| WAY OF FAITH |
Our Lord as a Believing Man
Alexander Whyte
The workings of our Lord's
human mind, the affections and the emotions of our Lord's human heart, and all
the spiritual experiences of our Lord's human life-take Jesus Christ in all
these things, and He is the most absorbing, the most satisfying, and the most
sanctifying study in all the universe. There is no other doctrine in heaven or
on earth for one moment to compare with the doctrine of God in Christ and Christ
in God: the Word made flesh, and the flesh made God. And, then, to as many of us
as by His grace to us are true believers on Him and in His blood, our Lord's own
faith in His Father and in His Father's word to Him is a subject of the
intensest interest, the most edifying meditation, and the most transporting
reflection. To as many of us as believe there is no subject in heaven or on
earth like our Lord Jesus Christ. This is the true learning. This is the true
knowledge. This is the true science and philosophy; and not falsely so called.
This is the wisdom that cometh from above. This is the wisdom of God in a
mystery. This, O Father, is life eternal, to know Thee, the only true God, and
Jesus Christ, Whom Thou hast sent.
Even in the Old Testament, and in some respects and for some reasons, even more
in the Old Testament than in the New, the coming Messiah is already set before
Israel as the Prince of believers, and as the perfect pattern to all believers,
both Old Testament and New. Take the Messiah, for instance, in two well-known
Psalms that were specially prepared for Him. In the sixteenth Psalm David is
inspired to speak in the name of the promised Messiah in these splendidly
believing words: "I have set the Lord always before me; because He is at my
right hand I shall not be moved. Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory
rejoiceth; my flesh also shall rest in hope. For Thou wilt not leave my soul in
hell, neither wilt Thou suffer Thine Holy One to see corruption." There spake
the incomparably believing Man Jesus Christ, long before He was born. And,
again, just listen to the Man of sorrows, and at the same time the Prince of
believers, as He speaks concerning Himself in the twenty-second Psalm: "My God,
my God, why hast Thou forsaken me? But I am a worm, and no man; a reproach of
men, and despised of the people. All they that see me laugh me to scorn; they
shoot out the lip, they shake the head, saying, He trusted in the Lord that He
would deliver him; let Him deliver him, seeing he trusted in Him. But Thou art
He that took me out of the womb; Thou didst make me hope when I was upon my
mother's breasts. Be not far from me, for trouble is near; for there is none to
help. I may tell all my bones; they look and stare upon me. They part my
garments among them, and cast lots upon my vesture. But be Thou not far from me,
O Lord; O my strength, make haste to help me." The four evangelists themselves
have nothing to surpass that, first for an unparalleled sorrow, and then for the
unparalleled victory of Messiah's faith. And then, in the greatest of the
Messianic prophets: "The Lord God hath opened mine ear, and I was not
rebellious, neither turned I away back. I give my back to the smiters, and my
cheek to them that pulled off the hair; I hid not my face from shame and
spitting. For the Lord God will help me; therefore shall I not be confounded;
therefore have I set my face as a flint, and I know that I shall not be ashamed.
He is near that justifieth me; and who shall contend with me? Let us stand
together. Who is mine adversary? Let him come near unto me." When Paul's faith
for himself and for all believers is at its most rapturous and its most defiant,
he borrows these bold words out of the mouth of the absolutely assured Messiah,
and applies them to the most advanced and assured and victorious of evangelical
believers. And no wonder. For, what a faith is here, even in the thickest
darkness! What a full assurance of a divine faith is here, even on the cross!
And, then, when the Messiah actually came in the flesh He sought out all
those Scriptures concerning Himself, and took them home to Himself, and believed
them, and made every jot and tittle of them His very own. Sabbath by
Sabbath, day by day, and hour by hour, Jesus of Nazareth read in the Psalms and
in the Prophets the things that were written there concerning Himself, till His
Father's word was more to Him than His necessary food. He may not indeed from a
very child have made much of the Messianic Scriptures. It was impossible that as
long as He spake as a child, and understood as a child, and thought as a child,
He could enter into the full appropriation to Himself of all these so deep and,
some of them, so dreadful Scriptures. But when He became a man, He read day and
night, and nothing else but the deepest Messianic Scriptures; and at every fresh
reading He made them more and more His own, and made Himself more and more their
own, till at last He came to the full assurance of His Messiahship, by more and
more performing the duties of the Messiahship, and by more and more clothing
Himself with the whole walk and conversation of the Messiahship. And our Lord's
faith in all these things so worked by an equal love that He was always found
both ready and willing to fulfil, and to have fulfilled in Himself, all the
Messianic Scriptures concerning Himself. "Lo, I come!" was never out of His
mouth, from the beginning down to the end. Even on the cross He still delighted
to do His Father's will. Yea, the law of our redemption was to the end. deeper
in His heart than anything else. As in Messianic prophecy, so in the days of His
actual flesh, our Lord was by far the greatest and the best of believers. He was
the very author and finisher of faith. If He was not actually the first of all
believers in point of time, no sooner did He begin to believe than He sprang at
once to the forefront of faith, till He was the most perfect, and complete and
completely God-pleasing believer in all Israel. Abraham himself, the father of
the faithful, would have resigned his supreme place in the life of faith in
favour of Jesus Christ, but for the best of reasons to Abraham himself and to
us. But, even after the coming of Christ, and even after Christ's life of
incomparable faith, Abraham still holds his God-given place. For, at his very
best, and to the very end, Abraham was but a believing sinner, and thus an ever
more and more justified man. But Jesus Christ was, to begin with, and much more
was He at His end, a believing saint and a justified surety. He had this
prerogative over Abraham, and over all Abraham's believing seed, that He knew no
sin. And thus it was that He did not need, like Abraham and all his seed, to
believe on God for the forgiveness of sin, and for justification of life. And
therefore it is that Abraham keeps his place, and will keep it to the end, as
the father of all those who submit to be justified by faith. But the life of
faith in all its aspects is so large and so rich that there is plenty of room in
it both for Abraham and for Jesus Christ and for you and for me.
First in His believing study and believing appropriation of the Messianic
Scriptures, and then in His life of unceasing and believing prayer, our Lord
stands at our head as the author and finisher of faith. And not more in His
believing reading of the word than in His believing prayer and intercession
continually. "Who, in the days of His flesh, when He had offered up prayers and
supplications, with strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him
from death, and was heard in that He feared." Day and night, early and late, our
Lord lived and moved and had His being in believing prayer. He could never have
entered on His great work, far less could He ever have finished it, but for His
faith in His father as the Hearer of prayer. At every successive step in the
process of our redemption, He took that step after a season of prayer, till He
had fulfilled in His own experience what He preaches with such point to us
concerning believing prayer. Preaching clearly and undeniably from His own
experience in prayer, He says to us in one great place-in the greatest, indeed,
of all Scripture places - concerning prayer: "What things soever ye desire, when
ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them." There is a
window opened into our Lord's secret life of prayer in these wonderful
words-words much too wonderful for the best believer among us, but true to the
letter of Him and of His faith in His Father. "I know," He said to His Father,
at the grave of Lazarus, "I know that Thou hearest me always. But because of the
people that stand by I said it, that they might believe that Thou hast heard
Me." Such close communion of faith, and such strong assurance of faith, was
there between the Father and the Son in the Son's life of believing reading and
believing praying.
But, after all, it was in Gethsemane and on Calvary that the faith of our
Substitute came to its absolute perfection. Loaded down to death and hell with
the sin of the world, our Saviour's faith in His Father's sure word of promise
was such that his burdened heart rose victorious above all the tremendous load
that was laid upon Him. Our Saviour had the fullest assurance of faith; the
fullest assurance that His Father who had begun such a good work in Him and by
Him would not leave it till He had perfected it in the day of Christ. And thus
it was that, as Bengel says, "the most fragrant part of Christ's sin-atoning
sacrifice was His unshaken trust in His Father's faithfulness and love." Not
only did our Lord's faith not give way even under the tremendous strain of His
sin-atoning death: His faith was so strong that it actually blossomed up into
absolute joy even in His hottest agony. For we have the testimony of the Holy
Ghost to the fact, that it was for the joy set before His faith that enabled our
Lord to endure the Cross, and to despise the shame. And then, when His darkness
was at its very darkest, His last words out of the thick darkness were these:
"Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit." If the centurion had known all
that we know, with how much more wonder would he have said, "Certainly this was
a righteous man! Truly this man was the Son of God!" Our Redeemer died, having
been made a curse for sin; but all the time He died without a shadow of doubt in
His soul that both He Himself, and all for whom He so died, would be openly
acknowledged and acquitted in the day of judgment. Truly the centurion would
have said, had he known all, "This is the author and finisher of faith!"
Now, my brethren, after all that is said-and the half has not been said of our
Lord's life and death of faith-at the same time, in some ways you and I have the
privilege and the opportunity of being even greater believers than our Lord ever
was. It may well have been of your faith and mine that He was speaking and
foreseeing when He said that some of His disciples would do greater works than
He had ever done. It is true, He believed and rested His soul on His Father's
word of grace and truth to Him, even when He was laden with sin to a bloody
sweat and to the darkness of death and hell. But, then, He had this comfort at
His very worst, that the sin under which He was dying was not actually His own
sin. Our worst sins, and all our sins, were imputed to Him and were actually
laid upon Him, and He took them up to make atonement for them as if they had
been His own. But all the time they were not His own; they were yours and mine.
His suretyship guilt was not a real, and an actual, and a genuine, and a
never-to-be-forgotten guilt like yours and mine. And thus it comes about that,
in some ways, we can magnify the grace of God, and can attain to victories of
faith and trust that were not open to our Lord, who knew no sin as we know it.
And, indeed, it is just here that the characteristic and essential genius of
justifying faith comes out, and makes itself to appear in all its trials and
triumphs. The worse our case is, under the Gospel the more able are we to adorn
the doctrines of grace and to magnify its saving power, if only we aright and
enough believe in the God of grace and in His word of promise. His Son, no
doubt, magnified His Father's grace and His word of promise to the very utmost
possible to Him by His life and death of the most perfect faith and trust. But
you and I can magnify the grace and the promises of God in a way altogether
personal and peculiar to ourselves. The darker, the more accumulated, the more
aggravated our guilt is, the more will mercy rejoice over judgment in our
forgiveness and salvation. Where sin abounds there grace much more abounds, when
we exercise faith according to our sin and according to God's grace. "It is of
faith," says the Apostle Paul, "that it might be by grace." Only believe that
you have to do with a God who delighteth in mercy, and you will, by your faith,
bring a tribute of glory to God that only a sinner, and a great sinner, can ever
bring. A tribute of glory-shall I take boldness to say?-that His sinless Son
could not possibly bring, or could only bring through you. Only believe in the
infinite grace of God the Father, and in the infinitely precious blood of His
Son, and you will thus glorify God far more than you have ever dishonoured Him.
And how great will that glory be!
Walter Marshall, one of our deepest divines, says in his "Twelfth Direction"
that "Christ walked in a constant persuasion of His excellent state, and it
was that constant persuasion that carried Him through." And Marshall presses
it upon all his believing readers that they are to walk in the same "constant
persuasion." And he bases his great counsel on this great evangelical ground,
that we are all complete in Christ; complete as Christ was complete. In fact,
that we stand, if we will only believe it, in the very same "excellent state" as
that was in which Christ stood. Yes; we stand now in His state, just as He at
one time stood in our state. And it is by believing that, and by realising that,
and by continually acting upon that, that we shall best please God with us, and
best adorn the doctrine of His Son. In fact, without this faith in Christ, and
in our "excellent state" in Christ, it is impossible for any sinner to please
God. We are to act, continues Marshall, "as those who are raised in Christ
altogether above and beyond the sphere and range of nature, and are advanced to
union and communion with the Son of God." Believe that, believers. Practice
believing that. Read and hear about that, and about little else but that: say to
your own dark and doubting hearts that it hath pleased the Father that in Christ
should all your fulness dwell. Say it, and believe it, and take your stand upon
it. Not Paul and Luther and Marshall only, but you, their constant readers, are
with them complete in Christ. And if you feel that you need more out of Christ's
completeness than they or the like of them could ever need, then that will only
enable you to magnify the grace of God more than they all. Believe that,
believers. Bring the whole of the scriptures of promise, and the whole of your
life of believing reading and believing praying to bear upon that. And if your
great and singular sinfulness threatens sometimes to shipwreck your faith
altogether, at such seasons cast your anchor into deeper seas of salvation than
you have ever yet sounded. And the grace of God, and the blood and righteousness
of Christ, and a corresponding faith in your soul, all these things will be seen
to work in you a miracle of salvation hitherto unheard of. You also will be
saved everlastingly from all your sin as sure as God has promised, and Christ
has died and has risen again, if you will only believe. And you should have no
difficulty in believing anything and everything of that kind, since all such
faith is the gift of God.
I often entertain myself and regale my great taste for words, and especially for
the words that the Holy Ghost teacheth, by repeating to myself the two last
times in which we shall be spoken of under this great designation of
"believers." "The souls of believers," I say to myself fifty times every day,
"are at their death made perfect in holiness, and do immediately pass into
glory." And then, following that up: "At the resurrection, believers being
raised up in glory, shall be openly acknowledged and acquitted in the day of
judgment, and made perfectly blessed in the full enjoying of God to all
eternity."
If that is to be so, who would not live and die, like Jesus Christ, a believer?
(Taken from Alexander Whyte's book Jesus Christ our Lord)
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