"Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto,
but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many."-Matthew 20:28.
WHEN first it was my duty to occupy this pulpit, and preach in this
hall, my congregation assumed the appearance of an irregular mass of persons
collected from all the streets of this city to listen to the Word. 'Twas
then simply an evangelist, preaching to many who had not heard the Gospel
before. By the grace of God, the most blessed change has taken place; and
now, instead of having an irregular multitude gathered together, my congregation
is as fixed as that of any minister in the whole city of London. I can
from this pulpit observe the countenance of my friends, who have occupied
the same places, as nearly as possible, for these many months; and I have
the privilege and the pleasure of knowing that a very large proportion,
certainly three-fourths of the persons who meet together here, are not
persons who stray hither from curiosity, but are my regular and constant
hearers. And observe, that my character also has been changed. From being
an evangelist, it is now my business to become your pastor. You were once
a motley group assembled to listen to me, but now we are bound together
by the ties of love; through association we have grown to love and respect
each other, and now you have become the sheep of my pasture, and members
of my flock; and I have now the privilege of assuming the position of a
pastor in this place, as well as in the chapel where I labour in the evening.
I think, then, it will strike the judgment of every person, that as both
the congregation and office have now changed, the teaching itself should
in some measure suffer a difference. It has been my wont to address you
from the simple truths of the Gospel; I have very seldom, in this place,
attempted to dive into the deep things of God. A text which I have thought
suitable for my congregation in the evening, I should not have made the
subject of discussion in this place in the morning.
There are many high and mysterious doctrines which I have often taken
the opportunity of handling in my own place, that I have not taken the
liberty of introducing here, regarding you as a company of people casually
gathered together to hear the Word. But now, since the circumstances are
changed, the teaching will be changed also. I shall not now simply confine
myself to the doctrine of faith, or the teaching of believer's baptism;
I shall not stay upon the surface of matters, but shall venture, as God
shall guide me, to enter into those things that lie at the basis of the
religion that we hold so dear. I shall not blush to preach before you the
doctrine of God's Divine Sovereignty; I shall not stagger to preach in
the most unreserved and unguarded manner the doctrine of election. I shall
not be afraid to propound the great truth of the final perseverance of
the saints; I shall not withhold that undoubted truth of Scripture, the
effectual calling of God's elect; I shall endeavour, as God shall help
me, to keep back nothing from you who have become my flock. Seeing that
many of you have now "tasted that the Lord is gracious," we will endeavour
to go through the whole system of the doctrines of grace, that saints may
be edified and built up in their most holy faith.
I begin this morning with the doctrine of Redemption. "He gave his life
a ransom for many."
The doctrine of Redemption is one of the most important doctrines of
the system of faith. A mistake on this point will inevitably lead to a
mistake through the entire system of our belief.
Now, you are aware that there are different theories of Redemption.
All Christians hold that Christ died to redeem, but all Christians do not
teach the same redemption. We differ as to the nature of atonement, and
as to the design of redemption. For instance, the Arminian holds that Christ,
when He died, did not die with an intent to save any particular person;
and they teach that Christ's death does not in itself secure, beyond doubt,
the salvation of any one man living. They believe that Christ died to make
the salvation of all men possible, or that by the doing of something else,
any man who pleases may attain unto eternal life; consequently, they are
obliged to hold that if man's will would not give way and voluntarily surrender
to grace, then Christ's atonement would be unavailing. They hold that there
was no particularity and speciality in the death of Christ. Christ died,
according to them, as much for Judas in Hell as for Peter who mounted to
Heaven. They believe that for those who are consigned to eternal fire,
there was a true and real a redemption made as for those who now stand
before the throne of the Most High. Now, we believe no such thing. We hold
that Christ, when He died, had an object in view, and that object will
most assuredly, and beyond a doubt, be accomplished. We measure the design
of Christ's death by the effect of it. If any one asks us, "What did Christ
design to do by His death?" we answer that question by asking him another-"What
has Christ done, or what will Christ do by His death?" For we declare that
the measure of the effect of Christ's love, is the measure of the design
of it. We cannot so belie our reason as to think that the intention of
Almighty God could be frustrated, or that the design of so great a thing
as the atonement, can by any way whatever, be missed of. We hold-we are
not afraid to say that we believe-that Christ came into this world with
the intention of saving "a multitude which no man can number;" and we believe
that as the result of this, every person for whom He died must, beyond
the shadow of a doubt, be cleansed from sin, and stand, washed in blood,
before the Father's throne. We do not believe that Christ made any effectual
atonement for those who are for ever damned; we dare not think that the
blood of Christ was ever shed with the intention of saving those whom God
foreknew never could be saved, and some of whom were even in Hell when
Christ, according to some men's account, died to save them.
I have thus just stated our theory of redemption, and hinted at the
differences which exist between two great parties in the professing church.
It shall be now my endeavour to show the greatness of the redemption of
Christ Jesus; and by so doing, I hope to be enabled by God's Spirit, to
bring out the whole of the great system of redemption, so that it may be
understood by us all, even if all of us cannot receive it. For you must
bear this in mind, that some of you, perhaps, may be ready to dispute things
which I assert; but you will remember that this is nothing to me; I shall
at all times teach those things which I hold to be true, without let or
hindrance from any man breathing. You have the like liberty to do the same
in your own places, and to preach your own views in your own assemblies,
as I claim the right to preach mine, fully, and without hesitation.
Christ Jesus "gave his life a ransom for many;" and by that ransom He
wrought out for us a great redemption. I shall endeavour to show the greatness
of this redemption, measuring it in five ways. We shall note its greatness,
first of all from the heinousness of our own guilt, from which He has delivered
us; secondly, we shall measure His redemption by the sternness of divine
justice; thirdly, we shall measure it by the price which He paid, the pangs
which He endured; then we shall endeavour to magnify it, by noting the
deliverance which He actually wrought out; and we shall close by noticing
the vast number for whom this redemption is made, who in our text are described
as "many."
I. First, then we shall see that the redemption of Christ was no little
thing, if we do but measure it, first by OUR OWN SINS. My brethren, for
a moment look at the hole of the pit whence ye were digged, and the quarry
whence you were hewn. Ye, who have been washed, and cleansed, and sanctified,
pause for a moment, and look back at the former state of your ignorance;
the sins in which you indulged, the crimes into which you were hurried,
the continual rebellion against God in which it was your habit to live.
One sin can ruin a soul for ever; it is not in the power of the human mind
to grasp the infinity of evil that slumbereth in the bowels of one solitary
sin. There is a very infinity of guilt couched in one transgression against
the majesty of Heaven. If, then, you and I had sinned but once, nothing
but an atonement infinite in value could ever have washed away the sin
and made satisfaction for it. But has it been once that you and I have
transgressed? Nay, my brethren, our iniquities are more in number than
the hairs of our head; they have mightily prevailed against us. We might
as well attempt to number the sands upon the sea-shore, or count the drops
which in their aggregate do make the ocean, as attempt to count the transgressions
which have marked our lives. Let us go back to our childhood. How early
we began to sin! How we disobeyed our parents, and even then learned to
make our mouth the house of lies! In our childhood, how full of wantonness
and waywardness we were! Headstrong and giddy, we preferred our own way,
and burst through all restraint which godly parents put upon us. Nor did
our youth sober us. Wildly we dashed, many of us, into the very midst of
the dance of sin. We became leaders in iniquity; we not only sinned ourselves,
but we taught others to sin. And as for your manhood, ye that have entered
upon the prime of life, ye may be more outwardly sober, ye may be somewhat
free from the dissipation of your youth; but how little has the man become
bettered! Unless the sovereign grace of God hath renewed us, we are now
no better than we were when we began; and even if it has operated, we have
still sins to repent of, for we all lay our mouths in the dust, and cast
ashes on our head, and cry, "Unclean! Unclean!" And oh! ye that lean wearily
on your staff, the support of your old age, have ye not sins still clinging
to your garments? Are your lives as white as the snowy hairs that crown
your head? Do you not still feel that transgression besmears the skirts
of your robe, and mars its spotlessness? How often are you now plunged
into the ditch, till your own clothes do abhor you! Cast your eyes over
the sixty, the seventy, the eighty years, during which God hath spared
your lives; and can ye for a moment think it possible, that ye can number
up your innumerable transgressions, or compute the weight of the crimes
which you have committed? O ye stars of Heaven! the astronomers may measure
your distance and tell your height, but O ye sins of mankind! ye surpass
all thought. O ye lofty mountains! the home of the tempest, the birthplace
of the storm! man may climb your summits and stand wonderingly upon your
snows; but ye hills of sin! ye tower higher than our thoughts; ye chasms
of transgressions! ye are deeper than our imagination dares to dive. Do
you accuse me of slandering human nature? It is because you know it not.
If God had once manifested your heart to yourself, you would bear me witness,
that so far from exaggerating, my poor words fail to describe the desperateness
of our evil. Oh! if we could each of us look into our hearts today-if our
eyes could be turned within, so as to see the iniquity that is graven as
with the point of the diamond upon our stony hearts, we should then say
to the minister, that however he may depict the desperateness of guilt,
yet can he not by any means surpass it. How great then, beloved, must be
the ransom of Christ, when He saved us from all these sins! The men for
whom Jesus died, however great their sin, when they believe, are justified
from all their transgressions. Though they may have indulged in every vice
and every lust which Satan could suggest, and which human nature could
perform, yet once believing, all their guilt is washed away. Year after
year may have coated them with blackness, till their sin hath become of
double dye; but in one moment of faith, one triumphant moment of confidence
in Christ, the great redemption takes away the guilt of numerous years.
Nay, more, if it were possible for all the sins that men have done, in
thought, or word, or deed, since worlds were made, or time began, to meet
on one poor head-the great redemption is all-sufficient to take all these
sins away, and wash the sinner whiter than the driven snow.
Oh! who shall measure the heights of the Saviour's all-sufficiency?
First, tell how high is sin, and, then, remember that as Noah's flood prevailed
over the tops of earth's mountains, so the flood of Christ's redemption
prevails over the tops of the mountains of our sins. In Heaven's courts
there are today men that once were murderers, and thieves, and drunkards,
and whoremongers, and blasphemers, and persecutors; but they have been
washed-they have been sanctified. Ask them whence the brightness of their
robes hath come, and where their purity hath been achieved, and they, with
united breath, tell you that they have washed their robes, and made them
white in the blood of the Lamb. O ye troubled consciences! O ye weary and
heavy-laden ones! O ye that are groaning on account of sin! the great redemption
now proclaimed to you is all-sufficient for your wants; and though your
numerous sins exceed the stars that deck the sky, here is an atonement
made for them all-a river which can overflow the whole of them, and carry
them away from you for ever.
This, then, is the first measure of the atonement-the greatness of our
guilt.
II. Now, secondly, we must measure the great redemption BY THE STERNNESS
OF DIVINE JUSTICE. "God is love," always loving; but my next proposition
does not at all interfere with this assertion. God is sternly just, inflexibly
severe in His dealings with mankind. The God of the Bible is not the God
of some men's imagination, Who thinks so little of sin that He passes it
by without demanding any punishment for it. He is not the God of the men
who imagine that our transgressions are such little things, such mere peccadilloes
that the God of Heaven winks at them, and suffers them to die forgotten.
No; Jehovah, Israel's God, hath declared concerning Himself, "The Lord
thy God is a jealous God." It is His own declaration, "I will by no means
clear the guilty." "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." Learn ye, my
friends, to look upon God as being as severe in His justice as if He were
not loving, and yet as loving as if He were not severe. His love does not
diminish His justice, nor does His justice, in the least degree, make warfare
upon His love. The two things are sweetly linked together in the atonement
of Christ.
But, mark, we can never understand the fullness of the atonement till
we have first grasped the Scriptural truth of God's immense justice. There
was never an ill word spoken, nor an ill thought conceived, nor an evil
deed done, for which God will not have punishment from some one or another.
He will either have satisfaction from you, or else from Christ. If you
have no atonement to bring through Christ, you must for ever lie paying
the debt which you never can pay, in eternal misery; for as surely as God
is God, He will sooner lose His Godhead than suffer one sin to go unpunished,
or one particle of rebellion unrevenged. You may say that this character
of God is cold, and stern, and severe. I cannot help what you say of it;
it is nevertheless true. Such is the God of the Bible; and though we repeat
it is true that He is love, it is no more true that He is love than that
He is full of justice, for every good thing meets in God, and is carried
to perfection, whilst love reaches to consummate loveliness, justice reaches
to the sternness of inflexibility in Him. He has no bend, no warp in His
character; no attribute so predominates as to cast a shadow upon the other.
Love hath its full sway, and justice hath no narrower limit than His love.
Oh! then, beloved, think how great must have been the substitution of Christ,
when it satisfied God for all the sins of His people. For man's sin God
demands eternal punishment; and God hath prepared a Hell into which He
casts those who die impenitent. Oh! my brethren, can ye think what must
have been the greatness of the atonement which was the substitution for
all this agony which God would have cast upon us, if He had not poured
it upon Christ. Look! look! look with solemn eye through the shades that
part us from the world of spirits, and see that house of misery which men
call Hell! Ye cannot endure the spectacle. Remember that in that place
there are spirits for ever paying their debt to divine justice; but though
some of them have been for these four thousand years sweltering in the
flame, they are no nearer a discharge than when they began; and when ten
thousand times ten thousand years shall have rolled away, they will no
more have made satisfaction to God for their guilt than they have done
up till now. And now can you grasp the thought of the greatness of your
Saviour's mediation when He paid your debt, and paid it all at once; so
that there now remaineth not one farthing of debt owing from Christ's people
to their God, except a debt of love. To justice the believer oweth nothing;
though he owed originally so much that eternity would not have been long
enough to suffice for the paying of it, yet, in one moment Christ did pay
it all, so that the man who believeth is entirely justified from all guilt,
and set free from all punishment, through what Jesus hath done. Think ye,
then, how great His atonement if He hath done all this.
I must just pause here, and utter another sentence. There are times
when God the Holy Spirit shows to men the sternness of justice in their
own consciences. There is a man here today who has just been cut to the
heart with a sense of sin. He was once a free man, a libertine, in bondage
to none; but now the arrow of the Lord sticks fast in his heart, and he
has come under a bondage worse than that of Egypt. I see him today, he
tells me that his guilt haunts him everywhere. The Negro slave, guided
by the pole star, may escape the cruel ties of his master and reach another
land where he may be free; but this man feels that if he were to wander
the wide world over he could not escape from guilt. He that hath been bound
by many irons, can yet find a file that can unbind him and set him at liberty;
but this man tells you that he has tried prayers and tears and good works,
but cannot escape the gyves from his wrist; he feels as a lost sinner still,
and emancipation, do what he may, seems to him impossible. The captive
in the dungeon is sometimes free in thought, though not in body; through
his dungeon walls his spirit leaps, and flies to the stars, free as the
eagle that is no man's slave. But this man is a slave in his thoughts;
he cannot think one bright, one happy thought. His soul is cast down within
him; the iron has entered into his spirit, and he is sorely afflicted.
The captive sometimes forgets his slavery in sleep, but this man cannot
sleep; by night he dreams of hell, by day he seems to feel it; he bears
a burning furnace of flame within his heart, and do what he may he cannot
quench it. He has been confirmed, he has been baptized, he takes the sacrament,
he attends a church or he frequents a chapel, he regards every rubric and
obeys every canon, but the fire burns still. He gives his money to the
poor, he is ready to give his body to be burned, he feeds the hungry, he
visits the sick, he clothes the naked, but the fire burns still, and do
what he may he cannot quench it. O, ye sons of weariness and woe, this
that you feel is God's justice in full pursuit of you, and happy are you
that you feel this, for now to you I preach this glorious Gospel of the
blessed God. You are the man for whom Jesus Christ has died; for you He
has satisfied stern justice; and now all you have to do to obtain peace
of conscience, is just to say to your adversary who pursues you, "Look
you there! Christ died for me; my good works would not stop you, my tears
would not appease you: look you there! There stands the cross; there hangs
the bleeding God! Hark to His death-shriek! See Him die! Art thou not satisfied
now?" And when thou hast done that, thou shalt have the peace of God which
passeth all understanding, which shall keep thy heart and mind through
Jesus Christ thy Lord; and then shalt thou know the greatness of His atonement.
III. In the third place, we may measure the greatness of Christ's Redemption
by THE PRICE HE PAID. It is impossible for us to know how great were the
pangs of our Saviour; but yet some glimpse of them will afford us a little
idea of the greatness of the price He paid for us. O Jesus, who shall describe
thine agony?
"Come, all ye springs,
Dwell in my head and eyes; come, clouds and rain!
My grief hath need of all the wat'ry things,
That nature hath produc'd. Let ev'ry vein
Suck up a river to supply mine eyes,
My weary weeping eyes; too dry for me,
Unless they get new conduits, new supplies,
To bear them out, and with my state agree."
O Jesus! thou wast a sufferer from thy birth, a man of sorrows and grief's
acquaintance. Thy sufferings fell on thee in one perpetual shower, until
the last dread hour of darkness. Then not in a shower, but in a cloud,
a torrent, a cataract of grief, thine agonies did dash upon thee. See Him
yonder! It is a night of frost and cold; but He is all abroad. It is night;
He sleeps not, but He is in prayer. Hark to His groans! Did ever man wrestle
as He wrestles? Go and look in His face! Was ever such suffering depicted
upon mortal countenance as you can there behold? Hear His own words: "My
soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death." He rises: He is seized by
traitors and is dragged away. Let us step to the place when just now He
was engaged in agony. O God! and what is this we see? What is this that
stains the ground? It is blood! Whence came it? Had He some wound which
oozed afresh through His dire struggle? Ah! no. "He sweat, as it were,
great drops of blood, falling down to the ground." O agonies that surpass
the word by which we name you! O sufferings that cannot be compassed in
language! What could ye be that thus could work upon the Saviour's blessed
frame, and force a bloody sweat to fall from His entire body? This is the
beginning; this is the opening of the tragedy. Follow Him mournfully, thou
sorrowing church, to witness the consummation of it. He is hurried through
the streets; He is dragged first to one bar and then to another; He is
cast and condemned before the Sanhedrin; He is mocked by Herod; He is tried
by Pilate. His sentence is pronounced-"Let Him be crucified!" And now the
tragedy cometh to its height. His back is bared; He is tied to the low
Roman column; the bloody scourge ploughs furrows on His back, and with
one stream of blood His back is red-a crimson robe that proclaims Him emperor
of misery. He is taken into the guard room; His eyes are bound, and then
they buffet Him, and say, "Prophesy who it was that smote thee?" They spit
into His face; they plait a crown of thorns, and press His temples with
it; they array Him in a purple robe; they bow their knees, and mock Him.
All silently He sits; He answers not a word. "When He was reviled, He reviled
not again," but committed Himself unto Him whom He came to serve. And now
they take Him, and with many a jeer and jibe they drive Him from the place,
and hurry Him through the streets. Emaciated by continual fastings, and
depressed with agony of spirit He stumbles beneath His cross. Daughters
of Jerusalem! He faints in your streets. They raise Him up; they put His
cross upon another's shoulders, and they urge Him on, perhaps with many
a spear-prick, till at last He reaches the mount of doom. Rough soldiers
seize Him, and hurl Him on His back; the transverse wood is laid beneath
Him; His arms are stretched to reach the necessary distance; the nails
are grasped; four hammers at one moment drive four nails through the tenderest
parts of His body; and there He lies upon His own place of execution dying
on His cross. It is not done yet. The cross is lifted by the rough soldiers.
There is the socket prepared for it. It is dashed into its place: they
fill up the place with earth; and there it stands.
But see the Saviour's limbs, how they quiver! Every bone has been put
out of joint by the dashing of the cross in that socket! How He weeps!
How He sighs! How He sobs! Nay, more hark how at last He shrieks in agony,
"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" O sun, no wonder thou didst
shut thine eye, and look no longer upon a deed so cruel! O rocks! no wonder
that ye did melt and rend your hearts with sympathy, when your Creator
died! Never man suffered as this man suffered, Even death itself relented,
and many of those who had been in their graves arose and came into the
city. This, however, is but the outward. Believe me, brethren, the inward
was far worse. What our Saviour suffered in His body was nothing compared
to what He endured in His soul. You cannot guess, and I cannot help you
to guess, what He endured within. Suppose for one moment-to repeat a sentence
I have often used-suppose a man who has passed into Hell-suppose his eternal
torment could all be brought into one hour; and then suppose it could be
multiplied by the number of the saved, which is a number past all human
enumeration. Can you now think what a vast aggregate of misery there would
have been in the sufferings of all God's people, if they had been punished
through all eternity? And recollect that Christ had to suffer an equivalent
for all the hells of all His redeemed. I can never express that thought
better than by using those oft-repeated words: it seemed as if Hell were
put into His cup; He seized it, and, "At one tremendous draught of love,
He drank damnation dry." So that there was nothing left of all the pangs
and miseries of Hell for His people ever to endure. I say not that He suffered
the same, but He did endure an equivalent for all this, and gave God the
satisfaction for all the sins of all His people, and consequently gave
Him an equivalent for all their punishment. Now can ye dream, can ye guess
the great redemption of our Lord Jesus Christ?
IV. I shall be very brief upon the next head. The fourth way of measuring
the Saviour's agonies is this: we must compute them by THE GLORIOUS DELIVERANCE
WHICH HE HAS EFFECTED.
Rise up, believer; stand up in thy place, and this day testify to the
greatness of what the Lord hath done for thee! Let me tell it for thee.
I will tell thy experience and mine in one breath. Once my soul was laden
with sin; I had revolted against God, and grievously transgressed. The
terrors of the law gat hold upon me; the pangs of conviction seized me.
I saw myself guilty. I looked to Heaven, and I saw an angry God sworn to
punish me; I looked beneath me and I saw a yawning Hell ready to devour
me. I sought by good works to satisfy my conscience; but all in vain, I
endeavoured by attending to the ceremonies of religion to appease the pangs
that I felt within; but all without effect. My soul was exceeding sorrowful,
almost unto death. I could have said with the ancient mourner, "My soul
chooseth strangling and death rather than life." This was the great question
that always perplexed me: "I have sinned; God must punish me; how can He
be just if He does not? Then, since He is just, what is to become of me?"
At last mine eyes turned to that sweet word which says, "The blood of Jesus
Christ His Son cleanseth from all sin." I took that text to my chamber;
I sat there and meditated. I saw one hanging on a cross. It was my Lord
Jesus. There was the thorn-crown, and there the emblems of unequalled and
peerless misery. I looked upon Him, and my thoughts recalled that word
which says, "This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation,
that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners." Then said I within
myself, "Did this man die for sinners? I am a sinner; then He died for
me. Those He died for He will save. He died for sinners; I am a sinner;
He died for me; He will save me." My soul relied upon that truth. I looked
to Him, and as I "viewed the flowing of His soul-redeeming blood," my spirit
rejoiced, for I could say,
"Nothing in my hands I bring,
Simply to this cross I cling;
Naked look to Him for dress;
Helpless come to Him for grace!
Black, I to this fountain fly;
Wash me, Saviour, or I die!"
And now, believer, you shall tell the rest. The moment that you believed,
your burden rolled from your shoulder, and you became light as air. Instead
of darkness you had light; for the garments of heaviness you had the robes
of praise. Who shall tell your joy since then? You have sung on earth hymns
of Heaven, and in your peaceful soul you have anticipated the eternal Sabbath
of the redeemed. Because you have believed you have entered into rest.
Yes, tell it the wide world over; they that believe, by Jesus' death are
justified from all things from which they could not be freed by the works
of the law. Tell it in Heaven, that none can lay anything to the charge
of Gods' elect. Tell it upon earth, that God's redeemed are free from sin
in Jehovah's sight. Tell it even in Hell, that God's elect can never come
there; for Christ hath died for them, and who is he that shall condemn
them?
V. I have hurried over that, to come to the last point, which is the
sweetest of all. Jesus Christ, we are told in our text, came into the world
"to give his life a ransom for many." The greatness of Christ's redemption
may be measured by the EXTENT OF THE DESIGN OF IT. He gave His life "a
ransom for many." I must now return to that controverted point again. We
are often told (I mean those of us who are commonly nicknamed by the title
of Calvinists-and we are not very much ashamed of that; we think that Calvin,
after all, knew more about the Gospel than almost any man who has ever
lived, uninspired), we are often told that we limit the atonement of Christ,
because we say that Christ has not made a satisfaction for all men, or
all men would be saved. Now, our reply to this is, that, on the other hand,
our opponents limit it: we do not. The Arminians say, Christ died for all
men. Ask them what they mean by it. Did Christ die so as to secure the
salvation of all men? They say, "No, certainly not." We ask them the next
question-Did Christ die so as to secure the salvation of any man in particular?
They answer "No." They are obliged to admit this, if they are consistent.
They say, "No; Christ has died that any man may be saved if"-and then follow
certain conditions of salvation. We say, then, we will go back to the old
statement-Christ did not die so as beyond a doubt to secure the salvation
of anybody, did He? You must say "No;" you are obliged to say so, for you
believe that even after a man has been pardoned, he may yet fall from grace,
and perish. Now, who is it that limits the death of Christ? Why, you. You
say that Christ did not die so as to infallibly secure the salvation of
anybody. We beg your pardon, when you say we limit Christ's death; we say,
"No, my dear sir, it is you that do it." We say Christ so died that He
infallibly secured the salvation of a multitude that no man can number,
who through Christ's death not only may be saved but are saved, must be
saved, and cannot by any possibility run the hazard of being anything but
saved. You are welcome to your atonement; you may keep it. We will never
renounce ours for the sake of it.
Now, beloved, when you hear any one laughing or jeering at a limited
atonement, you may tell him this. General atonement is like a great wide
bridge with only half an arch; it does not go across the stream: it only
professes to go half way; it does not secure the salvation of anybody.
Now, I had rather put my foot upon a bridge as narrow as Hungerford, which
went all the way across, than on a bridge that was as wide as the world,
if it did not go all the way across the stream. I am told it is my duty
to say that all men have been redeemed, and I am told that there is a Scriptural
warrant for it-"Who gave himself a ransom for all, to be testified in due
time." Now, that looks like a very, very great argument indeed on the other
side of the question. For instance, look here. "The whole world is gone
after Him." Did all the world go after Christ? "Then went all Judea, and
were baptized of him in Jordan." Was all Judea, or all Jerusalem baptized
in Jordan? "Ye are of God, little children," and "the whole world lieth
in the wicked one." Does "the whole world" there mean everybody? If so,
how was it, then, that there were some who were "of God?" The words "world"
and "all" are used in seven or eight senses in Scripture; and it is very
rarely that "all" means all persons, taken individually. The words are
generally used to signify that Christ has redeemed some of all sorts-some
Jews, some Gentiles, some rich, some poor, and has not restricted His redemption
to either Jew or Gentile.
Leaving controversy, however, I will now answer a question. Tell me,
then, sir, whom did Christ die for? Will you answer me a question or two,
and I will tell you whether He died for you. Do you want a Saviour? Do
you feel that you need a Saviour? Are you this morning conscious of sin?
Has the Holy Spirit taught you that you are lost? Then Christ died for
you and you will be saved. Are you this morning conscious that you have
no hope in the world but Christ? Do you feel that you of yourself cannot
offer an atonement that can satisfy God's justice? Have you given up all
confidence in yourselves? And can you say upon your bended knees, "Lord,
save, or I perish"? Christ died for you. If you are saying this morning,
"I am as good as I ought to be; I can get to Heaven by my own good works,"
then, remember, the Scripture says of Jesus, "I came not to call the righteous,
but sinners to repentance." So long as you are in that state I have no
atonement to preach to you. But if this morning you feel guilty, wretched,
conscious of your guilt, and are ready to take Christ to be your only Saviour,
I can not only say to you that you may be saved, but what is better still,
that you will be saved.
When you are stripped of everything, but hope in Christ, when you are
prepared to come empty-handed and take Christ to be your all, and to be
yourself nothing at all, then you may look up to Christ, and you may say,
"Thou dear, Thou bleeding Lamb of God! thy griefs were endured for me;
by thy stripes I am healed, and by thy sufferings I am pardoned." And then
see what peace of mind you will have; for if Christ has died for you, you
cannot be lost. God will not punish twice for one thing. If God punished
Christ for your sin, He will never punish you. "Payment, God's justice
cannot demand, first, at the bleeding surety's hand, and then again at
mine." We can today, if we believe in Christ, march to the very throne
of God, stand there, and if it is said, "Art thou guilty?" we can say,
"Yes, guilty." But if the question is put, "What have you to say why you
should not be punished for your guilt?" We can answer, "Great God, Thy
justice and Thy love are both guarantees that Thou wilt not punish us for
sin; for didst Thou not punish Christ for sin for us? How canst Thou, then,
be just-how canst Thou be God at all, if Thou dost punish Christ the substitute,
and then punish man himself afterwards?" Your only question is, "Did Christ
die for me?" And the only answer we can give is-"This is a faithful saying,
and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ came into the world to save
sinners." Can you write your name down among the sinners-not among the
complimentary sinners, but among those that feel it, bemoan it, lament
it, seek mercy on account of it? Are you a sinner? That felt, that known,
that professed, you are now invited to believe that Jesus Christ died for
you, because you are a sinner; and you are bidden to cast yourself upon
this great immovable rock, and find eternal security in the Lord Jesus
Christ. Amen.