
|
Metropolitan
Tabernacle Pulpit.
________________________________________________________________________
THE PERPETUITY
OF THE LAW OF GOD.
_______
A
Sermon
DELIVERED
ON LORD’S-DAY MORNING, MAY 21ST, 1882,
BY
C.
H. SPURGEON,
AT THE
METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"For verily I say unto
you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle
shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be
fulfilled."—Matthew v. 18.
It
has been said that he who understands the two
covenants is a theologian, and this is, no doubt,
true. I may also say that the man who knows the
relative positions of the law and of the gospel has
the keys of the situation in the matter of doctrine.
The relationship of the law to myself, and how it
condemns me: the relationship of the gospel to myself,
and how if I be a believer it justifies me—these
are two points which every Christian man should
clearly understand. He should not "see men as trees
walking" in this department, or else he may cause
himself great sorrow, and fall into errors which will
he grievous to his heart and injurious to his life. To
form a mingle-mangle of law and gospel is to teach
that which is neither law nor gospel, but the opposite
of both. May the Spirit of God be our teacher, and the
Word of God be our lesson-book, and then we shall not
err.
Very great mistakes have
been made about the law. Not long ago there were those
about us who affirmed that the law is utterly
abrogated and abolished, and they openly taught that
believers were not bound to make the moral law the
rule of their lives. What would have been sin in other
men they counted to be no sin in themselves. From such
Antinomianism as that may God deliver us. We are not
under the law as the method of salvation, but we
delight to see the law in the hand of Christ, and
desire to obey the Lord in all things. Others have
been met with who have taught that Jesus mitigated and
softened down the law, and they have in effect said
that the perfect law of God was too hard for imperfect
beings, and therefore God has given us a milder and
easier rule. These tread dangerously upon the verge of
terrible error, although we believe that they are
little aware of it. Alas, we have met with authors who
have gone much farther than this, and have railed at
the law. Oh, the hard words that I have sometimes read
against the holy law of God! How very unlike to those
which the apostle used when he said, "The law is holy,
and the commandment holy, and just, and good." How
different from the reverent spirit which made him
say,—"I delight in the law of God after the
inward man."
You know how David loved
the law of God, and sang its praises all through the
longest of the Psalms. The heart of every real
Christian is most reverent towards the law of the
Lord. It is perfect, nay, it is perfection itself. We
believe that we shall never have reached perfection
till we are perfectly conformed to it. A
sanctification which stops short of perfect conformity
to the law cannot truthfully be called perfect
sanctification, for every want of exact conformity to
the perfect law is sin. May the Spirit of God help us
while, in imitation of our Lord Jesus, we endeavour to
magnify the law.
I gather from our text
two things upon which I shall speak at this time. The
first is that the law of God is perpetual:
"Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle
shall in no wise pass from the law." The meaning is
that even in the least point it must abide till all be
fulfilled. Secondly, we perceive that the law must
be fulfilled: Not "one jot or one tittle shall
pass from the law, till all be fulfilled." He who came
to bring in the gospel dispensation here asserts that
he has not come to destroy the law, but to fulfil
it.
I. First: THE LAW OF GOD MUST BE PERPETUAL. There
is no abrogation of it, nor amendment of it. It is not
to he toned down or adjusted to our fallen condition;
but every one of the Lord’s righteous judgments
abideth for ever. I would urge three reasons which
will establish this teaching.
In the first place
our Lord Jesus declares that he did not come to
abolish it. His words are most express: "Think not
that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I
am not come to destroy, but to fulfil." And Paul tells
us with regard to the gospel, "Do we then make void
the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish
the law" (Rom. iii. 31). The gospel is the means of
the firm establishment and vindication of the law of
God.
Jesus did not come to
change the law, but he came to explain it, and that
very fact shows that it remains, for there is no need
to explain that which is abrogated. Upon one
particular point in which there happened to be a
little ceremonialism involved, namely, the keeping of
the Sabbath, our Lord enlarged, and showed that the
Jewish idea was not the true one. The Pharisees
forbade even the doing of works of necessity and
mercy, such as rubbing ears of corn to satisfy hunger,
and healing the sick. Our Lord Jesus showed that it
was not at all according to the mind of God to forbid
these things. In straining over the letter, and
carrying an outward observance to excess, they had
missed the spirit of the Sabbath law, which suggested
works of piety such as truly hallow the day. He showed
that Sabbatic rest was not mere inaction, and he said,
"My Father worketh hitherto, and I work." He pointed
to the priests who laboured hard at offering
sacrifices, and said of them, "the priests in the
temple profane the Sabbath, and are blameless." They
were doing divine service, and were within the law. To
meet the popular error he took care to do some of his
grandest miracles upon the Sabbath-day; and though
this excited great wrath against him, as though he
were a law-breaker, yet he did it on purpose that they
might see that the Sabbath was made for man and not
man for the Sabbath, and that it is meant to be a day
for doing that which honours God and blesses men. O
that men knew how to keep the spiritual Sabbath by a
ceasing from all servile work, and from all work done
for self. The rest of faith is the true Sabbath, and
the service of God is the most acceptable hallowing of
the day. Oh that the day were wholly spent in serving
God and doing good! The sum of our Lord’s
teaching was that works of necessity, works of mercy,
and works of piety are lawful on the Sabbath. He did
explain the law in that point and in others, yet that
explanation did not alter the command, but only
removed the rust of tradition which had settled upon
it. By thus explaining the law he confirmed it; he
could not have meant to abolish it or he would not
have needed to expound it.
In addition to
explaining it the Master went further: he pointed out
its spiritual character. This the Jews had not
observed. They thought, for instance, that the command
"Thou shalt not kill" simply forbade murder and
manslaughter: but the Saviour showed that anger
without cause violates the law, and that hard words
and cursing, and all other displays of enmity and
malice, are forbidden by the commandment. They knew
that they might not commit adultery, but it did not
enter into their minds that a lascivious desire would
be an offence against the precept till the Saviour
said, "He that looketh upon a woman to lust after her
committeth adultery with her already in his heart." He
showed that the thought of evil is sin, that an
unclean imagination pollutes the heart, that a wanton
wish is guilt in the eyes of the Most High. Assuredly
this was no abrogation of law: it was a wonderful
exhibition of its far-reaching sovereignty and of its
searching character. The Pharisees fancied that if
they kept their hands, and their feet, and their
tongues, all was done, but Jesus showed that thought,
imagination, desire, memory, everything, must be
brought into subjection to the will of God, or else
the law was not fulfilled. What a searching and
humbling doctrine is this! If the law of the Lord
reaches to the inward parts who among us can by nature
abide its judgment? Who can understand his errors?
Cleanse thou me from secret faults. The ten commands
are full of meaning—meaning which many seem to
ignore. For instance, many a man will allow in and
around his house inattention to the rules of health
and sanitary precaution, but it does not occur to him
that he is trampling on the command,—"Thou shalt
not kill," yet this rule forbids our doing anything
which may cause injury to our neighbour’s health,
and so deprive him of life. Many a deadly manufactured
article, many an ill-ventilated shop, many a business
with hours of excessive length, is a standing breach
of this command. Shall I say less of drinks, which
lead so speedily to disease and death, and crowd our
cemeteries with untimely graves? So, too, in reference
to another precept: some persons will repeat songs and
stories which are suggestive of uncleanness,—I
wish that this were not so common as it is. Do they
not know that an unchaste word, a double meaning, a
sly hint of lust all come under the command, "Thou
shalt not commit adultery"? It is so according to the
teaching of our Lord Jesus. Oh, talk not to me about
our Lord’s having brought in a milder law because
man could not keep the Decalogue, for he has done
nothing of the kind. "His fan is in his hand, and he
will throughly purge his floor." "Who may abide the
day of his coming? for he is like a refiner’s
fire, and like fullers’ soap." Let us not dare to
dream that God had given us a perfect law which we
poor creatures could not keep, and that therefore he
has corrected his legislature, and sent his Son to put
us under a relaxed discipline. Nothing of the sort.
The Lord Jesus Christ has, on the contrary, shown how
intimately the law surrounds and enters into our
inward parts, so as to convict us of sin within even
if we seem clear without. Ah me, this law is high; I
cannot attain to it. It everywhere surrounds me; it
tracks me to my bed and my board; it follows my steps
and marks my ways wherever I may be. No moment does it
cease to govern and demand obedience. O God, I am
everywhere condemned, for everywhere thy law reveals
to me my serious deviations from the way of
righteousness and shows me how far short I come of thy
glory. Have thou pity on thy servant, for I fly to the
gospel which has done for me what the law could never
do.
"To see the law by Christ fulfill’d,
And bear his pardoning voice,
Changes a slave into a child,
And duty into choice."
Our Lord Jesus
Christ, in addition to explaining the law and pointing
out its spiritual character, also unveiled its living
essence, for when one asked him "Which is the great
commandment in the law?" he said, "Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and
great commandment. And the second is like unto it;
Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. On these two
commandments hang all the law and the prophets." In
other words, he has told us, "All the law is fulfilled
in this: thou shalt love." There is the pith and
marrow of it. Does any man say to me, "You see, then,
instead of the ten commandments we have received the
two commandments, and these are much easier." I answer
that this reading of the law is not in the least
easier. Such a remark implies a want of thought and
experience. Those two precepts comprehend the ten at
their fullest extent, and cannot be regarded as the
erasure of a jot or tittle of them. Whatever
difficulties surround the ten commands are equally
found in the two, which are their sum and substance.
If you love God with all your heart you must keep the
first table; and if you love your neighbour as
yourself you must keep the second table. If any
suppose that the law of love is an adaptation of the
moral law to man’s fallen condition they greatly
err. I can only say that the supposed adaptation is no
more adapted to us than the original law. If there
could be conceived to be any difference in difficulty
it might be easier to keep the ten than the two; for
if we go no deeper than the letter, the two are the
more exacting, since they deal with the heart, and
soul, and mind. The ten commands mean all that the two
express; but if we forget this, and only look at the
wording of them, I say, it is harder for a man to love
God with all his heart, with all his soul, with all
his mind, and with all his strength, and his neighbour
as himself than it would be merely to abstain from
killing, stealing, and false witness. Christ has not,
therefore, abrogated or at all moderated the law to
meet our helplessness; he has left it in all its
sublime perfection, as it always must be left, and he
has pointed out how deep are its foundations, how
elevated are its heights, how measureless are its
length and breadth. Like the laws of the Medes and
Persians, God’s commands cannot be altered; we
are saved by another method.
To show that he never
meant to abrogate the law, our Lord Jesus has embodied
all its commands in his own life. In his own person
there was a nature which was perfectly conformed to
the law of God; and as was his nature such was his
life. He could say, "Which of you convinceth me of
sin?" and again "I have kept my Father’s
commandments and abide in his love." I may not say
that he was scrupulously careful to keep the law: I
will not put it so, for there was no tendency in him
to do otherwise: he was so perfect and pure, so
infinitely good, and so complete in his agreement and
communion with the Father, that he in all things
carried out the Father’s will. The Father said of
him, "This is my beloved Son in whom I am well
pleased; hear ye him." Point out, if you possibly can,
any way in which Christ has violated the law or left
it unfulfilled. There was never an unclean thought or
rebellious desire in his soul; he had nothing to
regret or to retract: it could not be that he should
err. He was thrice tempted in the wilderness, and the
enemy had the impertinence even to suggest idolatry,
but he instantly overthrew the adversary. The prince
of this world came to him, but he found nothing in
him.
"My dear Redeemer and my Lord,
I read my duty in thy Word;
But in thy life the law appears
Drawn out in living characters."
Now, if that law had
been too high and too hard, Christ would not have
exhibited it in his life, but as our exemplar he would
have set forth that milder form of law which it is
supposed by some theologians he came to introduce.
Inasmuch as our Leader and Exemplar has exhibited to
us in his life a perfect obedience to the sacred
commands in their undiminished grandeur, I gather that
he means it to be the model of our conversation. Our
Lord has not taken off a single point or pinnacle from
that up-towering alp of perfection. He said at the
first, "Lo, I come: in the volume of the book it is
written of me, I delight to do thy will, O my God;
yea, thy law is within my heart," and well has he
justified the writing of the volume of the book. "God
sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the
law"; and being for our sakes under the law he obeyed
it to the full, so that now "Christ is the end of the
law for righteousness to everyone that believeth."
Once more, that the
Master did not come to alter the law is clear, because
after having embodied it in his life he willingly gave
himself up to bear its penalty, though he had never
broken it, bearing the penalty for us, even as it is
written, "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of
the law, being made a curse for us." "All we like
sheep have gone astray, we have turned every one to
his own way, and the Lord hath laid on him the
iniquity of us all." If the law had demanded more of
us than it ought to have done, would the Lord Jesus
have rendered to it the penalty which resulted from
its too severe demands? I am sure he would not. But
because the law asked only what it ought to ask—
namely perfect obedience; and exacted of the
transgressor only what it ought to exact, namely,
death, as the penalty for sin,—death under divine
wrath, therefore the Saviour went to the tree, and
there bore our sins and purged them once for all. He
was crushed beneath the load of our guilt, and cried,
"My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death," and
at last when he had borne—
"All that incarnate God could bear,
With strength enough, but none to spare,"
he bowed his head and said, "It is finished." Our
Lord Jesus Christ gave a greater vindication to the
law by dying, because it had been broken, than all the
lost in hell can ever give by their miseries, for
their suffering is never complete, their debt is never
paid; but he has borne all that was due from his
people, and the law is defrauded of nothing. By his
death he has vindicated the honour of God’s moral
government, and made it just for him to be merciful.
When the lawgiver himself submits to the law, when the
sovereign himself bears the extreme penalty of that
law, then is the justice of God set upon such a
glorious high throne that all admiring worlds must
wonder at it. If therefore it is clearly proven that
Jesus was obedient to the law, even to the extent of
death, he certainly did not come to abolish or
abrogate it; and if he did not remove it, who
can do so? If he declares that he came to establish
it, who shall overthrow it?
But, secondly, the law
of God must be perpetual from its very nature,
for does it not strike you the moment you think of
it that right must always be right, truth must always
be true, and purity must always be purity? Before the
ten commandments were published at Sinai there was
still that same law of right and wrong laid upon men
by the necessity of their being God’s creatures.
Right was always right before a single command had
been committed to words. When Adam was in the garden
it was always right that he should love his Maker, and
it would always have been wrong that he should have
been at cross-purposes with his God; and it does not
matter what happens in this world, or what changes
take place in the universe, it never can be right to
lie, or to commit adultery, or murder, or theft, or to
worship an idol God. I will not say that the
principles of right and wrong are as absolutely
self-existent as God, but I do my that I cannot grasp
the idea of God himself as existing apart from his
being always holy and always true; so that the very
idea of right and wrong seems to me to be necessarily
permanent, and cannot possibly be shifted. You cannot
bring right down to a lower level; it must be where it
always is: right is right eternally, and cannot be
wrong. You cannot lift up wrong and make it somewhat
right; it must be wrong while the world standeth.
Heaven and earth may pass away, but not the smallest
letter or accent of the moral law can possibly change.
In spirit the law is eternal.
Suppose for a moment
that it were possible to temper and tone down the law,
wherein would it be? I confess I do not know and
cannot imagine. If it be perfectly holy, how can it be
altered except by being made imperfect. Would you wish
for that? Could you worship the God of an imperfect
law? Can it ever be true that God, by way of favouring
us, has put us under an imperfect law? Would that be a
blessing or a curse? It is said by some that man
cannot keep a perfect law, and God does not demand
that he should. Certain modern theologians have taught
this, I hope, by inadvertence. Has God issued an
imperfect law? It is the first imperfect thing I ever
heard of his making. Does it come to this that, after
all, the gospel is a proclamation that God is going to
be satisfied with obedience to a mutilated law? God
forbid. I say, better that we perish than that his
perfect law perish. Terrible as it is, it lies at the
foundation of the peace of the universe, and must be
honoured at all hazards. That gone, all goes. When the
power of the Holy Ghost convinced me of sin I felt
such a solemn awe of the law of God, that I remember
well, when I lay crushed beneath it as a condemned
sinner, I yet admired and glorified the law. I could
not have wished that perfect law to be altered for me.
Rather did I feel that, if my soul were sent to the
lowest hell, yet God was to be extolled for his
justice and his law held in honour for its
perfectness. I would not have had it altered even to
save my soul. Brethren, the law of the Lord must
stand, for it is perfect, and therefore has in it no
element of decay or change.
The law of God is no
more than God might most righteously ask of us. If God
were about to give us a more tolerant law, it would be
an admission on his part that he asked too much at
first. Can that be supposed? Was there, after all,
some justification for the statement of the wicked and
slothful servant when he said, "I feared thee, because
thou art an austere man"? It cannot be. For God to
alter his law would be an admission that he made a
mistake at first, that he put poor imperfect man (we
are often hearing that said) under too rigorous a
regime, and therefore he is now prepared to abate his
claims, and make them more reasonable. It has been
said that man’s moral inability to keep the
perfect law exempts him from the duty of doing so.
This is very specious, but it is utterly false.
Man’s inability is not of the kind which removes
responsibility: it is moral, not physical. Never fall
into the error that moral inability will be an excuse
for sin. What, when a man becomes such a liar that he
cannot speak the truth, is he thereby exempted from
the duty of truthfulness? If your servant owes you a
day’s labour, is he free from the duty because he
has made himself so drunk that he cannot serve you? Is
a man freed from a debt by the fact that he has
squandered the money, and therefore cannot pay it? Is
a lustful man free to indulge his passions because he
cannot understand the beauty of chastity? This is
dangerous doctrine. The law is a just one, and man is
bound by it though his sin has rendered him incapable
of doing so.
The law moreover demands
no more than is good for us. There is not a single
commandment of God’s law but what is meant to be
a kind of danger signal such as we put up upon the ice
when it is too thin to bear. Each commandment does as
it were say to us, "Dangerous." It is never for a
man’s good to do what God forbids him; it is
never for man’s real and ultimate happiness to
leave undone anything that God commands him. The
wisest directions for spiritual health, and for the
avoidance of evil, are those directions which are
given us concerning right and wrong in the law of God.
Therefore it is not possible that there should be any
alteration thereof, for it would not be for our
good.
I should like to say to
any brother who thinks that God has put us under an
altered rule: "Which particular part of the law is it
that God has relaxed?" Which precept do you feel free
to break? Are you delivered from the command which
forbids stealing? My dear sir, you may be a capital
theologian, but I should lock up my spoons when you
call at my house. Is it the command about adultery
which you think is removed? Then I could not recommend
your being admitted into any decent society. Is the
law as to killing softened down? Then I had rather
have your room than your company. Which law is it that
God has exempted you from? That law of worshipping him
only? Do you propose to have another God? Do you
intend to make graven images? The fact is that when we
come to detail we cannot afford to lose a single link
of this wonderful golden chain, which is perfect in
every part as well as perfect as a whole. The law is
absolutely complete, and you can neither add to it nor
take from it. "For whosoever shall keep the whole law,
and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all. For
he that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do
not kill. Now if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou
kill, thou art become a transgressor of the law." If,
then, no part of it can be taken down, it must stand,
and stand for ever.
A third reason I will
give why the law must be perpetual is that to
suppose it altered is most dangerous. To take away
from the law its perpetuity is first of all to take
away from it its power to convince of sin. Is it so,
that I, being an imperfect creature, am not expected
to keep a perfect law? Then it follows that I do not
sin when I break the law; and if all that is required
of me is that I am to do according to the best of my
knowledge and ability, then I have a very convenient
rule indeed, and most men will take care to adjust it
so as to give themselves as much latitude as possible.
By removing the law you have done away with sin, for
sin is the transgression of the law, and where there
is no law there is no transgression. When you have
done away with sin you may as well have done away with
the Saviour and with salvation, for they are by no
means needful. When you have reduced sin to a minimum,
what need is there of that great and glorious
salvation which Jesus Christ has come to bring into
the world? Brethren, we must have none of this: it is
evidently a way of mischief.
By lowering the law you
weaken its power in the hands of God as a convincer of
sin. "By the law is the knowledge of sin." It is the
looking-glass which shows us our spots, and that is a
most useful thing, though nothing but the gospel can
wash them away.
"My hopes of heaven were firm and bright,
But since the precept came
With a convincing power and light,
I find how vile I am.
"My guilt appear’d but small before,
Till terribly I saw
how perfect, holy, just, and pure,
Was thine eternal law.
"Then felt my soul the heavy load,
My sins reviv’d again,
I had provok’d a dreadful God,
And all my hopes were slain."
It is only a pure and
perfect law that the Holy Spirit can use in order to
show to us our depravity and sinfulness. Lower the law
and you dim the light by which man perceives his
guilt. This is a very serious loss to the sinner
rather than a gain, for it lessens the likelihood of
his conviction and conversion.
You have also taken away
from the law its power to shut us up to the faith of
Christ. What is the law of God for? For us to keep in
order to be saved by it? Not at all. It is sent in
order to show us that we cannot be saved by works, and
to shut us up to be saved by grace; but if you make
out that the law is altered so that a man can keep it,
you have left him his old legal hope, and he is sure
to cling to it. You need a perfect law that shuts man
right up to hopelessness apart from Jesus, puts him
into an iron cage and locks him up, and offers him no
escape but by faith in Jesus; then he begins to cry,
"Lord, save me by grace, for I perceive that I cannot
be saved by my own works." This is how Paul describes
it to the Galatians: "The Scripture hath concluded all
under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ
might be given to them that believe. But before faith
came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the
faith which should afterwards be revealed. Wherefore
the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ,
that we might be justified by faith." I say you have
deprived the gospel of its ablest auxiliary when you
have set aside the law. You have taken away from it
the schoolmaster that is to bring men to Christ. No,
it must stand, and stand in all its terrors, to drive
men away from self-righteousness and constrain them to
fly to Christ. They will never accept grace till they
tremble before a just and holy law; therefore the law
serves a most necessary and blessed purpose, and it
must not be removed from its place.
To alter the law is to
leave us without any law at all. A sliding-scale of
duty is an immoral invention, fatal to the principles
of law. If each man is to be accepted because he does
his best, we are all doing our best. Is there anybody
that is not? If we take their words for it, all our
fellow-men are doing as well as they can, considering
their imperfect natures. Even the harlot in the
streets has some righteousness,— she is not quite
so far gone as others. Have you never heard of the
bandit who committed many murders, but who felt that
he had been doing his best because he never killed
anybody on a Friday? Self-righteousness builds itself
a nest even in the worst character. This is the
man’s talk:—" Really, if you knew me, you
would say, I have been a good fellow to do as well as
I have. Consider what a poor, fallen creature I am;
what strong passions were born in me; what temptations
to vice beset me, and you will not blame me much.
After all, I dare say God is as satisfied with me as
with many who are a great deal better, because I had
so few advantages." Yes, you have shifted the
standard, and every man will now do that which is
right in his own eyes and claim to be doing his best.
If you shift the standard pound weight or the bushel
measure, you will certainly never get full weight or
measurement again. There will be no standard to go by,
and each man will do his best with his own pounds and
bushels. If the standard be tampered with you have
taken away the foundation upon which trade is
conducted; and it is the same in soul
matters,—abolish the best rule that ever can be,
even God’s own law, and there is no rule left
worthy of the name. What a fine opening this leaves
for vain glory. No wonder that men talk of perfect
sanctification if the law has been lowered. There is
nothing at all remarkable in our getting up to the
rule if it is conveniently lowered for us. I believe I
shall be perfectly sanctified when I keep God’s
law without omission or transgression, but not till
then. If any man says that he is perfectly sanctified
because he has come up to a modified law of his own, I
am glad to know what he means, for I have no longer
any discussion with him: I see nothing wonderful in
his attainment. Sin is my want of conformity to the
law of God, and until we are perfectly conformed to
that law in all its spiritual length and breadth it is
idle for us to talk about perfect sanctification: no
man is perfectly clean till he accepts absolute purity
as the standard by which he is to be judged. So long
as there is in us any coming short of the perfect law
we are not perfect. What a humbling truth this is! The
law shall not pass away, but it must be fulfilled.
This truth must be maintained, for if it goes, our
tacklings are loose, we cannot well strengthen the
mast; the ship goes all to pieces; she becomes a total
wreck. The gospel itself would be destroyed could you
destroy the law. To tamper with the law is to trifle
with the gospel. "Till heaven and earth pass, one jot
or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till
all be fulfilled."
II. I come to show, secondly, that THE LAW MUST BE
FULFILLED. I hope there are some in this place who are
saying, " We cannot fulfil it." That is exactly
where I want to bring you. Salvation by the works of
the law must be felt to be impossible by every man who
would be saved. We must learn that salvation is of
grace through faith in Jesus Christ our Lord, and not
by our own doings or feelings; but this is a doctrine
no one will receive till he has learned the previous
truth, that salvation by the works of the law can
never come to any man of woman born. Yet the law must
be fulfilled. Many will say with Nicodemus "How can
these things be?" I answer, the law is fulfilled in
Christ, and by faith we receive the fruit thereof.
First, as I have already
said, the law is fulfilled in the matchless
sacrifice of Jesus Christ. If a man has broken
a law, what does the law do with him? It says, "I must
be honoured. You have broken my command which was
sanctioned by the penalty of death. Inasmuch as you
did not honour me by obedience, but dishonoured me by
transgression, you must die." Our Lord Jesus Christ,
who is the great covenant representative of his
people, their second Adam, stood forward on the behalf
of all who are in him, and presented himself as a
victim to divine justice. Since his people were guilty
of death, he, as their covenant head, came under
death, in their place and stead. It was a glorious
thing that such representative death was possible, and
it was only so because of the original constitution of
the race as springing from a common father, and placed
under a single head. Inasmuch as our fall was by one
Adam, it was possible for us to be raised by another
Adam. "As in Adam all died, even so in Christ shall
all be made alive." It became possible for God, upon
the principle of representation, to allow of
substitution. Our first fall was not by our personal
fault, but through the failure of our representative;
and now in comes our second and grander
representative, the Son of God, and he sets us free,
not by our honouring the law, but by his doing so. He
came under the law by his birth, and being found as a
man loaded with the guilt of all his people, he was
visited with its penalty. The law lifts its bloody
axe, and it smites our glorious Head that we may go
free. It is the Son of God that keeps the law by
dying, the just for the unjust. "The soul that
sinneth, it shall die,"—there is death demanded,
and in Christ death is presented. Life for life is
rendered: an infinitely precious life instead of the
poor lives of men. Jesus has died, and so the law has
been fulfilled by the endurance of its penalty, and
being fulfilled, its power to condemn and punish the
believer has passed away.
Secondly, the law has
been fulfilled again for us by Christ in his life. I
have already gone over this, but I want to establish
you in it. Jesus Christ as our head and representative
came into the world for the double purpose of bearing
the penalty and at the same time keeping the law. One
of his main designs in coming to earth was "to bring
in perfect righteousness." "As by the disobedience of
one many were made sinners, so by the righteousness of
one shall many be made righteous." The law requires a
perfect life, and he that believeth in Jesus Christ
presents to the law a perfect life, which he has made
his own by faith. It is not his own life, but Christ
is made of God unto us righteousness, even to us who
are one with him. "Christ is the end of the law for
righteousness to every one that believeth." That which
Jesus did is counted as though we did it, and because
he was righteous God sees us in him and counts us
righteous upon the principle of substitution and
representation. Oh, how blessed it is to put on this
robe and to wear it, and so to stand before the Most
High in a better righteousness than ever his law
demanded, for that demanded the perfect righteousness
of a creature, but we put on the absolute
righteousness of the Creator himself, and what can the
law ask more? It is written, "In his days Judah shall
be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely, and this is
the name wherewith he shall be called—The Lord
our righteousness.’’ ‘‘The Lord is
well pleased for his righteousness’ sake: he will
magnify the law and make it honourable."
Ay, but that is not all.
The law has to be fulfilled in us personally in a
spiritual and gospel sense. "Well," say you, "but how
can that be?" I reply in the words of our apostle:
"What the law could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh," Christ has done and is doing by
the Holy Spirit, "that the righteousness of the law
might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh
but after the Spirit." Regeneration is a work by which
the law is fulfilled; for when a man is born again
there is placed in him a new nature, which loves the
law of God and is perfectly conformed thereto. The new
nature which God implants in every believer at the
time he is born again is incapable of sin: it cannot
sin, for it is born of God. That new nature is the
offspring of the eternal Father, and the Spirit of God
dwells in it, and with it, and strengthens it. It is
light, it is purity, it is according to the Scripture
the "living and incorruptible seed which liveth and
abideth for ever." If incorruptible, it is sinless,
for sin is corruption, and corrupts everything that it
touches. The apostle Paul, when describing his inward
conflicts, showed that he himself, his real and best
self, did keep the law, for he says, "So then with the
mind I myself serve the law of God." Romans vii. 25.
He consented to the law that it was good, which showed
that he was on the side of the law, and though sin
that dwelt in his members led him into transgression,
yet his new nature did not allow it, but hated and
loathed it, and cried out against it as one in
bondage. The newborn soul delights in the law of the
Lord, and there is within it a quenchless life which
aspires after absolute perfection, and will never rest
till it pays to God perfect obedience and comes to be
like God himself.
This which is begun in
regeneration is continued and grows till it ultimately
arrives at absolute perfection. That will be seen in
the world to come; and oh, what a fulfilment of the
law will be there! The Law will admit no man to heaven
till he is perfectly conformed to it, but every
believer shall be in that perfect condition. Our
nature shall be refined from all its dross and be as
pure gold. It will be our delight in heaven to be
holy. There will be nothing about us then to kick
against a single commandment. We shall there know in
our own hearts the glory and excellency of the divine
will, and our will shall run in the same channel. We
shall not imagine that the precepts are rigorous; they
will be our own will as truly as they are God’s
will. Nothing which God has commanded, however much of
self-denial it requires now, will require any
self-denial from us then. Holiness will be our
element, our delight. Our nature will be entirely
conformed to the nature and mind of God as to holiness
and goodness, and then the law will be fulfilled in
us, and we shall stand before God, having washed our
robes and made them white in. the blood of the Lamb,
and at the same time being ourselves without spot, or
wrinkle, or any such thing. Then shall the law of the
Lord have eternal honour from our immortal being. Oh,
how we shall rejoice in it! We delight in it after the
inward man now, but then we shall delight in it as to
our risen bodies which shall be charmed to be
instruments of righteousness unto God for ever and
ever. No appetite of those risen bodies, no want and
no necessity of them shall then lead the soul astray,
but our whole body, soul, and spirit shall be
perfectly conformed unto the Divine mind. Let us long
and pant for this. We shall never attain it except by
believing in Jesus. Perfect holiness will never he
reached by the works of the law, for works cannot
change the nature, but by faith in Jesus, and the
blessed work of his Holy Spirit, we shall have it, and
then I believe it will be among our songs of glory
that heaven and earth pass away, but the word of God
and the law of God shall stand fast for ever and ever.
Hallelujah ! Hallelujah! Amen.
__________________________
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Matthew
v. 17—37.
__________________________
HYMNS FROM "OUR OWN HYMN BOOK"—908, 545,
647.
Return
to the Main Highway

Return to the Notable Sermons Archive

:-)
<——
|