BV 4400 2JS5 . :)::.'■■ Ti sii mm LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. «***•" ,'\A)5 PRESENTED BY UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. GOSPEL WORK SCRIPTURE TEXT-BOOK, COMPILED BY C. M. WHITTELSEY and E. P. GARDNER. GOD'S WORD ABOUT WORKING. American Tract Society, I50 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. / _. PREFACE. Christian work has of late, in the history of the church, assumed a new importance. To tell the gospel is no longer conceived to be the exclusive function of a pastor, or an evangelist, but the duty and privilege of every believer. Many, however, with the desire to work, are conscious of a lack which they know not how to supply. They feel that, in some way, they need to be made " meet for the Master's use." They also know that the furnishing is to be by the Spirit of God from the Word of God. All such, we believe, will be glad of an attempt to gather and arrange for them the Scripture of which they have felt the need, in two companion pamphlets. This one contains the Scripture references which the worker should examine particularly for himself. 4 PREFACE. It is designed for his prayerful study, either at home by himself, or in Young Men's Chris- tian Associations, or in church and neighborhood classes. The companion, " Gospel Truth : a Text-book, for the Workers Use and the Inquirers Help," directs one to the passages needed to convince a sinner of his sin, to lead him to Christ, and to give him God's answers to his difficulties. It is, therefore, designed not only to serve the Worker as a book of study and reference, but also to be given to the Inquirer, to assist him in searching the Scriptures for himself. Begun for the good of a single church and its individual Christians, these compilations are now offered to Christian Workers everywhere. May they be owned and used of Him in whose service and for whose approval they have been prepared. Spencerport, N. Y., April, 1877. God's Word about Working. SYNOPSIS. I. THE WORK - page 9 II. THE WORKER - ---- n The Believer - - n Every Believer - 15 The Commission - 17 III. THE PREPARATION 20 General Qualifications - — 20 Special Qualifications - - - - - - - - — 20 Assurance — -- - 21 Love - — 22 Hunger for the Salvation of Souls -- 22 A Longing to Reach the Neglected 22 Prayerfulness - 22 Fulness of Faith and of the Holy Spirit — 23 Obedience to the Spirit -- 23 Confidence in the Message - 23 Boldness 24 Readiness to suffer and to wait-- 24 Joy in the Lord - 24 Humility 24 Oneness of Heart and Soul with the Children of God 24 Discrimination 25 Tenderness - 25 Blamelessness - - - 25 Consecration and Devotedness 25 God's Sufficiency 26 8 SYNOPSIS.. IV. THE POWER 27 (1.) Power by the Spirit - - 27 Examples from the Old Testament 27 Teaching in the New Testament 28 Examples from the New Testament 30 (2.) Power by the Word - - 31 The Word described 31 Knowledge of it needed - - 33 How to use it - 36 Christ's Use of it 37 Power by its Use 36 V. THE INCENTIVES 42 The Salvation of Men 42 Christ's Constraining Love 42 The Requirement to be Faithful 43 To please the Lord 43 The Honor of being associated with Christ 44 The Pressing Work and Little Time- 44 The Success promised -- 45 Certain and Proportionate Reward 46 Various Warnings •• 46 Present Blessings in Service 47 Future Blessings on account of Service 47 Reverence and Godly Fear 48 VI. THE OPPORTUNITIES 49 Suggestions from the Old Testament -- 49 Teaching in the New Testament 49 How Jesus found Opportunities 50 Scripture Text-Book ON GOSPEL WORK I. THE WORK. The work of the Christian in reaching and saving men, is, under the Holy Spirit, to make known to them the finished work that God has wrought in Christ for their salvation. The Scripture truth to be taught will be found in full in a companion pamphlet. The following outline, however, is given to show the general character of the work to be done. Gospel Work. 2 io GOSPEL WORK. i Cor. 2:1. The Worker is to declare THE TESTIMONY OF GOD : Rom. 3:19. That all the world is guilty before God. 2 Pet. 3 : 9. That God is not willing that any should perish. John 3:16. That God so loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoso- ever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 1 Pet. 2 : 24. That Christ has borne our sins in his own body on the tree. Acts 13:38. That it is through him the for- giveness of sins is preached. Acts 17: 30. That God now commands all men everywhere to repent. Acts 20 : 21. That the benefits of Christ's death are received through repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ. Acts 16 : 31. That, thus believing in Christ, the sinner is at once saved. John 5 124. THE WORKER. n II. THE WORKER. THE BELIEVER IS THE WORKER. God's work in Christ comes first. The Be- liever's work is in and from Him. John 17 : 16-18. Separated before sent. John 15 127. Communion before testimony. Acts 4:13, 20; 1 John 1 :i-3. John 21 : 15-17. Loving Christ before teaching others. Acts 1 : 8, 21, 22. Preaching is being a witness. Acts 5 :32. Acts 9 : 20. Saul believed, and "straightway he preached Christ." John 1 141, 45 ; 4:28, 29. Acts 20 : 24. Ministry is received from the Lord Jesus. Rom. 10: 1-5. The method of the law — doing that one may live — fails. Zeal without knowledge sets aside God's work in Christ. Rom. 10:6-17. The method of the gospel — life that one may do — puts Christ's work first, and is God's order. 12 GOSPEL WORK. ( The Word of God. 6-10. < Believing with the heart ' Confession with the mouth. ( Hearing. II_I 7- \ Calling upon his name. v Sent to preach. Rom. 12:3-8. Gifts for service flow from being members in the body of Christ. Eph. 4:7, 11, 12. Rom. 15:29. God pours from filled vessels. 2 Cor. 4 : 7. 1 Cor. 2 '.9-13. Receiving and knowing before speaking and teaching. 1 Cor. 3 : 5-9. God's co-workers. 2 Cor. 6:1. 1 Cor. 3: 10, 11. Jesus Christ, the foundation. 2 Cor. 2 : H-17; 3:5, 6. Our sufficiency is of God. 2 Cor. 4: 5, 6. Enlightened before giving light. 2 Cor. 4: 13, 14. Believing and knowing, there- fore speaking. 2 Cor. 5 : 1, 5, 6, 9. Knowing our acceptance, (Eph. 1 :6, 7,) therefore laboring to be accep- table* * The Greek of verse 9 requires the rendering " accep- table " instead of "accepted." THE WORKER. 13 2 Cor. 5 : 10, 11. Knowing the fear of the Lord, therefore persuading men. 2 Cor. 5 : 13-15. Love constraining. 2 Cor. 5 : 1 8-20. Reconciled, therefore recon- ciling. Gal. 1:15, 16. "It pleased God to reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him." Gal. 5 :6. Faith works by love. 1 Thess. 1 : 3. Eph. 2 : 1-3. A dead man's works are dead, Rom. 7:5; 8:5-8; Heb. 6:1. Dead works need to be repented of, and the doer of them, Heb. 9 : 14, to be purged by the blood of Christ. Eph. 2 : 4-9. God's work in Christ, quickening, saving, raising, seating in the heavenlies; or grace giving salvation apart from works, (Rom. 4:4-8,) comes first. 1 John 4:9, 10. Eph. 2 : 10. The good works, unto which the believer is created, (2 Cor. 5 : 17; Gal. 6:15,) then follow. Rom. 7:6; 8:3,4; I Thess. 1:9; 2:13; Titus 2:11-14; 3:8; Heb. 10:19-25; 1 John 4: 19, 20; 5:5. What God requires of the unbeliever is, to be- lieve. John 6:28, 29; 1 John 3:23. 14 GOSPEL WORK. Phil. 2:15, 16. Sons of God shine as lights, holding forth the Word of Life. 1 Pet. 2:9-12. Phil. 4:3. "My fellow laborers, whose names are in the Book of Life." Col. 1 : 25-29. Christ in the believer, as the hope of glory, is a power for service. 2 Thes. 1 : 11, 12. 1 Tim. 1 : 5-1 1. " Gospel work/' so called, which does not flow from love, out of a cleansed* heart, a good conscience, and faith unfeigned, becomes vain jangling, and a teaching of the law, not according to the glorious gos- pel of the blessed God. 1 Tim. 4: 10. We labor because we trust. 2 Tim. 1 : 5-8. Unfeigned faith stirs up the gift of God in us, unto fearless testimony. 2 Tim. 1 :9-i2. The saved man is the called man, ready to suffer in bearing witness, be- cause he knows. * The Greek word rendered "pure" in this passage, occurs Matt. $\%\ "clean," John 13: 10; 15:3; "purge," Heb. 1:3; 9:14; "cleanseth," 1 John 1:7,9, an d else- where. THE WORKER. 15 2 Tirii. 2 : 2. The testimony is committed to be- lievers. Titus 1 : 1-3. The gospel is committed, by the commandment of our Saviour, to one who acknowledges the truth of God, who can- not lie. Heb. 11. Examples of faith working. Heb. 12 : 1-3. Jesus the perfect example. Jas. 2 : 14-26. Works spring from faith, not from profession. Psa. 50: 16, 17. "Unto the wicked God saith, What hast thou to do, to declare my stat- utes, or that thou shouldest take my cove- nant in thy mouth ?" Matt. 7:15. Even a wolf will not preach except in sheep's clothing. Matt. 7 : 21-23. The unbelieving gospel worker, even if good should result, is a worker of iniquity. EVERY BELIEVER. In all these passages, believers, without dis- tinction, are workers ; and the inspiration of the work is the faith that is common to all. Hence 16 GOSPEL WORK. every believer is expected to work. For fur- ther evidence and illustration consult, Matt. 25 : 15. To every man talents according to his several ability, but every man to trade. Luke 19 : 1 1-26. Each servant has a pound. Every believer has the gospel. Acts 2 : 1-4. All were filled with the Holy Spirit, and all spake. Acts 4:31. Acts 2:17, 18. Sons and daughters, young men and old men, servants and hand-maidens, all are to prophesy. Acts 8 : 4. The church was scattered, but wher- ever there was a believer, there was a preacher of the Word. Acts 11 : 19-21. Acts 18:26. A husband and wife expound to a preacher, eloquent and mighty in the Scriptures, (of the law,) the way of God more perfectly. Rom. 16:1-15. A pastor's " helpers in Christ " have their names recorded by the Holy Spirit. Phil. 1 : 12-14. Silencing a gospel preacher makes many brethren preachers. THE WORKER. 17 Phil. 4 : 3. Women are not excepted from evan- gelistic work. Rom. 16: 1, 2, 3, 12. Acts 4:13, 20. An ignorant and unlearned man may speak what he has seen and heard with Jesus. Luke 9 : 12-17. Acts 3 : 6. Eph. 3 : 8. One less than the least of all saints may preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. 1 Tim. 1:15. The chief of sinners may tell that faithful saying, which is worthy of all acceptation. Heb. 8:11. When the believer will not be ex- pected to do gospel work. THE COMMISSION. That God has commissioned every believer to gospel work, is evident from the Scripture al- ready adduced. For further teaching, examine the following references, and may the Holy Spirit use them to impress upon every Christian that he is personally called of God to the work. Matt. 4: 18-22. Whosoever follows Jesus must become a fisher of men. Matt. 5 : 14-16. What is light for unless to shine ? Cf. Luke 8:16. 18 GOSPEL WORK. Matt. 9:37, 38 (connected with ch. 10). Seeing the need and praying for workers, prepares one to answer, " Lord, send me." Matt. 10:5-8. As ye have received Christ Je- sus, preach him. 1 Peter, 4: 10, 11. Matt. 10 : 27. What we have heard in our hearts we must tell publicly. Matt. 10:32, 33. Does the man possess Christ who never speaks of Him ? Cf. Mark 8 : 38. Matt, 20:25-28. The calling of the church in the world, like that of her Lord, is "not to be ministered unto, but to minister." Matt. 21 : 28. " Son, go work to-day in my vine- yard." Matt. 22 : 1-10. " Go ye into the highways-, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage." Matt. 25 : 19. Servants are reckoned with ac- cording to faithfulness in the gospel com- mitted to their trust. Luke 8:38, 39. A saved man is not taken to be with Jesus, but is sent into the world with a message. Psa. 65: 16. Luke 9:59, 60. The most sacred duties of af- fection are no excuse from gospel work. THE WORKER. 19 Luke 19 : 13. The departing Lord says to every servant, " Occupy till I come." Luke 19:15. On his return, he will ask how much every man has gained by trading. Luke 19 : 37-40. What would Jesus say to dis- ciples who wanted to hold their peace ? Luke 22 : 54-62. May the Lord now look (61) upon any Christian who, getting separated from Christ, (54) and failing to stand up for him, (55) comes at length to deny him. (57-60.) Rom. 1 : 13-15. The believer is a debtor to the unbeliever. He owes him the gospel. 1 Cor. 9:16, 17. Believer, a necessity is laid upon thee ; a dispensation is committed to thee ; to fail is to bring loss upon thyself. The church, whose home is with her Lord, is left on earth to testify to all men, every- where, the gospel of his grace. Matt. 28:18-20. Mark 16: 15. Luke 24:46-51. John 15 M3-16X This is our one work on earth. 26, 27. John 17: 18. Acts 1 : 7-1 1. How sacred and imperative to every Christian these last ^ words of our departing Lord. 20 GOSPEL WORK. III. THE PREPARATION. GENERAL QUALIFICATIONS. The spiritual preparation required for gospel work, whether by apostles, evangelists, pastors, and other church officers, or by the individual Christian, (2 Cor. 6:1-13,) does not differ in character, only in degree. Therefore study mi- nutely, Matt. 10 ; Luke 10; I Timothy; 2 Timothy; Titus ; 1 Peter, 5 : 1-11 ; But above all, let each one continually study the gospel work of the Lord Jesus, our great example. To learn of Him is to be wise in win- ning souls. SPECIAL QUALIFICATIONS. All that goes to make up a fully developed Christian character, whether in knowledge, ex- perience, or communion, will unquestionably add power to the gospel worker. The following THE PREPARATION. 21 particulars of inner equipment are therefore no- ted, not as being complete, but as being impor- tant, both to give direction to our prayers, and to open our hearts to the Spirit of God, by whom they are wrought. ASSURANCE. It must be remembered in this, and in all these special qualifications, that only those ref- erences will in general be given, which, directly or indirectly, show the relation of the qualifica- tion to success in Christian work. For exam- ple, to get the full teaching on assurance, one must search the New Testament with a Concor- dance under the words Assurance, Sure, Hath, Now Know, etc., and study such chapters as Eph. 1; Col. 1 ; Heb. 10; 1 John 5 :9~i3. But in connection with our present study upon Gos- pel Work, it is enough to notice that, in all the passages referred to under the headings, " The Believer is the Worker," and " Every Believer is expected to Work," the faith spoken of is evi- dently an assured faith, and to give here only such references as will show assurance to be important to the worker's highest success. i GOSPEL WORK. Luke 10:20, 2 Cor. 4: 13, 14, John 3:11; see also 2 Cor. 5:1, with 9, 4:42, 10, 11, Acts 22 : 14, 15, 2 Tim. 1 : 1 1, 12, 1 Cor. 1 13-7, 1 John 4: 13, 14. 1 Cor. 2 : 12, 13, LOVE. 1 Cor. 13, 1 Thess. 3 : 12, 1 Cor. 14:1, 1 John 4 : 7-16. HUNGER FOR THE SALVATION OF SOULS. John 3 : 16, Rom. 9 : 1-3, Matt. 23 : 37, Rom. 10:1, Luke 19:41,42, 2 Cor. 12:14, 15,^ Acts 20: 18-21, 26, 27, Phil. 1 : 8, Rom. 1 : 1 1-1 5, 1 Thess. 2 : 7, 8. A LONGING TO REACH THE NEGLECTED. Mark 6 : 34, Luke 19:10, Luke 5:31, 32, Rom. 15 : 20, 21, Luke 15:7, James 2 : 1-9. PRAYERFULNESS. Mark 9 : 29, John 12:21, 22, Luke 5 : 15-17, Acts 1 : 4, 14, Luke 11:5-13, Acts 4:24-31, * See marginal reading. THE PREPARATION. 23 Acts 6:4, 1 Thess. 5:17. Rom. 15 : 30, Col. 4:12, 13, Eph. 6: 18-20, FULNESS OF FAITH AND OF THE HOLY SPIRIT. Luke 5 : 18-20, Acts 13:9, Acts 1 14, 5, 8, Rom. 15 129, Acts 2 14, Eph. 5 : 18, Acts 4 : 8, 3 1, 1 Thess. 1 : 5, Acts 6 : 5, 8, 10, 2 Thess. 1 : 1 1, 12, Acts 7:55, 1 John ,2 : 20, 27, 28. Acts 9:17, OBEDIENCE TO THE SPIRIT. Luke 5 : 5-7, 2 Cor. 4 : 2, John 21 : 3-6, 1 Thess. 2 : 3-6, Acts 4 : 18-20, . 1 Thess. 5 : 19, Acts 5 : 28, 29, John 2 : 5, Acts 8 : 29, 30, John 7 : 3-10, 17, 18, Acts 13 : 2-4, Exod. 13 : 21, 22, Acts 16 : 6-10, Num. 9 : 15-23. Rom. 8 : 14, CONFIDENCE IN THE MESSAGE. Rom. 1 : 16, 17, 2 Cor. 1 : 18-22, 1 Cor. 1 : 17-28, 1 Pet. 4:11. 1 Cor. 2 : 1-5, 24 GOSPEL WORK, BOLDNESS. Acts 4: 13, 29, 31, Eph. 6: 10-20, Acts 7 : 5 1-60, 1 Thess. 2 : 2. 1 Cor. 16:9-14, READINESS TO SUFFER AND TO WAIT. Matt. 5: 11, 12, Col. 1 124, Acts 5 141, 2 Thess. 3 : 13, 2 Cor. 4 : 1, James 5 : 7, 8, 10, Phil. 1 : 29, 1 Pet. 2 : 19-25, Phil. 2:17,, 1 Pet. 4 : 12-19. Phil. 4:11-13, JOY IN THE LORD. Neh. 8:10, Phil. 4 : 4-7, 2 Cor. 7 14, 1 Thess. 5 : 16, Phil. 3:3, Psa. 51 : 12, 13. HUMILITY. Matt. 20 : 25-28, Phil. 1 : 15-18, Matt. 23 : 5-12, Phil. 2 : 5-8, Acts 20 : 19, Jude 9. Rom. 12:3, 10, ONENESS OF HEART AND SOUL WITH THE CHILDREN OF GOD. Acts 4 : 32, 33, Phil. 2 : 1-4. Rom 16: 17, 18, THE PREPARATION, 25 DISCRIMINATION. Matt. 7 : 6, Phil. 1 : 10, marg. Matt. 12 : 20, 2 Tim. 2:15, 1 Cor. 9 : 19-22, Jude 20-23, 1 Cor. 10:23, 32, 33, Matt. 5 :43~47- 1 Cor. 14 :6-n 523-25, TENDERNESS. Psa. 126: 5, 6, Luke 19:41, 42, 2 Cor. 2 :4, Acts 20: 19, 31, Phil. 3 : 18, Matt. 12:20. Luke 13:34* 35> BLAMELESSNESS. Matt. 7:3-5, Phil. 3 : 17, Rom. 2:17-24, Col. 1:9-11, Rom. 15 : 14, 1 Thess. 2 : 10, Rom. 16:19, James 3 : 10-13, Eph. 5 : 11-18, 1 Pet. 2:11, 12, 15. Phil. 2:15, CONSECRATION AND DEVOTEDNESS. Luke 5 : 10, 1 1, 1 Cor. 9 : 23-27, John 21 : 18-22, 2 Cor. 5 : 13-15, Acts 20:18-27, Phil. 1 : 19-21, Rom. 12:1, 2, Phil. 2 : 20, 21, (with I Cor. 2:2, . Matt. 6 : 24,) Gospel Work. A 26 GOSPEL WORK. Col. i : 28, 29, 19-22, 35, Heb. 11 124-27, Lev. 14: 1-20, Heb. 13 : 12-15, Isa. 52 : 11, Exod. 29 : 1, 4-9, 2 Tim. 2 : 1-5, 19-22. >T ^ r The worker cannot have Num. 6 : 1-27, . . T , power except as he is spirit- Judges 13:4, 5, ? u a Nazarite 2 Cor Judges 16: 17-21. U:i4- 7 :r; Acts. 20:18-24. GOD'S SUFFICIENCY. The call of God to work, and the qualifications to which he calls his workers, makes one con- scious of unfitness. But this God meets by the pledge of his sufficiency, which inspires and girds to service. Moses, Exodus 3 and 4. Gideon, Judges 6:15, 16. Isaiah 6 : 5-8. Jeremiah 1 : 6-9. r\ Cor. 15:9, 10. 2 Cor. 2 : 14-17. Paul,^ 2 Cor. 3:5, 6. 2 Cor. 4 : 7. ^2 Cor. 12:9, 10. _, ~, . . ( Phil- 4:13, IQ. Every Christian, \ _ 7 (2 Cor. 9 : 8. THE POWER. 27 IV. THE POWER. The worker can do nothing of himself. His power is entirely from the Spirit of God, given in answer to prayer, (see prayerfufness, page 21,) and in the use of God's Word. (1.) POWER BY THE SPIRIT. The general principle is stated Zech. 4:6, " Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord." Compare for illustration the vision in Ezek. 37. See also John 1 : 12, 13. The service of saints in past dispensations was, therefore, only by the power of the Spirit upon them. Yet the indwelling fulness of His power is manifested in this, the dispensation of the Spirit, (John 7:37, 38, and 14: 16, 23,) and the service is that not of servants but of full- grown sons, Gal. 4: 1-7. EXAMPLES FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. Exodus 31:3, Bezaleel. Num. 1 1 : 24-30, Moses and the seventy elders. Deut. 34:9, Joshua. Judges 3:9, 10, Othniel. 23 GOSPEL WORK. Judges 6 : 34, Gideon, Judges 1 1 : 29, Jephthah. Judges 14:6, 19, \ Judges 15 : 14, > Samson. Judges 16: 28, ) i Sam. 16:13, ) Psa. S i:i2,i3, [ DaVld 2 Kings 2:9, 15, Elijah and Elisha. 1 Chron. 12:18, Amasai. 2 Chron. 15:1, Azariah. Isa. 1 1 : 2, 3, \ Isa. 42 : 1, > Prophecies of Christ. Isa. 61 : 1-3, ) Ezek. 2:2, ) _ . . . _ , > Ezekiel. Ezek. 3 : 12-14, ) Micah 3 : 8, Micah. TEACHING IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. Matt. 3:11, cf. 16. The baptism of the Holy Spirit. Matt. 10 : 20. The Spirit of your Father. Luke 24:49. Endued with power. John 3 : 5. The Spirit gives new birth. John 6:63. The Spirit quickeneth. THE POWER, 29 John 7 : 38, 39. Rivers of living water flow from the indwelling Spirit. John 14: 17, 26. The Spirit, in the believer, is his Teacher and Reminder. John 15 126. The Spirit bears witness, 1 John 5:6. John 16 : 7-1 1. The Spirit convinces the world. John 16:13. The Spirit is to the believer a Guide into all truth. Acts 3:12. The work was not of man. Acts 4:31, 33. The Spirit gave great power. Acts 7:51. The Spirit is resisted and de- spised, (Heb. 10 : 29,) when the gospel is re- jected. Rom. 15:13, 14. "The power of the Holy Spirit/' 1 Cor. 2:5. Faith stands in the power of God, the demonstration of the Spirit. 1 Cor. 4:20. The kingdom of God is not in word, but in power. I Cor. 12:3. Faith in Jesus as Lord is by the Spirit. 1 Cor. 12:4-11. All gifts are worked by the Spirit, who distributes them. 3° GOSPEL WORK. Eph. 3 : 16. "To be strengthened with might/' is " by the Spirit." Eph. 6:17. The Spirit uses the sword. 2 Tim. 1 : 7. The Spirit of power. 2 Tim. 1 :6, 14. We are to keep our gifts for service, by the Spirit. EXAMPLES FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT Matt. 3:16, Matt. 12:28, Luke 2 : 25, Luke 4: 14, 18, Acts 1 : 2, Acts 10: 38, > Jesus. John the Baptist. Mary. Elisabeth. Zacharias. Paul. Luke 1:15. Luke 1 : 35. Luke 1 141. Luke 1 : 67. Rom. 15 : 19, 1 Cor. 2:4, 12, 13. 1 Cor. 3:5,6. Paul and Apollos. 2 Cor. 3 : 3-6. Paul. 2 Cor. 6:6, 7. Paul and Timothy. Col. 1 : 29. Paul. 1 Thess. 1 : 5. Among the Thessalonians. THE POWER. 31 For passages omitted above, see " Fulness of Faith and of the Holy Spirit/' page 23. (2.) POWER BY THE WORD. The Word of God is the instrument, as the Spirit of God is the agent, in saving souls. The worker, therefore, needs to know God's descrip- tion of his Word, and to realize that it is His instrument in all teaching, and that God will accordingly use the worker and clothe him with power in proportion as he brings His Word to bear directly on men's souls. GOD'S DESCRIPTION OF HIS WORD. GIVEN BY INSPIRATION. 2 Tim. 3:16, Heb. 2 : 1-4, Acts 1 : 16, Heb. 3 : 7, Acts 4 : 24, 25, Heb. 9:7, 8, Acts 28 : 25, Heb. 10:15, 1 Cor. 2 :4, 5, 9-13, 2 Pet. 1 :2i. Heb. 1:2; cf. 12 : 25, THE ORACLES OF GOD. Acts 7:38, Heb. 5 : 12, Rom. 3:2, 1 Pet. 4:11. 32 GOSPEL WORK. THE WORD OF GOD. Prov. 30 : 5, 6, Acts 6 : 7, Isaiah 40 : 8, Acts 1 1 : 1, Mark 7 : 13, Acts 12 124; cf. 19:20, Luke 4: 4, Acts 13:44, Luke 11:28, 2 Pet. 3 : 2-1 o. Acts 4:31, THE WORD OF THE LORD. Jer. 8: 9, Acts 16: 32, Acts 8:25, 1 Thess. 1 : 8, Acts 13 : 46-49, 2 Thess. 3 : 1. THE WORD OF TRUTH. 2 Cor. 6:7, 2 Tim. 2:15, Eph. 1 : 13, James 1:18. Col. 1 : 5, THE WORDS OF LIFE. John 6:63, 68, Phil. 2:16. Acts 5 : 20, Acts 20 : 32. The Word of His Grace. Rom. 10 : 8. The Word of Faith. 2 Cor. 5:19. The Word of Reconciliation. Col. 3:16. The Word of Christ. Psa. 119:89. Settled in Heaven. THE POWER. 33 2 Cor. i : 19, 20. Not yea and nay. Matt. 7: 24. A Rock foundation. Psa. 1 19 : 140. Very pure. Luke 8:11. The Seed sown. 1 Pet. 1 : 23. The incorruptible Seed. Luke 24 : 27, 44, \ John 5 : 39, > It testifies of Christ. Acts 10:43. ) John 12:48, ) It must be met in the Day ot Rom. 2:16. ) Judgment. 1 Pet. 1 : 23, 25. It liveth and abideth for ever "And this is the Word which by the gos- pel is preached. " KNOWLEDGE OF THE WORD. To be in heart thoroughly acquainted with God's Word, is to be thoroughly furnished unto Gospel Work. 2 Tim. 3:17. Deut. 4 : 2, Deut. 12:32, Prov. 30 : 5, 6. Psa. 119:27. Understanding God's precepts prepares one to speak. Gospel Work. 5 God's Word needs no supple- ment. 34 GOSPEL WORK. Psa. 119:97-100. God's testimonies give more understanding than any human teaching. Psa. 1 19 : 105. The Christian needs his lamp in gospel work. Psa. 119:46, \ One full of God's word is not Psa. 119: 171, > afraid, anywhere, to speak Psa. 119: 172. ) His testimonies. Prov. 2 : l-6. Out of the mouth of the Lord cometh wisdom and knowledge. Jer. 20 : 9. God's Word in the heart is a burn- ing fire. Jer. 23 : 16-40. The difference God puts be- tween those who speak out of their own hearts, and those who speak out of his Word. Mark 7:9^13. To teach " views" of truth, in- stead of God's words, is irreverent to Christ. Luke 1 : 3, 4. God's Word is written " that thou mightest know the certainty of those things wherein thou hast been instructed." John 8:31, 32. Knowledge of the truth, which is essential to gospel work, is dependent on continuance in the Word. Cf. Exod. 16: 12-21, and Deut. 8 :3. THE POWER. 35 John 8 = 26,28, ^j God , s w . tnesses ^ John 12: 50, - . . , \ T . > only what they hear from John 14: 10, 24, f . . T : J J , , 7 him. John 15:4-8. John 16: 13, 14, J 1 Tim. 4 : 6. To be a good servant of Jesus Christ, one must be nourished in the words of faith and good doctrine. 1 Tim. 4 : 12-16. He who would be wise to win souls (Prov. 1 1 : 30) must attend to read- ing, to exhortation, to doctrine, and. medi- tate upon these things. 1 Tim. 6: 3-5. Those who teach anything else than the health-giving words of our Lord Jesus Christ, are utterly condemned. 2 Tim. 1:13. " Hold fast the form of sound words." Cf. 2 Thess. 2:15. Heb. 5 : 1 1-14. By disuse of the Word, one be- comes unskilful in it, remains a babe, and is unfit to teach others. r Pet. 3:15. From the Word, the worker can give a reason for the hope that is in him. 1 John 2 : 14. He is strong, in whom the Word of God abideth. John 15:7. $6 GOSPEL WORK. HOW TO USE THE WORD. Neh. 8 : 8. Read it distinctly, and give the sense, that all may understand. Isa. 8 : 20. Appeal to it, as the test of all teach- ing. Isa. 34:16, \ Lead the inquirer to search out the John 5 : 39, > passages and read them, that he Acts 17:11.) may know the truth for himself. Jer. 23 : 28. " He that hath my word, let him speak my word faithfully. ,, a • 7 • 9> J p ress God's words as authori- 1 Thess. 2 : 13, > , .. °' { tative. Rom. 3 : 3, 4. ) Mark 12 : 14. Teach the way of God in truth, not regarding the person of men. Acts 4 : 29. With boldness. „ ( With simplicity, as the testimo- 1 Cor. 1 : 17, I r ^ / ~ < ny of God, not with enti- 1 Cor. 2:1, 4. / / ' , : \ cing words or man s wisdom. 2 Cor. 1:12, 18-20. In godly sincerity and pos- itiveness. 2 Cor. 2:17. As of God, in the sight of God. 2 Cor. 3:12. Using great plainness of speech. THE POWER. 37 2 Cor. 4 : 2. Not handling the Word of God by "accommodation," but manifesting the truth. Col. 2 : 3, 4, 8. To give Christ himself, not hu- man philosophy or tradition about him. Cf. Titus i : 14. 2 Tim. 2 : 14, 23, 24. Not striving about words to no profit. Cf. Titus 3 : 9. 2 Tim. 2:15. Rightly dividing the word of truth. Luke 12 142, 43. 2 Tim. 2 : 25. In meekness, that God may give repentance, to the acknowledging of the truth. 2 Tim. 4 : 2. With all long-suffering. OUR SAVIOUR'S USE OF THE WORD IN HIS MINISTRY. Matt. 4:4, 7, 10. It was his strength when tempted to swerve from his appointed path of service. Psa. 17:4. Matt. 9:13. He referred to it, as showing that the gospel was for sinners. Matt. 12:3, 5, 7. He appealed to it against tradition. Cf. Matt. 15 : 3-9. John 7 : 19-24. 33 GOSPEL WORK. Matt. 12:39-42. By it he rebuked an itch- ing for signs and a carelessness of truth. Matt. 13: 14, 15. By it he interpreted human nature. Matt. 19 '.4-6. From it he answered a question about divorce. Matt. 19 : 17-22. He used it as a looking-glass, to show a man his own heart. Matt. 21 : 13. It was his authority when he rebuked bargaining in the house of God. Matt. 21 : 16. He quoted it in defence of chil- dren who confessed him. Matt. 21 142. From it he showed the judgment which would follow the rejection of his tes- timony. Matt. 22:29-32. From the use of a tense in the Old Testament, he taught the resur- rection. Matt. 24:37-39, "J Luke 17 : 29, 30, 1 He used its types, as well John 3 : 14, j as its statements of truth. John 6:32,51. J THE POWER, 39 Mark 12:35-37, \ He used it, to show men Luke 24:25-27, I their ignorance of the Old Luke 24 : 44-46, ( Testament, when they did John 5 : 39, 46. J not see Him in it. Luke 4: 17-20. He rightly divided, Isa. 61:2. John 15:25,} He noted the fulfilment of John 17:12. \ Scripture. So also did Matthew and John. Matt. 1 : 22, John 12 : 38, Matt. 2:15, 17, 23, John 19: 24, 36, 37. Matt. 8:17, So also did Peter. Acts 2 : 16, 25. Stephen. Acts 7. James. Acts 15 : 13-18. Philip. Acts 8:35, Apollos. Acts 18 : 28. Paul. Acts 13 : 16-47. The Epistles and the Revelation are full of the Old Testament; Hebrews is little more than an exposition of Leviticus ; and the passages of the Old Testament quoted or alluded to in the New, number 825. THE DIRECT TESTIMONY TO THE POWER OF THE WORD. ^ ' ' ' \ It converts the soul. Jer. 23 : 22. ) 40 GOSPEL WORK. Psa. 119 : 9, \ John 13 : 8-10, l John 15:3, J Eph. 5 : 26. ) Psa. 119:50, 93. Psa. 119: 130, \ Prov. 6 : 20-23, Hos. 6 : 4-6. It makes clean. It quickens. rltenlight- ' j John 3: 19-21 ! ens and ' I Eph. 5: n-14-i convinces l^of sin. Isa. 55:2, 3, \ Matt. 4:4, j John 5 : 24, Vlt gives life. John 6 :6$ y 68, John 20: 31. > Isa. 55 : 11. It accomplishes God's purposes. Jer. 23 : 29. It is like a fire and a hammer. Luke 16 : 29-31. It is stronger than if one rose from the dead. Acts 11 : 14, N Acts 13 : 26, Rom. 1 : 16, 1 Tim. 4: 16, 2 Tim. 3: 15, James 1 : 21. >It saves the soul. THE POWER. 4 i Acts. 20:32, ^ Rom. 15 : 4, ! T . ,' n ^ >It is able to build up. 1 Cor. 10:11, j r 1 Pet. 2:2. j Rom. 3 : 20, \ Rom. 7 : 9-13, > It produces conviction of sin. James 2:9. ) Rom. 10:17. It produces faith. Rom. 15:13. It produces joy and peace. 1 Cor. 1 : 17-25, ) _ . . - - . _ Mt is the power of God. 1 Cor. 2 :4, 5. ) r 2 Cor. 2: 16, 17. It is a savor of death unto death, or of life unto life. 2 Cor. 4:2. It appeals to every man's conscience. 2 Cor. 10:4, 5- It pulls down strongholds. Gal. 3 : 19-24. Is a schoolmaster unto Christ. __, ' [ It is the sword of the Spirit. Heb. 4: 12. ) r Titus 1 : 9—1 1. Stops the mouths of gainsayers. James 1 : 18, ) • . ., ,. . J _ \ It gives the new birth. 1 Pet. 1:23, ) s 1 John 5 : 9—13. It gives knowledge of the pos- session of eternal life. 42 GOSPEL WORK. V. THE INCENTIVES. The great incentives to Gospel Work are the facts, that man is lost and that in CJirist only is salvation. (See Text-Book of Gospel Truth.) These two underlie and enter into all other in- centives. THE SALVATION OF MEN. John 3:16, \ Ezek. 18 : 32, > God would not have them perish. Ezek. 33 : n. ) Rom. 10: 12-17. How shall they hear without a preacher ? 1 Cor. 9 : 19-22. Paul could not rest while men were perishing. ~ " ( God would have all men saved. 2 Pet. 3:9. ) CHRIST'S CONSTRAINING LOVE. 2 Cor. 5: 14, 15. John 15:9-14. Abiding in Christ's love, and obeying his commands, are inseparable. 2 Cor. 4: 1. "As we have received mercy, we faint not." THE INCENTIVES. 43 Gal. 2 : 20. Christ's love lives in our love for the lost. Eph. 5:2, ) We give ourselves as he hath 1 John 3:16. ) given himself. 1 John 4:7-16, 19. We love, because he first loved us. THE REQUIREMENT TO BE FAITHFUL. Acts 20 : 26, 27. He who is unfaithful is guilty of the blood of souls. 1 Cor. 4 : 1-5. Faithfulness is required in stew- ards. Col. 4:17. The ministry is to be fulfilled. 1 Pet. 4:10. Everyman is to minister as he has received the gift. PLEASING THE LORD. Luke 15:7, 10, 22-24. Making the Father glad. 2 Cor. 5 : 5-9. Being wrought for resurrection, we labor to be acceptable. r 1 ( Christ's servant \ ^ x - T ^ • Gal. 1 :io, I _ / Rom. 15: 1-3, -fi ~ * \ seeks to please > T n 1 Thess. 2:4.) l 1 Cor. 10: 33. v him, not men. ) Col. 1:10. We are to walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing. 44 GOSPEL WORK. 2 Tim. 2:4. A soldier must please him who hath chosen him. 2 Tim. 2:15. A workman must be approved. THE HONOR OF BEING ASSOCIATED WITH CHRIST. John 13:20. Christ and his messengers are one. John 15:15. As friends, they know his plans. John 1 5 : 20. They are treated as he was. Matt. 10 : 25. John 17 : 18, 21. They are sent as he was. Rom. 15 : 17-19, ) He and ths Spirit work in 1 Cor. 2:4-13. \ them. 2 Cor. 5 : 20. They are ambassadors for him. Heb. 12 : 2-4. They are encouraged by the joy set before them, even as he was. THE PRESSING WORK AND LITTLE TIME. Matt. 9:37. The harvest is plenteous, and the laborers are few. Matt. 28 : 19. All nations are to be taught. Mark 16: 15. The gospel is to be preached to every creature. John 4 : 35-38. The fields are white to harvest. THE INCENTIVES. 45 John 9:4, ) The night cometh, when no John 11 :g, 10. J man can work. Rom. 13:1 1-14, ) It is high time to awake out 1 Pet. 4:7. j of sleep. 1 Cor. 7 : 29-31. The time is short. THE SUCCESS PROMISED. Matt. 17:20, 21, ) Nothing is impossible, even Matt. 21 : 21, 22. ) to little faith. Luke 5 :6-io, ) From henceforth thou shalt John 21 : 3—1 1. ) catch men. John 14: 12, 13. Christ in the believer's work is greater than in his own. 1 Cor. 1 : 17-28. The weakness of God is stronger than men. 1 Cor. 15:58. Labor is not in vain in the Lord. Gal. 6 : 9. We shall reap if we faint not. Phil. 1:12. Even adversities shall further the gospel. 1 Tim. 4:16. We may save those that hear us. Psa. 126:6. " He shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." 46 GOSPEL WORK. THE CERTAIN AND PROPORTIONATE REWARD. Matt. 10:40-42, ) The least service shall in Matt. 16 : 27. ) no wise lose its reward. 1 Cor. 3 18-14, ) It shall be to every man, ac- Rev. 22 : 12. ) cording as his work shall be. 1 Cor. 4:5. Every one serving shall have praise of God. 1 Cor. 15:41. Star differs from star in glo- ry. Rev. 14 : 13. Our works follow us. See also " Future -blessings on account of ser- vice," page 47. VARIOUS WARNINGS. Matt. 24 : 4S-5 1, ( A " SerV f nt " Wh ° d ° eS n0t Matt. 25 : 24-30. serve ls classed Wlth h yP°" 3 ^ J ( crites. Luke 12 '.46. And with unbelievers. Luke 12 : 47, 48. The greater the knowledge, the greater the responsibility. Luke 15 : 25-32. The elder son is rebuked. Rom. 2 : 1-16. Judging another and doing the same things, is inexcusable. Rom. 2:17-24. The name of God is bias- THE INCENTIVES. 47 phemed through those who, teaching others, do not teach themselves. Rom. 14:10-23. Destroy not him for whom Christ died. Rev. 3 : 8-1 1, ) An open door — let no man take 2 John 8. ) thy crown. PRESENT BLESSINGS IN SERVICE. Matt. 6 : 25-34. God's care and supply de- liver from fear of want. Matt. 10:25-31. God's care and protection de- liver from fear of man. Matt. 10 : 18-20, ) Wisdom is given by the James 1:5. ) Spirit in time of need. Matt. 28 : 20 J ™ . ,. , T ,.. , ^ \ The companionship of Jesus. Mark 16:20. ) L r J Mark 10 : 29, 30. Loss for the gospel's sake is a hundred-fold rewarded. 1 Cor. 1 : 5. We are enriched in utterance. 2 Cor. 1:7-11, ) We have deliverance in 2 Tim. 4: 17, 18. ) trouble. FUTURE BLESSINGS ON ACCOUNT OF SERVICE. Dan. 12: 3. Shining in heaven. Matt. 5 : 19. Greatness in heaven. 48 GOSPEL WORK. Matt. 6:19, 20. Treasures in heaven. Matt. 10: 32. Confessed in heaven. Matt. 16:27. Reward at his coming. Matt. 24:45-47, \ Matt. 25 : 21, 23, > Ruling with Christ. 2 Tim. 2 : 11, 12. ) John 12 : 26. Honor from the Father. 1 Cor. 9:25. An incorruptible crown. 1 Thess. 2 : 19, 20. A crown of rejoicing. 2 Tim. 4 : 5-8. A crown of righteousness. 1 Pet. 5 14. An unfading crown of glory. REVERENCE AND GODLY FEAR. _,. ' "' ' ' f The judgment-seat of Christ. 2 Tim. 4:1. J J & Heb. 12 : 28, 29. Our God is a consuming fire. 2 Pet. 3: 10-15. Seeing all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of workers ought we to be ! THE OPPORTUNITIES. 49 VI. THE OPPORTUNITIES. The whole of the Christian's life here, as con- trasted with the life hereafter, is an opportunity to tell the gospel. And had we anointed eyes, and were we, as led by the Holy Spirit, on the watch for opportunities, we should see them every day, and many times a day. SUGGESTIONS FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. Deut. 6:6-9. God's words are to be in our mouths, at home and abroad, by night and by day. 2 Sam. 5 : 24. The sound of a going in the mul- berry-trees is a signal to bestir one's self. 1 Chron. 12: 32. One wise to discern opportu- nities makes a good soldier. 2 Chron. 18:33. A bow, drawn at a venture, smote a king of Israel between the joints of his harness. TEACHING IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. Luke 10 : 29-37. Every man's necessity or dis* tress is our opportunity to minister the gospel. Gospel Worl% 7 50 GOSPEL WORK. 2 Cor. 6 : 2. Our gospel opportunities are now. Gal. 6:10. u As we have opportunity, let us do good unto all." Eph. 5:16, ) Buying up the time, (every op- Col. 4 : 5, 6. ) portunity.) 2 Tim. 4:2. " In season, out of season."* Heb. 3:13. Exhort one another daily, while it is called " to-day." JESUS, IN EVERY CIRCUMSTANCE, FOUND AN OPPORTUNITY. Matt. 4:18. When walking by the sea. Matt. 4: 23. When teaching in the synagogue. Matt. 5:1, Matt. 13 : 2. Matt. 8:2, 5. When he was asked. Matt. 8 : 14. Without being asked. Matt. 8 : 29. When men would have nothing to do with him. Matt. 9:9. At a place of business. Matt. 9 : 10. When sitting at meat. Matt. 12:10-12. Even when considered un- lawful. * In these passages, the words " opportunity," " time," and " season," are the same word in the original. When multitudes were gathered. THE OPPORTUNITIES. 51 Matt. 12:46, 50. When interrupted. Matt. 13 : 1, 36. When he went out, and when he came in. Matt. 13 : 54-57. In his own town (Luke 4:16) and away from home, Matt. 15 : 21-28. Matt. 14: 13. When his privacy^was invaded. Matt. 16: 1-12. When men tried to catch him in his talk. Matt. 17: 1-13. On the mount of Vision. Matt. 17:14-20. In the valley of human need. Matt. 17: 24-27. When the tax-gatherers came to him. Matt. 18 M, 21, ) Taking advantage of ques- Matt. 19:3, 16, 27. ( tions proposed to him. Matt. 22 : 15, 23, 35. When his enemies sought to entangle him. Mark 5 : 25-34. When a poor woman touched him in the press, on his way to a ruler's house. Cf. Matt. 20 : 29-34. Mark 9:33. When he overheard disciples dis- puting. Mark 12 141. As he sat over against the treas- ury. 52 GOSPEL WORK. Luke 2:46-49. As a child among the teach- ers of the law. Luke 7:12. When he met a funeral procession. Luke 7 : 24. When his attention was called to the persecution of God's messenger. Luke 7:37. When a woman, who was a sin- ner, honored him in the presence of a rich Pharisee. Luke 8 : 23. When men in jeopardy awoke him. Luke 11: 1. When men would learn of him how to pray. Luke 11 .-27. When a woman praised him. Luke 1 1 : 38. When men were shocked at his disregard of religious proprieties. Luke n 145. When a lawyer* winced at his testimony. Luke 12 : 13. When a man would use his influ- ence to get property for himself. Luke 13 : 1, 4. When told of a murder and an accident. Luke 13:23. When an abstract theological * " Lawyer/' a teacher of the law — God's word. THE OPPORTUNITIES. 53 question was proposed, he made it the oc- casion of a personal admonition. Luke 13:31. When men would stop his work by warning him of danger. Luke 14 : 7. When men contended for social position. Luke 14:15. When some one made a pious observation about heaven. Luke 15 : 2. When Pharisees murmured at his receiving sinners. Luke 16 : 14. When covetous men derided him. Luke 18:9. When he met self-satisfied reli- gious people. Luke 18:15. When his disciples would have kept back children. Luke 24:13-32. When he met men by the way, he joined them that he might open to them the Scriptures. John 1 : 38. When men gave indication of in- terest. John 2 : 2. When he attended a wedding. John 3 : 2. When one came to him secretly. John 4:6, 7. When wearied he sat on the well. 54 GOSPEL WORK, John 6:26. When men followed him, though it was only for loaves and fishes. John 7:37. When men were thirsty. John 9:5. To a blind man he showed the Son of God, as the light of the world. John 11 : 1-45. To the dead he preached Jesus and the resurrection. Cf. Acts 8:35; 17: 18. Jesus was never at a loss to introduce the gospel. He made whatever was before men's eyes serve as an opportunity ; e. g % sowing, grinding, fishing, a shepherd and his sheep, a fig-tree, a vineyard, bread, a well of water, the birds, the flowers, the wind, the sun. In all this he is surely our example. Every life, however ordinary, will be full of testimony and blessing, if only we see that its familiar events are oppor- tunities, and use them for the Master. TOIL BEFORE REST. 55 TOIL BEFORE REST. " Go, labor on; spend and be spent — Thy joy to do the Father's will ; It is the way the Master went ; Should not the servant tread it still ? " Go, labor on, while it is day ; The world's dark night is hastening on : Speed, speed thy work — cast sloth away ! It is not thus that souls are won. " Go, labor on ; enough, while here, If he shall praise thee, if he deign • Thy willing-heart to mark and cheer : No toil for him shall be in vain. "Toil on, and in thy toil rejoice; For toil comes rest, for exile home ; Soon shalt thou hear the Bridegroom's voice, The midnight peal, ' Behold, I come !' " GOSPEL TRUTH, OR GOD'S WORD ABOUT MAN AND SALVATION. SCRIPTURE TEXT-BOOK, FOR INQUIRERS, BELIEVERS, AND CHRISTIAN WORKERS. COMPILED BY C. M. WHITTELSEY and E. P. GARDNER. American Tract Society, I50 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. I COPYRIGHT, 1878, BY AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY. PREFACE The object of this compilation of Scripture is to refer all who read it to the statements of God's Word which are suited to convict a sinner of his sin and lead him to Christ. Many an inquirer, convinced of his need and attracted to the Saviour, would fain search the Scriptures to know the certainty of those things wherein he has been instructed. Every believer, in order to be so established in the doctrine of Christ as to walk with him in unhindered communion, and in order to be so fully assured of salvation that, at rest from him- self, he may be devoted to the service of the Lord, must carefully and studiously become ac- quainted with the Word of God about himself and about the work of Christ. And if the Christian pastor and preacher, in order to be thoroughly equipped for his work, needs years of patient and laborious study in the doctrine of the Word of God, surely every Chris- 4 PREFACE. tian who would be successful in the witnessing and work of the gospel committed to his hands,* in his measure as truly needs to be thoroughly furnished by accurate knowledge of the teaching of Christ. For who can weigh the guilt of care- less or superficial instruction when the question pertains to the salvation of a soul ? He, then, who finds himself in any one of the above classes, is earnestly asked not to content himself with reading what we have written as if it were a message by itself. We urge a thought- -ful and prayerful study of the Bible, to which this book is only a partial table of contents. And since this is the character of our work, it can of course be of full value only to those who will heed the interruption made by the referen- ces, and search out the passages themselves in the Word of God, noting also the context. Calling believers, as we do, to this doctrinal study of the Scriptures, a word of caution may * A companion pamphlet, entitled " Gospel Work, or God's Words about Working," directs one to the passages of Scripture which call the believer to be a gospel worker, de- scribe the qualifications he needs, and his sources of power, and give the incentives by which he should be urged and the opportunities he should improve. PREFACE. 5 not be out of place. To study only by themes, following out separate doctrines, is not sufficient. God's Word is a living whole, moulded and ordered by the Spirit of God, and single portions of it can be rightly understood only in the con- nections in which the Spirit has set them forth. The Bible is given us in order that we may be- come acquainted with Christ himself, with God in Christ. True reverence, while seeking to rightly divide the word, will never permit one to dissect and mutilate that which is so intimately associated with His person, nor to press into the service of a particular truth that which the Spirit of God has written with a different intent. Any study of doctrine which does not keep us patient- ly waiting upon the Holy Spirit, and continually looking at and unto Christ, will be barren of fruit, if not positively injurious. The study here proposed is therefore not to supplant but to accompany-that reading of Scrip- ture in course, and that study of chapters and books in the Bible, which will enable us to right- ly understand selected verses in their relation to the whole Word and its central object, and in their bearing upon one or another aspect of truth. 6 PREFACE. How great our undertaking was we had no conception when we began. Only those who have attempted such work can know the prayer- ful labor expended in seeking, both to reach up in our statements to something of the fulness of Scripture, and at the same time to abide accu- rately within the statements of the inspired words, to the exclusion of mere inferences, in presenting the truth as it is in Jesus. May He who has greatly blessed our own souls in all our study, and given us by His Spirit whatever of success we may have attained, par- don also whatever He may see amiss. The Lord guard, by the same Holy Spirit, all who search the Scriptures by means of these references, as no man can, from every error of mind and heart, guiding them into his own truth. And may he greatly bless and use this service, done as unto him, to the salvation of souls, the comfort and furnishing of his people, and the glory of his own name. CHAS. M. WHITTELSEY, Spencerport, N. Y. E. P. GARDNER, Portland, Me. SYNOPSIS. GOD page 9 MAN-- -------- n i. What he was in the mind of God •• .-- — ---.. n 2. What he is in fact — - - 14 (1.) What he has shown himself in History 15 (A.) Before the Deluge 15 (B.) From the Deluge till Abraham 16 (C.) Till the close of Jewish History -- 17 (D.) In Profane History- ----- 19 (E.) Since the Day of Pentecost 19 (2.) God's Testimony to what is in Man 20 (3.) The Case summed up 24 3. What he deserves 26 SALVATION - 30 1. Salvation from God So 2. Salvation through Christ. His Person - 32 (1.) Christ is God-- 32 (2.) Christ is Man 23 SYNOPSIS. 3. The Work of Christ 3 y (1.) As Saviour of the World 3$ (2.) As unto the Believer — (A.) Redemption 41 (B.) Forgiveness- - — 42 (C.) Righteousness - - 44 4. Salvation by Grace 47 5. Salvation through Repentance --- 50 6. Salvation through Faith - 53 (1.) Repentance and Faith- 53 (2.) Faith in General — Saving Faith 54 (3.) The Testimony to be Believed 56 (4.) The Decisive Question 57 (5.) What Unbelief Involves---" 58 7. The Work of the Holy Spirit in Regeneration 60 8. How one may Know he is Saved • 64 (1.) By the Fruits of the Spirit 65 (2.) From the Testimony of God 66 9. The State and Prospects of Believers - 69 (1.) What Believers Are 69 (2.) What Believers Have 72 (3.) The Believer's Life 74 (4.) The Believer's Hope 77 GOSPEL TRUTH. GOD. We learn from the Scriptures that God is the infinite, Rom. 11:33-36, and unchangeable One, Jas. 1 : 17 who inhabiteth eternity, Isa. He created all things, Rev. 4:11, and up- holds them by the word of his power, Heb. 1 13. He rules the universe, Psa. 103:19, and is everywhere present, Psa. 139:11 ; Jer. 23 :24. All things past, present, Heb. 4:13, and to come, Isa. 46 :g y 10, are open to his gaze. He is a God of truth, Deut. 32:4, purity, Hab. 1:13, justice, Psa. 89:14, and holiness, 1 Pet. 1 : 16; Rev. 4:8. He is bountiful toward all his creatures, Psa. 104:10-24, and kind even to the unthankful and the evil, Luke 6:35. io GOSPEL TRUTH. His compassions fail not, Lam. 3:22, 23. He is long-suffering, 2 Pet. 3 19, and abundant in goodness, Ex. 34:6, giving his Son to be a sacrifice for sinners, Rom. 5 : 8. He feels every sorrow, Isa. 63:9, knows every want, Luke 12:29, 30, and hears every prayer, Luke 1 1 : 9-13, of those who look to him. He is their guide, Psa. 32:8, support, Psa. 55 : 22, and strength, Isa. 40 : 28-731. He pities like a father, Psa. 103 : 13, and com- forts like a mother, Isa. 66: 13, but with a deeper than a father's and mothers tenderness, Matt. 7:11; Isa. 49:15. His love passes knowledge, Eph. 3:17-19; for love is the very essence of his being, 1 John 4:8, 16. With such a character he is indeed the blessed God, 1 Tim. 1 :u, and the God of peace, Phil. 4:7>9. To do his will is a privilege, Pro v. 3:17. To wander from him is misery, Isa. 48 : 22. To be in his presence is fulness of joy, Psa. t6:io. MAN: AS IN GOD'S MIND. n MAN. i. WHAT HE WAS IN THE MIND OF GOD. Such a God as the Scriptures reveal could not be satisfied with a moral character unlike his own. He testified this when he created man in his own image, Gen. 1:27. And the Bible in its specific requirements of man knows no other standard. (1.) There are the "common virtues " that have the general consent of man's moral sense. God asks man to abstain from murder, adultery, theft and false-witness, Matt. 19:16-19; to be upright, Prov. 11 : 20, honest, Deut. 25 : 15 ; Rom. 13:7, 8, truthful, Zech. 8:16, and tem- perate, 1 Cor. 9:25; to be filial, Ex. 20:12, courteous, 1 Pet. 3:8, and gentle, Jas. 3:17; and withal to deliver the oppressed, relieve those in want, Isa. 58:6, 7, and comfort the afflicted, Jas. 1 127. (2.) But though a man say he has kept all these from his youth up, Matt. 19:20, there is 12 GOSPEL TRUTH. much yet lacking. God forbids envy, Jas. 3 : 16, pride, Prov. 16 : 5, and covetousness, Ex. 20 : 17 ; and requires lowliness, Phil. 2 : 3, patience, 1 Tim. 6: II, and that a man be blameless in speech, Jas. 3 : 2. Christ interpreted the law as reaching to the thoughts and intents of the heart. Anger and impure desire rank as crim- inal offences, Matt. 5:22, 28. A man must be meek, Matt. 5:5, and forgiving, Matt. 6 : 12, 14, 15 ; he must do to others as he ought to wish that they should do to him, Matt. 7:12; graciously yield his rights, Matt. 5 138-42; and love all men as himself, Matt. 22:39, even when they despise and hate him, Matt. 5 : 44. (3.) High as this divine standard necessarily is already, the first and great commandment yet remains : a Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind," Matt. 22:36, 37. This is more than to be moral or religious or orthodox, Matt. 5 : 20. God asks us at the very outset to become as little children, Matt. 11:25; Luke 18:17, and to understand and know him, Jer. 9 : 23, 24 ; at the same time that we are to worship him MAN: AS IN GOD'S MIND. 13 only, Matt. 4: 10, and do his will as it is done in heaven, Matt. 6: 10. He would have every part of our life devoted to himself, 1 Cor. 10:31 ; so that, without anxi- ety for the future, Matt. 6 : 25-32, his kingdom and righteousness shall always be first in our thoughts, Matt. 6:33, 34. Every man is called, further, to live upon God's words, Matt. 4:4, and teach them to others, Deut. 6:6-9; being led of the Spirit of God, John 16:13; Rom. 8:14; Ex. 13:21, as a stranger and pilgrim on the earth, Heb. 11 : 13-16, with his heart set on things in heav- en, Matt. 6 : 19-21 ; Col. 3 : 2. Blameless in every point, Jas. 2:10, in all things like Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. 2:21-23; the standard is summed up in this: to be holy as God is holy, 1 Pet. 1:16. With such a blessed character, itself a foun- tain of good, man must have possessed uninter- rupted communion with God, peace like a river and joy unspeakable; while the history of earth would have been a page from that of heaven. 14 GOSPEL TRUTH. MAN. 2. WHAT HE IS. When God created man in His own image, with free-will, and entirely innocent, the door to this blessed character was open to him. He had but to obey and thus recognize his true re- lation to God. He was also warned that dis- obedience would involve death, Gen. 2:16, 17. But he turned his back upon God and the char- acter designed for him, by refusing to render obedience and choosing the path of sin, Gen. 3:6, 7. His free will set aside God's will and became self-will. So human nature and free will, when tested, proved to be a failure. Proba- tion came in fact to an end ; and man, brought into judgment before God, was sentenced, Gen. 3:16-19. From this point, probation as to character is simply proving man to himself. God accordingly began a twofold teaching : one of history, in which man would learn by experi- ence what he had become, and the other of divine testimony. MAN: IN HIS TOR Y. 1 5 (1.) WHAT MAN HAS SHOWED HIMSELF TO BE IN HISTORY. As we read the inspired history of man we find a series of dispensations, in each of which he is placed in different circumstances and suc- cessively under new motives and influences, suited to turn him from sin to God. We find also that each dispensation ends in failure and judgment. So that when we ask the results of man's first disobedience, the historical answer is that human nature is not only marred but ruin- ed ; that man is not only erring but lost ; that the result is just what God said it would be, a condition of complete alienation from Him, a death in trespasses and sins. Let us follow this history in detail. (A.) When man had failed in innocency and had been judged before God, he entered on a new probation that he might know himself. No new commandment took the place of the one that had been broken, but the promise of a Re- deemer was given him, Gen. 3:15; and divine instruction as to the way in which one may stand before God forgiven and accepted, Gen. 1 6 GOSPEL TRUTH. 3:7, 21 ; 4:4; Heb. 11 14; Zech. 3 : 3-5 ; Rev. 7 : 14 * But the promise and the instruction were in vain. Mankind went out from the pres- ence of the Lord and began a Cain-like progress, Gen. 4: 16-22, which is not yet at an end; for mankind is still seeking to escape and forget the curse by monuments to his own name, by the acquisition of wealth, and by the inventions which shall render life easy and joyous "without God." The flood, Gen. 6 and 7, was accordingly sent as God's testimony that the race — human nature — had failed under promise and instruction, as completely as it did in Eden. For " God saw that every imagination of the thought of his heart was only evil continually." Gen. 6:5, 11, 12. (B) Now a third opportunity was given to man. To the miraculously saved family of eight per- sons, who offered up the appointed sacrifice, God gave the covenant of the bow in the cloud, the * The recorded fact that Abel offered sacrifice "by faith," (and where there is no word to believe, there is no faith, Rom. 10 : 17,) God's dealing with Cain, and the scriptural use of clothing ever after, clearly indicate that when Adam was cloth- ed with skins, God taught him the way of salvation through the death of a substitute, the bruising of the promised Redeemer. MAN: IN HIS TOR Y. 1 7 solemn lessons of the past, and an earth from whose face dominant iniquity had been washed away in the flood. Gen. 8 : 15 to 9 : 17. But all was again in vain. The city and tower of Babel were an attempted brotherhood of the race, leav- ing out God as the centre of unity, and substitu- ting instead an ideal of humanity, in which man showed his godlessness and pride ; and God de- clared man's failure in the judgment of the dis- persion, Gen. 1 1 : 3-9. (C.) Next, one man of the race and his descend- ants were chosen, that it might be seen what a supernatural culture and special advantages could effect, Gen. 12 : 1-3. Wonderful promises were made and miracles wrought. But the his- tory of this elect race shows a long succession of obdurate rejections of God, Acts 7. The heirs of the promises made to Abraham became slaves and idol-worshippers in Egypt, Ezek. 20 : 5-8. Their deliverance from bondage did not keep them from murmuring in the wilder- ness, when on their way to the country God had provided, Exod. 16 and 17; and the past experi- ence of the race did not keep them from assu- 3 18 GOSPEL TRUTH. ming their ability to do all that God could ask of them, Exod. 19:8. Before there had been time for even the utterance of His commands, they were bowing before a golden calf, Exod. 32. The early promise of a Redeemer and the in- struction as to forgiveness were amplified to them in a tabernacle and a ritual which spoke of Christ in every part. The Angel of God's presence in the cloud of glory met every want, and led them to the very borders of the land of promise. But by reason of unbelief they did not enter in, Numb. 14; and for forty years they were proved in the wilderness, Deut. 8 : 1-3. Even after they were brought into their inherit- ance, they rebelled against God under the suc- cessive dispensations of Judges, Jiidg. 2 : 11-13, 19, of Kings, 2 Kings 17 : 7-23 ; 2 Chron. 36: 15, 16, and of Prophets, Jer. 7:25-28. Every de- liverance was followed by some new departure from God. Under the Kingdom they became divided against themselves. Nowhere in all lit- erature are to be found such warnings, instruc- tions, and expostulations as may be read in the pages of the prophets. If intense appeals could MAN: IN HIS TOR Y. 19 move man to return to God, Israel must have been brought into fellowship with Him. Finally God sent his own Son, divinely attested, full of grace and truth, in whom dwelt the fulness of the Godhead bodily. He w r as God manifest in the flesh to the chosen people. But even he was hated, rejected, and slain, Mark 12:1-8; John 15 122-25. Thus the nation upon whom God had centred all his testimonies, revelations, and mighty deliverances, Isa. 1 : 1-6, constitu- ting a miraculous culture the highest conceiva- ble, proved the impossibility of educating human nature back to God. (Z?.) The profane history of other nations, and the divine record of the result of leaving man to himself, Rom. 1, tell the same story. Human wisdom reached its highest stage in Greek cul- ture, and organized power in the Roman Empire, but they both rejected Christ, Acts 4:26, 27; 1 Cor. 1 : 23. (E.) Since the day of Pentecost man has had the testimony of the Spirit. It is His mission to convince the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment, and dwelling in the believer, to com- 20 GOSPEL TRUTH. fort, teach, and guide, showing him the things of Christ both present and to come, John 14: 16, 17; 16:7-14. Through Him is given to us a revelation more complete, Eph. 3 15, and great- er privileges, Gal. 4 : 1-7, than were possible before. But prophecy warns us that the result will show the human heart still unchanged, and that this age will end, as each preceding age has ended, in the rejection of God and consequent judgment, Luke 17:26-30; 18:8; 21:34-36; 2 Thess. 2:3-12 ; 2 Tim, 3:152 Pet. 3 :3, 4. The testimony of man about himself is thus historically unequivocal. Human nature, under the strongest and most varied incentives, and under a divine and most marvellous culture, has shown no will to take a single step toward fel- lowship with God ; but has, under every test, turned away from God and toward evil. (2.) god's testimony to what is in man. The divine testimony has, from the first, ac- companied man's manifestation of his own char- acter in history. As we listen, let us keep in mind the fact that God is love. MAN: IN GOD'S TESTIMONY. 21 He is too truthful to deceive us, too loving to be harsh with us. If the testimony is unpalatable, it is only be- cause the facts are dreadful. If the unwelcome facts are pressed upon our attention, it is only that we may find the deliv- erance in God which cannot be found in our- selves. (A.) Upon the plane of man's relations to his fellow-men, the testimony is that " from within out of the heart of men proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covet- ousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness : all these evil things come from within and defile the man,"* Mark 7:21-23 cf. Rom. 3: 12-17; J as - 3:6, 8, 9. In addition to this description of " humanity," we find among the works of the flesh, " uncleanness, idolatry, witchcraft, vari- ance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, here- sies, drunkenness, revellings, and such like." Gal. 5 : 19-21 ; Col. 3 : 5, 6. It is also written * The Greek word translated "the man," as here used, might aptly be rendered "humanity," or "mankind." 22 GOSPEL TRUTH. as characteristic of men that they are disobedi- ent, deceived, serving divers lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another, Tit. 3 : 3, and filling the world with cru- elty, misery, and war, Psa. 74: 20; Rom. 3 : 16 ; Jas. 4:2; and that they not only commit sin themselves, but take pleasure in others who sin, Rom. 1 : 32. In the full development of our human nature, to be seen in the last days, men are declared to be "lovers of their own selves, boasters, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, truce-breakers, false accusers, inconti- nent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, trai- tors, heady, high-minded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God, having the form of godliness but denying the power thereof," 2 Tim. 3 : 1-5. (B) As regards their conduct towards God, their Maker and rightful Ruler, men are de- scribed as careless, Deut. 32:18; Psa. 10:4, without reverence or love, Rom. 3:18; Prov. 1 : 29 ; John 5 : 42 ; Rom. 3:11, separated from the life of God, Eph. 4: 18, T9, and practically infidels, Psa. 10: 11, 13; Job 21:15, and athe- ists, Psa. 14 : 1. MAN: IN GOD'S TESTIMONY. 23 Nor is this a mere passive state of estrange- ment ; men are actively disobedient and rebel- lious, Isa. 1:2; Col. 3:6; rejecting his appeals, Prov. 1 : 24, 25, contemning his goodness, Rom. 2 : 1-4, and rising to the height of positive en- mity toward him, Col. 1:21; Jas. 4 : 4. (C) We are further taught that sin has defiled the very fountain of action, so that man's nature is represented as evil. He is polluted from birth, Psa. 58:3; 53:3; 5i:S, carnal in his desires, John 3:3-6, and hating the light, John 3:19, 20. He is set in unchangeable opposition to the will of God, Rom. 8 : 7. He is the bond-slave of sin, John 8 : 34 ; Rom. 6:16; 7 ; 14, deliver- ing himself over into the control of Satan, Eph. 2 : 2 ; 1 John 3 : 8-10 ; 5:19. (D.) Hence in his full-length portrait of the inner and outer man, God declares that the ruin is not partial, but affecting all departments of his being, Isa. 1 : 4-6. His whole head is sick, so that his mind is blinded, 2 Cor. 4 : 4, his spiritual perception is lost, 1 Cor. 2 : 14, his understanding is dark- ened, Eph. 4: 18, his imagination is evil, Gen. 24 GOSPEL TRUTH. 6:5; Rom. 1:21, and his conscience defiled, Tit. 1 : 15. His will is obdurate, Eccles. 8 ; 1 1 ; John 5 : 40, and his heart is hard as a stone, Ezek, 11 : 19 ; Zech. 7:12, and incurably wicked, Jer. 17:9. His ears are dull and his eyes closed, Matt. I 3 :I 3~ I 5- His mouth is given to evil, Psa. 50 : 19 ; 52 : 2, and his tongue to deceit, so that his throat is like an open sepulchre, Rom. 3:13; Jas. 3:8. His hands are unclean, Isa. 59:3; Jas. 4:8, and his feet run to evil, Prov. 1 : 16; Isa. 53:6. (E.) Moreover, when Christ is presented to men, their will is not to yield to his authority, Luke 19:14; John 1:11, not to believe his promises, John 1-6:9, anc ^ even to hate him, John 15:24, 25. (3.) THE CASE SUMMED UP. Whether man writes his character in history or God reads it from his heart, the result is the same. Since its first choice of sin, human na- ture in God's sight has nothing good in it, Rom. 7:18. MAN: THE CASE SUMMED UP. 25 Men are lost, Luke 19 : 10. Instead of being on probation, they are al- ready condemned, John 3:18. Their existence is a death whose activity is before God only corruption in trespasses and sins, Eph. 2:1; Rom. 7 : 24. There is need to begin wholly afresh, with new birth, John 3 : 3, and a new life, John 6:53. Nor can any one who remains in his sins ac- cuse God or excuse himself, John 15 : 22 ; Rom. 1 : 20, because he abides in it of his own will, John 5 140, and against every motive which love could devise, Isa. 5 14. Finally, this testimony of God is not excep- tional, applying only to some individuals or sec- tions of the race; it is a description of all men as they are in germ, if not in full development, Psa. 143 : 2 ; Prov. 27 : 19 ; Rom. 2 : 1 ; 3 : 19, 22, 23 ; John 2 : 25, as followed by John 3. 26 GOSPEL TRUTH. MAN. 3. WHAT HE DESERVES. God's estimate of sin and its sinfulness must be intense. This is evident from his character, from what he requires in man, and from his tes- timony as to the condition into which man has brought himself. (1.) His feeling, accordingly, finds expression in the strongest terms of abhorrence, Deut. 32 : 19. Sin is the abominable thing which he hates, Jer. 44:4; Pro v. 15:9. It is exceeding sinful, Rom. 7: 13. His wrath abides on it, Psa. 7:11; John 3 : 36. (2.) But this feeling in no wise leads him to be unduly severe. He declares the penalty to be dictated by justice, Rom. 2:2, 5 ; Job 34 : 23. He sees the enormity of sin, not merely in the ruin it has wrought, but in its denial of his own Godhead, Rom. 1 : 21, 23, 25 ; Psa. 50 : 21 ; Mai. MAN: WHAT HE DESERVES. 27 3:8; Luke 20 : 14, its wilful lawlessness, 1 John 3 : 4, and its self-deification, Gen. 3:5)2 Thes. 2 : 3, 4- Even if one does not feel the sinfulness of sin, nor see that it deserves what the Bible teaches, how can he assume to question the revelation ? Rom. 9 : 20. Plainly we are ignorant, Job 8 : 9, our moral perceptions are dulled, Eph. 4 : 18, 19, and the desire to acquit ourselves unfits us to judge, Job 40 : 8. While God's greatness, Isa. 40 : 12-18, holiness, Isa. 6 : 3, righteousness, Psa. 145 : 17, and goodness, Rom. 11 133-36, espe- cially as revealed in Jesus Christ, his Son, John 1 : 17, 18, should lead us to trust him implicitly, Gen. 18 : 25 ; Rom. 3 -.4, giving all things into his hands, John 3:35; 5 : 27. God's righteousness was not tarnished when his love made a way of salvation, Rom. 3 : 26. God's love will not be obscured when his right- eousness is executed, Psa. 51 14. Nor can we forget that it is the sinner who brings the penalty upon his own head, Prov. 8 : 36, by rejecting God's counsels and warn- ings, Isa. 1:18; Prov. 1 : 24, 25, by contempt of 28 GOSPEL TRUTH his forbearance, Rom. 2 : 4, and by despising his grace, Heb. 2:3; 10 : 29 ; 12 : 18-29. (3.) God cannot, therefore, in any wise over- look the guilt of sin, Hab. 1:13. His own character compels him to his strange work of judgment, Isa. 28:21. And the certainty of punishment is specially testified in the passages which declare God's forbearance and his wish that none should perish, but that all should come to repentance, Rom. 2 : 2-1 1 ; 2 Pet. 3 : 3-10. No appeal, therefore, to some vague mercy of God will avail, Exod. 34 : 6, 7 ; Heb. 10 : 28, 29. Sincerity cannot be accepted as a plea, Prov. 16 : 25. And no excuse can hide one from his sin, Luke 12 : 2-5. (4.) But next to the cross of Christ, only the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God can give us his true estimate of sin. In that day, Acts 17:31, Christ, to whom all judgment is committed, John 5:22, will raise the dead, John 5 : 28, 29, and cause' them to stand before his throne, Rev. 20:5, 6, While distinctions will be recognized, because MAN: WHAT HE DESERVES. 29 men will be judged according to their deeds, Rom. 2 : 6, according to their privileges, Rom. 2:12, and according to their light, Luke 12 : 47, 48, yet all unbelievers will be punished with death, Rom. 6 123. This death God defines to be separation from the righteous, Luke 13:24-28, from Christ, 2 Thess. 1:9; John 7 : 34, and from heaven, Rev. 21 : 27. It is described as outer darkness, Matt. 8:12, the lake of fire, Rev. 20 : 15, a place of torment, Matt. 24 : 5 1 ; Luke 16 : 23, 28 ; Rom. 2 : 9, which was prepared for the devil and his angels, Matt. 25 141, 46; Rev. 20:10. More- over, it is written of those condemned at this last judgment, that their character will be final, Rev. 22 : 11, and their destiny everlasting mis- ery, Mark 9 : 43, 44 ; Luke 16 : 26 ; Rev. 14:11. 3o GOSPEL TRUTH. SALVATION. I. SALVATION FROM GOD. From the dark sad record of man and his de- sert, we turn again to the character of God. With no resource in himself, there is salvation for the sinner in the very Being against whom he has rebelled. God has throughout been tes- tifying that He was not willing that any should perish, Ezek. 33:11; 2 Pet. 3:9; 1 Tim. 2 : 4. He planned for salvation even before man sinned, Eph. 1 14, 5 ; and afterward arranged all history with a view to redemption, Acts 17 : 26, 27; Gal. 4:4. Though man has embraced no opportunity to feel after God, yet God has been seeking after man ever since the garden, Gen. 3 : 8, 9; Luke 19 : 10. Man made no discovery of God, but God con- tinually, by many messengers, and at last by his Son, sent news of Himself, John 1:18; Heb. 1 : 1-3. SAL VAT10N FROM GOD. 3 1 He revealed his love, 1 John 4 : 9, and his righteousness, Rom. 3:21-26, in divine harmo- ny, Psa. 85 : 10, by the gift of his Son that men might not perish, John 3:16. He established the law, Rom. 3:31, and condemned sin, Rom. 8 : 3, and in the very act brought salvation and eternal life, John 5 : 24, and the privilege of sons of God, Rom. 8 : 14-17, within reach of the low- est and worst of sinners, Matt. 9:9-13; Luke 7 : 36-50. Nor did he stop with the finished work upon the cross, but has ever since been himself urging men to accept salvation, 2 Cor. 5 : 18 to 6: 2. For this the Holy Spirit has come, and is in the world, John 16: 7-15. For this the church is left on earth, John 17: 18; Acts 1 :8. For this the Bible throbs with invitation and entreaty, Isa. 55:1-3; Matt. 11:28, 29; Rev. 22 : 17. All heaven is interested in the work, Luke 2 : 9-15 ; Eph. 3 : 10 ; 1 Pet. 1:12, while God himself rejoices over one sinner that repenteth, Luke 15. 32 GOSPEL TRUTH. SALVATION. 2. SALVATION THROUGH CHRIST. But the marvel grows unspeakably great by the glad tidings of salvation, in that Son who is "the mighty God," Isa. 9:6. The love God had to us could not be valued by silver nor gold, nor by any creature : nor could the salva- tion he had devised for us be wrought by an- other than himself. Only the Son, who came from the bosom of the Father, could bring us into sonship. To truly discern his Person is itself salvation in all its completeness, John 1 : 11, 12; 3:14-16; 17:3; 20:31; Romans 10:8-10; 1 Cor, 12:3; 2 Cor. 3:18; 1 John 3:i-3; 5:l (i.) CHRIST IS GOD It is not therefore a dead dogma but a living gospel that we read in the fact that Jesus was Immanuel, Matt. 1 : 23, " God manifest in the flesh," 1 Tim. 3 : 16. With adoring faith we see that Christ from eternity was and is God, John 1 : 1, 2, the only begotten and coequal Son of the Father, John 1:14; 5 : 23 ; 10 : 30 ; Phil. SAL VA TION THE UGH CHRIST. 33 2 : 6, whose goings forth were from everlasting, Micah 5 : 2, and whose throne is for ever and ever, Heb. 1 :8-i2. Christ is the Almighty, Rev. 1 : 5-8, Maker of heaven and earth, the Lord of all, who upholds all things, and for whom all things exist, John 1:3-5; Acts 10:36; Col. 1:16, 17; Heb. 1 : 1-3- He is the unchangeable One, Heb. 13:8, who knoweth all things, John 21:17. He is present with every " two or three " gath- ered in his name, Matt. 18:20, and with every servant engaged upon his business, Matt. 28 :20. (2.) CHRIST IS MAN. This glorious Son of God,* who is God over all blessed for ever, Rom. 9 : 5, for redemption's sake, became man, John 1 : 14; Luke 1 : 31-35 ; 2:11; Heb. 2 : 14-17. * The forms of expression, "children of," or "son of," in Acts 4:36, Numb. 23:19, 2 Thess. 2:3, Eph. 2 : 2, 1 Thess. 5 : 5, etc., are used to describe what one is essentially. Hence the scriptural titles, the "Son of God," the "Son of man," instead of giving reason to question, actually assert, Christ's essential Deity and essential humanity. 5 34 GOSPEL TRUTH, He humbled himself to all the limitations of a human life, Luke 2:51; Mark 6:3; Luke 9:58. He took on him a human body, Heb. 10:5, and was weary, John 4 : 6, and hungry, Matt. 21: 18. His growth in stature was accompanied by a growth in wisdom and favor with God, that showed a human development of his mind and character, Luke 2:46, 52. Possessing a human soul, Mark 14 : 34, he had personal friendships, John 11:5; J 3 : 2 3 >" anc ^ he, who groaned in spirit and wept with others, John 11 : 33, 35, in his own great sorrow appeal- ed to men for sympathy, Matt. 26:38-45. His agony of soul, though it could not cause him to falter in subjection to God, yet prostrated him as a man, Luke 22 141-45. Thus assuming a complete human nature in order to be both high-priest and sin-offering, Heb. 2: 17, he was in his person entirely with- out sin — a sinless man, Luke 1:35; John 8:46; 14: 30; 2 Cor. 5:21; Heb. 4:15; 1 Pet. 2: 22 ; 1 John 3:5. SAL VA TION THR O UGH CHRIST, 3 5 He indeed returned to the glory he had with the Father before the world was, John 17:5, yet after he was raised from the dead, Luke 24 : 39-43 ; John 20 : 27, and when he ascended on higl), Acts 1:11, he was a man still, the same Jesus. Having passed through the heavens as our forerunner, Heb. 6 : 20, he is now the sympathi- zing Man, Heb. 4:14-16, at the right hand of God as an intercessor, Heb. 9:24; 10:12, on behalf of those whom he is not ashamed to call his brethren, Heb. 2 : 11, 12. Finally, when about to give his last message to the churches, he even then revealed himself, as "for evermore " alive from the dead, Rev. 1 : 13-18; while he is yet to be manifested be- fore all the ransomed church of God, even in the midst of the throne, still bearing the marks of his crucifixion, a Lamb "as it had been slain," Rev. 5 : 6. Thus the salvation which is from God is given to men in a Saviour who is both God and man in one person for ever. In his own person he is able to stand for God among men and for 36 GOSPEL TRUTH. men before God, divinely constituted to be a Mediator, I Tim. 2:5; Heb. 12:24, cf. Gal. 3:20. In Him the invisible God became visible and tangible, 1 John 1 : 1-3 ; Matt. 11 127, 28; and the sinner is not only drawn by the cords of a man, but also in seeing and knowing Him, sees and knows the Father also, John 14:7-9; for in Him dwelleth the fulness of the Godhead bodily, Col. 2:9. But in him, on the other hand, God finds the man in whom he can delight, Matt. 3 : 1 5— 17; Acts 2:22, and worthy to be exalted above every name, Phil. 2:9; and in him, whosoever will may find a second Adam, or head of the race, through whom God can bestow righteous- ness and life and incorruption in abounding grace, even as through the first Adam we have all been visited with sin and death, Rom. 5 : 12-20; 1 Cor. 15 : 22, 45. While the surpass- ing love and the treasures of wisdom and knowl- edge which are wrapped in the fathomless marvel of his person, will take the ages of eternity for their unfolding, Eph. 3 : 19; Col. 2:3; Eph. 2 :y. THE WORK OF CHRIST. 37 SALVATION. 3. THE WORK OF CHRIST. But the climax of the marvel of Christ's in- carnation and spotless life was his death. The Son of God became man in order to offer him- self a sacrifice for sin, John 1 : 1-29. He, who knew no sin, voluntarily humbled himself, John 10:17, 18, to take the place of a sinner before God's broken law, Phil. 2 : 5-8 ; Gal. 4:4; Mark 15 128. The Prince of glory died in agony and shame upon the cross, Luke 23 146; Heb. 12 :2. But beyond his shameful rejection by men, Matt. 27 : 22-44, an d beyond all the torture of his crucifixion, John 19:28, there was in his death a fathomless depth of anguish, Matt. 27:45, 46, to be accounted for only by the judicial act of a righteous God upon a sin- bearer, Isaiah 53:6; Zech. 13:7. It is a re- vealed fact that the spotless One was made sin, 2 Cor. 5:21; that the Beloved of God was made a curse, Gal. 3:13. But we need to distinguish (2 Tim. 2:15) be- tween the relation of the death of Christ to the 38 GOSPEL TRUTH. race, as offering to the world the gift of salva- tion, and the value of that death to believers, as bestowing redemption, forgiveness and right- eousness. (i.) AS SAVIOUR OF THE WORLD. The death of Christ has a world-wide relation, John 3 : 14-21 ; 4 142 ; 6:51; Titus 2:11. It is written, " Behold the Lamb of God which ta- keth away the sin of the world," John 1 129. As such he not only glorified God by his spotless and unblemished manhood, but also by his death, by which he magnified the law, Isa. 42 : 21, so that the door to God's mercy is justly thrown wide open. In this aspect of the atonement, to use the phrases of one whose expositions of the Word have been greatly blessed to Christians, it was not a question of the persons or of the sins which were to be forgiven, nor of God's counsels of grace, Eph. 1:4, 5, for God has a distinct portion in the death of Christ as meet- ing all his claims — the claims of his nature, his character, and his throne — in a world that, has disregarded them and dishonored him. And THE WORK OF CHRIST 39 thus, as "the Lord's lot," as "God's Lamb," all aside from the fact that men are saved by it, he has glorified God before the universe by this dis- play of his love and righteousness. Thus did he fulfil the types of the Lord's lot and the slain bird, Lev. 16 : 8, 9, 15 ; 14 : 4-7. He gave up all that he had to buy the field which held the treasure, Matt. 13:44; which "field is the world," Matt. 13:38. He was a "ransom for all," 1 Tim. 2:4-6; "a propitia- tion* not for our sins only but for the whole world," 1 John 2 : 2. Thus, whether men believe it or not, whether men avail themselves of it or not, the great fact is heralded of God to all the world, that there is a mercy-seat, a meeting-place for God and sin- ful man as such, upon which and before which the blood of a perfect and ample atonement has been sprinkled. This accounts for the gospel statements that are without limitations, such as that the Just * Two different Greek words are translated " propitiation." The "propitiation" in Rom. 3:25 is rendered "mercy-seat" in Heb. 9:5; and upon it the " propitiation" or mercy offer- ing of 1 John 2 : 2, and 4:10, has been sprinkled. 40 GOSPEL TRUTH, One suffered " for the unjust," i Pet. 3:18; that Christ "died for the ungodly/' Rom. 5:6; that he came into the world " to save sinners," 1 Tim. 1:15. There is therefore nothing in God or in the sacrifice to hinder its universal accep- tation, 1 Tim. 1:15; and God's "whosoever" rings at the door of every man's conscience. (2.) AS UNTO THE BELIEVER. (A.) REDEMPTION. This very gospel to the world is God's chosen power to bring men to himself, 1 Pet. 3:18. To it every man ought to give the assent of his whole soul, because it is true. He who dis- believes, thereby charges God with falsehood, 1 John 5 : 10; and remaining alienated from God abides under condemnation, John 3:18, 36. He who believes is at once in Christ Jesus made nigh unto God by the blood of Christ, Eph. 2:13. Having taken his place as a sinner be- fore the mercy-seat, in the light that shines there he sees his own sin and the value of the sacrifice as he never could before. Personally confessing that he is one of those who like THE WORK OF CHRIST. 41 sheep have gone astray, he is also constrained to see that he is one of those whose sins have by a priestly act been l^id upon Christ, Isaiah 53:6. The second of the two parables in Matt. 13 144-46, now finds its counterpart to him in Matt. 20 : 28 ; Eph. 5 : 25-27 ; Titus 2 : 14. In these passages the purchase is not of a mere privilege — that the Son of Man may seek for treasure, Matt. 13 144, and the Father may seek for worshippers, John 4 : 23 ; or that man as such may come to God through a mediator, 1 Tim. 2 : 4-6 — but of the persons of believers, 1 Cor. 6 : 20; a finished transaction, 1 Pet. 1 : 18, 19; Rev. 5:9, by which they are redeemed from under the curse and slavery of sin, Gal. 3:13; Rom. 7 : 14, 23 — 8 : 1, and have become his purchased possession, Eph. 1 : 14, for his exclusive service, Rom. 6 : 22 ; 12 : 1 ; 1 Cor. to : 31, and especial glory, Isa. 53:12; 2 Thess. 1 : 10-12 ; Jude 24. Instructed by these Scrip- tures the believer comes to know with assurance that he possesses the manifold benefits of the one death of Christ as figured in the varied G 42 GOSPEL TRUTH. aspects of the many offerings given to Israel. He should now apply to himself the family per- sonal pronouns of the epistles, e. g. Rom. 4:25; 5 : 1 ; 1 Cor. 1 : 30 ; 2 19-16; 15 .-51-54 ; 2 Cor. 5 : 1-9, 18, 21 ; Gal. 2 120; Eph. 1 : 3-7; 2:4-10 ; 4:30; 5 :2, 8; Col. 1 : 12, 13; 2:6, 7, 10; 3:1-5; Jas. I : 18 ; 1 Pet. 2 : 24 ; 1 John 1 : 7, 9; 3 : 1-3; 4: 10, 11, 16, 17; Rev. 1:5,6. (JB.) FORGIVENESS. Nothing of all that the believer possesses through the death, of Christ should be more clearly discerned than that he now has the for- giveness of sins, Eph. 4 : 32 ; Col. 3:13. As the scapegoat typically took upon its head "all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions in all their sins," as con- fessed by the high priest, so particularly also has the Lord Jesus assumed upon himself all the sins of those who come unto God by Him. And even as the scapegoat was "let go" into the wilderness never to be seen again ; as it bore away its 'heavy load "into a land not inhab- ited" — a land of separation, (margin,) a land THE WORK OF CHRIST. 43 inaccessible (Septuagint) — so Christ also has borne away the believers iniquities into the realm of God's forgetfulness. His transgres- sions have been so let go and banished that in God's sight he is entirely separated from all that he has ever been and done, Lev. .16: 10, 21, 22; cf. Lev. 14:6, 7. Thus wonderfully do even Old Testament types picture out the riches of the grace according to which the be- liever possesses the forgiveness of sins, Eph. 1:7. All Scripture combines to set forth in figure and statement its fulness and completeness. " As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us," Psa. 103 : 12. He has cast our sins behind his back, Isa. 38 : 17. He has buried them in the depths of the sea, Micah 7 : 19. Their record is blotted out, Isa. 43 : 25, and their remission is as abso- lute as the cancelling of a debt which has been settled by another,. Matt. 6:12; Acts 10:43; 13:38, 39- The scarlet, crimson stains which human chemistry cannot bleach, are, through grace, 44 GOSPEL TRUTH. washed white in the sight of God, Isa. I : 18 ; I John 1:7; Rev. 7 : 14. And since with God there is not even the remembrance of his sins, every believer may, through the blood of Jesus, draw near; yes, is bidden of God to come, in the full assurance of a present possession of forgiveness, Heb. 10: 17- 22. He has not to wait for it as a future inher- itance ; it is his already, (note the tenses of Eph. 1 : 7 ; 4 : 32 ; Col. 1 : 12-14 ; 3 : 13,) even though he be a babe in Christ, 1 John 2:12. (C.) RIGHTEOUSNESS. The forgiveness of the gospel is more than deliverance from the penalty of the law. It is " the forgiveness of sins." The gospel, accord- ingly, goes on to declare that God is righteous in the justification of him that believeth in Jesus, Rom. 1 : 16, 17 ; 3 : 26. As a sinner he is reckoned to have already so died in the death of Christ for him, Rom. 6 : 3- 11; 7 : 4, 6, margin ; Gal. 2 : 19, 20 ; Col. 3:3; 1 Pet. 2 : 24, that in God's sight all that he was and had done is entirely cleared from connec- THE WORK OF CHRIST. 45 tion with him, 2 Cor. 5 : 14-18 ; 1 Pet. 4:1, 2 ; 1 John 3 : 5. As redeemed unto God, the believer is now absolutely His, John 17 : 2, 6, 10 ; 1 Cor. 6 : 19, 20; Gal. 1:4; Titus 2:14; so that God can righteously do with him as love may dictate, Eph. 1 : 3-6, and in unfettered grace exalt him into union with his Son, John 17 : 21-23 \ l Cor. 1:9, and upon him, as risen from the dead, lavish untold blessings, Eph. 2 : 4-10 ; 3 : 20, 21. Christ in his death was not the "sin-offering" and the " trespass-offering" only; he was also for the believer all the " sweet-savor offerings," Lev. 1-3 ; Eph. 5 : 2 — " the offerings for accept- ance"* — so that God is justified, in view of the cross, in bestowing righteousness upon him and in accepting him in the acceptableness of Christ, 1 John 4:17; Eph. 5 : 29, 30 ; 1 Cor. 12: 12, 27; Col. 3:3, 4. Accordingly, the righteousness which the be- * The original Hebrew in Lev. 1 : 3, for "of his own volun- tary will," should be rendered, "for his acceptance," and in verse 4 is translated " accepted for him." 46 GOSPEL TRUTH. liever has before God* is seen to be not by works of the law, but apart from law, Rom. 3 : 19-21, 28; 4:3-6; 10:3-10; Gal. 2: 16, 19, 2 1 ; Phil. 3 : 9 ; 2 Tim. 1:9; Heb. 11:4; Titus 3 : 5-7, and not ever; by the faith of the believer as itself a good work, Rom. 3 : 24, but by the blood of Christ, Rom. 5:9; Gal. 3 : 1-14, in the work of redemption, Rom. 3 : 24 ; 4 : 23-25 ; 5:9, 10, 18, 19 ; 8 : 33, 34 ; 2 Cor. 5 : 18-21. It is therefore entirely a righteousness from God, Phil, 3:9; 1 Cor. 1:30; for the unworthy, Rom. 3:24; 4:5, 16; 5:6-10, 15, 16, 21; Gal. 2:21 ; Titus 3 : 1-7 ; by grace, unto all and upon all who believe, Rom. 1:16, 17 ; 3 : 22 ; 5:1; 10:4, 10; Phil. 3 :g. It is moreover justification in a person, and not merely through a plan of redemption. It is " in Christ " that we become the righteousness of God, 2 Cor. 5 : 21 ; 1 Cor. 1 : 30 ; 1 Cor. 6:11; Acts 13:39;! Gal. 2:17;! Jer. 23:6. * James speaks of a righteousness by works which Abra- ham had "before men," and which showed his righteousness by faith to be real, not merely professed, and alive, not dead. James 2 : 14-26 cf. Rom. 4 : 2. t The "by him" and "by Christ" are literally "in him" and "in Christ." SAL VATION B Y GRACE. 47 The issue under the leading of the Spirit of God, is in the works and fruits of righteousness, Phil. 1 Ml ; Rom. 7:6] 8:4; Gal. 5:23-25; Eph. 5:9; Col. 1:6, 10; 3 : 5-17 ; Tit. 2 : 12-14 J 1 John 2 : 29 ; 3:7; Rev. 7 : 14 with 19 : 8. But what the believer is, as created after God in the righteousness and holiness of truth, Eph. 4:24;— -what he is because Christ, of God, is made unto him righteousness, 1 Cor. 1 : 30, can- not be fully seen till resurrection, 1 John 3 : 2. 4. SALVATION BY GRACE. Plainly, since man is guilty, Rom. 3 : 19, lost, Luke 19:10, condemned already, John 3:18, and dead in trespasses and sins, Eph. 2:1; Rom. 8:6, 7, there is nothing he can do to earn salvation or commend himself to God. And as plainly, since Christ came into the world to save sinners, I Tim. 1:15, and finished the work God gave him to do, John 17:4; 19:30, so that he is able to completely save all who come unto God by him, Heb. 7:25, there is no work the sinner needs to do, no fitness he needs to seek, in order that he may receive salvation. 48 GOSPEL TRUTH. He has not to win God's love ; for God al- ready loves him, as testified in the gift of his Son, John 3: 16; 1 John 4:9, 10. The sinner has not to persuade God to be merciful* and willing to save him ; God, already more than willing to save, Ezek. 33:11; 2 Pet. 3:9; 1 Tim. 2:4, has been merciful, and is beseeching him to accept salvation, 2 Cor. 5 : 20. - No emotions or experiences are to be sought, to make it right for God to save the sinner, Rom. 10: 3, 6-8 ; God has already made it right, through the death of his Son, Rom. 3 : 19-26. To a perfect offering nothing can be added, Heb. 10: 1— 18. The sinner has no money or price of any sort to pay, Isa. 55 : 1-3, for God has already pur- chased salvation, that he may make it a free gift, Rom. 5:15-18; 6:23; Eph. 2 : 8. * The publican's prayer, Luke 18: 13, was literally "God make a propitiation for me a sinner;" and he was justified be- cause he rested, not in anything connected with himself, but in a propitiation which God should make, cf. Rom. 3 : 25. But to now offer this prayer, instead of accepting the reconciliation (Greek, propitiation) God has made, Heb. 2 : 17, is to ignore the great fact of the Gospel, that Christ has died. See note on propitiation, page 39. SAL VA T10N B Y GRA CE. 49 There is in salvation no mixture of grace and works, God doing his part and we doing our part, Rom. 4:4, 5; 11:6. God does all the providing and giving, 2 Tim. 1:9, 10; Titus 3:3-7; the sinner, in order to salvation, can only receive, 1 John 5 : 11-13. The believer is, indeed, called to a holy life, 1 Pet. 1 115, 16; Eph. 4: 17-24, and has much to do for God because he is saved, Rom. 12:1; 1 Cor. 6:20; 15 : 10; 2 Cor. 5 : 14, 15 ; yet the sin- ner, as an unbeliever, has nothing to do before accepting Christ, John 6 :28, 29; Acts 16 130, 31. He has not to wait for a favorable opportuni- ty, for God declares that now is the accepted time and the day of salvation, 2 Cor. 6:2; Heb. 3:7, 8. All things are now ready, Luke 14:17. As simply and really and immediately as one accepts any gift, so simply and really and im- mediately must the sinner accept the gift of God, Rev. 22 : 17. So GOSPEL TRUTH. 5. SALVATION THROUGH REPENTANCE. From the testimony already before us, no self- reformation, no protracted agony of soul, no mere sorrowing over sin, nor anything whatever which the sinner works out for himself, need be first experienced, before he can accept salvation as the gift of God. Repentance, therefore, while often accompanied by these and similar experi- ences, must be scAnething different, wrought in the soul by receiving the facts of the gospel. Accordingly repentance unto life, Acts 11:18, is, in the Bible, that change of mind,* in which * The Greek word for repentance, occurring in the New Testament fifty-seven times, is literally an "after-mind." John the Baptist preached to God's ancient people that change of mind necessary to the reception of their promised Messiah, Matt. 3 : 2, 3. Jesus preached to them that change of mind which should accept him in his humiliation, Matt. 4: 17, 23; 5 : 3, 10. Peter preached to them that change of mind which should accept Him whom they had crucified as both Lord and Christ, Acts 2 : 36-38. In each case repentance was coming into an after-mind. Another word, occurring only five times in the Greek New Testament, is translated in our version " repent," which strictly means an " after-sorrow," and which may be simply "regret," as in 2 Cor. 7:8; or maybe " remorse," as in Matt. 27 : 3, a sorrow of the world which worked death, cf. 2 Cor. 7 : 10. But REPENTANCE UNTO SALVATION 51 one, instructed by the gospel, acknowledges the truth, 2 Tim. 2 : 25, concerning himself, Isa. 6 : 5 ; Job 42 : 5, 6; Matt. 12 141, and con- cerning God, Acts 17:23-25, 29, 30; so that, forsaking his own ways and giving up his own thoughts, Isa. 55:7-9; 2 Kings 5:11-14, he comes to God through Christ, and believes the gospel, Acts 20:21; Mark 1:14, 15; Luke 24 : 46, 47. A man repents when, instead of justifying himself, Luke 16 : 15, he turns and confesses his sins, Luke 18:9-11, cf. Luke 7:29 and Psa. 51:3,4; and instead of esteeming them lightly, is convinced of their exceeding sinfulness, Rom. 7 : 7-13 ; and instead of making excuses, listens to God's invitations, Luke 14:16-24; and in- stead of doubting God's love, believes it, 1 John 4:16; and instead of rejecting God's gift, ac- cepts it, 1 John 5 :9-i2. A man repents when he turns from resting upon anything in himself, because he sees noth- this "after-sorrow," as in Matt. 21 : 29, 32, may also result in the "repentance unto salvation'* that does not need to be changed, 2 Cor. 7 : 10. 52 GOSPEL TRUTH. ing there upon which he can rest, and begins to rest entirely upon Christ, Luke 5:32; 1 Cor. 3:11; when, instead of bringing anything he has done as an offering to God, he finds he has done nothing worthy to be offered, and brings only what Christ has done, Gen. 4 : 2-7, cf. Heb. 11:4; Gen. 22:8; John 1 : 29 ; Heb. 10 : 8-10, 18, 26 ;* when he suffers himself to be brought home to God through the Shepherd's work, through the gospel that has sought him out in his sins, and through the fact that in the Fa- ther's house there is bread enough and to spare, Luke 15. See particularly verses 7, 10, 17. It is therefore the goodness of God that leads to repentance, Rom. 2:4; and repentance unto life is turning to God in Christ, from self and sin, " to servef the living and true God, and to * The Greek in Heb. 10 : 18, 26 for "no more " offering, " no more" sacrifice, has the force of "no different,'' "no addi- tional " offering or sacrifice. t While therefore reformation is not repentance, tru? re- pentance will always manifest itself in a life of service and devotion to God, Matt. 3:8; Acts 26: 20. It must further be remembered that repentance has been here set forth only as related to the sinner's conversion. The believer, in his advancing knowledge of the will of God, will SAL VA TION THR O UGH FAITH. 53 wait for his Son from heaven," Acts 26:20; 1 Thess. 1 :g f 10. Accordingly the message which declares the fulness of the work of Christ for sinners demands an immediate repentance, to the acceptance of the gospel, Mark 1 : 14, 15 ; Luke 24 147 ; Acts 17:30. 6. SALVATION THROUGH FAITH, (i.) REPENTANCE AND FAITH. Repentance unto life, as thus set forth from the Scriptures, plainly involves faith ; and faith equally involves repentance. They are not two separable acts of the soul, but so blended, that faith is the very heart of repentance. Re- pentance describes the turning from self as well as the turning to God ; faith brings before the mind especially the coming to God. Re- pentance is the change of a man's mind from the conviction and life which he holds by na- ture, to the convictions and life wrought by the gospel. Faith is his simple and hearty reception be led again and again to repentance, which will also show itself in a changed life, 2 Cor. 7 : 8—1 1. 54 GOSPEL TRUTH. of the truth, the reliance upon Christ to which the gospel has brought him. (2.) FAITH IN GENERAL SAVING FAITH. Accordingly, in the Bible, faith in general is defined as "the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen," Heb. 11 : 1, Greek. In its simplest form it is belief in the testimony of another, 1 John 5 :g f and comes by hearing, Gal. 3:2; Rom. 10 : 17 ; Isa. 55:3. It is taking God at his word, Rom. 4 : 20, 21. The faith, therefore, that saves, Acts 16:30, 31, is no arbitrary requirement of God, to be first fulfilled as a condition, entitling one to receive eternal life, but is itself the very act of receiving the salvation God has provided and given, Eph. 2: 8. It is the single act of taking one's place behind the blood of the passover lamb, which, though sprinkled upon the door- posts and lintel, can be no protection to those who remain outside its shelter, Exod. 12. It is simply listening to the message of the gospel, which, however true and widely proclaimed, can- not produce any effect except it be heard, Isa. FAITH IN GENERAL. 55 55:1-3; Matt. 13:9, 12-16. It is only receiv- ing the light, which, however clearly it shines from the uplifted Christ, cannot enlighten nor heal one who keeps his eyes shut and face turned away, Numb. 21 : 8, 9; John 3 : 14, 18-21 ; 12 : 32, 33> 35> 36, 46-48. It is really drinking in the water of life, which, however freely it flows, can no otherwise quench the thirst, Isa. 55:1; John 4:14; 6:35; 7:37; Rev. 22:17. It is merely taking in the seed which, however vital, cannot spring up into life except it be honestly received into the heart. Luke 8:5-15; John 6 :63 ; 1 Pet. 1 123. Thus salvation which is entirely by grace must be by faith, Rom. 4 : 16 ; Eph. 2 : 5, 8 ; and the faith essential to salvation, Luke 7:50; 8 : 48, 50 ; John 6 : 28, 29 ; Rom. 3 : 2 1-26 ; 5 : 1 ; 10 : 9, 10, instead of being an arbitrary requirement, is, in the nature of things, necessary, just as a gift can be accepted only through believing the tes- timony of the giver when he declares that he gives it, 1 John 5 :9~io. 56 GOSPEL TRUTH, (3.) THE TESTIMONY TO BE BELIEVED. The attention of the sinner must therefore be directed, not to his own faith, or to any process of his own mind, but to the testimony of God* by which salvation is given. God has declared man's need and sin and danger in unmistakable terms. The very rec- ord that testifies man's utter ruin, has declared that there is salvation for him from God. God has revealed his love in the gift of his Son. He has made him to be an offering for sin. Seated now in righteousness upon a throne of mercy, he declares the way entirely open, and invites the weary and sin-laden to come to him through the Mediator he has provided. He proclaims pardon for the unworthy through the death of his Son. He declares that every one who comes to him, through the sacrifice of the Lamb he has himself provided, is for ever redeemed, for- * To set forth this testimony in its various parts, separately and at length, has been the endeavor in the preceding pages. To them the reader is directed, in the testimony as summed up in this and in the following section, for the Scripture referen- ces to every sentence without one. THE DECISIVE QUESTION. 57 given, and justified. He declares that every one who believes this testimony, is at once in possession of salvation. Behind every one of these statements is the character of God who cannot lie, Rom. 3:4; Titus 1 : 1-3 ; Heb. 6:16-18. (4.) THE DECISIVE QUESTION. Therefore the whole question now at issue between God and the sinner, upon which his possession of salvation hinges, is the hearty ac- ceptance of these declarations as true, John 3 : 18 ; Mark 16: 15, 16. Will he confess himself a sinner, lost and un- done ? Will he open his eyes to the fact, that God loves him and has salvation for him ? Will he bow to the revelation that God, in the death of Christ, has done everything requisite in order to bestow salvation ? Will he accept it as a reality, that God has given him His Son and eternal life in Him, and be at peace with God ? Will he see Jesus to be his Saviour ? and will he, as reconciled to God, seeing that Jesus, His own self, bore his sins in His own body on the tree, 58 GOSPEL TRUTH. with his whole soul bow to Christ as his Lord, who has redeemed him unto Himself, and to whom his whole heart and life and service must belong ? At every step the single question is, will the sinner take God at his word ? If he receives the testimony, in believing, Rom. 15 : 13, he enters into possession of salva- tion and of all the blessings which flow from Christ's death, John 3:16, 36; 5:24; 20:31; Eph. 1 : 3-7 ; 1 John 5:1, 5, 12, and yet, in it all, has simply set to his seal that God is true, John 3 • 31-33. (5.) WHAT UNBELIEF INVOLVES. If he rejects the testimony, he does nothing less than make God a liar, 1 John 5:10. In set- ting aside God's words, Zech. 7:12; Acts. 26 : 28, he denies his own sin and need, John 8 140-45 ; Luke 18:11, 12, denies that Christ and his death have any personal relation to him, Acts 13 : 45, 46, and denies that there is any gift of salvation for him. Shutting his eyes to the testimony that there WHAT UNBELIEF IN VOL FES. 59 is none other name under heaven, given among men, whereby he must be saved, Acts 4:12, that other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 3:11, that if righteousness come by the law, Christ died in vain, Gal. 2 :2i, that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sins, Heb. 9:22, that no man cometh unto the Father if not by Christ, John 14:6; 1 Tim. 2:5, that into heaven shall in no wise enter any whose names are not writ- ten in the Lamb's book of life, Rev. 21 '.27, he refuses to recognize Christ as his Saviour and his Lord, John 1 : 11 ; Luke 20 : 14, 15, rebels against His word and authority, Luke 19 : 14, and persists in obdurate alienation from God and enmity toward Him, John 5 140 ; Eph. 4:17- 19, and further makes God a liar by still hoping to be happy. Resisting all the messages of the Holy Spirit, he does despite to His grace ; and unmoved by the love of God, which at such inestimable cost has sought to win him from his sin and bring him to Himself, he tramples upon the Son of God and puts him to an open shame, Heb. 6 :6; 10:29. 6o GOSPEL TRUTH, Surely, as the Scripture itself declares, noth- ing but the folly and madness, Gal. 3:1, which suffers itself to be duped and blinded by Satan, 2 Cor. 4 : 2-4, nothing but ineradicable hatred to God, John 7 \*j ; 15:18, 19, 22-25, could per- sist in such a course ; and he who does so must abide under the wrath of God, John 3 : 36. 7. THE WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT IN REGEN- ERATION. God the Holy Spirit, Acts 5 : 3, 4 ; Matt. 28 : 19; 2 Cor. 13 : 14 ; 1 Cor. 2 : 10, 11 ; 3 : 16, the author of the Scriptures, 1 Cor. 2: 13, 14; Acts 1:16; 28 : 25 ; Heb. 3:7; 9 : 7, 8 ; 10:15; 1 Pet. 1 : 10-12 ; 2 Pet. 1:21, is, at every step, the author also of salvation, John 3:5; 7 : 37— 39; 15:26; 16:7-15; 14:16,17,26; 1 Cor. 12:3; 2 Cor. 3 : 18 ; Rom. 8:11. Himself unseen, He is behind every declara- tion of the gospel, energizing and vitalizing the Word, John 6 : 63 ; Acts 2 : 4 ; 4 : 31 ; 1 Peter 1 : 12, 22. He designedly remains invisible, that Christ alone may be held up before the unbeliever and REGENERATION. 61 revealed in the believer, John 14:17; 15:26; 16: 13-15 ; Rom. 5 : 5 ; 1 Cor. 12 .-3-11 ; 1 John 4: 13. The testimony of the necessity of the new birth is used in the Scripture, not to turn the eye from the work of Christ to any working of the Spirit within the heart, but to take from ev- ery man the last vestige of a hope that he may be saved through any goodness or self develop- ment of his own, John 3 : 1-8 ; cf. Rom. 8 : 5-9. The sinner is, by Christ himself, turned from the process of the new birth and directed to look at the cross, John 3 : 9—1 5 ; 12 : 32, 33. In being born anew he has consciously to do, not with the Spirit himself, but with the words of the Spirit by whom he is begotten, John 6 : 63 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 23 ; Jas. 1:18; 2 Pet. 1 : 4. Thus the word itself, which the Spirit uses, is a helper in the new birth, John 3 : 5, the water of the Word, Psa. 119:9 ; John 13 :6-io ; 15:3; Eph. 5 :25- 27 ; Titus 3 :5, the water of life, Isa. 55 : 1-3, 10, 1 1 ; John 4 : 10-14, which is the word of life, John 5 : 24 ; 20 : 3 1 ; Acts 10:22, 43 ; 11:14; 2 Tim. 3 : 15. And he who sets aside the testi- 62 GOSPEL TRUTH. mony of the Word, therein rejects Christ and resists the Holy Spirit, Gen. 6:3; Acts 7:51. Even as in the material creation the Spirit brooded over chaos, and life was created by the Word that spoke light, Gen. 1 : 1-3, 11, 24, 27; Job 33 14; John 1:3-5; 12:46-50; 2 Cor. 4:6; so the Spirit has come into and is brooding over a ruined world, energizing the words which give light and life ; and he who believes is made alive from the death in trespasses and sins, Rom. 6 : 4-13 ; 8:2; Eph. 2:5, is a new creation, a new creature, Gal. 6:15; 2 Cor. 5:17; Eph. 2:10; 4:24; Col. 3:10, and has been born again, or from above, John 3:3; 1 Pet. 1:23; Jas. 1 : 18. Thus as the grape-vine, John 15:1, natural bread, John 6:32-35, etc., are figures of which Christ is the reality, so the new birth is no figure of speech, but a divine reality, of which the natural birth is the figure. This is evident from the minute detail concerning the new birth. 1. There is a begetting, cf. Matt. 1:2; Luke 1:35; J°h n l : l 3 I 3 : 3> etc - 2 - There are children " begotten," Greek "tekna," Scotch RE GENERA 77 ON. 6 3 " bairns," literally "born ones," see Rom. 8 : 16, and the argument founded upon the fact in verse 17. 3. There is, in 1 John 2 : 29-3 : 3, a distinct statement, that in order to truly call us " born ones " or children, he " begat us out from" him- self. 4. Accordingly, and as matter of fact, there is no warrant for the word "adoption," as used in the. English version. Wherever found, there is no thought of transfer, and the Greek word for it should be rendered "sonship." By birth we are put into the position of heirs, Rom. 8:15,23; 9:4; Gal. 4: 5; Eph. 1:5; 5. There is a seed used to communicate life, 1 Pet. 1 123. 6. Through its reception one becomes a partaker of the divine nature, 2 Pet. 1:4. 7. God's chil- dren are always born " babes " and expected to grow and reach maturity, 1 Pet. 2:2; Heb. 5 : 1 1--14. Certainly Christ did not come to reveal a figure of speech, John 1:18; and, as really as the child Jesus was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit, so really is the believer born of the Spirit of God, cf. Luke 1 : 28-38 and John 3. While the believer is, by spiritual birth, made in reality a partaker of the divine nature, 2 Pet. 64 GOSPEL TRUTH. 1:4; i Cor. 12:13; Gal. 3:26, the testimony further is explicit, that this does not transform or remove the carnal nature which he has by human birth : but that the two, existing together in him, John 3 :6, are radically opposed the one to the other, Rom. 7:14-25; 8:5-7; Gal. 5 : 16-25 J 6:7, 8. The believer accordingly is called practically to identify himself with his new nature, by submitting himself in every part of his experience and action to the direction of the Holy Spirit, Rom. 7:4-6; 8:2-17; Gal. 2 : 19, 20 ; 5 : 25 ; Eph. 4 : 22-24, 30 \ Phil. 3:3; Col. 3 : 1-17. The whole testimony, therefore, concerning the work of the Holy Spirit forbids one who would become a child of God, to expect to change his own heart, and shuts him up to repentance toward God and faith toward the Lord Jesus Christ ; and it is equally positive in declaring that every one who has received Christ, has been born of God, John 1:12, 13. 8. HOW ONE MAY KNOW 7 HE IS SAVED. God calls upon the believer to know that he ONE MA Y KNO IV HE IS SA FED. 65 has passed from death unto life, John 5 : 24 ; 1 John 5 : 13. The source of this knowledge is twofold ; from the fruit of the Spirit in himself, and from the testimony of God. (1.) BY THE FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT. The fruit of the Spirit in the life and experi- ence of the believer, proceeding as it must from the Spirit's presentation and revelation of Christ, John 14: 16-27 ; 16 : 13-15 ; Rom. 5:5; 8:15; 2 Cor. 3 : 18 ; is not to be sought by looking away from Christ, to search one's own heart ; and yet he who is consciously occupied with Christ is conscious also of spiritual experiences, such as righteousness, Rom. 14:17; 1 John 2 : 29 ; 3:5-10; love, joy, peace, and kindred graces, Gal. 5 :22, 23 ; Rom. 15:13; obedience to his commands, John 14 : 15 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 2, 22 ; 1 John 2 • 3-5 ! 3 : 18-24 ; love for the brethren, 1 John 3 : 14, 19-23 ; 5:1,2; the preciousness of Christ. 1 Pet. 2:6, 7; the seven-fold products of faith, 2 Pet. 1 : 5-1 1 ; and the manifold characteristics of the new man, Eph, 5 1-2 1 ; Col. 2:6, 7; 9 66 GOSPEL TRUTH. Such an experience of Christ, which can be wrought only by the Holy Spirit in one who walks in him, assures the heart of the believer before God ; and the more fully he enters into this experience, the more conscious will he be of his filial relation to God. (2.) FROM THE TESTIMONY OF GOD. God would not have the believer rely solely, or even mainly, upon experience as the source of assurance. Many children of God are either in legal bondage, or distressed with doubts, be- cause too much occupied with their " evidences," instead of looking at Christ, 2 Cor. 3:18. Because of the fluctuations of emotion and experience, and because the heart is deceitful above all things, and incurably wicked, in searching only himself, one may often be de- ceived, and either be puffed up with, false satis- faction in himself, or brought into darkness and uncertainty, Jer. 17:9; Rom. 7:11. On the other hand, Christ is the truth as well as the way and the life, John 14:6; 1 John 5:19, 20. And it is not the Spirit's work in us, but Christ's work FROM THE TESTIMONY OF GOD. 67 for us, which is the only ground oc the believer's acceptance with God, and so must be the great source of his personal assurance of salvation. The very Scriptures which bring one the tes- timony to his own sin and the work of Christ, also declare that he who believes is saved, Luke 7 148, 50; 1 Cor. 1 : 18 ; 2 Cor. 2:15; Eph. 2 : 5, 8 ; Tit. 3 : 5 ; 2 Tim. 1 : 9. He who believes that Christ died for his sins, 1 Pet. 3:18, has the same word for it that he is passed from death unto life, John 3 : 16, 36; 5 : 24. He who believes the record that God has given him His Son, has the same record upon which to believe that Christ and eternal life are his, 1 John 5:9-13. He who believes in Christ as having wrought complete redemption through His blood, has the testimony of God that this redemption is his, even the forgiveness of sins, and that he is not his own because bought with a price, Eph, 1 : 6, 7 ; Col. 1:13, 14; 1 Pet. 1:18, 19 ; 1 Cor. 6: 19, 20; Tit. 2 : 14. He who believes that the sacrifice is perfect, 68 GOSPEL TRUTH. has the word of God that Christ has made his peace, that he is now brought nigh to God, and that he is completely justified, Eph. 2: 13-22; Col. 1 : 20-22 ; Rom. 5 : 1 ; 1 Cor. 6:11; 2 Cor. 5:21; and possessing the remission of sins, has boldness, by the blood of Jesus, to draw near to God in the full assurance of faith, Hebrews 10: 12-22. But the word of God certifies the believer of his salvation by more than its testimony to the completeness of the work of Christ for us. It also bears definite testimony that all who believe on him have been born of God. As, in human birth, both the time and the parentage are known upon testimony and not by consciousness, nor memory, nor even by family traits and affections ; so, even when one can fix upon no definite time when he was born, and can remember no marked experience which he would call regeneration, can the believer upon God's testimony be perfectly sure of spiritual birth, John 1 : 12, 13 ; 3 : 16, 36 ; 5 : 24 ; 1 Cor. 2 : 9-14 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 23. Moreover, it is the will of God that the be- liever should know that he has eternal life, 1 John WHA T BELIE VERS ARE. 69 5 19-13 ; and the heart of the Father, not will- ing that his child should walk in darkness, John 8:12; 12 146, longs to have him possess the joy and strength which the assurance of salvation would give. 9. WHAT BELIEVERS ARE AND HAVE, THE LIFE TO WHICH THEY ARE CALLED, AND THE HOPE SET BEFORE THEM. Wonderful as the testimony already consid- ered is, the love of Christ passes knowledge, and an endless learning will be necessary in order to know all that the believer is and has in Christ. And while secret things belong unto the Lord our God, Deut. 29 : 29, the things that are re- vealed belong to us, and we are called to appre- hend that for which we have been apprehended in Christ Jesus, Phil. 3.: 8-14. (1.) WHAT BELIEVERS ARE. We are children of God through faith in Jesus Christ, Gal. 3:26; 1 John 3:1, 2. We are quickened with Christ, and in him are risen and seated in heavenly places, Eph. 2 : 4-9. Our citizenship is in heaven, Eph. 2:19, 20; Phil. yo GOSPEL TRUTH, 3 : 20, Greek; Heb. 11 : 13-16; and we are the family of God, Ephes. 2:19; 3 : 14, 15 ; Heb. 12:23, the brethren of the Lord Jesus Christ, Heb. 2 : 10-12, 17, sons of God and joint-heirs with Christ, Gal. 4 : 1-7 ; Rom. 8:14-17. As the Father has loved the Son, so he loves us, John 15:9; 17:23-26. We are a chosen gen- eration, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God's purchased people, 1 Pet. 2 :c), 10, the espoused Bride of Christ, 2 Cor. 11:2; Ephes. 5 : 25-27 ; Rev. 19:7-9, and members in particular of his body, 1 Cor. 12:12, 13; Eph. 1:22, 23; 4:15, 16; 5 :3o; Col. 1: 18, 24; 2: 19. Even as Christ is, so are we in this world, 1 John 4:17. He is the Lamb of God, John 1 : 36 ; we are the sheep of his pasture, the fol- lowers of the Lamb, Psalm 23 ; 79 : 13 ; John 10 : 4, 27, 28; Rev. 14:4. He is the First-born of every creature, from among many brethren, and from the dead, Col. 1 : 15, 18 ; Rom. 8 : 29 ; we are the church of the first-born, Heb. 12:23. (In the Greek, ''first- born " is in the plural.) He is the Beloved Son, Matt. 3:17; 17:5; WHA T BEL IE VERS ARE, 7 1 Eph. 1:6; we in him are the beloved of God, his children, Rom. 1:7; Col. 3:12; 1 John 3:.i. He is the Holy One of God, Psa. 16: 10; in him we are holy, Col. 3:12; Heb. 3:1. He is the foundation-stone, Isa. 28 : 16 ; 1 Cor. 3:11; we are living stones built upon him, and of whom he is the crown and topstone, Eph. 2 : 20 ; 1 Pet. 2 : 4-7. He is the vine, we are the branches, John 15. He is the Word of God, John 1:1, 2, 14; Rev. 19:13; we are words of God, Acts 6:7; 12 : 24 ; 2 Cor. 3 : 2, 3. He is the King of kings, John 18 : 37 ; 1 Tim. 6:13-16; Rev. 17:14; 19:16, and the great High-priest, Heb. 4:14; 8:1; we are kings and priests unto God, 1 Pet. 2:9; Rev. 1:6; not only witnessing a good confession, but also interceding for the world, and bringing Christ to those who are ruined. He is the light of the world, John 8:12; we in him are light and the children of light, Matt 5:14; Eph. 5:8; 1 Thess. 5 : 4-8. 72 GOSPEL TRUTH. He was the Servant of God, Matt. 20:26-28; John 13:4-10; Phil. 2:7; we are servants of God, Rom. 6. 22 ; Jas. 1 : 1. He was sent of the Father; we are sent of Christ, John 17:18; 20:21. (2.) WHAT BELIEVERS HAVE. In Christ Jesus, as before shown, we have eternal life, acceptance in the Beloved, redemp- tion through his blood, and the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of the grace of God ; and so of him Christ is made unto us wisdom, even righteousness, sanctification, and resurrec- tion.* Though "all things" are thus now the possession of the believer, grace and peace are multiplied to us in the measure of our experi- mental knowledge of what we have, 1 Cor. 3 : 2 1-23 ; 2 Pet. 1 : 1-4 ; Phil. 3 :8-io. In Christ we have the Father's care, Matt. 6 : 25-34 ; Luke * The questions of the Greek philosophy, unanswerable by human wisdom — How shall a man be just with God, pure in heart, and delivered from the ruin which sin has wrought in the body itself? — are all answered in Christ. The redemption spoken of in 1 Cor. 1 : 30 is therefore, from the argument of the passage, resurrection, the redemption of the body, Rom. S:23; Eph. I : 14. WHA 2 1 BELIE VERS HA VE. 73 12 : 6, 7 ; 1 Pet. 5 : 7, and nurture, John 15:1,2; Psa. 107 ; 1 Cor. 11 : 32 ; Heb. 12 : 3-13 ; heav- enly food, I Pet. 2:2; Heb. 5 : 11-14, cf. John 16 : 12, 25 ; Exod. 12 : 8-1 1, 14, cf. 1 Cor. 5 : 7, 8, and John 6 : 53-58 ; Isa. 55 : 1-3, and John 6 : 30-35 ; Exod. 16 : 12-22 ; Deut. 8 : 1-9 ; Psa. 81 : 13, 16 ; 119: 103 ; Ezek. 3 : 3, cf. Rev. 10:9, 10, and Numb. 21 : 4-6 ; Job. 23 : 12 ; Jer. 15 : 16, the supply of every earthly need, Psa. 84 : 1 1 ; 103:1-5; Matt. 6:32, 33; Phil. 4:19; the Shepherd's watchfulness, Psa. 23 ; John 10: 1-29, wisdom, Prov. 2 : 1-11 ; Jas. 1 : 5 ; 2 Tim. 1 : 7, guidance, Psa. 32:8; Prov. 3:5,6; John 16:13; Rom. 8 : 14, power, Acts 1:8; Ephes. 3 : 16; 6:10; Col. 1 : 1 1 ; 2 Tim. 1 : 7, and victory over the world, Rom. 8:37; 1 John 5 : 4, 5. Thus it is ours experimentally to search out the unsearchable riches of Christ, Eph. 3:8; to know the love of Christ, which passes knowl- edge, Eph. 3:19; in our hearts to understand and be kept by the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, John 14:27; Phil. 4:7; to speak from experience the joy that is unspeaka- ble and full of glory, John 15:911; 1 Pet. 1:8; 10 74 GOSPEL TRUTH. and be filled with all the fulness of God, Eph. i :23 ; 3:19; Col. 2:9, 10. (3.) THE BELIEVER'S LIFE. In view of what we are and have and hope for in Christ, what manner of persons ought we to be in all holiness of life and godliness, 2 Pet. We are bidden to consider Jesus, Heb. 3:1; to walk in him, Col. 2 : 6, 7, and in his steps, 1 Pet. 2 : 21-25 ; l John 2:6; to walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God, Col. 1 : 10; and to walk worthy of the call- ing wherewith we are called, Eph. 4: 1-3. Entering into the manhood that is after God's own heart, (see page 11,) it is his will that we should appropriate the family personal pronouns, (see page 41 and the epistles themselves,) and be persuaded by the frequent " wherefore " and "therefore" which leads from the teaching to the arguments and exhortations by which the Holy Spirit beseeches us in Christ, Rom. 6: 12, 13; 7:4; 8:1, 12; 13:11-14; 14:12, 13, 18, THE BELIEVER'S LIFE. ' 75 19 ; 15:7; 1 Cor. 5 :6-8 ; 6 : 20; 15 : 58; 2 Cor. 5 : 5—1 1 ; Gal. 5:1; Eph. 2 : 11-13 ; 5 : i, 2; Phil. 2:12; 3 : 20—4 : 1 ; Col. 2 : 13-20 ; 3 : 3-5, etc. God is glorified in our lives according as we bear much fruit, John 15:8, 16. See fruit of the Spirit, page 65. Thus we are called to be the obedient children of God, John 14:15; 15:14; Rom. 6:16-18; 2 Cor. 10 : 5 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 13, 14, entirely consecra- ted to him and to his service, Rom. 12: 1, 2; 2 Cor. 5 : 14-17 ; Gal. 2 : 20, because bought with the precious blood of Christ, 1 Cor. 6:19, 20; 7 : 23 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 18, 19, and indwelt by his Spirit, Rom. 8:11; 1 Cor. 3:16; 2 Cor. 6 : 16. We are called to live by his word, Psalm 1 19 : 105 ; Matt. 4 : 4, studying it, Psa. 1:2; 119:24, 97-100; 2 Tim. 3:14-17; Col. 3:16, and teaching it, Deut. 6:6-9; Matt. 13:52; 2 Tim. 4: 1, 2, ourselves taught and led by the Holy Spirit, John 16:13; Rom. 8:14; 1 Cor. 2: 1-4. We are called to be separate from the world, John 17:15, 16; 2 Tim. 2:3,4, from its aims, Matt. 6 : 32, 33, from its eagerness after pleasure, 7 6 % GOSPEL TRUTH. 2 Tim. 3:4, and wealth, 1 Tim. 6:7-12; Heb. 13 : 5, from its lusts, Titus 2:12; 1 John 2 : 15, 16, from its glorying, Jer. 9: 23, 24; 1 Cor. 1 : 29, 31, from its affections, 1 John 2: 15, from its principles and maxims, Col. 2 : 8, and its associa- tions, 2 Cor. 6:14-17, while we lovingly seek the salvation of those under its sway, Luke 15 : 1-24; 1 Cor. 5:9, 10; 9 : 18, 22 ; Romans 9: 1--3; 10: 1 ; Jude 22, 23. We are called to love those who are Christ's, John 13 ; 34, 35 ; 15 : 12-14, confessing him by being united to those that are his, Rom. 12:3- 16 ; 14: 7 ; 15 : 1-7; 1 Cor. 11 124 ; Eph. 4:2- 16, and not forsaking the assembling of our- selves together as the manner of some is, Psa. 84 : 1-4, 10 ; Heb. 10 : 25 ; Jude 4, 8, 19. We are called to follow Christ both as Master and Leader, Matt. 11 : 29 ; Mark 2:14; Heb. 12:2, letting him rule our lives, Rom. 12:17- 21 ; 13 : 7, 8 ; 2 Cor. 8:21; Phil. 2:15, 16 ; 1 Thess. 2:12; 1 Pet. 2 : 1 1-2 1 ; 4 : 1-5, living for him at home, Luke 8 : 39, and in little things, 1 Cor. 10:31, speaking for him, Psa. 40 : 10; Acts 1:8; 4 : 20 ; 2 Cor. 5:11, 13 ; laboring for THE BELIEVERS HOPE. 77 souls, 1 Cor. 9:16, 19, 22, watching our influ- ence, Rom. 14: 15 ; 1 Cor. 8:13, and .walking circumspectly toward them that are without, Eph. 5:15; Col. 4 : 5 ; 1 Thess. 4:12. We are to be pure in heart, 2 Tim. 2 : 19-22 ; Phil. 4 : 8, 9 ; 1 Pet. 2:11, active, 2 Cor. 9 : 6-8 ; Eph. 2:10; Titus 2 : 14, humble, Phil. 2 : 3, for- bearing, Eph. 4:2; Phil. 2 : 14 ; Col. 3:12, 13 ; 1 Thess. 5:15, loving, 1 Cor. 13 ; 1 Thess. 3:12; 1 John 4 : 16, prayerful, Rom. 12:12; Eph. 6: 18 ; Phil. 4:6; 1 Thess. 5:17, to grow in grace, Eph. 4:15; Phil. 3 : 12-14; 2 Thess. 1 : 3 ; 1 Pet. 2 : 2 ; 2 Pet. 3:18, and to live relying upon God's promises, 2 Tim. 1:12; Heb. 10:35-39, w *th our hearts in heaven, Col. 3 : 1-5 ; Heb. 11:13- 16, waiting and looking for God's Son, Phil. 3:20; 1 Thess. 1:9, 10; Titus 2:13, who will bring for every faithful child of God His own praise, 1 Cor. 4: 1-5, and reward, Rev. 22 : 12, a crown of life, Jas. 1 : 12, of righteousness, 2 Tim. 4:8, and of rejoicing, 1 Thess. 2 : 19. (4.) THE BELIEVER'S HOPE. Holy and blessed as such a life is, precious and wonderful as the relations and possessions 78 GOSPEL TRUTH. of the believer are, all is but the earnest of that which is to come. Though we have eternal life now, we also wait for its fulness, John 17:3; cf.'i John 3:2; Titus 1:2; 3 : 4-7. Possessing the salvation of our souls, we are heirs of the salvation yet to be revealed, 1 Pet. 1:5. In the midst of suffering and service now, there is awaiting us both rest, 2 Thess. 1:7; Heb. 4 : 9, and reward, Dan. 12:3; Matt. 5:19; 6 : 19, 20 ; 10 : 32, 40-42 ; 16 : 27 ; John 12 : 26 ; 1 Cor. 3 18-14; 4:5; 15:41; .2 Cor. 5:9, 10; Rev. 14: 13, and still more glorious service, Rev. 7;i5; 22:3. To depart and be with Christ is far better than our present joy, Phil. 1 : 21-24, but our hope is resurrection, Acts 2:26; 23:6; 24:14, 15; Rom. 8:23-25; 1 Cor. 15:23, 50-54; 2 Cor. 5 : 1-8 ; 1 Thess. 4 : 13-17 ; 1 Pet. 1 : 3. The Lord Jesus is himself our hope, Eph. 4:4; 1 Tim. 1:1, and we shall be like him when we see him, Rom. 8:11, 29,30; Phil. 3 : 20, 21 ; 1 John 3 : 1-3. THE BELIEVER'S HOPE. 79 Then shall be the manifestation of our son- ship, Rom. 8:19; 2 Cor. 5 : 9-1 1 ; Col. 3 14, and we shall be presented blameless and faultless un- to himself and before the Father, Eph. 5 125-27 ; 1 Thess. 5:23; Jude 24. The marriage of the Lamb will come, and " all glorious," her clothing of wrought gold, Ps. 45 : I 3 _I 5» hi s Bride shall sit down with him at the feast, Matt. 22 : 1-14 ; 25 : 1-13 ; 26 : 29, cf. 1 Cor. 1 1 : 26 ; 2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5 : 25-27 ; Rev. 19 :7~9. There is thus for us, kept by the power of God, an inheritance that is incorruptible, 1 Pet 1:4; Eph. 2 : 7, a fadeless crown, 2 Tim. 4:8 ; 1 Pet. 5 14, a seat upon the throne with Christ, 2 Tim. 2:12; 2 Pet. 1 : 1 1 ; Rev. 3:21; 20 : 4. and an endless fellowship with him in glory, John 17:22-24; Rom. 5:2; 8:16-18; 1 Cor. 1 5 : 43 ; 2 Cor. 4:17; Col. 3:4; 1 Thess. 2:12; 2 Thess. 1 : 10 ; 2 : 14 ; Heb. 2:10; 1 Pet. 1 : 7, 8 ; 5:1; 2 Pet. 1 : 3. Utterly beyond our present conception as all this is, ii is revealed and is therefore no uncertain- ty, 1 Cor. 2 :g, 10, being based upon the immu- So GOSPEL TRUTH, table counsel and inviolable oath of God, Heb. 6:13-18; Eph. 1:3-14. For every one who has fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us in the Gospel, it is " sure and steadfast, an anchor to the soul, entering into that within the veil/' whither the Forerunner, even Jesus our High Priest, has for us entered. Heb. 6 : 1 8-20. FINALLY. May the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, give unto all who have believed a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowl- edge of him, the eyes of our hearts being en- lightened that we may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints, Eph. 1 : 15-18. Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, ac- cording to the power that worketh in us, unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen Eph. 3 : 14-21. lft/0®