SCRIPTURE
STUDIES
VOLUME FIVE - THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD AND MAN
STUDY
V
THE MEDIATOR OF THE ATONEMENT
— “MADE LIKE UNTO HIS BRETHREN”
AND
“TOUCHED WITH A FEELING OF OUR INFIRMITIES”
Who
“His Brethren” are — In What the Likeness Consisted — How He was Tempted in all Points, Like as We are Tempted, Yet Without
Sin — The Wilderness
Temptations — Their Resemblance to ours — Some of which would “Deceive if it were Possible the Very Elect”
— In What
Sense our Lord was Made
Perfect through Sufferings — Though a Son, yet Learned He Obedience
— How He was Made in the Likeness of Sinful Flesh
— Yet Without Sin — “Himself took our Infirmities” — How
He was “Touched.”
“In all things it behooved him to be made like unto his brethren;
that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining
unto God—to make reconciliation for the sins of the people.” Heb. 2:17
THE TWO popular but opposing lines of thought touch and
conflict in respect to all the various Scriptural statements which declare
our Lord’s relationship to mankind; and the third or truth line alone is
able to either reconcile the various scriptures or to satisfy sanctified
reason. Of the two false but
popular theories one claims that our Lord Jesus was the Almighty God,
Jehovah, who merely garbed himself in human flesh, without really having
actual sensibility of humanity’s trials, temptations and environments.
The other theory claims that he was a sinful man, partaker of the
blemishes of our race, just as others, but more successful than others in
combating and resisting the motions of sin.
We are endeavoring to show that both of these theories are
erroneous, and that the truth lies between them, in the fact that the Logos “being in a form of God,” a spirit being, when “made
flesh” was really a
man, “The man Christ Jesus,” but
“separate
from sinners,” a perfect man prepared to be the “corresponding price” for the
first perfect man whose fall involved our race, and whose redemption also
involves the race. [page 108]
It is quite proper in this connection, therefore, in seeking to
establish the Scripturally correct view of this subject, that we examine
various scriptures which have been distorted and misused to prove that our
Lord was blemished, and subject to like passions with the fallen race.
We hold that if he had been in this condition it would have been as
impossible for him as it is impossible for us to keep absolutely and
perfectly every feature of the Divine Law.
The Divine Law is the full measure of the perfect
man’s ability and is beyond the measure and ability of any man who is
not perfect. Hence, the very
fact that in our Lord was no sin, the very fact that he was pleasing to
the Father, and acceptable as a sin-offering, as a ransom-price for Adam
(and the race lost in him), proves indirectly his perfection, as we hold
that the Scriptures everywhere teach it.
But our Lord’s “brethren” were not immaculate, were not
separate from sinners. How,
then, could he be “made like unto his brethren,” and yet be separate
from sinners? The answer to this question is found in the recognition of
the fact that the world of mankind, sinners in general, are not the ones
who are referred to as “his brethren.”
The man Adam, indeed, was a son of God at his creation, and up to
the time of his transgression (Luke 3:38), but not subsequently. And all
of his race are Scripturally designated “children of wrath.” (Eph.
2:3) Only those who have
“escaped the condemnation that is on the world,” and who have gotten
back into harmony with God, through Christ, are Scripturally authorized to
consider themselves the sons of God. (John 1:12)
Of the others, our Lord declares, “Ye are of your father, the
devil, for his works ye do.” (John 8:44) Our Lord Jesus never counted
himself in as one of the children of the devil, nor as one of the
“children of wrath,” but declared that he “proceeded forth and came
from God.” Neither did he
recognize as “his brethren” any of those who were still “children of
wrath.” The only ones
recognized as the “Lord’s brethren” are those who, having escaped
the condemnation that is on the world, have been [page 109]
brought nigh to the Father through the blood of
Christ, and have received “the spirit of adoption” into God’s
family, and the promise of full “adoption of sons” at the
establishment of the Kingdom. (Rom. 8:15,23; Gal. 4:5)
It is because these are justified,
reckonedly freed from Adamic guilt and reckonedly constituted righteous,
through the blood of Christ, that they are in any sense of the word like
our Lord Jesus, “his brethren,” on a similar footing of divine favor
and separateness from the world. Of
the consecrated of this class our Lord says, “They are not of the world,
even as I am not of the world.” “I
have chosen you out of the world.” (John 15:19; 17:16)
From this standpoint it can readily be seen that our Lord was
“made like unto his brethren”—exactly,
in every particular. Not that
his “brethren” were in this condition at the time he humbled himself
and was made flesh—he had no brethren at that time, except as this class
was foreknown
of God. (Eph. 1:5,11; Rom. 8:29) But the divine arrangement was such that
God foresaw that he could be just, and yet justify those of the sinner
race who accepted divine grace through Christ, and whose sins were, on
this account, covered, not imputed to them, but imputed to him who “bore
our sins in his own body on the tree.”
God forearranged, foreknew, his purpose to call out the Gospel
Church to be “joint-heirs with Jesus Christ our Lord,” to the
inheritance, incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved
in heaven. And it was in view
of this prearranged plan that all who will constitute this class were
spoken of in advance, through the prophets, as the “brethren” of
Christ. Prophetically, our
Lord is represented as saying to the Father, “I have declared thy name
unto my brethren; in the midst
of the Church have I sung thy praise.” (Psa. 22:22; Heb. 2:12)
Since this was the divine program—that our Lord should not only
be the Redeemer of the world, but also a pattern
for the “brethren” who would be his joint-heirs—therefore, in
carrying out this divine program it was fitting that he should in all his
trials and experiences be “made like unto his brethren.” [page 110]
“He
Was Tempted in All Points Like as We
Are,
Yet Without Sin”
—Heb.
4:15—
It will be noticed that this statement is not that our Lord was
tempted in all points like as the world is tempted, but like as we, his
followers, are tempted. He
was not tempted along the lines of depraved appetites for sinful things,
received by heredity, from an earthly parentage; but being holy, harmless,
undefiled and separate from sinners, he was tempted along the same lines
as his followers of this Gospel age—who walk not after the flesh but
after the spirit; and who are judged not according to the infirmities of
their flesh, but according to the spirit of their minds—according to
their new wills, new hearts. Rom. 8:4; 2 Cor. 5:16; John 8:15
This is seen very clearly in connection with our Lord’s
temptations in the wilderness, which immediately followed his consecration
and baptism at Jordan. Matt. 4:1-11
(1) The first was Satan’s suggestion that he use the divine power
which he had just received at Jordan, in ministering to his own wants,
converting the stones into bread. This was not a temptation in any degree
traceable to heredity or imperfection.
Our Lord had been forty days without food, studying the divine
plan, seeking to determine, under the enlightening influence of the holy
Spirit, just received, what would be his proper course in life, to fulfil
the great mission upon which he had come into the world, viz., the
world’s redemption. The
suggestion that he use the spiritual power conferred upon him, and which
he realized was in his possession, to minister to the necessities of his
flesh, would, at first thought, seem reasonable; but our Lord at once
discerned that such a use of his spiritual gift would be wrong, would be a
misuse of it, a use for which it was not intended, and hence he rejected
the suggestion, saying, “It is written, Man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every [page 111] word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”
The Lord’s “brethren” sometimes have similar temptations of
the Adversary, suggestions to use spiritual gifts for the furtherance of
temporal interests. Suggestions
of this kind are insidious, and are the channels through which God’s
consecrated people not infrequently are led astray by the Adversary to
greater and greater misuse of divine blessings.
(2) The Adversary suggested to our Lord fakir methods of
introducing his mission to the people—that he leap from a pinnacle of
the temple into the valley below in the sight of the multitude; so that
their seeing him survive uninjured would be a proof to them of his
superhuman power, which would lead them at once to accept him as the
Messiah, and to cooperate with him in the work before him.
But our Lord saw at once that such methods were wholly out of
harmony with the divine arrangement, and even the misapplication of a
scripture by the Adversary (apparently in favor of the
wrong) did not swerve him from the principles of righteousness.
He immediately replied to the effect that such a procedure on his
part would be a tempting of divine providence, wholly unwarranted, and
hence not to be considered for a moment.
Where duty called or danger the Master did not hesitate, but
realized the Father’s ability to keep every interest; but true
confidence in God does not involve a reckless exposure to danger, without
divine command, and merely for a show, and in a spirit of braggadocio.
The Lord’s brethren have temptations along this line also, and
need to remember this lesson and example set before them by the Captain of
our Salvation. We are not to
rush unbidden into dangers, and esteem ourselves thus valiant soldiers of
the cross. “Daredevil deeds” may not seem out of place to the
children of the devil, but they are wholly improper in the children of
God. The latter have a
warfare which requires still greater courage.
They are called upon to perform services which the world does not
applaud, nor [page 112]
even appreciate, but often persecutes.
They are called upon to endure ignominy, and the scoffs of the
world; yea, and to have the uncircumcised of heart “say all manner of
evil” against them falsely for Christ’s sake.
In this respect the followers of the Captain of our Salvation pass
along the same road, and walk in the footsteps of their Captain.
And it requires greater courage to ignore the shame and ignominy of
the world, in the disesteemed service of God, than to perform some great
and wonderful feat, that would cause the natural man to wonder and admire.
One of the chief battles of those who walk this narrow way is
against self-will; to bring their wills into fullest subjection to the
Heavenly Father’s will, and to keep them there; to rule their own
hearts, crushing out the rising ambitions which are natural even to a
perfect manhood; quenching these kindling fires, and presenting their
bodies and all earthly interests living sacrifices in the service of the
Lord and his cause. These
were the trials in which our Captain gained his victory and its laurels,
and these also are the trials of his “brethren.”
“Greater is he that ruleth his own spirit [bringing it into full
subordination to the will of God] than he that taketh a city:” greater
also is such than he who, with a false conception of faith, would leap
from the pinnacle of a temple, or do some other foolhardy thing.
True faith in God consists not in blind credulity and extravagant
assumptions respecting his providential care: it consists, on the
contrary, of a quiet confidence in all the exceeding great and precious
promises which God has made, a confidence which enables the faithful to
resist the various efforts of the world, the flesh and the devil, to
distract his attention, and which follows carefully the lines of faith and
obedience marked out for us in the divine Word.
(3) The third temptation of our Lord was to offer earthly dominion
and speedy success in the establishment of his kingdom, without suffering
and death, without the cross, upon condition of a compromise with the
Adversary. The Adversary
claimed, and his claim was not disputed, that he [page 113]
held control of the world, and that by his
cooperation the Kingdom of Righteousness, which our Lord had come to
institute, could be quickly established.
Satan’s intimation was that he had become weary of leading the
world into sin, blindness, superstition, ignorance, and that he therefore
had a sympathy with our Lord’s mission, which was to help the poor,
fallen race. What he wanted to retain, however, was a leading or
controlling influence in the world; and hence the price of his turning the
world over to a righteous course, the price of his cooperation with the
Lord Jesus in a restitutionary blessing of the world, was, that the latter
should recognize him, Satan, as the ruler of the world, in its
reconstructed condition—that thus our Lord should do homage to him.
We are to remember that Satan’s rebellion against the divine rule
was instigated by ambition to be himself a monarch—“as the Most
High.” (Isa. 14:14) We
recall that this was the primary motive of his successful attack upon our
first parents in Eden—that he might alienate or separate them from God,
and thus enslave them to himself. We
can readily suppose that he would prefer to be monarch of happier subjects
than the “groaning creation:” he would prefer subjects possessed of
everlasting life. It would
appear that even yet he does not recognize the fact that everlasting life
and true happiness are impossible except in harmony with Divine law.
Satan was therefore willing to become a reformer in all particulars
except one—his ambition must be gratified—he must be no less the ruler
amongst men; and was he not already “the Prince of this world”—and
so acknowledged in Holy Writ? (John 14:30; 12:31; 16:11; 2 Cor. 4:4) Not
that he had any divine commission to be “the prince of this world,”
but that by getting possession of mankind, through ignorance, and through
misrepresentation of the false as the true, of darkness as the light, of
wrong as the right, he had so confused, bewildered, blinded the world that
he easily held the position of master or “god of this world, who now
worketh in the hearts of the children of disobedience”—the vast
majority.
[page 114]
The peculiar temptation of Satan’s suggestion therefore was, that
it seemed to offer a new solution of the question of the recovery of man
out of his condition of sin. And
more than this, it seemed to imply at least a partial repentance on the
part of Satan, and the possibility of his recovery to a course of
righteousness, provided he could be guaranteed the continued success of
his ambition to be a ruler over subjects more happy and more prosperous
than it was possible for them to be while kept under his delusions and
enslaved by sin, which was the only way in which he could retain man’s
loyalty: because in proportion as mankind rejects sin and appreciates
holiness, in that proportion it becomes desirous to serve and to worship
God.
Our Lord Jesus did not long hesitate.
He had absolute confidence that the Father’s wisdom had adopted
the best and only adequate plan. Therefore
he not only did not confer with flesh and blood, but neither would he
bargain with the Adversary for cooperation in the work of the world’s uplift.
Here also we see one of the special besetments of the Adversary
against the Lord’s “brethren.”
He succeeded in tempting the nominal Church, early in her career,
to abandon the way of the cross, the narrow way of separateness from the
world, and to enter into a league with the civil power, and thus gradually
to become influential in the world’s politics.
By cooperation with “the princes of this world,” fostered and
aided by the Adversary secretly, she sought to establish the reign of
Christ on earth, through a representative, a pope, for whom it was claimed
that he was Christ’s vicegerent. We have seen what baneful influences resulted: how this
counterfeit Kingdom of Christ became really a kingdom of the devil, for
his work it did. We have seen
the result in the “dark ages,” and that the Lord denominates the
system “Antichrist.”*
—————
*See Vol. II, Chap. ix.
And although the Reformation started in boldly, we find that the
Adversary again presented the same temptation before the Reformers, and we
see that they resisted it only [page
115] in part, that they were willing to compromise the
truth for the sake of the protection and aid of “the kingdoms of this
world,” and in the hope that the kingdoms of this world would in some
manner become the Kingdom of our Lord. But we see that the combination of
the Church and the world influence, as represented in Protestantism, while
less baneful in its results than Papacy’s combination, is nevertheless
very injurious, and a great hindrance to all who come under its influence.
We see that the constant conflict of the “brethren” is to
overcome this temptation of the Adversary, and to stand fast in the
liberty wherewith Christ has made us free—not of the world, but separate
from it.
Moreover, we find that although the same temptation comes to all
the “brethren,” it comes in slightly modified form from time to time,
and that the great Adversary very cunningly, in every instance, attempts
to do with us as with the Lord, viz., to present himself as a leader along
the lines of reform which he advocates—appearing to be in hearty
sympathy with the work of blessing the world.
His latest temptation along this line comes in the form of the
suggested “social uplift,” which he is successfully bringing before
the minds of many of the “brethren.”
He suggests now, that however necessary it once was to walk the
“narrow way,” the way of the cross, it is no longer necessary so to
do; but that now we have reached the place where the whole matter may be
easily and quickly accomplished, and the world in general lifted up to a
high plane of social, intellectual, moral and religious standing.
But the plans which he suggests always involve combination with
him: in the present instance it is the suggestion that all who would be
co-workers in the social uplift shall join in social
and political
movements, which shall bring about the desired end. And he has become so bold and so confident of the support of
the majority that he no longer pretends to favor reform along the line of
individual conversion from sin and salvation from condemnation, and
reconciliation with the Father, through a personal faith in and
consecration to the Lord Jesus Christ: his proposition is a social uplift,
which shall ignore [page 116]
individual responsibilities and sins, and merely
regard social conditions and make society outwardly “clean.”
He would have us disregard the Lord’s teaching, to the effect
that only those who come unto the Father through him are “sons of
God,” and his “brethren:” instead, he would have us believe that all
men are brethren, and that God is the Father of all humanity, that none
are “children of wrath,” and that it is criminally unchristian and
uncharitable to believe our Lord’s words that some are of their
“father, the devil.” He
would thus, without always so saying in specific terms, have us ignore and
deny man’s fall into sin, and ignore
and deny the ransom from sin, and all the work of atonement; under the
specious, deceptive watchword, “the Fatherhood of God and the
Brotherhood of man,” and the Golden Rule.
This temptation of the Adversary before the “brethren” today is
deceiving many, and probably will yet deceive all except “the very
elect.” (Matt. 24:24) These
very elect “brethren,” are those who follow closely in the Master’s
footsteps, and who, instead of hearkening to the Adversary’s
suggestions, hearken to the Word of the Lord.
These very elect “brethren,” instead of leaning to their own
understandings, and to Satan’s sophistries, have faith in the superior
wisdom of Jehovah and his divine plan of the ages. Hence these are all
“taught of God,” and know thereby that the work of the present age is
the selection of the “brethren” of Christ, and their testing, and
finally their glorification with the Lord in the Kingdom, as the seed of
Abraham, to bless the world; and that in the next age will come God’s
“due time” for the world’s uplift, mental, moral and physical. Hence
the very elect cannot be deceived by any of the specious arguments or
sophistries of their wily foe. Moreover,
the “brethren” are not ignorant of his devices, for they were
forewarned along this line, and they are looking unto Jesus, who not only
is the Author of their faith, through the sacrifice of himself, but also
is to be the finisher of it, when he shall grant them a part in the first
resurrection, and [page 117] make them partakers of his excellent glory and divine
nature.
Such are the points of temptation to the “brethren,” and such
were the points of temptation to their Captain.
He was “tempted
in all points like as we are” tempted; and he knows how to
succor those who are tempted, and who are willing to receive the succor
which he gives, in the way in which he gives it—through the teachings of
his Word and its exceeding great and precious promises.
The weaknesses which come to us through heredity were no part of
our Lord’s temptation. He
did not have a drunkard’s appetite; he did not have a murderer’s
passion, nor a thief’s avarice; he was holy, harmless, separate from
sinners. Nor do his
“brethren” have these besetments, as their temptations.
Those who have become his “brethren” through faith, and
consecration, and begetting of the holy Spirit of adoption, have lost the
disposition which seeks to do injury to others, and have received instead
the new mind, the mind of Christ, the spirit of Christ, the spirit of a
sound mind, the holy Spirit—the spirit of love; which seeks first of all
the Father’s will, and secondly, seeks to do good unto all men, as it
has opportunity, especially to the household of faith. Gal. 6:10
And though there remains in the flesh of these “new creatures,”
possessed of the new mind or new will, a weakness of heredity, a tendency
toward passion or strife, so that they may need continually to keep on
guard against these, and may occasionally be overtaken in a fault,
contrary to their wills, nevertheless these unintentional weaknesses are
not counted unto them as sins, nor as the acts of the “new creature,”
but merely as defects which belong to the old nature, which, so long as
the new nature opposes them, are reckoned as covered by the merit of the
ransom—the great sin-offering made by the Captain of our Salvation.
It is the “new creature” alone that is being tried, tested,
fitted, polished and prepared for joint-heirship with Christ in his
Kingdom, and not the body of flesh, which, of such, is reckoned dead. [page 118]
“Made
Perfect Through Suffering”
“It became him [the Father] for whom are all things, and by whom
are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the Captain of
their Salvation perfect through sufferings.” Heb. 2:10
Having in mind the foregoing, it will be easy to see that our Lord
was not
made perfect as a man, through the things which he suffered as a
man; nor did he suffer anything before he became a man. The thought of this scripture is that our Lord, when in the
world, when he was already perfect as a man, the very image of the Father
in the flesh, holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, attained,
by his experiences and sufferings, another perfection—a perfection on
another plane of being, gained since then.
It was one thing that the Logos was perfect when with the Father before the world
was—perfect in his being, and in his heart or will—perfectly loyal to
the Father; it was another thing that when voluntarily he humbled himself
to be made flesh, and to take our nature, a lower nature, he was perfect
as a man—separate from sinners: it is still a third thing that he is now
perfect in his present highly exalted condition, a sharer of the
divine nature. It is to this
latter that our text relates. So high an exaltation to the “glory, honor
and immortality” of “the divine nature,” made it proper in the
divine wisdom that certain tests
should be applied, the meeting of which should make perfect the title of
God’s Only Begotten Son to share all the riches of divine grace, and
“that all men should honor the Son even as they honor the Father.”
We are to remember that it was in connection with these tests of his obedience to
the Father that there was set before him a certain joy or prospect, as it
is written—“For the joy that was set before him he endured the cross, despising the
shame.” (Heb. 12:2) This
joy before him, we may reasonably suppose, was:
(1) A joy to render a service which would be acceptable to the
Father. [page 119]
(2) A joy to redeem mankind, and make possible their rescue from
sin and death.
(3) A joy in the thought that by the accomplishment of this
redemption he would be accounted worthy of the Father to be the mighty
ruler and blesser, King and Priest of the world; to reveal to the world a
knowledge of the divine plan, and to lift up from sin to divine grace
whosoever would accept of the terms of the New Covenant.
(4) A joy that the Father had promised him; not only a return to
the glory of spirit-being which he had with the Father before the world
was, but a more excellent glory—to be exalted far above angels,
principalities and powers, and every name that is named, and to be made an
associate in the Kingdom of the Universe, next to the Father—on the
right of the majesty on high; and partaker of the divine nature, with its
inherent or immortal life.
But all this joy set before our Lord was made contingent or
dependent upon his full obedience to the Father’s will. True, he had
always been obedient to the Father, and delighted in the Father’s way,
but never before had he been put to such a test as now.
Hitherto it had been pleasurable and honorable to do the Father’s
will; now the test was to be whether or not he would do that will under
conditions that would be distressing, painful, humiliating—conditions
which would bring him finally not only to death, but even the ignominious
death of the cross. He did
stand this testing, and never faltered, never wavered, but manifested in
every particular, and to the utmost, faith in the Father’s Justice,
Love, Wisdom and Power, and unhesitatingly endured all the oppositions and
contradictions of sinners against himself, with all other besetments of
the Adversary; and by this means; through suffering, he “made
perfect” his title to all the joys set before him, and in
consequence was perfected as a being of the very highest order, viz.,
“of the divine nature.” Thus
it was true of the Only Begotten of the Father that:
[page 120]
“Though
He Were a Son
Yet
Learned He Obedience by the Things
Which
He Suffered
and
Being Made Perfect He Became the Author
of
Everlasting Salvation
Unto
All Them that Obey Him.”
—Heb.
5:8-10—
The inspired Apostle thus explains that our Lord, already
undefiled, perfect, already a “Son,” already fully obedient to the
Father under favorable conditions, learned what it meant to be obedient under most adverse
conditions, and being thus tested and proved worthy of perfection on the
highest plane of being, the divine nature, he was perfected in it when the
Father raised him from the dead to the excellent glory set before him—to
be, first, the Deliverer of the Church which is his body, and afterward,
“in due time,” of all who, being brought to a knowledge of the Truth,
will obey him.
Note the harmony between this and the Apostle Peter’s
testimony—“The God of our fathers raised up Jesus.... Him hath God
exalted with his right hand, to be a Prince and a Savior.” Acts 5:31
Thus our Lord Jesus demonstrated before the Father, before angels,
and before us, his “brethren,” his fidelity to the Father and to the
principles of the Father’s government. Thus he magnified the Father’s
law and made it honorable: demonstrating that it was not too exacting,
that it was not beyond the ability of a perfect being, even under the most
adverse conditions. We, his
followers, may well rejoice with all of God’s obedient and intelligent
creation, saying, “Worthy the Lamb that was slain, to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength and honor and
glory and blessing.” Rev. 5:12
And as our Lord glorified is the Captain of our Salvation, it
implies that all who would be soldiers of the cross, followers of this
Captain and joint-heirs with him in the [page 121]
Kingdom, must likewise be made perfect as “new
creatures” through trial and suffering.
And as the sufferings through which the Captain was made perfect as
a new creature were the things which he endured through the opposition of
the world, the flesh and devil, and through the submission of his own will
to the Father’s will, so with us: our sufferings are not the ordinary
sufferings of pain, such as the “groaning creation” shares, and which
we share to some extent, as members of the world.
The sufferings which count in the development of the “new
creature” are those voluntary
and willing
endurances on account of the Lord and the Lord’s Word and the Lord’s
people—the hardness which we endure, as good soldiers of the Lord Jesus
Christ, while seeking to do not our own wills, but to have perfected in us
the will of our Captain, the will of our Heavenly Father.
Thus we are to walk in his footsteps, realizing his watchcare, and
availing ourselves at the throne of the heavenly grace of his helps by the
way; and trusting his promise that all things shall work together for good
to us, and that he will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are
able, but will with every temptation provide a way of escape; and that in
every trial he will grant grace sufficient—for every time of need. Thus
are his “brethren” also now on trial and now being made
perfect as new creatures in Christ—“made meet for the
inheritance of the saints in light.” Col. 1:12
“In
the Likeness of Sinful Flesh”
What the Law could not do, in that it was powerless because of the
flesh [because all flesh was depraved through the fall, and incapable of
rendering absolute obedience to the Law], God accomplished by sending his
own Son in the likeness of the flesh of mankind [that had come under the
dominion of Sin], even by an offering for sin, which, though it condemned
sin in the flesh, opened up a new way of life under which the
righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled by us [who are not walking
according to the flesh but according to the Spirit].
To such, therefore, there is now no condemnation, for the Law of
the spirit of life in Christ Jesus [under the precious blood] hath made us
free from the Law Covenant, which convicted all imperfect ones as sinners,
and condemned them to death. Rom. 8:1-4, paraphrase.
[page 122]
Those more or less disposed to consider our Lord a sinner, a member
of the fallen race, have seized upon this scripture, and attempted to turn
it out of harmony with reason, and out of harmony with the other
scriptures, to support their theory: to prove that Christ was made exactly
like “sinful flesh,” and not like flesh that had not sinned—namely,
Adam before his transgression. But
from the above paraphrase of his text, we believe that the Apostle’s
thought is clearly brought before the mind of the English reader. Our Lord
left the glory of the spirit nature, and was “made flesh,” made of the
same kind of nature as the race which he came to redeem—the race whose
nature, or flesh, had come under the bondage of sin, which was sold under
sin, through the disobedience of its first parent, Adam.
Nothing here intimates, except in the gloss given through the
translation, that our Lord himself was a sinner.
Indeed, it is one of the simplest propositions imaginable, that if
he were a sinner, or in any manner a partaker of the curse which rested
upon the human family, he could not have been our sin-offering, for one
sinner could not be an offering for another sinner.
Under the divine law, “the wages of sin is death.”
Our Lord, if he had been in any sense or degree a sinner, would
thereby have forfeited his own life, and would have been valueless as a ransom-price
for Adam or for any other sinner.
“Himself
Took Our Infirmities”
—Matt.
8:17—
“Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet we
did esteem him stricken, smitten of God and afflicted.
But he was wounded for our transgressions; he was bruised for our
iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his
stripes we are healed.” Isa. 53:4,5
Perfection is the opposite of infirmity, and the fact that our Lord
had infirmities might logically be argued as proof that he was not
perfect—that he had inherited some of the blemishes of the fallen race.
It will be remembered that on the night of his agony in the Garden
of Gethsemane our [page 123] Lord sweated “as it were great drops of blood,”
and this is set down by some medical authorities as a disease, which,
altho very rare, has been known to affect others of the human family.
It gave evidence of a great nervous strain and weakness.
Again, tradition says that when on the way to Golgotha our Lord was
compelled to carry the cross, and that he fainted under it, and that it
was on this account that Simon, the Cyrenian, was compelled to bear the
cross for the remainder of the journey. (Matt. 27:32)
It is further claimed that our Lord’s death on the cross, so much
sooner than was usual, was occasioned by a literal breaking of his heart,
the rupture of its muscles, and that this is indicated by the flow of both
blood and water from the spear-wound in his side after death.
At all events, our Lord did not manifest that fulness of vigor
which was manifested in Adam, the first perfect man, whose vitality was
such that he lived for nine hundred and thirty years.
The question arises, Did not these evidences of infirmity on the
part of our Lord indicate imperfection: that either through heredity or in
some other manner he lacked the powers of a perfect man, and was therefore
a blemished man?
On the surface the matter has this appearance, and only under the
guidance of the divine Word are we enabled to explain satisfactorily to
our own minds, or to others, the consistency between these facts and the
Scriptural assurance that our Redeemer was “holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners.”
The key to the matter is given in the scripture under
consideration. The prophet
declares what would naturally appear to ourselves or to others, viz., that
our Lord, like all the remainder of the race, was stricken, was under
sentence of death, was smitten of God and afflicted—as much under the
sentence of death as the remainder of the race: but then he shows that
what thus seems or appears is not the fact, explaining that it was for our
sins, and not for his own sins, that he suffered; his infirmities were the
result of bearing our griefs and carrying the load of our sorrow; his
death was in consequence of his taking our [page 124]
place before the divine law, and suffering, “the
just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God.” Speaking for fleshly Israel at the first advent, the Prophet
says—We did esteem him to be stricken,
smitten and afflicted of God: and explaining that such a view was
incorrect, he declares—But it was for our transgressions that he was
wounded; it was for our iniquities that he was bruised: our peace with God
was secured by the chastisement for sin which he bore; our healing was
secured by the punishment which he endured for us.
Matthew calls attention to the fulfilment of this very prophecy,
declaring—“They brought unto him many that were possessed with devils;
and he cast out the spirits with his word, and healed all that were sick:
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying,
Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses.” Matt. 8:16,17
The connection between the healing of disease, on our Lord’s
part, and his taking of infirmity upon himself, is not very apparent to
the majority of those who read the record. It is generally supposed that
our Lord merely exercised a power of healing that cost himself
nothing—that he had an inexhaustible power from a spiritual source,
unseen, which permitted all manner of miracles, without the slightest
impairment of his own strength, his own vitality.
We do not question that “the power of the Highest,” bestowed
upon our Redeemer without measure, would have enabled him to do many
things entirely supernatural, and hence entirely without self-exhaustion:
nor do we question that our Lord used this superhuman power—for instance
in the turning of the water into wine, and in the miraculous feeding of
the multitudes. But, from the
record of the Scriptures, we understand that the healing of the sick, as
performed by our Lord, was not by the superhuman power at his command, but
that on the contrary, in healing the sick he expended upon them a part of his
own vitality: and consequently, the greater the number healed, the
greater was our Lord’s loss of vitality, strength.
In proof that this was so, [page 125]
call to mind the record of the poor woman who “for
twelve years had an issue of blood, and had suffered many things of many
physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but
rather worse,” etc. Remember
how with faith she pressed close to the Lord, and touched the hem of his
garment, saying within herself, “If I may touch but his clothes I shall
be whole.” The record is
that “straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up, and she felt
in her body that she was healed of that plague.
And Jesus, immediately knowing within himself that virtue [vitality]
had gone out of him, turned him about in the press, and said, Who touched
my clothes? And the disciples
said unto him, Thou seest the multitude thronging thee and sayest thou,
Who touched me? And he looked
round about to see her that had done this thing, and he said unto her,
Daughter thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy
plague.” Mark 5:25-34
Notice also Luke’s account (6:19) which declares, “And the
whole multitude sought to touch him: for there went virtue [vitality]
out of him, and healed them all.” This,
then, was the sense in which our dear Redeemer took the infirmities of
humanity, bearing our sicknesses. And
the result of thus day by day giving his own vitality for the healing of
others, could be no other than debilitating in its effect upon his own
strength, his own vitality. And
we are to remember that this work of healing, lavishly expending his
vitality, was in connection with his preaching and travels, our Lord’s
almost continuous work during the three and a half years of his ministry.
Nor does this seem so strange to us when we consider our own
experiences: who is there of deeply sympathetic nature who has not at
times, to a limited degree, witnessed the fact that it is possible for a
friend to share the troubles of a friend, and sympathetically to relieve
in a measure the depressed one, and to some extent to impart increased
vitality and lightness of spirit? But
such a helpful influence, and such feeling of the infirmities of others,
depends very largely upon the degree of sympathy
inspiring the one who [page 126]
visits the sick and the afflicted.
Not only so, but we know that certain animals have varying degrees
of sympathy; the dove, for instance, being one of the most gentle and
sympathetic, was one of the typical representatives of our Redeemer under
the Mosaic dispensation. Because
it has been found helpful in many instances, doves are sometimes brought
into the chamber of the sick, and are found beneficial to the sufferers.
The dove, perhaps because of its sympathetic nature, takes on a
certain proportion of the disease, and imparts a certain proportion of its
own vitality. This manifests itself in the fact that the birds grow sick
(have their limbs drawn up, as with rheumatism, etc.), while the patient
is proportionately relieved.
When we remember that our loves and sympathies are only such as
have survived the fall of six thousand years, and when we remember that
our dear Redeemer was perfect and that therefore in him this quality of
sympathetic love abounded in greatest measure, we can realize, faintly,
how “he was touched with the feeling of our infirmities.” His sympathy
was touched, because his nature was fine, perfect, touchable—not hard,
not calloused with selfishness and sin, either through heredity or
personal acquirement. Again, we read of him that he was “moved with
compassion,” and again, “He had compassion on the multitude,” and
again, when he saw the Jews weeping, and Martha and Mary weeping, he was
moved with sympathy, and “Jesus wept.”
So far from these sympathies indicating weakness of character, they
indicate the very reverse; for the true character of man, in its image and
likeness to the Creator, is not hard and heartless and calloused, but
tender, gentle, loving, sympathetic.
Hence, all these things go to show to us that he who spake “as
never man spake” also sympathized, as none of the fallen race could
sympathize, with the fallen conditions, troubles and afflictions of
humanity.
Not only so, but we are to remember the very object for which our
Lord came into the world. That
object was not to [page 127] simply manifest power without cost to himself, but,
as he himself explained it, the Son of Man came to minister to others, and
to give
his life a ransom for many. True,
the wages of sin was not suffering, but death; and hence suffering on our
Lord’s part would not alone pay the wages of sin for us; it was
absolutely necessary that he should “taste
death for every man.” Hence
we read, “Christ died for our sins,
according to the Scriptures.” (1 Cor. 15:3)
Nevertheless, it was appropriate that in taking the sinner’s place
our Lord should experience all that was implied in the curse—the penalty
of death: and inasmuch as the human family has died, by a process of
gradual loss of life, through weakness, sickness and infirmity, it was
correspondingly appropriate that our dear Redeemer should pass through
this experience also. And since he himself was not the sinner, all the
penalties of sin which could rest upon him must be as the result of his taking
the sinner’s place, and bearing
for us the stroke of Justice.
Our Lord did this, so far as sickness and pain and weakness were
concerned, in the best and most helpful manner, viz., by voluntarily
pouring out his life, day by day, during the three and a half years of his
ministry, giving away his vitality to those who appreciated not his
motive—his grace, his love. Thus,
as it is written, “He poured out his soul [being, existence] unto
death:” “He made his soul [being] an offering for sin.” (Isa.
53:10,12) And we can readily
see that from the time of his consecration, when he was thirty years old,
and was baptized of John in Jordan, down to Calvary, he was constantly pouring
out his soul: vitality was continually going out of him for the
help and healing of those to whom he ministered.
And while all this would not
have been sufficient as
the price of our sins, yet it was all a part of the dying process through
which our dear Redeemer passed, which culminated at Calvary, when he
cried, “It is finished,” and the last spark of life went out.
It would seem to have been just as necessary that our Lord should
thus sacrifice, spend his life-forces, and be [page 128]
touched with the experiences of our dying process, as
that later, when on the cross, he should be obliged to experience, if only
for a moment, the sinner’s position of complete
separation from the Heavenly Father, and the withdrawal of all
superhuman help, at the time when he cried, “My God!
My God! Why hast thou
forsaken me?” As the
sinner’s substitute, he must bear
the sinner’s penalty in all its particulars, and not until all this was
accomplished was his sacrificial mission finished; not until this had been
faithfully endured had he passed all the tests deemed of the Father
requisite to his being made “the Captain of our Salvation,” and
exalted far above all angels, and principalities, and powers, to be the
Father’s associate in the throne of the Universe.
All of these experiences through which the Heavenly Father caused his Beloved
Son to pass before exalting him to his own right hand of majesty and
committing to his charge the great work of blessing all the families of
the earth, were not merely tests
of the fidelity of the Only Begotten, the Logos: the Scriptures assure us that they were necessary also to
fit our Lord to sympathize with those whom he thus redeemed, that he might
be able to sympathize with and “succor” such as would return to full
fellowship with God through him—the Church during this age, the world
during the Millennial age: “That he might be a merciful and faithful
High Priest in things pertaining to God”; “in all points tempted like
as we are”; one who can have compassion on the ignorant and them that
are out of the way; for that he himself also was compassed with
infirmities.” “Wherefore
he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by
him.” Verily, “Such an
High Priest was suitable for us—one holy, harmless, undefiled, separate
from sinners, and exalted higher than the heavens.” Heb. 2:17,18;
4:15,16; 5:2; 7:25,26