THE LESSONS OF SUFFERING.— 1Pe 4:1-6
IT is always hard to swim against the stream; and if the effort be a
moral one, the difficulty is not lessened. These early Christians
were finding it so. For them there must have existed hardships of
which today we can have no experience, and form but an imperfect
estimate. If they lived among a Jewish population, these were sure
to
be offended at the new faith. And when we remember the zeal for
persecution of a Saul of Tarsus, we can see that in many cases the
better the Jew the more would he feel himself bound, if possible, to
exterminate the new doctrines. Among the heathen the lot of the
Christians was often worse. Did the people listen a while to the
teaching of the missionaries, yet so unstable were they that, as at
Lystra, today might see them stoning those whom yesterday they were
venerating as gods; and they could easily, by reason of their
greater
numbers, bring the magistrates to inflict penalties even where the
multitude refrained from mob violence. The cry, "These men
exceedingly trouble our city," or "These who turn the world upside
down are come among us," was sure to find a ready audience; while
the uproar and violence which raged in a city like Ephesus, when
Paul
and his companions preached there, show how many temporal interests
could be banded together against the Christian cause. On individual
believers, not of the number of the preachers, the more violent
attacks might not fall; but to suffer in the flesh was the lot of
most of them in St. Peter’s day. Hence the strong figure he employs
to describe the preparation they will need: "Arm ye yourselves"
— make you ready, for you are going forth to battle. St. Paul also,
writing to Rome and Corinth, uses the same figure: "Let us put on the
armor of light," "the armor of righteousness on the right hand and
on the left." "Forasmuch then as Christ suffered in the flesh, arm ye
yourselves also with the same mind." Though some strokes of the
foe will fall on the flesh, the conflict is really a spiritual
one. The suffering in the body is to be sustained and surmounted
by an inward power; the armor of light and of righteousness is
the equipment of the soul, which panoply the Apostle here calls
the mind of Christ. Now what is the mind of Christ which can
avail His struggling servants? The word implies intention,
purpose, resolution, that on which the heart is set. Now the
intention of Christ’s life was to oppose and overcome all that
was evil, and to consecrate Himself to all good for the love of
His people. This latter He tells us in His parting prayer for
His disciples: "For their sakes I sanctify Myself, that they
themselves also may be sanctified in truth," {Joh 17:19}
while every action of His life proclaims His determined enmity
against sin. This brought Him obloquy while He lived in the
world, and in the end a shameful death; but these things did not
abate His hatred of sin, nor lessen His love for sinners. For
still into the city where He reigns there shall in no wise enter
anything that defileth, {Re 21:27} though to the faithful
penitent "the Spirit and the bride say, Come, and he that is
athirst, let him come; he that will, let him take the water of
life freely". {Re 22:17} Christ bare willingly all that was laid upon Him that He might bring
men unto God. This is the spirit, this the purpose, the intent, with
which His followers are to be actuated: to have the same strenuous
abhorrence of sin, the same devotion in themselves to goodness,
which
shall make them inflexible, however fiercely they may be assailed.
Let them only make the resolve, and power shall be bestowed to
strengthen them. He who says, "Arm yourselves," supplies the
weapons when His servants need them. Jesus Himself found them ready
when the tempter came, and drew them in all their keenness and
strength from the Divine armory. Satan comes to others as he came to
Christ, and will make them flinch and waver, if he can. At times he
offers attractive baits; at times he brings fear to his aid. But, in
whatever shape he comes or sends his agents, let them but cling to
the mind of Christ, and they shall, like Him, say triumphantly, "Get
thee behind me, Satan." "For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from
sin." God intends it to be so, and the earnest Christian
strives with all his might that it may be so. To help men God
sends them sufferings, and intends them to have a moral effect
on the life. They are not penal; they are the discipline of
perfect love desiring that men should be held back from
straying. Men cannot always see the purposes of God at first,
and are prone to bewail their lot. But here and there a saint of
old has left his testimony. One of the later psalmists had
discovered the blessedness of God-sent trials: "Before I was
afflicted I went astray; but now I observe Thy word"; and, in
thankful acknowledgment of the love which sent the blows, he
adds, "It is good for me that I have been afflicted, that I
might learn Thy statutes". {Ps 119:67,71} Hezekiah had
learnt the lesson, though it brought him close to the gates of
the grave; but he testifies, "Behold, it was for my peace that
I had great bitterness. Thou hast cast all my sins behind Thy
back." {Isa 38:17} God had blotted out the evil record that
he who had suffered in the flesh might cease from sin. It is good
for us thus to recognize that God’s dispensations are for our
correction and teaching, and that without them we should have
been verily desolate, left to choose our own way, which would
surely have been evil; and though we cannot cease from sin while
we are in the flesh, God’s mercy places the ideal state before
us—"He that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from
sin"—that we may be strengthened, nevermore to submit
ourselves to the yoke of wickedness. How shall he that is dead
to sin live any longer therein? Live therein he cannot. Of that
old man within him he will have no resurrection, for though the
motions, the promptings to evil, are there, the love of evil is
slain by the greater love of Christ. "That ye no longer should live the rest of your time in the
flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God." Christians
must live out their lives till God calls them, and for the rest
of their time in the flesh they will be among their wonted
surroundings. Just as Christian slaves must abide with their
masters, and Christian wives continue with their husbands, so
each several believer must do his duty where God has placed him.
But because he is a believer it will be done in a different
spirit. He is daily cutting himself away from what the world
counts for life; he has begun to live in the Spirit, and the
natural man is weakened day by day; he knows that what is born
of the flesh is flesh, and bears the taint of sin: so he refuses
to follow where it would lead him. Men often plead for evil
habits that they are natural, forgetting that "natural" thus
used means human, corrupt nature. The birth of the Spirit
transforms this nature, and the renewed man goes about his
worldly life with a new motive, new purposes. He must follow his
lawful calling like other folks, but the sense of his pilgrimage
makes him to differ; he is longing to depart, and holds himself
in constant readiness. Worldly men live as though they were
rooted here and would never be moved. "Their inward thought is
that their houses shall continue for ever, and their
dwelling-places to all generations; they call their lands after
their own names". {Ps 49:2} To the servant of Christ life
wears another aspect. He is content to live on, for God so wills
it, and has work for him to do. To continue in the flesh may be,
as it was to St. Paul, the fruit of his labor. And he welcomes
this owning of his work, and will spend his powers in like
service. Yet, with the Apostle, he has ever "the desire to
depart and be with Christ, for it is very far better". {Php
1:23} And as he strives to fulfill God’s intent by crucifying the old man
and ceasing from sin, the Christian rejoices in a growing sense of
freedom. To follow the lusts of men was to serve many and hard
taskmasters. Riches, fame, luxury, sensual indulgences, riotous
living, are all keen to win new slaves, and paint their lures in the
most attractive colors; and one appetite will make itself the ally
of
another, lust hard by greed, so that the chains of him who takes
service with them are riveted many times over, and difficult, often
impossible, to be cast off. But the will of God is one: "One is your
Master"; "Love the Lord your God with all your heart"; "And all
ye are brethren"; "Love your neighbor as yourself." Then shall you
enter into life. And the life of this promise is not that fragment
of
time, which remains to men in the flesh, but that unending
after-life
where the natural body shall be exchanged for a spiritual body, and
death be swallowed up in victory. "For the time past may suffice to have wrought the desire of
the Gentiles." The Apostle here seems to be addressing the Jews
who, living among the Gentiles, had, like their forefathers in
Canaan, learned their works. The nation was not so prone to fall
away into heathendom after the Captivity; yet some of them in
the dispersion, like Samson when he went down unto the
Philistines, may have been captured and blinded and made to
serve. The proximity of evil is infectious. To the Gentile
converts St. Peter speaks elsewhere as having been slaves to
their lusts in ignorance. {1Pe 1:14} But whether Jew or
Gentile, when they had once tasted the joy of this purer
service, this law of obedience which made them truly free, they
would be strengthened to suffer in the flesh rather than fall
back upon their former life. The time would seem enough, far
more than enough, to have been thus defiled. All was God’s; all
that remained must be given to Him with strenuous devotion. St. Peter seems to place in contrast, as he describes the two ways
of
life, two words, one by which he denotes the service of God, by the
other devotion to the world and its attractions. The former
(θελημα)
implies a pleasure and joy; it is the will of God that which He
delights in, and which He makes to be a joy to those who serve Him.
The other (βουλημα) has a sense of longing, unsatisfied want, a
state which craves for something which it cannot attain. St. Paul
describes it as "led away by divers lusts, ever learning" (but in
an evil school), "never able to come to the knowledge of the truth,
corrupted in mind, reprobate". {2Ti 3:7} Such is the desire of
the Gentiles. The Apostle describes it in his next words: "To have
walked in lasciviousness, lusts, winebibbings, revellings,
carousings, and abominable idolatries." How gross heathendom can be
our missionaries from time to time reveal to us. All the
corruptions,
which they describe, were reigning in full power round about these
converts. When men change the glory of the incorruptible God for the
likeness of corruptible man or even worse, and worship and serve the
creature, their own animal passions, rather than the Creator, there
is no depth of degradation to which they may not sink. St. Paul has
painted for us some dark pictures of what such lives could be. {Ro
1:24-32 Col 3:5-8} But though Christianity in our own land has
forced sin to veil some of its fouler aspects, vice has not changed
its nature. The same passions rule in the hearts of those who live
to
the lusts of men, and not to the will of God. The flesh warreth
against the Spirit, even if the Spirit be not utterly quenched, and
brings men into its slavery. For the sake of Christ, then, and for
love of the brethren, the faithful have need still to be
proclaiming,
"Let the time past suffice," and by their actions to testify that
they are willing to suffer in the flesh, if so be they may thereby
be
sustained in the battle against sin and may strengthen their
brethren
to walk in a new way. "Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them
into the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you." The
godless love to be a large company, that they may keep one
another in heart. Hence they who have been of them, and would
fain withdraw, have no easy task; and to win new comrades
sinners are ever most solicitous. Their invitations at first
will take a friendly tone. Solomon understood them well, and
described them in warning to his son: "Come with us," they
say: "let us lay wait for blood; let us lurk privily for the
innocent without cause; let us swallow them up alive as Sheol,
and whole as those that go down into the pit. We shall find
all precious substance; we shall fill our houses with spoil.
Thou shalt cast thy lot among us; we will all have one
purse". {Pr 1:11-14} This is one fashion of their excess
of riot, but there are many more. The Apostle’s words picture
their life as an overflow, a deluge. And the figure is not
strange in Holy Writ. "The floods of ungodly men made me
afraid," says the Psalmist; {Ps 18:14} and St. Jude,
writing about the same time as St. Peter and of the same evil
days, calls such sinners "wild waves of the sea, foaming out
their own shames". {Jude 1:14} "Shames," he says,
because the floods of excess pour on in overwhelming abundance,
and those who escape from them do so only with much suffering in
the flesh, sent of God, to set them free from sin. And if there be no hope of winning recruits or alluring back those
who have escaped, the godless follow another course. They hate, and
persecute, and malign. Ever since the days of Cain this has been the
policy of the wicked, though not all push it so far as did the first
murderer. {1Jo 3:12} For the life of the righteous is a constant
reproach to them. They have made their own choice, but it yields
them
no comfort; and if one means of making others as wretched as
themselves fails, they take another. They point the finger of hatred
and scorn at the faithful. To the Greeks Christ’s faith was
foolishness. The Athenians, full of this world’s wisdom, asked about
Paul, "What will this babbler say?" and mocked as they heard of the
resurrection of the dead. With them and such as they this life is
all. But the Christian has his consolation: he has committed his
cause to another Judge, before whom they also who speak evil of him
must appear. "Who shall give account to Him that is ready to judge the
quick and the dead." The Christian looks on to the coming
judgment. He can therefore disregard the censures of men.
Neither the penalties nor the revilings of the world trouble
him. They are a part of the judgment in the present life; by
them God is chastening him, preparing him by the suffering in
the flesh to be more ready for the coming of the Lord. In that
day it will be seen how the servant has been made like unto his
Master, how he has welcomed the purging which Christ gives to
His servants that they may bring forth more fruit. He believes,
yea knows, that in the Judge who has been teaching and judging
him here day by day he will find a Mediator and a Savior. With
the unbeliever all is otherwise. He has refused correction, has
chosen his own path, and drawn away his neck from the yoke of
Christ; his judgment is all yet to come. The Judge is ready, but
He is full of mercy. St. Peter’s phrase implies this. It tells
of readiness, but also of holding back, of a desire to spare. He
is on His throne, the record is prepared, but yet He waits; He
is Himself the long-suffering Vinedresser who pleads, "Let it
alone this year also." Such has been the mercy of God even from the days of Eden. In the
first temptation Eve adds one sin upon another. First she listens to
the insidious questioning which proclaims the speaker a foe to God:
then without remonstrance she hears God’s truth declared a lie;
hearkens to an aspersion of the Divine goodness; then yields to the
tempter, sins, and leads her husband into sin. Not till then does
God’s judgment fall, which might have fallen at the first offence;
and when it is pronounced, it is full of pity, and gives more space
for repentance. So, though the Judge be ready, His mercy waits. For
He will judge the dead as well as the living: and while men live His
compassion goes forth in its fullness to the ignorant and them that
are out of the way. "For unto this end was the gospel preached even to the dead,
that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but
live according to God in the spirit." "Unto this end" what does it
signify? What but that
God has ever been true to the name under which He first revealed
Himself: "The Lord God, merciful and gracious"; {Ex 34:6} that
He has been preaching the Gospel to stoners by His dispensations
from
the first day until now? Thus was the Gospel preached unto
Abraham {Ga 3:8} when he was called from the home of his
fathers, and pointed forward through a life of trial to a world-wide
blessing. Heeding the lesson, he was gladdened by the knowledge of
the day of Christ. In like manner and unto this end was the Gospel
sent to God’s people in the wilderness, {Heb 4:2} even as unto
us; but the word of hearing did not profit them. With many of them
God was not well pleased. Yet He showed them in signs His Gospel
sacraments. They were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in
the
sea, did all eat the same spiritual meat, and all drank the same
spiritual drink, {1Co 10:2-4} for Christ was with them, as their
Rock of refreshing, all their journey through the desert, preaching
the Gospel by visitations now of mercy, now of affliction. Unto this
end He brought them many a time under the yoke of their enemies;
unto
this end He sent them into captivity. Thus were they being judged,
as
men count judgments, if haply they might listen in this life to the
gospel of trial and pain, and so live at last, as God counts life,
in
the spirit, when the final judgment-day is over. They are dead, but
to every generation of them was the Gospel preached, that God might
gather Him a great multitude to stand on His right hand in the day
of
account. Some have applied the Words of this verse to the sinners of the days
of Noah, connecting them closely with 1Pe 3:19; and truly,
though they be but one example out of a world of mercies, they are
very notable. They were doomed; they were dead while they lived:
"Everything that is in the earth shall die". {Ge 6:17} Yet to
them the preacher was sent, and unto this end: that though they were
to be drowned in the Deluge, and so in men’s sight be judged, their
souls might be saved, as God would have them saved, in the great day
of the Lord. But every visitation is a gospel, a gospel unto this
end: that through judgment here a people may be made ready in God’s
sight to be called unto His rest. Few passages have more powerful lessons than this for every age. The
world is full of suffering in the flesh. Who has not known it in
many
kinds? But it is in consequence, to those who will hear, very full
of
Gospel sermons. They cry aloud, Sin no more; the time past may
suffice to have wrought the will of the Gentiles. Suffering does not
mean that God is not full of love; rather it is a token that, in His
great love, He is training us, opening our eyes to our wrong-doings
that we may cast them off, and giving us a true standard to judge
between the desire of the Gentiles and the will of God. And though
men may look on us as sore afflicted, our Father, when the rest of
our time in the flesh shall be ended, will give us the true life
with
Him in the spirit.
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