Wednesday, December 25, 2013

The Angel was Sent

.....The angel was sent with the most interesting
news that could be made known to
mankind; not to Caesar, or to Herod, or to
the High Priest, but to obscure and lowly
shepherds. The Lord seeth not as man seeth;
the petty distinctions that obtain among men
are not regarded by him. He is equally near
to them that fear him in every situation of
life, as the sun shines, as freely and fully, upon
a cottage as upon a palace. These shepherds
were doubtless, of the number of the
happy few, who, in that time of degeneracy,
were waiting and longing for the consolation
of Israel. The heads of the Jewish people
found their consolation in their rank and
wealth, and in the respect paid them by the
vulgar. These things usually add to the idea
of self-importance, and feed those tempers
which are most displeasing to the Lord, and
which indispose the mind to the reception of
the gospel, or to any due inquiry concerning
it. And thus, in fact from age to age, it has
generally been hidden from the wise and the
great, and revealed unto babes. The magi,
or wise men who lived in the east, where the
knowledge of astronomy obtained, but where
the scripture was not known, were guided to
Messiah by the appearance of a new star or
meteor. The shepherds, who were acquainted
with the prophecies concerning Messiah,
were informed of their accomplishment by an
angel. Thus the Lord was pleased to suit
the different manner of making known his
will, to the previous situation of the persons.

II. The message of the angel, though
concise, was comprehensive and full. It contained
the Fact, "Unto you is born this day"—the Place,
"In the city of David," that is, in Bethlehem, so called,
because David likewise had been born there
(Luke ii. 4.)—the Office of Messiah,
"A Saviour"—his Name, Honour, and Character,
"Christ," or the Anointed; "the Lord," the head
and king of Israel, and of the church, the Lord
of all......

For how unlikely would it seem to a merely
human judgment, that the Saviour of sinners,
the promised Messiah, the Lord of all, should
be a babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, and
lying in a manger. Yet thus it was. Though rich
in himself, he became poor for our sakes,
2 Cor. viii. 9. On this account, as the scriptures
had foretold, he was despised and rejected of
men. Though he came to his own, as a Lord
or Master to his own house; yet, coming in
this manner, his own professed servants, who
pretended that they were longing and waiting
for him, slighted and opposed him; preferred
a notorious malefactor to him, and put him to
death as an impostor and blasphemer. But
the shepherds reasoned not through unbelief,
and therefore they were not staggered: they
obeyed the message, they went, they saw, they
believed.
                         from a sermon by John Newton


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Have Seen a Great Light


by John Newton

THE SUN RISING UPON A DARK WORLD.
The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light; they
that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath
the light shined Isaiah, ix. 2.

Contrasts are suited to illustrate and strengthen the impression of
each other. The happiness of those, who, by faith in Messiah, are
brought into a state of peace, liberty, and comfort, is greatly enhanced
and heightened by the consideration of that previous state of misery
in which they once lived, and of the greater misery to which they were
justly exposed. They are not only made meet to be partakers of the
inheritance of the saints in light (Col. i. 12, 13), but they have been
delivered from the powers of darkness. Thus, while they have communion
with God as a father, they contemplate their privilege with a greater pleasure,
than they probably could do if they had never known a difference. They
remember a time when they were afar off, without hope, and without God
in the world; and they remember how carelessly they then trifled upon
the brink of destruction. In this deplorable and dangerous situation they
were found of the Lord, when they sought him not, Isa. lxv. 1. He
convinced, humbled, and pardoned them, and brought them near to
himself, into a state of adoption and communion by the blood of Jesus.
The admiration, gratitude, and love, which they feel for this undeserved
grace, gives them a more lively sense of the blessings they enjoy. Yea,
the thought of what they have been redeemed from (of which they will
then have a much clearer perception than at present) will add to their joys
in heaven, and inspire such a song of praise as will be peculiar to themselves,
and in which the holy angels, who never felt the stings of guilt, nor tasted
the sweetness of pardoning mercy, will not be able to join them. They are
accordingly represented, in the prophetical vision, as standing nearest to
the throne, and uniting in the noblest strains of praise to him who sitteth
upon it (Rev. v. 9—21), while the surrounding angels can only take part in
the chorus, and admire and adore, when they behold the brightest displays
of the glory of the wonder-working God, manifested in his love to worthless,
helpless sinners. These opposite ideas are joined in my text. The people
who are spoken of as rejoicing ina great light, were, till this light arose and
shone upon them, in darkness; walking, sitting, living in darkness, and in
the land of the shadow of death. That this passage refers to Messiah, we
have a direct proof. The evangelist refers it expressly to him, and points
out the time and manner of its literal accomplishment, Matthew iv. 15, 16.
I shall first consider the literal sense and completion of the prophecy, and
then shew how fitly it applies to the state of mankind at large, and to the
happy effects of the gospel of salvation;which, by the blessing of God,
has been the instrument of bringing multitudes of many nations, peoples,
and languages, out of a state of gross darkness, into marvellous light,
1 Pet. ii. 9.

I. Hebrew words (like many in our own language) have often more than
one signification. But only one sense can be expressed in a version.
And therefore interpreters and translators frequently differ. Which of the
different words, used to express the meaning of the same original term,
is most happily chosen, may be sometimes decided by the context. The
two words, in the first verse of this chapter, rendered lightly afflicted and
grievously afflicted, signify likewise, the one to think lightly of, to account
vile; and the other, to honour, to render honourable, and glorious. Both
these words occur in one verse, and are used in these senses, in the Lord's
message to Eli, "Them that honour me I will honour, and they that despise
me shall be lightly esteemed," 1 Sam. ii. 30. Had the same words been
thus rendered in the passage before us, the sense of both verses would,
I think, have been more plain, connected, and consistent to the following
purport, agreeable to the translation given by Vitringa, and the present
bishop of London. "Nevertheless there shall not be dimness (or darkness)
as in the time of her vexation or distress. He formerly debased (made light
or vile) the land of Zebulon and Naphtali but in the latter time he hath made
it glorious, even (the land) by the way of the sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee
of the Gentiles. (For) the people that walked in darkness have seen a great
light," &c.—Such was the afflicted and low state of Galilee previous to the
coming of Messiah; such was the exaltation and honour it derived from
his appearance.

1. The land allotted to the tribes of Issachar, Zebulon, and Naphtali, was
chiefly included in the province, which, upon a subsequent division of the
country, obtained the name of Galilee. The northern part of it, the inheritance
of Naphtali, was the boundary or frontier towards Syria, and had been
frequently vexed and afflicted, when the sins of Israel brought the armies
of their enemies upon them, as frontier countries usually suffer most in times
of invasion and war. Particularly this part of the land, called Galilee of the
Gentiles, was the first, and most  immediately exposed to the ravages of
Tiglath-Pileser and Sennacherib. And as the people there were likewise
more mixed with foreigners, and at the greatest distance from the capital,
Jerusalem, on these accounts Galilee was lightly esteemed by the Jews
themselves. They thought that no prophet could arise in Galilee, John vii. 52.
It even prejudiced Nathaniel against the first report he received of Jesus
as Messiah, that he lived, and was generally supposed (by those who
were content to be governed by popular rumour, without enquiring
attentively for themselves) to have been born in Galilee. He asked
with an appearance of surprise, "Can any good thing come out of
Nazareth?" John i. 46. They were accounted a rude, unpolished,
provincial people. And therefore, when Peter would have denied any
acquaintance with his Lord, he was discovered to be a Galilean (Mark xiv. 70),
by his dialect and manner of speech.

2. This despised and least valued part of the land of Israel was the principal
scene of Messiah's life and ministry, insomuch that, as I have observed, he
was supposed to have been born there, a mistake which his enemies
industriously supported and made the most of; for those who could persuade
themselves that it was so in fact, would think themselves justified in rejecting
his claim, it being one undeniable mark of Messiah, given by the prophet
Micah, that he was to be born in Bethlehem of Judah, Micah v. 2. He was,
however, brought up at Nazareth, and lived for a time in Capernaum,
towns in Galilee, but both of so little repute, that, had they not been connected
with his history, it is not probable that their names would have been transmitted
to posterity.

3. But by his residence there, Galilee was honoured and ennobled. He himself
declared, that on this account, Chorazin, Betbsaida, and Capernaum (though
probably none of them were more than inconsiderable fishingtowns) were
exalted even to heaven, Matthew xi. 21—23. Those were highly privileged
places which our Lord condescended to visit in person; so likewise are those
places where he is pleased to send his gospel. I have observed formerly, and
I make no apology for repeating a truth so very important and so little attended
to, that the glorious gospel of the blessed God, when faithfully preached, and
thankfully received and improved, renders an obscure village more honourable,
and of more real consequence, than the metropolis of a great empire, where
this light shineth not. For what are the dark places of the earth, however
celebrated for numbers and opulence, for the monuments of ambition and
arts, but habitations of cruelty, infatuation, and misery!

4. Though Galilee was favoured with the scriptures, and with synagogue-worship,
and the inhabitants were a people who professed to know the God of Israel, it
was a land of darkness at the time of Messiah's appearance. Though they were
not idolaters, ignorance prevailed among them. The law and the prophets
were read in their synagogues, but we may believe to little good purpose,
while they were under the direction of perverse teachers, who substituted the
traditions of men for the commands of God. The single circumstance of keeping
herds of swine, as the Gadarenes did, seems a proof that the law of Moses was
but little regarded by them. They, as well as the people of Judea, were under the
guidance of the Scribes and Pharisees in their religious concerns, who were, if
I may use a modern phrase, the clergy of that time; and these, we are assured by
him who knew their hearts, were generally corrupted, blind leaders of the blind.
Yet they were held in ignorant admiration, and implicitly submitted to. From the
character of the public ministers of religion, we may, without great danger of mis-
take, infer the character of the people who are pleased and satisfied with their
ministrations. As the disciple cannot, ordinarily, be expected to be superior to
his master (Luke vi. 40), the religion of the scribes may be taken as a standard
of that of the Galileans, who were instructed by them; yet these were the people
among whom Messiah chiefly conversed; so that his enemies styled him a
Galilean and a Nazarene, as a mark of reproach and contempt. Many
of his apostles, perhaps the most of them, were Galileans likewise. He
seeth not as man seeth, 1 Sam. xvi. 7. The most of his immediate followers
while upon earth were such as men despised, on account of their situation,
rank, or callings; publicans and sinners, fishermen and Galileans. This
was, among other reasons, for the encouragement of the poor, the destitute,
the despised, the miserable, and the guilty, in succeeding ages, who should
desire to put their trust in his name and to implore his mercy. To those who
received him he was the light, the true light; he relieved them from the
ignorance, wickedness, and distress in which he found them. They, on
their parts, bore testimony to him. They saw and acknowledged his glory.
They felt his power, and devoted themselves to his service. Thus much for
the literal sense.

II. But this prophecy is not to be restrained to the first and more immediate
season of its accomplishment. The Lord speaks thus of Messiah in another
place: "It is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant, to raise up the
tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give thee
for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation to the ends of the
earth," Isaiah, xlix. 6. And there are many declarations of a like import. He
is still the light of the world (John viii. 12), though no longer visible and
conversant with men. By the influence and power of his Spirit, he is still
present wherever his gospel is known. This his word of grace and truth
he sends where he pleases, and with a discrimination not unlike that which
he observed when he was upon earth. The gospel is preached to the poor.
Courts and palaces are seldom favoured with it. While he passes by many
great cities, many habitations of the wise and wealthy, he is known in
villages and cottages. His condescension and favour to those who are
unnoticed by the world, cannot be too highly extolled. That the others are
excluded from the same benefits is more properly to be ascribed to their
obstinacy than to his will. They exclude themselves. He stands at the door
and knocks, Rev. iii. 20. His word is within their reach; his ministers are
within their call. They might easily enjoy every mean and help which the
gospel provides for sinners if they pleased, but they do not please. They
are either engaged in a round of sensual pleasure, or engrossed by studies
and pursuits which possess their hearts and fill up their thoughts and time,
so that they have neither leisure nor inclination to attend to the things
which pertain to their peace. Instead of inviting his gospel to them, they
too frequently employ their power and influence to discountenance, and,
if possible, to suppress it. They have their choice. The great and the gay
will not receive his message; it is therefore sent to the poor and to the
wretched, and they will hear it. Yet as he visited Jerusalem in person,
and taught there, so London likewise is favoured with the light of his gospel.
But alas! how few believe the report! They who do, experience the change
described in my text. Their darkness is changed into marvellous light.

Mankind, till enlightened by the word and Spirit of grace, are truly in a
state of darkness. Thick darkness is a vail which conceals from us, not
only distant, but the nearest objects. A man in the dark cannot perceive
either friend or enemy; he may be in great danger, yet think himself in
safety; or, if he thinks himself in danger, be unable to take any step for his
preservation, from a want of light. Thus, though God be our maker and
preserver, though in him we live, move, and have our being, though we
are surrounded with his presence, and proofs of his wisdom and goodness
are before us wherever we turn our eyes, yet we live without him in the world.
Equally ignorant are we of ourselves, of the proper happiness of our nature,
or how it is to be attained. We know neither the cause, nor the cure, nor the
consequences of our proneness to cleave to the dust, and of placing our
affection on inadequate and unsatisfying objects.

And if we suppose a person awakened to a conviction of the evil of sin,
and to understand that nothing less than the favour of God can make a
rational and immortal creature happy, still, without the gospel, he would
be in darkness and the shadow of death. His case may be compared to
that of a person shipwrecked upon some desert, inhospitable coast,
suffering great horrors and anxiety, from his exposedness to perish, by
hunger, by enemies, or wild beasts—who, if he saw, at no very great
distance, an island, and was, by some means, informed and assured, that
that island was the seat of safety, plenty, and pleasure; and that, if he was
once there, his dangers would all cease, and his utmost wishes be satisfied;
still, if there were neither bridge, nor boat, nor any means by which he
might arrive thither, to know that happiness was so near him, yet
inaccessible to him, would but aggravate his misery, and make his despair
more emphatically pungent. Miserable indeed must we be, if we clearly
perceived that only he, whose creatures we are, can make us happy;
and that, as sinners, we have forfeited his favour, and are utterly incapable
of regaining it, if we were left under these views, without any hope of relief.
Such must have been our situation sooner or later, if God, who is rich in
mercy, had not himself provided the means of reconciliation. For though
a hope of pardon is easily taken up by those who are ignorant of the
holiness of God, and the malignity of sin, yet nothing but a declaration
from himself, that there is forgiveness with him, can give peace to a
truly awakened conscience. But Jesus dispels this darkness, and brings
life and immortality to light by the gospel. For,

1. The office and agency of the Holy Spirit, so absolutely necessary to
make us duly sensible, either of our danger, or of the possibility of
scaping it, is entirely the effect of his mediation. The soul of man,
originally formed to be the temple of the living God, when defiled by
sin, was justly forsaken by its great inhabitant; and, since the fall,
answers the prophetical description given of Babylon: "It is become
the habitation of devils, the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
unclean and hateful bird," Rev. xviii. 2. If we ask, as with good reason we
may, How can the wise and holy God, who is of purer eyes than to behold
iniquity, and with whom evil cannot dwell, return to his sanctuary, thus
polluted and profaned? an answer is afforded in that gracious promise,
"I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean: from all
your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you: and I will take
away the stony heart, and I will give you an heart of flesh, and," in order
to this, "I will put my Spirit within you," Ezek. xxxvi. 25, 26. But the source
of this mercy is his sovereign love and purpose, to give the seed of the
woman, his only Son, to be the mediator of sinners. By his atonement, to be
manifested in due time, but which had a virtual influence from the beginning,
the Holy Spirit returned to dwell with men.

2. His obedience unto death, when revealed by the Holy Spirit to the
enlightened conscience, affords a clear and satisfactory discovery of
reconciliation with God: it shews, that, on his part, every hindrance to the
free exercise of mercy is thereby removed, the honour of his law
vindicated, and the demands of his justice answered. On our parts, by
opening a door of hope, it removes that enmity and obduracy of heart,
which are nourished by consciousness of guilt, and a secret foreboding of
deserved punishment. But when the dignity of the Redeemer's person,
the causes, nature, and design of his sufferings are understood, emotions
of admiration, love, and gratitude, till then unknown, are felt, and obstinate
sinners are made a willing people in this day of divine power.

3. The doctrine of the cross pours a light upon every subject and
circumstance in which we are concerned. It enlarges the mind, and forms
the judgment and taste, agreeable to the standard of truth, and the real
nature of things. It rectifies those prejudices and prepossessions which
dispose us to mistake good for evil, and evil for good (Isa. v. 20), to pursue
trifles with earnestness, and to trifle with things of the greatest importance.
In Jesus Christ crucified, all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are
at once both hidden and exhibited. This object the holy angels, whose
knowledge of the wonders in creation, without doubt, greatly surpasses our
conceptions, incessantly contemplate with delight, as affording the brightest
displays of the manifold wisdom of God, Eph. iii. 10. It is especially the
fountain of wisdom to sinners. They look unto him, and are enlightened.
The slight and partial thoughts they once entertained of the great God,
the mistaken judgment they formed of themselves, of their state and their
conduct, are corrected by their knowledge of the cross: from thence they
derive a solid hope, a humble spirit, just views of their duty and obligations,
and motives and prospects which animate them in a course of cheerful,
persevering obedience to the will of God.

4. In this way, God, as revealed in Christ, is apprehended and chosen, as
the chief and proper good of the soul. Thus the poor are enriched with the
pearl of great price, and the weary obtain rest. The mind, no longer burdened
with anxiety, nor mortified with a succession of disappointments, which attended
the vain pursuit of happiness in earthly things, possesses present peace, and
rejoices in the expectation of future glory. It is released from the slavery of
hewing out broken cisterns, and introduced to the fountain of living waters.
Or, to close with the beautiful image in my text, The people who once walked
in darkness, and the region of the shadow of death are translated into the
kingdom of life and salvation, Col. i. 13.

How greatly are they to be pitied who reject the light of the gospel! It is true,
they cannot see it; but it is equally true, they will not. But may I not hope that
this is a day of divine power, in which some of you shall be made a willing
people? Do not reason against your own life, but repent, and believe the gospel.
The light shines around you, whether you perceive it or not; and it has an efficacy
to open the eyes of the blind. Where the gospel is preached, the Lord is
present. If you call upon him, he will hear, and you shall receive your sight. If
the grace and the glory of the Saviour have hitherto made no impression
upon your heart, you are spiritually blind. Could you be sensible of your
disorder, the remedy is at hand. If now, at last, you are willing to seek
him, he will be found of you. But if you deliberately prefer darkness, your state
is awfully dangerous; and if you persist in your obstinacy, your ruin is unavoidable.
God is gracious and long-suffering, but he will not be mocked, Gal. vi. 7.
Humble yourselves at once, and implore his mercy, or else prepare to meet
him in judgment. But be assured he will not meet you as a man. You must
either bend or break. The Lord forbid that he should say to any of you, in
the great day of his appearance, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
fire!"

His Name Shall be Called Wonderful






Monday, December 16, 2013

You Say You Have the Bible in Your Houses


You say you have the Bible in your houses; do I think
you are such heathens as not to have a Bible?  But when
did you read it last?  How do you know that your spectacles,
which you have lost, have not been there for the last three years?
                                              C. H. Spurgeon

Saturday, December 14, 2013

The Host Prayed

.....I have heard an anecdote of two gentlemen travelling together,
somewhere in Switzerland.  Presently they came into the midst of
the forests; and you know the gloomy tales the people tell about
the inns there, how dangerous it is to lodge in them. 
     One of them, an Infidel, said to the other, who was a Christian,
"I don't like stopping here at all; it is very dangerous indeed." 
     "Well," said the other, "let us try." 
     So they went into a house; but it looked so suspicious that neither
of them liked it; and they thought they would prefer being at home in
England. 
     Presently the landlord said, "Gentlemen, I always read and pray
with my family before going to bed; will you allow me to do so to-night?" 
     "Yes," they said, "with the greatest pleasure."  
     When they went up stairs, the Infidel said, "I am not at all afraid now."
     "Why?" said the Christian.
     "Because our host has prayed." 
     "Oh!" said the other, "then it seems, after all, you think something of
religion; because a man prays, you can go to sleep in his house." 
     And it was marvellous how both of them did sleep.  Sweet dreams
they had, for they felt that where the house had been roofed by prayer,
and walled with devotion, there could not be found a man living that would
commit an injury to them. 
                                              C. H. Spurgeon

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

What a Poor, Uncertain Dying World is This!

 A Letter from John Newton

Dear Madam,—
     What a poor, uncertain dying world is this! What a
wilderness in itself!  How dark, how desolate, without
the light of the gospel and the knowledge of Jesus! 
It does not appear so to us in a state of nature, because
we are then in a state of enchantment, the magical lantern
binding us with a splendid delusion.
     It is a great mercy to be undeceived in time; and
though our gay dreams are at an end, and we awake
to every thing that is disgustful and dismaying, yet
we see a highway through the wilderness, a powerful
guard, an infallible guide at hand to conduct us
through; and we can discern beyond the limits of the
wilderness a better land, where we shall be at rest and
at home.  What will the difficulties we meet by the
way then signify?  The remembrance of them will
only remain to heighten our sense of the love, care,
and power of our Saviour and leader.  O, how shall
we then admire, adore, and praise him, when he shall
condescend to unfold to us the beauty, propriety, and
harmony of the whole train of his dispensations towards
us, and give us a clear retrospect of all the way, and all the
turns of our pilgrimage!
     In the meanwhile, the best method of adorning our
profession, and of enjoying peace in our souls, is
simply to trust him, and absolutely to commit ourselves
and our all to his management.  By casting our burdens upon
him, our spirits become light and cheerful; we are freed from
a thousand anxieties and inquietudes, which are wearisome to
our minds, and which, with respect to events, are needless for
us, yea, useless.  But though it may be easy to speak of this
trust, and it appears to our judgment perfectly right
and reasonable, the actual attainment is a great thing;
and especially, so to trust the Lord, not by fits and starts,
surrendering one day and retracting the next, but to
abide by our surrender, and go habitually trusting
through all the changes we meet, knowing that his
love, purpose, and promise, are unchangeable.  Some
little fainting, perhaps, none are freed from; but I believe
a power of trusting the Lord in good measure at
all times, and living quietly under the shadow of his
wing, is what the promise warrants us to expect, if
we seek it by diligent prayer; if not all at once, yet
by a gradual increase.  May it be your experience and mine.
                                               John Newton