IT is interesting to stand on a hill-top and watch the coming dawn:
first the grey streaks in the East, and then the brighter light, until
the full orbed sun arises. There is a sunrise with its dawn like that
in the Old Testament Scriptures. The fore gleam begins with the
promise in the curse upon the serpent, that the seed of the woman
should bruise his head. It grows brighter in Abel’s altar, with its
sacrifice of blood. We see it again in the victim, whether lamb, or
bullock or turtle-dove, on the altar of the Tabernacle and the Temple.
We see it in the offering of Isaac, and the substitution of the ram
that was caught in the thicket. We see it in the uplifted serpent of
brass, to which the people were commanded to look and live. We see it
in the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, and kindred prophecies, in which
our Lord is held forth as the Messiah, the Sin-bearer, the One who
makes atonement for our guilt.
THE MEANING~What is meant by the Cross of Christ? There are several
phrases which mean about the same thing. “The death of Christ,”
“the blood of Christ,” “the Lamb of God which taketh away the
sin of the world,” “Christ and Him crucified “—each has in the
heart of it a definition of what the Cross of Christ means. Then, if
you will put together some of the great words which occur in the
writings of the Apostle Paul, you find an unfolding of this heart
meaning. The word “propitiation,” which suggests the justice and
holiness of God; His love making propitiation to His justice: not His
demanding of another that propitiation shall be made to Him, but love
furnishing what justice and holiness demand. “Reconciliation,”
which is the manward side of it—” Be ye reconciled to God “—comes
through the Cross of Christ. “Redemption “—“ Redeemed not with
corruptible things, as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of
Christ.” “Justification,” which has in it the accounting of a
man as innocent. He began before the Fall in a state of innocency, and
justification is away beyond anything that a human court of justice
ever realizes. It is putting the sinner in the condition before God as
if he had never sinned at all. It is giving him a standing in the
merit of Jesus Christ of absolute innocency before God.
It is all summed up in the word used over eighty times in the Old
Testament, and just once in the English version of the New, “ATONEMENT.”
At-one-ment really defines the fruitage of it. It brings us into
harmony with God, makes us one with Him.
THE DEEPER MEANING.—A careful study of our text will give a
clearer insight into the deeper meaning of the Cross. “Let this mind
be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” We have a portrait of
“Christ and Him crucified” in the words “Obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross.” Let us look for a moment at that
picture.“Who, being in the form of God.” That does not mean in the
shape of God. “God is a Spirit, and they that worship Him must
worship Him in spirit and in truth;” and we do not think of Spirit
as having shape. Christ from eternity has been a spiritual God: “Equal
with God “—equal in authority, equal in power, in every respect
equal with God. Now, though equal with God, and of the very substance
of God, “Very God of Very God,” as the old Puritans used to say,
He empties Himself, gives up for the time this equality, and makes
Himself incarnate in a human being. He does not cease to be the
spiritual God that He has been from eternity, but He begins now to
express Himself in this concrete way, and thus puts Himself within the
compass of our comprehension. Our finite minds cannot comprehend a
spiritual God filling all eternity and all immensity; so He puts
Himself within the compass of our thought, in order that He may make
Himself thinkable and approachable to us. He saw fit to give up His
authority for the time, this position of authority, without
surrendering one whit of His attributes of Deity, in order that He
might work out our redemption.
He takes also the form of a servant. The God of the universe not
only puts Himself within the limits of a human being, but the narrower
limitations of a servant. Christ makes Himself a servant to humanity;
puts Himself not only
within the limitations of a perfect human being, but in service to
imperfect human beings. How does He do that? By becoming a universal
Man.
Now listen to this phrase, for I would not have you forget it. He
“took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness
of men.” Not of a man, but in the likeness of all men. “Son of
man,” this Servant places Himself underneath all men, that He may
serve them. He is the universal Man. He is not a Greek, not a Roman,
not a Jew, not an Italian, not an American, not a German, not an
Englishman. He is bigger than each and all; He is the Son of man. The
blood of the whole human race courses in His veins. His heart is big
enough to take in its millions, and His arm long enough to reach down
to the depths of humanity’s greatest need and lift up to the heights
of God. “Son of man “—the poorest, the richest, the youngest,
the oldest, the most degraded, the most moral, the weakest, the
strongest, every man, every woman, every human being in this world is
represented by this universal Man.
But though He becomes a universal Man, He does not lose His
personality. “And being found in fashion as a man.” Having the
form of God and “in the likeness of men,” He is yet “in fashion
as a man.” He has His likes and dislikes; He is careful about His
mother; He hungers and thirsts; He gets tired and sits by the
well-side. This universal Man is an individual. He has a personality
that brings Him a little closer to me still. When I realize that He
gets hungry and thirsty and tired, and that He took my infirmities as
well as my sins, it makes me feel akin to Him.
Now notice what took place. In the form of a Servant, as a
universal Man, and yet with a personality that is distinct, “He
humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the
cross.” The One who hung upon that Roman cross was not simply a
servant; He has become a criminal. He hung there because He was
regarded guilty; the law passed sentence upon Him. It was a position
not only of unutterable agony, but of infinite shame. “Obedient unto
death, even the death of the cross.” So that this universal Man has
not only submitted to the limits of the servant, but He has taken the
place of the criminal. Sin is crime before God, and sin must be
punished. This universal Man, having become a Servant, goes lower than
the servant’s place, and takes that of a criminal before God, in
order that He may take our guilt upon Himself, and give us freedom
from it all.
A DEEPER DEPTH.—This gives us at least a glimpse of the deeper
meaning of the Cross. Yet there is a still deeper depth. “Let this
mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” May the Spirit of
God help us now to go a little farther into this Holy of Holies, and
try to realize the meaning of “Christ and -Him crucified,” with
the glory of it, the glory of giving up glory, the honour of
surrendering honour, the reputation of being of no reputation, for the
sake of the glory, honour and reputation of others. Seeking glory and
grasping after honour may mean selfishness; but there is a higher
glory than seeking glory, and a deeper honour than grasping after
honour—the glory of the sacrificial spirit which gives up glory and
honour for the sake of others.
Let us imagine, if we can, a man in this world who is truth
incarnate. In him is all truth; and I mean by truth, reality without
sham—no pretence. There is not a ring of unreality about him. A man
like that would be the glory of his nation. Then imagine another man
in whom all light centers. I mean by light, knowledge, light on every
subject in the universe; and if you could find a man like that he
would be the glory of his nation. Then look for another man in whom
life is centered—physical life, intellectual life, ethical life,
spiritual life, all the life you can think of incarnate in this one
man. He would be the glory of his nation. Then find another man in
whom all wisdom is centered, not simply knowledge, but how to use it.
He never makes a mistake, never acts foolishly. He would be the glory
of his nation. Find another man in whom all power is centered, and he
would be the glory of his nation. Then another man in whom all love is
centered, love that is pure, love that is not flecked with lust;
everything that is lovely and of good report centers in him. He would
be the glory of his race.
Now find, if you can, a man in whom all of these things are
centered—all truth, all light, all life, all wisdom, all power, all
holiness, and all love, and you would say that a man in whom all of
these were incarnate was not only the glory of earth, but he is the
glory of heaven. Find a man in whom all goodness, all virtue, all
purity, everything that is good centers, and you have the glory of all
worlds. Yet we have just approached the glory of the Cross. I have
been describing to you our Lord Jesus Christ. He is the only One who
ever came into this world of whom it could be said, “In Him is all
Truth, all Light, all Life, all Wisdom, all Power, all Holiness and
all Love.” These things incarnate in Christ make Him not only the
glory of earth but the glory of heaven. Yet you have not touche the
glory of the Cross. I have just describe this faint, feeble way the
glory of the incarnate God.
Let us go a step farther and see what the Cross means. If you can
find a man in whom all truth is centered, not contending for the
truth, but dying for those in error, you have reached another degree
of glory. If you can find a man
in whom all light is centered, light not displaying itself, but
dying for those in darkness; if you can find a man in whom all wisdom
is centered, not wisdom admiring itself, but dying for the ignorant;
if you can find a man in whom all life is centered, not protecting
itself, as a coward would, but giving itself for those who are dead;
if you can find a man in whom all holiness is centered, holiness not
cultivating itself, though that is a good thing, but holiness giving
itself on the altar, dying for the unholy and the impure; if you can
find a man that has all power, not exerting itself, but willing to be
weak, restraining itself, that it
may carry out its noble purpose of sacrifice for sin; if you can
find a man that is all love, not simply enjoying itself, but love on
the altar, love dying, love giving itself to the Cross in order that
the unlovely might be saved; if you can find all these, you have some
little conception of what the Cross of Christ means. Now put all into
one—O God, help us to realize it !—all Truth, all Light, all Life,
all Wisdom, all Power, all Holiness, all Love, incarnate in one Man,
who gives Himself for the untruthful, for the darkened, for the dead,
for the weak, for the unholy, for the unlovely—and you have some
conception of what the Cross of Jesus Christ is in its deeper meaning.
YET DEEPER AND DEEPER.—NOW shall we go through the gate and
follow the surging crowd, stand on the hill-top and look up into the
marred face, then listen and see if we cannot catch a little deeper
note still of the meaning of the Cross. “Father, forgive them, for
they know not what they do “—and Jesus could make that prayer only
while He died, or after His death, or in virtue of His death. To take
righteousness, and justice, and holiness from God would be to dethrone
Him. How can God forgive the guilty? How can God be merciful without
being unjust? for mercy is a species of injustice. The moment a judge
becomes merciful he ceases to be perfectly just, and the moment he
begins to be just he ceases to be merciful. There is only one way for
a just God to forgive, and that is by the guilt being removed, and
while Jesus Christ was bearing the guilt of sin, He said, “Father,
forgive, for I am making it possible for My murderers to be forgiven.
Father, forgive upon the merit of the atonement I am making just now.”
Then listen, and we catch a deeper note still, My God! My God! why
hast Thou forsaken Me?” Turn over to another Scripture, He tasted
death for every man.” What is death? Death to the soul is separation
from God. “Depart from Me, ye cursed.” That means death. And Jesus
is now by His own choice tasting death. What is hell? Whatever else it
may mean, it means separation from God; and my Lord is tasting that
sort of death for every man.
Then listen. “ I thirst.” Why, the body is redeemed. There is
not only spiritual death, but physical death; and that cry is the
appeal of the body through the crucified Christ for the satisfaction
of its needs. And this body of ours is redeemed through the Cross of
Christ for time and eternity.Now you can listen and know what it means
when He says, “It is finished.” “Father, forgive them. It is
possible, for •I am bearing their guilt. I am tasting death for
them. This cry of My body in its thirst is the appeal for the
satisfaction of the body’s needs. Now, Father, It is finished.’
The great achievement is complete. In the beginning we saw the work of
Our hands that it was good. Now, Father, this work of redemption, the
fore gleams of which have been coming down the ages since the darkness
of mans first guilt, is finished.” Death has been tasted, the guilt
has been borne, and it is possible now to forgive. “It is finished,”
and we accept a finished salvation in Christ. Salvation for us is
finished; and salvation in us begins when we accept the finished
salvation for us.
Now we hear His tender words: “Mother, behold thy son. Son,
behold thy mother”; and it is in the deeper meaning of the Cross
to-day that the son beholds his mother, and the mother beholds her
son. Show me a spot on this earth where the Cross has not touched and
you have no home, no Christian fatherhood, no Christian motherhood, no
Christian wifehood, no Christian childhood. Women are chattels,
children are slaves. It is through the deeper meaning of the Cross
that motherhood has been redeemed, fatherhood has been sanctified, and
childhood, sisterhood and wifehood have been glorified. All these are
gleams of the glories of the Cross. Then listen again. “Father, into
Thy hands I commend My spirit.” “I have tasted death; now all that
is left for Me to do is just to commend My spirit.” That is where
the Christian’s dying begins. He does not have to taste death; it
has been tasted for him. He does not have to bear the separation from
God; it has been borne for him. He has accepted the finished salvation
through the merit of Jesus Christ, and when he comes to the end he
finds it just the beginning. “Father, into Thy hands I commend My
spirit.” That is not death. Oh, no! Death is separation from God.
But the Christian when he dies is departing to be with God.“The time
of my departure is at hand,” says Paul; and Paul got so enthusiastic
over the idea that he was almost extravagant, for you remember that
the word “departure “is a nautical term. It carries with it the
idea of lifting anchor and spreading sail, and going out of the
land-locked harbour into the open sea. Paul was not thinking about
contraction, but expansion; and through the gate of Christ I am going
to begin to live. I am going to lay aside this garment we call the
body, and enter into the spiritual world with a freedom I cannot have
in this.
While we are thinking of the glory of the Cross in its deeper
meaning, let us read the muster roll of heroes from the time of
righteous Abel down to the present moment, and we shall find that the
flashes of glory in history have been the gleams of the Cross. In the
autumn of 1912 Nonconformists met at Smithfield and recalled the deeds
of the martyrs, who were obedient unto death, even the death of the
stake. We glorify them, almost canonize them ; and the spirit that
went to the flames was the spirit of the Cross. In 1662 two thousand
preachers left their churches and their livings. Why? They were
willing to be “obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross.” “Christ
and Him crucified” was shining out in glory through their characters
and their deeds. If you would have glory, do not seek it as Napoleon
Bonaparte sought it, when he rang the word out to the French army and
filled them with a wild enthusiasm, a wiIl-o’-the-wisp, a thing that
was grasped at and never caught, an apple of Sodom that turns to ashes
in your mouth. Seek the glory that becomes incarnate in your life, the
glory of the Cross in its sacrificial spirit.
“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who
being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God:
but made Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a
servant, and was made in the likeness of men; and being found in
fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross.”