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Safety, Fulness,
and Sweet
Refreshment in Christ
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Isaiah 32:2
And a man shall be as an hiding-place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest;
as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.
In these words we may observe,
1. The person who is here prophesied of and commended, viz. the Lord Jesus Christ,
the King spoken of in the preceding verse, who shall reign in righteousness. This
King is abundantly prophesied of in the Old Testament, and especially in this prophecy
of Isaiah. Glorious predictions were from time to time uttered by the prophets concerning
that great King who was to come: there is no subject which is spoken of in so magnificent
and exalted a style by the prophets of the Old Testament, as the Messiah. They saw
his day and rejoiced, and searched diligently, together with the angels, into those
things. I Peter 1:11, 12. "Searching what, or what manner of time, the Spirit
of Christ which was in them did signify, when it testified beforehand the sufferings
of Christ, and the glory that should follow. Unto whom it was revealed, that not
unto themselves, but unto us, they did minister the things, which are now reported
unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent
down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into."
We are told here that "a man shall be a hiding-place from the wind," &c.
There is an emphasis in the words, that "a man" should be this. If these
things had been said of God, it would not be strange under the Old Testament; for
God is frequently called a hiding-place for his people, a refuge in time of trouble,
a strong rock, and a high tower. But what is so remarkable is, that they are said
of "a man." But this is a prophecy of the Son of God incarnate.
2. The things here foretold of him, and the commendations given him. "He shall
be a hiding-place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest:" that is, he
shall be the safety and defence of his people, to which they shall flee for protection
in the time of their danger and trouble. To him they shall flee, as one who is abroad,
and sees a terrible storm arising, makes haste to some shelter to secure himself;
so that however furious is the tempest, yet he is safe within, and the wind and rain,
though they beat never so impetuously upon the roof and walls, are no annoyance unto
him.
He shall be as "rivers of water in a dry place." This is an allusion to
the deserts of Arabia, which was an exceedingly hot and dry country. One may travel
there many days, and see no sign of a river, brook, or spring, nothing but a dry
and parched wilderness; so that travelers are ready to be consumed with thirst, as
the children of Israel were when they were in this wilderness, when they were faint
because there was no water. Now when a man finds Jesus Christ, he is like one that
has been traveling in those deserts till he is almost consumed with thirst, and who
as last finds a river of cool and clear water. And Christ was typified by the river
of water that issued out of the rock for the children of Israel in this desert: he
is compared to a river, because there is such a plenty and fulness in him.
He is the "shadow of a great rock in a weary land." Allusion is still made
to the desert of Arabia. It is not said, as the shadow of a tree, because in some
places of that country, there is nothing but dry sand and rocks for a vast space
together, not a tree to be seen; and the sun beats exceedingly hot upon the sands,
and all the shade to be found there, where travellers can rest and shelter themselves
from the scorching sun, is under some great rock. They who come to Christ find such
rest and refreshment as the weary traveller in that hot and desolate country finds
under the shadow of a great rock.
We propose to speak to three propositions that are explicatory of the several parts
of the text.
I. There is in Christ Jesus abundant foundation of peace and safety for those who
are in fear and danger. "A man shall be a hiding-place from the wind, a covert
from the tempest."
II. There is in Christ provision for the satisfaction, and full contentment, of the
needy and thirsty soul. He shall be "as rivers of water in a dry place."
III. There are quiet rest and sweet refreshment in Christ Jesus for him who is weary.
He shall be "as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."
I. There is in Christ Jesus abundant foundation of peace and safety for those who
are in fear and danger.
The fears and dangers to which men are subject, are of two kinds; temporal and eternal.
Men are frequently in distress from fear of temporal evils. We live in an evil world,
where we are liable to an abundance of sorrows and calamities. A great part of our
lives is spent in sorrowing for present or past evils, and in fearing those which
are future. What poor, distressed creatures are we, when God is pleased to send his
judgements among us! If he visits a place with mortal and prevailing sickness, what
terror seizes our hearts! If any person is taken sick, and trembles for his life,
or if our near friends are at the point of death, or in many other dangers, how fearful
is our condition! Now there is sufficient foundation for peace and safety to those
exercised with such fears, and brought into such dangers. But Christ is a refuge
in all trouble; there is a foundation for rational support and peace in him, whatever
threatens us. He, whose heart is fixed, trusting in Christ, need not be afraid of
any evil tidings. "As the mountains are round about Jerusalem, so Christ is
round about them that fear him."
But it is the other kind of fear and danger to which we have a principal respect;
the fear and danger of God's wrath. The fears of a terrified conscience, the fearful
expectation of the dire fruits of sin, and the resentment of an angry God, these
are infinitely the most dreadful. If men are in danger of those things, and are not
asleep, they will be more terrified than with the fears of any outward evil. Men
are in a most deplorable condition, as they are by nature exposed to God's wrath;
and if they are sensible how dismal their case is, will be in dreadful fears and
dismal expectations.
God is pleased to make some sensible of their true condition. He lets them see the
storm that threatens them, how black the clouds are, and how impregnated with thunder,
that it is a burning tempest, that they are in danger of being speedily overtaken
by it, that they have nothing to shelter themselves from it, and that they are in
danger of being taken away by the fierceness of his anger.
It is a fearful condition when one is smitten with a sense of the dreadfulness of
God's wrath, when he has his heart impressed with the conviction that the great God
is not reconciled to him, that he holds him guilty of these and those sins, and that
he is angry enough with him to condemn him for ever. It is dreadful to lie down and
rise up, it is dreadful to eat and drink, and to walk about, in God's anger from
day to day. One, in such a case, is ready to be afraid of every thing; he is afraid
of meeting God's wrath wherever he goes. He has no peace in his mind, but there is
a dreadful sound in his ears; his mind is afflicted and tossed with tempest, and
not comforted, and courage is ready to fail, and the spirit ready to sink with fear;
for how can a poor worm bear the wrath of the great God, and what would not he give
for peace of conscience, what would not he give if he could find safety! When such
fears exist to a great degree, or are continued a long time, they greatly enfeeble
the heart, and bring it to a trembling posture and disposition.
Now for such as these there is abundant foundation for peace and safety in Jesus
Christ, and this will appear from the following things:
1. Christ has undertaken to save all such from what they fear, if they come to him.
It is his professional business; the work in which he engaged before the foundation
of the world. It is what he always had in his thoughts and intentions; he undertook
from everlasting to be the refuge of those that are afraid of God's wrath. His wisdom
is such, that he would never undertake a work for which he is not sufficient. If
there were some in so dreadful a case that he was not able to defend them, or so
guilty that it was not fit that he should save them, then he never would have undertaken
for them. Those who are in trouble and distressing fear, if they come to Jesus Christ,
have this to ease them of their fears, that Christ has promised them that he will
protect them; that they come upon his invitation; that Christ has plighted his faith
for their security if they will close with him; and that he is engaged by covenant
to God the Father that he will save those afflicted and distressed souls that come
to him.
Christ, by his own free act, has made himself the surety of such, he has voluntarily
put himself in their stead; and if justice has any thing against them, he has undertaken
to answer for them. By his own act, he has engaged to be responsible for them; so
that if they have exposed themselves to God's wrath, and to the stroke of justice,
it is not their concern, but his, how to answer or satisfy for what they have done.
Let there be never so much wrath that they have deserved, they are as safe as if
they never had deserved any; because he has undertaken to stand for them, let it
be more or less. If they are in Christ Jesus, the storm does of course light on him,
and not on them; as when we are under a good shelter, the storm, that would otherwise
come upon our heads, lights upon the shelter.
2. He is chosen and appointed of the Father to this work. There needs to be no fear
nor jealousy, whether the Father will approve of this undertaking of Christ Jesus,
whether he will accept of him as a surety, or whether he will be willing that his
wrath should be poured upon his own dear Son, instead of us miserable sinners. For
there was an agreement with him concerning it before the world was; it was a thing
much upon God's heart, that his Son Jesus Christ should undertake this work, and
it was the Father that sent him into the world. It is as much the act of God the
Father as it is of the Son. Therefore, when Christ was near the time of his death,
he tells the Father that he had finished the work which he gave him to do. Christ
is often called God's elect, or his chosen, because he was chosen by the Father for
his work; and God's anointed, for the words Messiah and Christ signify anointed,
because he is by God appointed and fitted for this work.
3. If we are in Christ Jesus, justice and the law have its course with respect to
our sins, without our hurt. The foundation of the sinner's fear and distress is the
justice and the law of God; they are against him, and they are unalterable, they
must have their course. Every jot and tittle of the law must be fulfilled, heaven
and earth shall be destroyed, rather than justice should not take place; there is
no possibility of sin's escaping justice.
But yet if the distressed trembling soul who is afraid of justice, would fly to Christ,
he would be a safe hiding-place. Justice and the threatening of the law will have
their course as fully, while he is safe and untouched, as if he were to be eternally
destroyed. Christ bears the stroke of justice, and the curse of the law falls fully
upon him; Christ bears all that vengeance that belongs to the sin that has been committed
by him, and there is no need of its being borne twice over. His temporal sufferings,
by reason of the infinite dignity of his person, are fully equivalent to the eternal
sufferings of a mere creature. And then his sufferings answer for him who flees to
him as well as if they were his own, for indeed they are his own by virtue of the
union between Christ and him. Christ has made himself one with them; he is the head,
and they are the members. Therefore, if Christ suffers for the believer, there is
no need of his suffering; and what needs he to be afraid? His safety is not only
consistent with absolute justice, but it is consistent with the tenor of the law.
The law leaves fair room for such a thing as the answering of a surety. If the end
of punishment in maintaining the authority of the law and the majesty of the government
is fully secured by the sufferings of Christ as his surety, then the law of God,
according to the true and fair interpretation of it, has its course as much in the
sufferings of Christ, as it would have in his own sufferings. The threatening, "thou
shalt surely die," is properly fulfilled in the death of Christ, as it is fairly
to be understood. Therefore if those who are afraid will go to Jesus Christ, they
need to fear nothing from the threatening of the law. The threatening of the law
has nothing to do with them.
4. Those who come to Christ, need not be afraid of God's wrath for their sins; for
God's honour will not suffer by their escaping punishment and being made happy. The
wounded soul is sensible that he has affronted the majesty of God, and looks upon
God as a vindicator of his honour; as a jealous God that will not be mocked, an infinitely
great God that will not bear to be affronted, that will not suffer his authority
and majesty to be trampled on, that will not bear that his kindness should be abused.
A view of God in this light terrifies awakened souls. They think how exceedingly
they have sinned, how they have sinned against light, against frequent and long-continued
calls and warnings; and how they have slighted mercy, and been guilty of turning
the grace of God into lasciviousness, taking encouragement from God's mercy to go
on in sin against him; and they fear that God is so affronted at the contempt and
slight which they have cast upon him, that he, being careful of his honour, will
never forgive them, but will punish them. But if they go to Christ, the honour of
God's majesty and authority will not be in the least hurt by their being freed and
made happy. For what Christ has done has repaired God's honour to the full. It is
a greater honour to God's authority and majesty, that, rather than it should be wronged,
so glorious a person would suffer what the law required. It is surely a wonderful
display of the honour of God's majesty, to see an infinite and eternal person dying
for its being wronged. And then Christ by his obedience, by that obedience which
he undertook for our sakes, has honoured God abundantly more than the sins of any
of us have dishonoured him, how many soever, and how great soever. How great an honour
is it to God's law that so great a person is willing to submit to it, and to obey
it! God hates our sins, but not more than he delights in Christ's obedience which
he performed on account. This is a sweet savour to him, a savour of rest. God is
abundantly compensated, he desires no more; Christ's righteousness is of infinite
worthiness and merit.
5. Christ is a person so dear to the Father, that those who are in Christ need not
be at all jealous of being accepted upon his account. If Christ is accepted they
must of consequence be accepted, for they are in Christ, as members, as parts, as
the same. They are the body of Christ, his flesh and his bones. They that are in
Christ Jesus, are one spirit; and therefore, if God loves Christ Jesus, he must of
necessity accept of those that are in him, and that are of him. But Christ is a person
exceedingly dear to the Father, the Father's love to the Son is really infinite.
God necessarily loves the Son; God could as soon cease to be, as cease to love the
Son. He is God's elect, in whom his soul delighteth; he is his beloved Son, in whom
he is well pleased; he loved him before the foundation of the world, and had infinite
delight in him from all eternity.
A terrified conscience, therefore, may have rest here, and abundant satisfaction
that he is safe in Christ, and that there is not the least danger but that he shall
be accepted, and that God will be at peace with him in Christ.
6. God has given an open testimony that Christ has done and suffered enough, and
that he is satisfied with it, by his raising him from the dead. Christ, when he was
in his passion, was in the hands of justice, he was God's prisoner for believers,
and it pleased God to bruise him, and put him to grief, and to bring him into a low
state; and when he raised him from the dead, he set him at liberty, whereby he declared
that it was enough. If God was not satisfied, why did he set Christ at liberty so
soon? he was in the hands of justice, why did not God pour out more wrath upon him,
and hold him in the chains of darkness longer? God raised him up and opened the prison
doors to him, because he desired no more. And now surely there is free admittance
for all sinners into God's favour through this risen Saviour, there is enough done,
and God is satisfied; as he has declared and sealed to it by the resurrection of
Christ, who is alive, and lives for evermore, and is making intercession for poor,
distressed souls that come unto him.
7. Christ has the dispensation of safety and deliverance in his own hands, so that
we need not fear but that, if we are united to him, we may be safe. God has given
him all power in heaven and in earth, to give eternal life to whomsoever comes to
him. He is made head over all things to the church, and the work of salvation is
left with himself, he may save whom he pleases, and defend those that are in him
by his own power. What greater ground of confidence could God have given us than
that the Mediator, who died for us, and intercedes for us, should have committed
to him the dispensation of the very thing which he died to purchase and for which
he intercedes?
8. Christ's love, and compassion, and gracious disposition, are such that we may
be sure he is inclined to receive all who come to him. If he should not do it, he
would fail of his own undertaking, and also of his promise to the Father, and to
us; and his wisdom and faithfulness will not allow of that. But he is so full of
love and kindness that he is disposed to nothing but to receive and defend us, if
we come to him. Christ is exceedingly ready to pity us, his arms are open to receive
us, he delights to receive distressed souls that come to him, and to protect them;
he would gather them as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings; it is a work
that he exceedingly rejoices in, because he delights in acts of love, and pity, and
mercy.
I shall take occasion from what now has been said, to invite those who are afraid
of God's wrath, to come to Christ Jesus. You are indeed in a dreadful condition.
It is dismal to have God's wrath impending over our heads, and not to know how soon
it will fall upon us. And you are in some measure sensible that it is a dreadful
condition, you are full of fear and trouble, and you know not where to flee for help;
your mind is, as it were, tossed with a tempest. But how lamentable is it, that you
should spend your life in such a condition, when Christ would shelter you, as a hen
shelters her chickens under her wings, if you were but willing; and that you should
live such a fearful, distressed life, when there is so much provision made for your
safety in Christ Jesus!
How happy would you be if your hearts were but persuaded to close with Jesus Christ!
Then you would be out of all danger: whatever storms and tempests were without, you
might rest securely within; you might hear the rushing of the wind, and the thunder
roar abroad, while you are safe in this hiding-place. O be persuaded to hide yourself
in Christ Jesus! What greater assurance of safety can you desire? He has undertaken
to defend and save you, if you will come to him: he looks upon it as his work; he
engaged in it before the world was, and he has given his faithful promise which he
will not break; and if you will but make your flight there, his life shall be for
yours; he will answer for you, you shall have nothing to do but rest quietly in him;
you may stand still and see what the Lord will do for you. If there be any thing
to suffer, the suffering is Christ's, you will have nothing to suffer; if there be
any thing to be done, the doing of it is Christ's, you will have nothing to do but
to stand still and behold it.
You will certainly be accepted of the Father if your soul lays hold of Jesus Christ.
Christ is chosen and anointed of the Father, and sent forth for this very end, to
save those that are in danger and fear; and he is greatly beloved of God, even infinitely,
and he will accept of those that are in him. Justice and the law will not be against
you, if you are in Christ; that threatening, "in the day that thou eatest thou
shalt die," in the proper sense of it, will not touch you. The majesty and honour
of God are not against you. You need not be afraid but that you shall be justified,
if you come to him; there is an act of justification already past and declared for
all who come to Christ by the resurrection of Christ, and as soon as ever you come,
you are by that declared free. If you come to Christ it will be a sure sign that
Christ loved you from all eternity, and that he died for you; and you may be sure
if he died for you, he will not lose the end of his death, for the dispensation of
life is committed unto him.
You need not, therefore, continue in so dangerous a condition; there is help for
you. You need not stand out in the storm so long, as there is so good a shelter near
you, whose doors are open to receive you. O make haste, therefore, unto that man
who is a hiding-place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest!
Let this truth also cause believers more to prize the Lord Jesus Christ. Consider
that it is he, and he only, who defends you from wrath, and that he is a safe defence;
your defence is a high tower; your city of refuge is impregnable. There is no rock
like your rock. There is none like Christ, "the God of Jeshurun, who rideth
upon the heaven in thy help, and in his excellency on the sky; the eternal God is
thy refuge, and underneath are everlasting arms." He in whom you trust is a
buckler to all that trust in him. O prize that Saviour, who keeps your soul in safety,
while thousands of others are carried away by the fury of God's anger, and are tossed
with raging and burning tempests in hell! O, how much better is your case than theirs!
and to whom is it owing but to the Lord Jesus Christ? Remember what was once your
case, and what it is now, and prize Jesus Christ.
And let those christians who are in doubts and fears concerning their condition,
renewedly fly to Jesus Christ, who is a hiding-place from the wind, and a covert
from the tempest. Most Christians are at times afraid whether they shall not miscarry
at last. Such doubtings are always through some want of the exercise of faith, and
the best remedy for them is a renewed resort of the soul to this hiding-place; the
same act which at first gave comfort and peace, will give peace again. They that
clearly see the sufficiency of Christ, and the safety of committing themselves to
him to save them from what they fear, will rest in it that Christ will defend them;
be directed therefore at such times to do as the psalmist. Psalm 56:3, 4. "What
time I am afraid, I will trust in thee. In God I will praise his word; in God I have
put my trust: I will not fear what flesh can do unto me."
II. There is provision in Christ for the satisfaction and full contentment of the
needy and thirsty soul.
This is the sense of those words in the text, "as rivers of water in a dry place,"
in a dry and parched wilderness, where there is a great want of water, and where
travellers are ready to be destroyed with thirst, such as was that wilderness in
which the children of Israel wandered. This comparison is used elsewhere in the Scriptures.
Psalm 63:1. "O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee: my soul thirsteth
for thee, my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is."
Psalm 143:6. "I stretch forth my hands unto thee; my soul thirsteth after thee,
as a thirsty land." Those who travel in such a land, who wander in such a wilderness,
are in extreme need of water; they are ready to perish for the want of it; and thus
they have a great thirst and longing for it.
It is said that Christ is a river of water, because there is such a fulness in him,
so plentiful a provision for the satisfaction of the needy and longing soul. When
one is extremely thirsty, though it is not a small draught of water will satisfy
him, yet when he comes to a river, he finds a fulness, there he may drink full draughts.
Christ is like a river, in that he has a sufficiency not only for one thirsty soul,
but by supplying him the fountain is not lessened; there is not the less afforded
to those who come afterwards. A thirsty man does not sensibly lessen a river by quenching
his thirst.
Christ is like a river in another respect. A river is continually flowing, there
are fresh supplies of water coming from the fountain-head continually, so that a
man may live by it, and be supplied with water all his life. So Christ is an ever-flowing
fountain; he is continually supplying his people, and the fountain is not spent.
They who live upon Christ, may have fresh supplies from him to all eternity; they
may have an increase of blessedness that is new, and new still, and which never will
come to an end.
In illustrating this second proposition, I shall inquire,
1. What it is that the soul of every man naturally and necessarily craves.
First. The soul of every man necessarily craves happiness. This is an universal appetite
of human nature, that is alike in the good and the bad; it is as universal as the
very essence of the soul, because it necessarily and immediately flows from that
essence. It is not only natural to all mankind, but to the angels; it is universal
among all reasonable, intelligent beings, in heaven, earth, or hell, because it flows
necessarily from an intelligent nature. There is no rational being, nor can there
be any, without a love and desire of happiness. It is impossible that there should
be any creature made that should love misery, or not love happiness, since it implies
a manifest contradiction; for the very notion of misery is to be in a state that
nature abhors, and the notion of happiness, is to be in such a state as is most agreeable
to nature.
Therefore, this craving of happiness must be insuperable, and what never can be changed;
it never can be overcome, or in any way abated. Young and old love happiness alike,
and good and bad, wise and unwise; though there is a great variety as to men's ideas
of happiness. Some think it is to be found in one thing, and some in another; yet,
as to the desire of happiness in general, there is no variety. There are particular
appetites that may be restrained, and kept under, and conquered, but this general
appetite for happiness nev-er can be.
Secondly. The soul of every man craves a happiness that is equal to the capacity
of his nature. The soul of man is like a vessel; the capacity of the soul is as the
largeness or contents of the vessel. And therefore, if man has much pleasure and
happiness, yet if the vessel is not full, the craving will not cease. Every creature
is restless till it enjoys what is equal to the capacity of its nature. Thus we may
observe in the brutes; when they have that which is suitable to their nature, and
proportional to their capacity, they are contented. Man is of such a nature, that
he is capable of an exceedingly great degree of happiness; he is made of a vastly
higher nature than the brutes, and therefore he must have vastly higher happiness
to satisfy. The pleasures of the outward senses which content the beasts, will not
content man. He has other faculties of a higher nature that stand in need of something
to fill them; if the sense be satiated, yet if the faculties of the soul are not
filled, man will be in a craving restless state.
It is more especially by reason of the faculty of understanding that the soul is
capable of so great a happiness, and desires so much. The understanding is an exceedingly
extensive faculty; it extends itself beyond the limits of earth, beyond the limits
of the creation. As we are capable of understanding immensely more than we do understand,
who can tell how far the understanding of men is capable of stretching itself? and
as the understanding enlarges, the desire will enlarge with it. It must therefore
be an incomprehensible object that must satisfy the soul; it will never be contented
with that, and that only, to which it can see an end, it will never be satisfied
with that happiness to which it can find a bottom. A man may seem to take contentment
for a little while in a finite object, but after he has had a little experience,
he finds that he wants something besides. This is very apparent from the experience
of this restless craving world. Every one is inquiring, Who will show us any good?
2. Men in their fallen state, are in very great want of this happiness. They were
once in the enjoyment of it, but mankind are sunk to a very low estate; we are naturally
poor, destitute creatures. We came naked into the world, and our souls as well as
our bodies are in a wretched, miserable condition; we are so far from having food
to eat suitable to our nature, that we are greedy after the husks which the swine
do eat.
The poverty of man in a natural condition, appears in his discontented, craving spirit;
it shows that the soul is very empty, when, like the horse-leech, it cries, "Give,
give, and saith not, It is enough." We are naturally like the prodigal, for
we once were rich, but we departed from our father's house, and have squandered away
our wealth, and are become poor, hungry, famishing wretches. Men in a natural condition
may find something to gratify their senses, but there is nothing to feed the soul;
that more noble and more essential part perishes for lack of food. They may fare
sumptuously every day, they may pamper their bodies, but the soul cannot be fed from
a sumptuous table; they may drink wine in bowls, yet the spiritual part is not refreshed.
The superior faculties want to be supplied as well as the inferior. True poverty
and true misery consist in the want of those things of which our spiritual part stands
in need.
3. Those sinners who are thoroughly awakened, are sensible of their great want. Multitudes
of men are not sensible of their miserable, needy condition. There are many who are
thus poor, and think themselves rich, and increased in goods. Indeed there are no
natural men that have true contentment: they are all restless, and crying, "Who
will show us any good?" but multitudes are not sensible how exceedingly necessitous
is their condition. But the thoroughly awakened soul sees that he is very far from
true happiness, that those things which he possesses will never make him happy; that
for all his outward possessions he is wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind,
and naked. He becomes sensible of the short continuance and uncertainty of those
things, and their insufficiency to satisfy a troubled conscience. He wants something
else to give him peace and ease. If you would tell him that he might have a kingdom,
it would not quiet him; he desires to have his sins pardoned, and to be at peace
with his Judge. He is poor, and he becomes as a beggar; he comes and cries for help.
He does not thirst, because he as yet sees where true happiness is to be found, but
because he sees that he has it not, and cannot find it. He is without comfort, and
does not know where to find it, but he longs for it. O, what would he not give, if
he could find some satisfying peace and comfort!
Such are those hungry, thirsty souls that Christ so often invites to come to him.
Isaiah 55:1, 2. "Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he
that hath no money, come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money
and without price. Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread, and your
labour for that which satisfieth not? hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that
which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness." "If any man
thirst, let him come unto me and drink; and he that is athirst, let him come and
take of the water of life freely."
4. There is in Christ Jesus provision for the full satisfaction and contentment of
such as these.
First. The excellency of Christ is such, that the discovery of it is exceedingly
contenting and satisfying to the soul. The inquiry of the soul is after that which
is most excellent. The carnal soul imagines that earthly things are excellent; one
thinks riches most excellent, another has the highest esteem of honour, and to another
carnal pleasure appears the most excellent; but the soul cannot find contentment
in any of these things, because it soon finds an end to their excellency. Worldly
men imagine, that there is true excellency and true happiness in those things which
they are pursuing. They think that if they could but obtain them, they should be
happy; and when they obtain them, and cannot find happiness, they look for happiness
in something else, and are still upon the pursuit.
But Christ Jesus has true excellency, and so great excellency, that when they come
to see it they look no further, but the mind rests there. It sees a transcendent
glory and an ineffable sweetness in him; it sees that till now it has been pursuing
shadows, but that now it has found the substance; that before it had been seeking
happiness in the stream, but that now it has found the ocean. The excellency of Christ
is an object adequate to the natural cravings of the soul, and is sufficient to fill
the capacity. It is an infinite excellency, such an one as the mind desires, in which
it can find no bounds; and the more the mind is used to it, the more excellent it
appears. Every new discovery makes this beauty appear more ravishing, and the mind
sees no end; here is room enough for the mind to go deeper and deeper, and never
come to the bottom. The soul is exceedingly ravished when it first looks on this
beauty, and it is never weary of it. The mind never has any satiety, but Christ's
excellency is always fresh and new, and tends as much to delight, after it has been
seen a thousand or ten thousand years, as when it was seen the first moment. The
excellency of Christ is an object suited to the superior faculties of man, it is
suited to entertain the faculty of reason and understanding, and there is nothing
so worthy about which the understanding can be employed as this excellency; no other
object is so great, noble, and exalted.
This excellency of Jesus Christ is the suitable food of the rational soul. The soul
that comes to Christ, feeds upon this, and lives upon it; it is that bread which
came down from heaven, of which he that eats shall not die; it is angels' food, it
is that wine and milk that is given without money, and without price. This is that
fatness in which the believing soul delights itself; here the longing soul may be
satisfied, and the hungry soul may be filled with goodness. The delight and contentment
that is to be found here, passeth understanding, and is unspeakable and full of glory.
It is impossible for those who have tasted of this fountain, and know the sweetness
of it, ever to forsake it. The soul has found the river of water of life, and it
desires no other drink; it has found the tree of life, and it desires no other fruit.
Secondly. The manifestation of the love of Christ gives the soul abundant contentment.
This love of Christ is exceedingly sweet and satisfying, it is better than life,
because it is the love of a person of such dignity and excellency. The sweetness
of his love depends very much upon the greatness of his excellency; so much the more
lovely the person, so much the more desirable is his love. How sweet must the love
of that person be, who is the eternal Son of God, who is of equal dignity with the
Father! How great a happiness must it be to be the object of the love of him who
is the Creator of the world, and by whom all things consist, and who is exalted at
God's right hand, and made head over principalities and powers in heavenly places,
who has all things put under his feet, and is King of kings and Lord of lords, and
is the brightness of the Father's glory! Surely to be beloved by him, is enough to
satisfy the soul of a worm of the dust.
This love of Christ is also exceedingly sweet and satisfying from the greatness of
it; it is a dying love; such love as never was before seen, and such as no other
can parallel. There have been instances of very great love between one earthly friend
and another; there was a surpassing love between David and Jonathan. But there never
was any such love as Christ has towards believers. The satisfying nature of this
love arises also from the sweet fruits of it. Those precious benefits that Christ
bestows upon his people, and those precious promises which he has given them, are
the fruit of this love; joy and hope are the constant streams that flow from this
fountain, from the love of Christ.
Thirdly. There is provision for the satisfaction and contentment of the thirsty longing
soul in Christ, as he is the way to the Father; not only from the fulness of excellency
and grace which he has in his own person, but as by him we may come to God, may be
reconciled to him, and may be made happy in his favour and love. The poverty and
want of the soul in its natural state consist in its being separated from God, for
God is the riches and the happiness of the creature. But we naturally are alienated
from God; and God is alienated from us, our Maker is not at peace with us. But in
Christ there is a way for a free communication between God and us; for us to come
to God, and for God to communicate himself to us by his Spirit. John 14:6. "Jesus
saith unto him, I am the way, and the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the
Father but by me." Ephesians 2:13, 18, 19. "But now in Christ Jesus, ye
who sometimes were far off, are made nigh by the blood of Christ. For through him
we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father. Now, therefore, ye are no more
strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the household
of God." Christ by being thus the way to the Father, is the way to true happiness
and contentment. John 10:9. "I am the door: by me, if any man enter in, he shall
be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture." Hence I would take occasion
to invite needy, thirsty souls to come to Jesus. "In the last day, that great
day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come
unto me and drink." You that have not yet come to Christ, are in a poor, necessitous
condition; you are in a parched wilderness, in a dry and thirsty land. And if you
are thoroughly awakened, you are sensible that you are in distress and ready to faint
for want of something to satisfy your souls. Come to him who is "as rivers of
water in a dry place." There are plenty and fulness in him; he is like a river
that is always flowing, you may live by it for ever, and never be in want. Come to
him who has such excellency as is sufficient to give full contentment to your soul,
who is a person of transcendent glory, and ineffable beauty, where you may entertain
the view of your soul for ever without weariness, and without being cloyed. Accept
of the offered love of him who is the only-begotten Son of God, and his elect, in
whom his soul delighteth. Through Christ, come to God the Father, from whom you have
departed by sin. He is the way, the truth, and the life; he is the door, by which
if any man enters he shall be saved.
III. There are quiet rest and sweet refreshment in Christ Jesus, for those that are
weary. He is "as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."
The comparison that is used in the text is very beautiful and very significative.
The dry, barren, and scorched wilderness of Arabia is a very lively representation
of the misery that men have brought upon themselves by sin. It is destitute of any
inhabitants but lions and tigers and fiery serpents; it is barren and parched, and
without any river or spring; it is a land of drought, wherein there is seldom any
rain, a land exceedingly hot and uncomfortable. The scorching sunbeams that are ready
to consume the spirits of travellers, are a fit representation of terror of conscience,
and the inward sense of God's displeasure. And there being no other shade in which
travellers may rest, but only here and there that of a great rock, it is a fit representation
of Jesus Christ, who came to redeem us from our misery. Christ is often compared
to a rock, because he is a sure foundation to builders, and because he is a sure
bulwark and defence. They who dwell upon the top of a rock, dwell in a most defensible
place; we read of those whose habitation is the munitions of rocks. He may also be
compared to a rock, as he is everlasting and unchangeable. A great rock remains stedfast,
unmoved, and unbroken by winds and storms from age to age; and therefore God chose
a rock to be an emblem of Christ in the wilderness, when he caused water to issue
forth for the children of Israel; and the shadow of a great rock is a most fit representation
of the refreshment given to weary souls by Jesus Christ.
1. There is quiet rest and full refreshment in Christ for sinners that are weary
and heavy laden with sin. Sin is the most evil and odious thing, as well as the most
mischievous and fatal; it is the most mortal poison; it, above all things, hazards
life, and endangers the soul, exposes to the loss of all happiness, and to the suffering
of all misery, and brings the wrath of God. All men have this dreadful evil hanging
about them, and cleaving fast to the soul, and ruling over it, and keeping it in
possession, and under absolute command: it hangs like a viper to the heart, or rather
holds it as a lion does his prey.
But yet there are multitudes, who are not sensible of their misery. They are in such
a sleep that they are not very unquiet in this condition, it is not very burthensome
to them, they are so sottish that they do not know what is their state, and what
is like to become of them. But there are others who have their sense so far restored
to them that they feel the pain, and see the approaching destruction, and sin lies
like a heavy load upon their hearts; it is a load that lies upon them day and night,
they cannot lay it down to rest themselves, but it continually oppresses them. It
is bound fast unto them, and is ready to sink them down; it is a continual labour
of heart, to support itself under this burden. Thus we read of them "that labour,
and are heavy laden." Or rather, it is like the scorching heat in a dry wilderness,
where the sun beats and burns all the day long; where they have nothing to defend
them; where they can find no shade to refresh themselves. If they lay themselves
down to rest, it is like lying down in the hot sands, where there is nothing to keep
off the heat.
Here it may be proper to inquire who are weary and heavy laden with sin; and in what
sense a sinner may be weary and burdened with sin. Sinners are not wearied with sin
from any dislike to it, or dislike of it. There is no sinner that is burdened with
sin in the sense in which a godly man carries his indwelling sin, as his daily and
greatest burden, because he loathes it, and longs to get rid of it; he would fain
be at a great distance from it, and have nothing more to do with it; he is ready
to cry out as Paul did, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from
the body of this death?" The unregenerate man has nothing of this nature, for
sin is yet his delight, he dearly loves it. If he be under convictions, his love
to sin in general is not mortified, he loves it as well as ever, he hides it still
as a sweet morsel under his tongue.
But there is a difference between being weary and burdened with sin, and being weary
of sin. Awakened sinners are weary with sin, but not properly weary of it.
Therefore, they are only weary of the guilt of sin, the guilt that cleaves to their
consciences is that great burden. God has put the sense of feeling into their consciences,
that were before as seared flesh, and it is guilt that pains them. The filthiness
of sin and its evil nature, as it is an offence to a holy, gracious, and glorious
God, is not a burden to them. But it is the connexion between sin and punishment,
between sin and God's wrath, that makes it a burden. Their consciences are heavy
laden with guilt, which is an obligation to punishment; they see the threatening
and curse of the law joined to their sins, and see that the justice of God and his
vengeance are against them. They are burdened with their sins, not because there
is any odiousness in them, but because there is hell in them. This is the sting of
sin, whereby it stings the conscience, and distresses and wearies the soul.
The guilt of such and such great sins is upon the soul, and the man sees no way to
get rid of it, but he has wearisome days and wearisome nights; it makes him ready
sometimes to say as the psalmist did, "O that I had wings like a dove! for then
would I fly away and be at rest. Lo, then would I wander far off, and remain in the
wilderness. I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest." But
when sinners come to Christ, he takes away that which was their burden, or their
sin and guilt, that which was so heavy upon their hearts, that so distressed their
minds.
First. He takes away the guilt of sin, from which the soul before saw no way how
it was possible to be freed, and which, if it was not removed, led to eternal destruction.
When the sinner comes to Christ, it is all at once taken away, and the soul is left
free, it is lightened of its burden, it is delivered from its bondage, and is like
a bird escaped from the snare of the fowler. The soul sees in Christ a way to peace
with God, and a way by which the law may be answered, and justice satisfied, and
yet he may escape; a wonderful way indeed, but yet a certain and a glorious one.
And what rest does it give to the weary soul to see itself thus delivered, that the
foundation of its anxieties and fears is wholly removed, and that God's wrath ceases,
that it is brought into a state of peace with God, and that there is no more occasion
to fear hell, but that it is for ever safe! How refreshing is it to the soul to be
at once thus delivered of that which was so much its trouble and terror, and to be
eased of that which was so much its burden! This is like coming to a cool shade after
one has been travelling in a dry and hot wilderness, and almost fainting under the
scorching heat. And then Christ also takes away sin itself, and mortifies that root
of bitterness which is the cause of all the inward tumults and disquietudes that
are in the mind, that make it like the troubled sea that cannot rest, and leaves
it all calm. When guilt is taken away and sin is mortified, then the foundation of
fear, and trouble, and pain is removed, and the soul is left in peace and serenity.
Secondly. Christ puts strength and a principle of new life into the weary soul that
comes to him. The sinner, before he comes to Christ, is as a sick man that is weakened
and brought low, and whose nature is consumed by some strong distemper: he is full
of pain, and so weak that he cannot walk nor stand. Therefore, Christ is compared
to a physician. "But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be
whole, need not a physician, but they that are sick." When he comes and speaks
the word, he puts a principle of life into him that was before as dead: he gives
a principle of spiritual life and the beginning of eternal life; he invigorates the
mind with a communication of his own life and strength, and renews the nature and
creates it again, and makes the man to be a new creature.
So that the fainting, sinking spirits are now revived, and this principle of spiritual
life is a continual spring of refreshment, like a well of living water. "Whosoever
drinketh of the water that I shall give him, shall never thirst; but the water that
I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life."
Christ gives his Spirit, that calms the mind, and is like a refreshing breeze of
wind. He gives that strength whereby he lifts up the hands that hang down, and strengthens
the feeble knees.
Thirdly. Christ gives to those who come to him such comfort and pleasure as are enough
to make them forget all their former labour and travail. A little of true peace,
a little of the joys of the manifested love of Christ, and a little of the true and
holy hope of eternal life, are enough to compensate for all that toil and weariness,
and to erase the remembrance of it from the mind. That peace which results from true
faith passes understanding, and that joy is joy unspeakable. There is something peculiarly
sweet and refreshing in this joy, that is not in other joys; and what can more effectually
support the mind, or give a more rational ground of rejoicing, than a prospect of
eternal glory in the enjoyment of God from God's own promise in Christ? If we come
to Christ, we may not only be refreshed by resting in his shadow, but by eating his
fruit: these things are the fruits of this tree. "I sat down under his shadow
with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste."
Before proceeding to the next particular of this proposition, I would apply myself
to those that are weary; to move them to repose themselves under Christ's shadow.
The great trouble of such a state, one would think, should be a motive to you to
accept of an offer of relief, and remedy. You are weary, and doubtless would be glad
to be at rest; but here you are to consider,
First. That there is no remedy but in Jesus Christ; there is nothing else will give
you true quietness. If you could fly into heaven, you would not find it there; if
you should take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the
earth, in some solitary place in the wilderness, you could not fly from your burden.
So that if you do not come to Christ, you must either continue still weary and burdened,
or, which is worse, you must return to your old dead sleep, to a state of stupidity;
and not only so, but you must be everlastingly wearied with God's wrath.
Second. Consider that Christ is a remedy at hand. You need not wish for the wings
of a dove that you may fly afar off, and be at rest, but Christ is nigh at hand,
if you were but sensible of it. Romans 10:6, 7, 8. "But the righteousness which
is of faith speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into
heaven? (that is, to bring Christ down from above:) or, Who shall descend into the
deep? (that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead.) But what saith it? The word
is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart; that is, the word of faith which
we preach." There is no need of doing any great work to come at this rest; the
way is plain to it; it is but going to it, it is but sitting down under Christ's
shadow. Christ requires no money to purchase rest of him, he calls to us to come
freely, and for nothing. If we are poor and have no money, we may come. Christ sent
out his servants to invite the poor, the maimed, the halt, and the blind. Christ
does not want to be hired to accept of you, and to give you rest. It is his work
as Mediator to give rest to the weary, it is the work that he was anointed for, and
in which he delights. "The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord
hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek; he hath sent me to bind up
the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison
to them that are bound."
Third. Christ is not only a remedy for your weariness and trouble, but he will give
you an abundance of the contrary, joy and delight. They who come to Christ, do no
only come to a resting-place after they have been wandering in a wilderness, but
they come to a banqueting-house where they may rest, and where they may feast. They
may cease from their former troubles and toils, and they may enter upon a course
of delights and spiritual joys.
Christ not only delivers from fears of hell and of wrath, but he gives hopes of heaven,
and the enjoyment of God's love. He delivers from inward tumults and inward pain
from that guilt of conscience which is as a worm gnawing within, and he gives delight
and inward glory. He brings us out of a wilderness of pits, and drought, and fiery
flying spirits; and he brings us into a pleasant land, a land flowing with milk and
honey. He delivers us out of prison, and lifts us off from the dunghill, and he sets
us among princes, and causes us to inherit the throne of glory. Wherefore, if any
one is weary, if any is in prison, if any one is in captivity, if any one is in the
wilderness, let him come to the blessed Jesus, who is as the shadow of a great rock
in a weary land. Delay not, arise and come away.
2. There are quiet rest and sweet refreshment in Christ for God's people that are
weary.
The saints themselves, while they remain in this imperfect state, and have so much
remains of sin in their hearts, are liable still to many troubles and sorrows, and
much weariness, and have often need to resort anew unto Jesus Christ for rest. I
shall mention three cases wherein Christ is a sufficient remedy.
First. There is rest and sweet refreshment in Christ for those that are wearied with
persecutions. It has been the lot of God's church in this world for the most part
to be persecuted. It has had now and then some lucid intervals of peace and outward
prosperity, but generally it has been otherwise. This has accorded with the first
prophecy concerning Christ; "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and
between thy seed and her seed." Those two seeds have been at enmity ever since
the time of Abel. Satan has borne great malice against the church of God, and so
have those that are his seed. And oftentimes God's people have been persecuted to
an extreme degree, have been put to the most exquisite torments that wit or art could
devise, and thousands of them have been tormented to death.
But even in such a case there are rest and refreshment to be found in Christ Jesus.
When their cruel enemies have given them no rest in this world; when, as oftentimes
has been the case, they could not flee, nor in any way avoid the rage of their adversaries,
but many of them have been tormented gradually from day to day, that their torments
might be lengthened; still rest has been found even then in Christ. It has been often
found by experience; the martyrs have often showed plainly that the peace and calm
of their minds were undisturbed in the midst of the greatest bodily torment, and
have sometimes rejoiced and sung praises upon the rack and in the fire. If Christ
is pleased to send forth his Spirit to manifest his love, and speaks friendly to
the soul, it will support it even in the greatest outward torment that man can inflict.
Christ is the joy of the soul, and if the soul be but rejoiced and filled with divine
light, such joy no man can take away; whatever outward misery there be, the spirit
will sustain it.
Secondly. There is in Christ rest for God's people, when exercised with afflictions.
If a person labour under great bodily weakness, or under some disease that causes
frequent and strong pains, such things will tire out so feeble a creature as man.
It may to such an one be a comfort and an effectual support to think, that he has
a Mediator, who knows by experience what pain is; who by his pain has purchased eternal
ease and pleasure for him; and who will make his brief sufferings to work out a far
more exceeding delight, to be bestowed when he shall rest from his labours and sorrows.
If a person be brought into great straits as to outward subsistence, and poverty
brings abundance of difficulties and extremities; yet it may be a supporting, refreshing
consideration to such an one to think, that he has a compassionate Savior, who when
upon earth, was so poor that he had not where to lay his head, and who became poor
to make him rich, and purchased for him durable riches, and will make his poverty
work out an exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
If God in his providence calls his people to mourn over lost relations, and if he
repeats his stroke and takes away one after another of those that were dear to him;
it is a supporting, refreshing consideration to think, that Christ has declared that
he will be in stead of all relations unto those who trust in him. They are as his
mother, and sister, and brother; he has taken them into a very near relation to himself:
and in every other afflictive providence, it is a great comfort to a believing soul
to think that he has an intercessor with God, that by him he can have access with
confidence to the throne of grace, and that in Christ we have so many great and precious
promises, that all things shall work together for good, and shall issue in eternal
blessedness. God's people, whenever they are scorched by afflictions as by hot sun-beams,
may resort to him, who is as a shadow of a great rock, and be effectually sheltered,
and sweetly refreshed.
Thirdly. There is in Christ quiet rest and sweet refreshment for God's people, when
wearied with the buffetings of Satan. The devil, that malicious enemy of God and
man, does whatever lies in his power to darken and hinder, and tempt God's people,
and render their lives uncomfortable. Often he raises needless and groundless scruples,
and casts in doubts, and fills the mind with such fear as is tormenting, and tends
to hinder them exceedingly in the christian course; and he often raises mists and
clouds of darkness, and stirs up corruption, and thereby fills the mind with concern
and anguish, and sometimes wearies out the soul. So that they may say as the psalmist;
"Many bulls have compassed me: strong bulls of Bashan have beset me round. They
gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion."
In such a case if the soul flies to Jesus Christ, they may find rest in him, for
he came into the world to destroy Satan, and to rescue souls out of his hands. And
he has all things put under his feet, whether they be things in heaven, or things
on earth, or things in hell, and therefore he can restrain Satan when he pleases.
And that he is doubtless ready enough to pity us under such temptations, we may be
assured, for he has been tempted and buffeted by Satan as well as we. He is able
to succour those that are tempted, and he has promised that the will subdue Satan
under his people's feet. Let God's people therefore, when they are exercised with
any of those kinds of weariness, make their resort unto Jesus Christ for refuge and
rest.
REFLECTIONS
1. We may here see great reason to admire the goodness and grace of God to us in
our low estate, that he has so provided for our help and relief. We are by our own
sin against God plunged into all sort of evil, and God has provided a remedy for
us against every sort of evil, he has left us helpless in no calamity. We by our
sin have exposed ourselves to wrath, to a vindictive justice; but God has done very
great things that we might be saved from that wrath; he has been at infinite cost
that the law might be answered without our suffering. We by our sins have exposed
ourselves to terror of conscience, in expectation of the dreadful storm of God's
wrath; but God has provided for us a hiding-place from the storm, he bids us enter
into his chambers, and hide ourselves from indignation. We by sin have made ourselves
poor, needy creatures; but God has provided for us gold tried in the fire. We by
sin have made ourselves naked; and when he passed by, he took notice of our want,
and has provided us white raiment that we may be clothed. We have made ourselves
blind, and God in mercy to us has provided eye-salve, that we may see. We have deprived
ourselves of all spiritual food; we are like the prodigal son that perished with
hunger, and would gladly have filled his belly with husks. God has taken notice of
this our condition, and has provided for us a feast of fat things, and has sent forth
his servants to invite the poor, the maimed, the halt, and the blind. We by sin have
brought ourselves into a dry and thirsty wilderness; but God was merciful, and took
notice of our condition, and has provided for us rivers of water, water out of the
rock. We by sin have brought upon ourselves a miserable slavery and bondage; God
has made provision for our liberty. We have exposed ourselves to weariness; God has
provided a resting-place for us. We by sin have exposed ourselves to many outward
troubles and afflictions; God has pitied us, and in Christ has provided true comfort
for us. We have exposed ourselves to our grand enemy, even Satan, to be tempted and
buffeted by him; God has pitied, and has provided for us a Savior and Captain of
salvation, who has overcome Satan, and is able to deliver us. Thus God has in Christ
provided sufficiently for our help in all kinds of evils.
How ought we to bless God for this abundant provision he has made for us, poor and
sinful as we were, who were so undeserving and so ungrateful. He made no such provision
for the fallen angels, who are left without remedy in all the woes and miseries into
which they are plunged.
2. We should admire the love of Christ to men, that he has thus given himself to
be the remedy for all their evil, and a fountain of all good. Christ has given himself
to us, to be all things to us that we need. We want clothing, and Christ does not
only give us clothing, but he gives himself to be our clothing, that we might put
him on. Galatians 3:27. "For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ
have put on Christ." Romans 13:14. "But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof."
We want food, and Christ has given himself to be our food; he has given his own flesh
to be our meat, and his blood to be our drink, to nourish our soul. Thus Christ tells
us that he is the bread which came down from heaven, and the bread of life. "I
am that bread of life. Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead.
This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and
not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this
bread, he shall live for ever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which
I will give for the life of the world." In order to our eating of his flesh,
it was necessary that he should be slain, as the sacrifices must be slain before
they could be eaten; and such was Christ's love to us, that he consented to be slain,
he went as a sheep to the slaughter, that he might give us his flesh to be food for
our poor, famishing souls.
We are in need of a habitation; we by sin have, as it were, turned ourselves out
of house and home; Christ has given himself to be the habitation of his people. Psalm
90:1. "Lord, thou has been our dwelling-place in all generations." It is
promised to God's people that they should dwell in the temple of God for ever, and
should go no more out; and we are told that Christ is the temple of the new Jerusalem.
Christ gives himself to his people to be all things to them that they need, and all
things that make for their happiness. Colossians 3:11. "Where there is neither
Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond, nor free;
but Christ is all, and in all." And that he might be so, he has refused nothing
that is needful to prepare him to be so.
When it was needful that he should be incarnate, he refused it not, but became man,
and appeared in the form of a servant. When it was needful that he should be slain,
he refused it not, but gave himself for us, and gave himself to us upon the cross.
Here is love for us to admire, for us to praise, and for us to rejoice in, with joy
that is full of glory for ever.
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