30, and led them into his banqueting
house, and made them to drink new wine with him in the kingdom of his
heavenly Father, as he foretold them when he instituted the Lord’s
supper, Mat. 26:29.
Yea the saints’ conversation with Christ in heaven shall not only be as
intimate, and their access to him as free, as of the disciples on earth,
but in many respects much more so. For in heaven, that vital union shall
be perfect, which is exceeding imperfect here. While the saints are in
this world, there are great remains of sin and darkness to separate or
disunite them from Christ, which shall then all be removed. This is not
a time for that full acquaintance, and those glorious manifestations of
love, which Christ designs for his people hereafter; which seems to be
signified by his speech to Mary Magdalene, when ready to embrace him
[and] when she met him after his resurrection; John 20:17, “Jesus saith
unto her, Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended to my Father.”
When the saints shall see Christ’s glory and exaltation in heaven, it
will indeed possess their hearts with the greater admiration and adoring
respect, but it will not awe them into any separation, but will serve
only to heighten their surprise and joy, when they find Christ
condescending to admit them to such intimate access, and so freely and
fully communicating himself to them. So that if we choose Christ for our
friend and portion, we shall hereafter be so received to him, that there
shall be nothing to hinder the fullest enjoyment of him, to the
satisfying the utmost cravings of our souls. We may take our full swing
at gratifying our spiritual appetite after these holy pleasures. Christ
will then say, as in Song 5:1, “Eat, O friends, drink, yea, drink
abundantly O beloved.” And this shall be our entertainment to all
eternity! There shall never be any end of this happiness, or anything to
interrupt our enjoyment of it, or in the least to molest us in it!
2. By your being united to Christ, you will have a more glorious union
with and enjoyment of God the Father, than otherwise could be. For
hereby the saints’ relation to God becomes much nearer: they are the
children of God in a higher manner than otherwise could be. For, being
members of God’s own Son, they are in a sort partakers of his relation
to the Father. They are not only sons of God by regeneration, but by a
kind of communion in the sonship of the eternal Son. This seems to be
intended, Gal. 4:4-6, “God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made
under the law, to redeem them that are under the law, that we might
receive the adoption of sons. And because ye are sons, God hath sent
forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.” The
church is the daughter of God, not only as he has begotten her by his
Word and Spirit, but as she is the spouse of his eternal Son.
So we being members of the Son, are partakers in our measure of the
Father’s love to the Son, and complacence in him. John 17:23, “I in
them, and thou in me, — Thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me.” And
verse 26, “That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them.”
And chap. 16:27, “The Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved
me, and have believed that I came out from God.” So we shall, according
to our capacities, be partakers of the Son’s enjoyment of God, and have
his joy fulfilled in ourselves, John 17:13. And by this means we shall
come to an immensely higher, more intimate and full enjoyment of God,
than otherwise could have been. For there is doubtless an infinite
intimacy between the Father and the Son which is expressed by his being
in the bosom of the Father. And saints being in him, shall, in their
measure and manner, partake with him in it, and of the blessedness of
it.
And thus is the affair of our redemption ordered, that thereby we are
brought to an immensely more exalted kind of union with God, and
enjoyment of him, both the Father and the Son, than otherwise could have
been. For Christ being united to the human nature, we have advantage for
a more free and full enjoyment of him, than we could have had if he had
remained only in the divine nature. So again, we being united to a
divine person, as his members, can have a more intimate union and
intercourse with God the Father, who is only in the divine nature, than
otherwise could be. Christ, who is a divine person, by taking on him our
nature, descends from the infinite distance and height above us, and is
brought nigh to us, whereby we have advantage for the full enjoyment of
him. And, on the other hand, we, by being in Christ a divine person, do
as it were ascend up to God, through the infinite distance, and have
hereby advantage for the full enjoyment of him also.
This was the design of Christ, that he and his Father, and his people,
might all be united in one. John 17:21-23, “That they all may be one, as
thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee; that they also may be one in us;
that the world may believe that thou hast sent me. And the glory which
thou hast given me, I have given them, that they may be one, even as we
are one; I in them and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in
one.” Christ has brought it to pass, that those whom the Father has
given him should be brought into the household of God, that he, his
Father, and his people should be as one society, one family, [and] that
the church should be as it were admitted into the society of the blessed
Trinity.
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