| WAY OF FAITH |
"The Love of Christ"
Robert Murray M'Cheyne
"For the love of Christ constrains us." - 2 Corinthians 5:14
Of all the features of St. Paul's character, untiring activity was the most
striking. From Paul's early history, which tells us of his personal exertions in
wasting the infant Church, when he was a "blasphemer, and a persecutor, and
injurious", it is quite obvious that this was the prominent characteristic of
his natural mind. But when it pleased the Lord Jesus Christ to show forth in him
all long-suffering, and to make him a pattern to them which should afterwards
believe on Him, it is beautiful and most instructive to see how the natural
features of this daringly bad man became not only sanctified, but invigorated
and enlarged; so true it is that they that are in Christ are a new creation:
"Old things pass away, and all things become new". "Troubled on every side, yet
not distressed; cast down, but not destroyed"; this was a faithful picture of
the life of the converted Paul. Knowing the terrors of the Lord, and the fearful
situation of all who were yet in their sins, he made it the business of his life
to persuade men; striving if, by any means, he might commend the truth to their
consciences. "For (he says) whether we be beside ourselves, it is to God; or
whether we be sober, it is for your cause" (verse 13).
Whether the world think us wise or mad, the cause of God and of human souls is
the cause in which we have embarked all the energies of our being. Who, then, is
not ready to inquire into the secret spring of all these supernatural labours?
Who would not desire to have heard from the lips of Paul the mighty principle
that impelled him through so many toils and dangers? What magic spell had taken
possession of this mighty mind, or what unseen planetary influence, with
unceasing power, drew him on through all discouragements, indifferent alike to
the world's dread laugh, and the fear of man; careless alike of the sneer of the
sceptical Athenian, of the frown of the luxurious Corinthian, and the rage of
the narrow-minded Jew? What does the apostle say himself? We have his own
explanation of the mystery in the words before us: "The love of Christ
constraineth us".
I. CHRIST'S CONSTRAINING LOVE
That Christ's love to man is here intended, and not our love to the Saviour, is
quite obvious, from the explanation which follows, where His dying for all is
pointed to as the instance of His love. It was the view of that strange
compassion of the Saviour, moving Him to die for His enemies, to bear double for
all their sins, to taste death for every man; It was this view which gave Paul
the impulse in every labour, which made all suffering light to him, and every
commandment not grievous. He "ran with patience the race that was set before
him". Why? Because, looking unto Jesus, he lived a man "crucified unto the
world, and the world crucified unto him". By what means? By looking to the cross
of Christ.
As the natural sun in the heavens exercises a mighty and unceasing attractive
energy on the planets which circle round it, so did the Sun of Righteousness,
which had indeed arisen on Paul with a brightness above that of noon-day,
exercise on his mind a continual and an almighty energy, constraining him to
live henceforth no more unto himself, but to Him that died for him and rose
again. And observe, that it was no temporary, fitful energy, which it exerted
over his heart and life, but an abiding and a continued attraction; for he does
not say that the love of Christ did once constrain him; or that it
shall yet constrain him; or that in times of excitement, in seasons of
prayer, or peculiar devotion, the love of Christ was wont to constrain
hem. He said simply, that the love of Christ constrains him. It is the
ever-present, ever-abiding, ever-moving power, which forms the mainspring of all
his working; so that, take that away, and his energies are gone, and Paul is
become weak as other men.
Is there no one reading this whose heart is longing to possess just such a
master-principle? Is there no one who has arrived at that most interesting of
all the stages of conversion in which you are panting after a power to make you
new? You have entered in at the straight gate of believing. You have seen that
there is no peace to the unjustified; and therefore you have put on Christ for
your righteousness; and already you feel something of the joy and peace of
believing. You can look back on your past life, spent without God in the world,
and without Christ in the world, and without the Spirit in the world; you can
see yourself a condemned outcast, and you say: "Though I should wash my hands in
snow-water, yet mine own clothes would abhor me". You can do all this, with
shame and self-reproach, it is true, but yet without dismay, and without
despair; for your eye has been lifted believingly to Him who was made sin for
us, and you are persuaded that, as it please God to count all your iniquities to
the Saviour, so He is willing, and has always been willing, to count all the
Saviour's righteousness to you. Without despair, did I say? Nay, with joy and
singing; for if, indeed, you believe with all your heart, then you are come to
the blessedness of the man to whom God imputes righteousness without works;
which David describes, saying: "Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven,
whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not
iniquity."
This is the peace of the justified man. But is this peace a state of perfect
blessedness? Is there nothing left to be desired? I appeal to those of you who
know what it is to be just by believing. What is it that still clouds the brow,
that represses the exulting of the spirit? Why might we not always join in the
song of thanksgiving: "Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all he
benefits: who forgiveth all thine iniquities"! If we have received double for
all our sins, why should it ever be needful for us to argue as does the
psalmist: "Why art thou cast down, O my soul: and why are thou disquieted within
me?". My friends there is not a man among you who has really believed, who has
not felt the disquieting thought of which I am now speaking. There may be some
of you who have felt it so painfully, that it has obscured, as with a heavy
cloud, the sweet light of gospel peace, the shining in of the reconciled
countenance upon the soul. the thought is this: "I am a justified man; but,
alas! I am not a sanctified man. I can look at my past life without despair; but
how can I look forward to what is to come?".
There is not a more picturesque moral landscape in the universe than such a soul
presents. Forgiven all trespasses that are past, the eye looks inward with a
clearness and an impartiality unknown before, and there it gazes upon its
long-fostered affections for sin, which, like ancient rivers, have worn a deep
channel into the heart; its periodic returns of passion, hitherto irresistible
and overwhelming, like the tides of the ocean; its perversities of temper and of
habit, crooked and unyielding, like the gnarled branches of a stunted oak. What
a scene is here; what anticipation of the future! What forebodings of a vain
struggle against the tyranny of lust! Against old trains of acting, and of
speaking, and of thinking! Were it not that the hope of the glory of God is one
of the chartered rights of the justified man, who would be surprised if this
view of terror were to drive a man back, like a dog to his vomit, or the sow
that was washed to wallow again in the mire?
Now it is to the man precisely in this situation, crying out at morning and at
evening, How shall I be made new? What good shall the forgiveness of my past
sins do me, if I be not delivered from the love of sin? - it is to that man that
we would now, with all earnestness and affection, point out the example of Paul,
and the secret power which wrought in him. "The love of Christ" (says Paul)
"constraineth us." We, too, are men of like passions with yourselves; that same
sight which you view with dismay within you, was in like manner revealed to us
in all its discouraging power. Ever and anon the same hideous view of our own
hearts is opened up to us. But we have an encouragement which never fails. The
love of the bleeding Saviour constrains us. The Spirit is given to them that
believe; and that almighty agent has one argument that moves us continually -
the love of Christ.
My present object is to show how this argument, in the hand of the Spirit,
does move the believer to live unto God; how so simple a truth as the love of
Christ to man, continually presented to the mind by the Holy Ghost, should
enable any man to live a life of gospel holiness. If there be one man among you
whose great inquiry is: How shall I be saved from sin, how shall I walk as a
child of God? that is the man of all others, whose ear and heart I am anxious to
engage.
II. HIS LOVE REMOVES OUR HATRED
The love of Christ to man constrains the believer to live a holy life,
because that truth takes away all his dread and hatred of God.
When Adam was unfallen, God was everything to his soul; and everything was good
and desirable to him, only in so far as it had to do with God. Every vein of his
body, so fearfully and wonderfully made, every leaf that rustled in the bowers
of Paradise, every new sun that rose, rejoicing like a strong man to run his
race, brought him in every day new subjects of godly thought and of admiring
praise; and it was only for that reason that he could delight to look on them.
The flowers that appeared on the earth, the singing of birds, and the voice of
the turtle heard throughout the happy land, the fig tree putting forth her green
figs, and the vines with the tender grapes giving a good smell, all these
combined to bring in to him at every pore a rich and varied tribute of
pleasantness. And why? Just because they brought into the soul rich and varied
communications of the manifold grace of Jehovah. For, just as you may have seen
a child on earth devoted to its earthly parent, pleased with everything when he
is present, and valuing every gift just as it shows more of the tenderness of
that parent's heart, so was it with that genuine child of God. In God he lived,
and moved, and had his being; and not more surely would the blotting out of the
sun in the heavens have taken away that light which is so pleasant to the eyes,
than would the hiding of the face of God from him have taken away the light of
his soul, and left nature a dark and desolate witness.
But when Adam fell, the fine gold became dim, the system of his thoughts and
likings was just reversed. Instead of enjoying God in everything, and everything
in God, everything now seemed hateful and disagreeable to him, just in as far as
it had to do with God.
When man sinned, then he feared, and hated Him whom he feared; and fled to all
sin just to flee from Him whom he hated. So that, just as you may have seen a
child who has grievously transgressed against a loving parent doing all it can
to hide that parent from its view, hurrying from his presence and plunging into
other thoughts and occupations, just to rid itself of the thought of its justly
offended father; in the very same way when fallen Adam heard the voice of the
Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, that voice which before
he sinned was heavenly music in his ears - then "Adam and his wife hid
themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden".
And in the same way does every natural man run from the voice and presence of
the Lord, not to hide under the thick embowering leaves of Paradise, but to bury
himself in cares and business and pleasures and revellings. Any retreat is
agreeable, where God is not; any occupation is tolerable, if God be not in the
thoughts.
Now I am quite sure that many of you may hear this charge against the natural
man with incredulous indifference, if not with indignation. You do not feel that
you hate God, or dread his presence; and therefore you say it cannot be true.
But when God says of your heart that it is "desperately wicked"; when god claims
for Himself the privilege of knowing and trying the heart, is it not
presumptuous in such ignorant beings as we are to say that that is not true with
respect to our hearts, which God affirms to be true, merely because we are not
conscious of it? God says that "the carnal mind is enmity against God", that the
very grain and substance of an unconverted mind is hatred against god, absolute,
implacable hatred against Him in whom we live, and move, and have our being. It
is quite true that we do not feel this hatred within us; but that is only an
aggravation of our sin and of our danger. We have so choked up the avenues of
self-examination, there are so many turnings and windings before we can arrive
at the true motives of our actions, that our dread and hatred of God, which
first moved man to sin, and which are still the grand impelling forces whereby
Satan goads on the children of disobedience; these are wholly concealed from our
vies, and you cannot persuade a natural man that they are really there. But the
Bible testifies, that out of these two deadly roots - dread of God and hatred of
God - grows up the thick forest of sins with which the earth is blackened and
overspread. And if there be one among you, who has been awakened by God to know
what is in his heart, I take that men this day to witness that his bitter cry,
in view of all his sins, has ever been: "Against thee, thee only have I sinned."
If, then, dread of God, and hatred of God, be the cause of all our sins, how
shall we be cured of the love of sin, but by taking away the cause? How do you
most effectually kill the noxious weed? Is it not by striking at the root. In
the love of Christ to man then - in that strange, unspeakable gift of God, when
He laid down His life for His enemies, when He died the just for the unjust that
he might bring us to God - do you not see an object which, if really believed by
the sinner, takes away all his dread and all his hatred of God? The root of sin
is severed from the stock. In His bearing double for all our sins, we see the
curse carried away, we see God reconciled. Why should we fear any more? Not
fearing, why should we hate God any more? Not hating God, what desirableness can
we see in sin any more? Putting on the righteousness of Christ, we are again
placed as Adam was, with God as our friend. We have no object in sinning; and,
therefore, we do not care to sin.
In the sixth chapter of Romans Paul seems to speak of the believer sinning, as
if the very proposition were absurd. "How shall we, that are dead to sin," that
is, who in Christ have already borne the penalty - "how shall we live any longer
therein?" And again he says very boldly: "Sin shall not have dominion over you"
- it is impossible in the nature of things - "for you are not under the law, but
under grace"; you are no longer under the curse of a broken law, dreading and
hating God; you are under grace; under a system of piece and friendship with
God.
But is there anyone ready to object to me that if these things be so, if nothing
more than that a man may be brought into peace with god is needful to a holy
life and conversation, how comes it that believers do still sin? I answer, it is
indeed too true that believers do sin; but it is just as true that unbelief is
the cause of their sinning. If you and I were to live with our eye so closely on
Christ bearing double for all our sins, freely offering to all a double
righteousness for all our sins; and if this constant view of the love of Christ
maintained within us, as assuredly it would if we looked with a straightforward
eye, the peace of God which passes all understanding - the peace that rests on
nothing in us, but upon the completeness that is in Christ - then I do say that,
frail and helpless as we are, we should never sin; we should not have the
slightest object in sinning. But this is not the way with us. How often in the
day is the love of Christ quite out of view! How often is it obscured to us!
Sometimes hid from us by God Himself, to teach us what we are. How often are we
left without the realising sense of the completeness of His offering, the
perfectness of His righteousness, and without the will or confidence to claim an
interest in Him! Who can wonder then that, where there is so much unbelief,
dread and hatred of God should again creep in, and sin should often display its
poisonous head.
The matter is very plain, if only we had spiritual eyes to see it. If we live a
life of faith on the Son of God, then we shall assuredly live a life of
holiness. I do not say we ought to do so; but I say, we shall, as
a matter of necessary consequence. But in as far as we do not live a life of
faith, in so far we shall live a life of unholiness. It is through faith that
God purifies the heart; and there is no other way.
Is there one of you, then, desirous of being made new, of being delivered from
the slavery of sinful habits and affections. We can point you to no other remedy
but the love of Christ. Behold how He love you! See what He bore for you; put
your finger, as it were, into the prints of the nails, and thrust your hand into
His side; and be no more faithless, but believing. Under a sense of your sin,
flee to the Saviour of sinners. As the timorous dove flies to hide itself in the
crevices of the rock, so do you flee to hide yourself in the wounds of your
Saviour; and when you have found Him, like the shadow of a great rock in a weary
land; when you sit under His shadow, with great delight; you will find that He
has slain all the enmity, that He has accomplished all your warfare. God is now
for you. Planted together with Christ in the likeness of His death, you shall be
also in the likeness of His resurrection. Dead unto sin, you shall be alive unto
God.
III. HIS LOVE STIRS UP OUR LOVE
The love of Christ to man constrains the believer to live a holy life;
because that truth not only takes away our fear and hatred, but stirs up our
love.
When we are brought to see the reconciled face of God in peace, that is a great
privilege. But how can we look upon that face, reconciling and reconciled, and
not love him who has so loved us? Love begets love. We can hardly keep from
esteeming those on earth who really love us, how worthless they may be. But when
we are convinced that God loves us, and convinced in such a way as by the giving
up of His Son for us all, how shall we but love Him, in whom are all excellences
- everything to call forth love?
I have already shown you that the gospel is a restorative scheme; it brings us
back to the same state of friendship with God which Adam enjoyed, and thus takes
away the desire of sin. But now I wish to show you, that the gospel does far
more than restore us to the state from which we fell. If rightly and
consistently embraced by us, it brings us into a state far better than Adam's.
It constrains us by a more powerful motive. Adam had not this strong love of God
to man shed abroad in his heart; and, therefore, he had not this constraining
power to make him live to God. But our eyes have seen this great sight. Before
us Christ has been evidently set forth crucified. If we really believe, His love
has brought us into peace, through pardon; and because we are pardoned and at
peace with God, the Holy Spirit is given us. What to do? Why, just to shed
abroad this truth over our hearts, to show us more and more of this love of God
to us, that we may be drawn to love Him who has so love us, to live to Him who
has so loved us, to live to Him who died for us and rose again.
It is truly admirable to see how the Bible way of making us holy is suited to
our nature. Had God proposed to frighten us into a holy life, how vain would
have been the attempt! Men have always an idea, that if one came from the dead
to tell us of the reality of the doleful regions where dwell in endless misery
the spirits of the damned, that that would constrain us to live a holy life; but
what ignorance does this not show of our mysterious nature!
Suppose that God should this hour unveil before our eyes the secrets of those
dreadful abodes where hope never comes; suppose, if it were possible, that you
were actually made to feel for a season the real pains of the lake of living
agony, and the worm that never dies; and then that you were brought back again
on earth, and placed in your old situation, among your old friends and
companions; do you really think that there would be any chance of your walking
with God as a child? I doubt not you would be frightened out of your positive
sins; the cup of godless pleasure would drop from your hand; you would shudder
at an oath, you would tremble at a falsehood, because you had seen and felt
something of the torment that awaits the drunkard, and the swearer, and the
liar, in the world beyond the grave; but do you really think that you would live
to god any more than you did, that you would serve Him better than before? It is
quite true you might be driven to give larger charity; yea, to give all your
goods to feed the poor, and your body to be burned; you might live strictly and
soberly, most fearful of breaking one of the commandments, all the rest of your
days: but this would not be living to God, you would not love Him one whit more.
You are sadly blinded to your curiously formed hearts, if you do not know that
love cannot be forced; no man was ever frightened into love, and, therefore, no
man was ever frightened into holiness.
But thrice blessed be God, He has invented a way more powerful than hell and all
its terrors; an argument mightier far than even a sight of those torments; He
has invented a way of drawing us to holiness. By showing us the love of
his Son, He calls forth our love. He knew our frame; He remembered that we were
dust; He knew all the peculiarities of our treacherous hearts; and, therefore,
He suited His way of sanctifying to the creature to be sanctified. Thus, the
Spirit does not make use of terror to sanctify us, but of love: "The love of
Christ constrains us". He draws us by "the cords of love, by the bands of a
man". What parent does not know that the true way to gain the obedience of a
child, is to gain the affections of the child? And do you think that God, who
gave us this wisdom, does not Himself know? Do you think He would set about
obtaining the obedience of His children, without first of all gaining their
affections, which by nature rove over the face of the world, and centre anywhere
but in Him, God has sent His Son into the world to bear the curse of our sins.
"Though he was rich, yet for our sakes he became poor, that we, through his
poverty, might be made rich."
If there is but one of you who will consent this day, under a sense of
undoneness, to flee for refuge to the Saviour, to find in Him the forgiveness of
all sins that are past, I know well that from this day forth you will be like
that poor woman which was a sinner, who stood at Christ's feet behind Him
weeping, and began to wash His feet with tears and did wipe them with the hairs
of her head, and kissed His feet and anointed them with the ointment. Forgiven
much, you will love much; loving much, you will live to the service of Him whom
you love. This is the grand master-principle of which we spoke; this is the
secret spring of all the holiness of the saints.
The life of holiness is not what the world falsely represents it, a life of
preciseness and painfulness, in which a man crosses every affection in his
nature. There is no such thing as self-denial in the Popish sense of that word
in the religion of the Bible. The system of restrictions and self-crossings is
the very system which Satan has set up as a counterfeit of God's way of
sanctifying. It is thus that Satan frightens away thousands from gospel peace
and gospel holiness; as if to be a sanctified man were to be a man who crossed
every desire of his being, who did everything that was disagreeable and
uncomfortable to him. My friends, our text distinctly shows us that it not so.
We are constrained to holiness by the love of Christ; the love of Him who loved
us, is the only cord by which we are bound to the service of God. The scourge
that drives us to duty. Sweet bands and gentle scourges! Who would not be under
their power?
CHRIST'S PERSEVERING LOVE
Finally, if Christ's love to us be the object which the Holy Spirit makes use
of, at the very first, to draw us to the service of Christ, it is by means of
the same object that He draws us to persevere even unto the end. So that if you
are visited with seasons of coldness and indifference; if you begin to be weary,
or lag behind in the service of God, behold! Here is the remedy: look again to
the bleeding Saviour. That Sun of Righteousness is the grand attractive centre,
round which all His saints move swiftly, and in smooth harmonious concert, "not
without song". As long as the believing eye is fixed upon His love, the path of
the believer is easy and unimpeded; for that love always constrains. But lift
off the believing eye, and that path becomes impracticable, the life of holiness
a weariness.
Whoever, then, would live a life of persevering holiness, let him keep his eye
fixed on the Saviour. As long as Peter looked only to the Saviour, he walked
upon the sea in safety, to go to Jesus; but when he looked around and saw the
wind boisterous, he was afraid, and beginning to sink, cried, "Lord, save me!".
Just so will it be with you. As long a you look believingly to the Saviour, who
loved you, and gave Himself for you, so long you may tread the waters of life's
troubled sea, and the soles of your feet shall not be wet. But venture to look
around upon the winds and waves that threaten you on every hand, and, like
Peter, you begin to sink, and cry, "Lord, save me!". How justly, then, may we
address to you the Saviour's rebuke to Peter: "O thou of little faith, wherefore
didst thou doubt?" Look again to the love of the Saviour, and behold that love
which constrains you to live no more to yourself, but to Him that died for you
and rose again.
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