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THE SIGNS OF ELECTION
1Th 1:5-8 (R.V.) THE Revised Version renders the
οτι, with which ver. 5 begins,
"how
that," the Authorised Version, "for." In the first case, the
Apostle is made to explain in what election consists; in the other,
he explains how it is that he knows the Thessalonians to be among
the
elect. There is hardly room to doubt that it is this last which he
intends to do. Election does not consist in the things which he
proceeds to enlarge upon, though these may be in some sense its
effects or tokens; and there is something like unanimity among
scholars in favour of the rendering "for," or "because." What,
then, are the grounds of the statement, that Paul knows the election
of the Thessalonians? They are twofold; lying partly in his own
experience, and that of his fellow labourers, while they preached
the
gospel in Thessalonica; and partly in the reception which the
Thessalonians gave to their message. I The tokens in the preacher that his hearers are elect: "Our
gospel came not unto you in word only, but in power, and in the Holy
Ghost, and in much assurance." That was the consciousness of the
preachers themselves, but they could appeal to those who had heard
them: "even as ye know what manner of men we showed ourselves toward
you for your sake." The self-consciousness of the preacher, we see from these words, is
a
legitimate though a perilous study. Everyone has been told that
there
is no relation whatever between his own consciousness when
preaching,
and the effect of what is preached; but has anybody ever quite
believed this? If there were no relation whatever between the
preacher’s Consciousness and his conscience; if he did not know that
many a time neglect of prayer or duty had separated him from God,
and
made him useless as an evangelist, it would be easier to believe it;
but as our life is, the preacher may know quite well that it is no
proof of God’s good will to men that he is sent to preach to them;
or, on the other hand, he may have a humble but sure trust that when
he Stands up to speak, God is with him for good to his hearers. Thus
it was with Paul at Thessalonica. The heartiness with which he speaks here justifies the inference
that
he had had experiences of an opposite and disappointing kind. Twice
in Asia. {Ac 16:6 f.} he had been forbidden by the Spirit to
preach at all; he could not argue that the people so passed by were
specially favoured of God. Often, especially in his intercourse with
the Jews, he must have spoken, like Isaiah, with the depressing
consciousness that it was all in vain; that the sole issue would be
to blind their eyes and harden their hearts and seal them up in
impenitence. In Corinth, just before writing this letter, he had
come
forward with unusual trepidation—in weakness and fear and much
trembling; and though there also the Holy Spirit and a divine power
brought home the gospel to men’s hearts, he seems to have been so
far
from that inward assurance which he enjoyed at Thessalonica, that
the
Lord appeared to him in a vision by night to reveal the existence of
an election of grace even in Corinth. "Fear not: I have much people
in this city." In Thessalonica he had no such sinking of heart. He
came thither, as he hoped to go to Rome, in the fulness of the
blessing of Christ. {Ro 15:29} He knew in himself that God had
given it to him to be a true minister of His grace; he was full of
power by the Spirit of the Lord. That is why he says so confidently,
"Knowing your election." The Apostle explains himself more precisely when he writes, "not in
word only, but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much
assurance." The gospel must come in word at least; but what a
profanation it is to preach it only in word. Not preachers only, but
all Christians, have to be on their guard, lest familiarity rob the
great words of the gospel of their reality, and they themselves sink
into that worst atheism which is forever handling holy things
without
feeling them. How easy is it to speak of God, Christ, redemption,
atonement, sanctification, heaven, hell, and to be less impressed
and
less impressive than if we were speaking of the merest trivialities
of everyday life. It is hard to believe that an apostle could have
seen such a possibility even from afar; yet the contrast of "word"
and "power" leaves no room to doubt that such is his meaning. Words
alone are worthless. No matter how brilliant, how eloquent, how
imposing they may be, they cannot do the work of an evangelist. The
call to this requires "power." No definition of power is given; we can only see that it is that
which achieves spiritual results, and that the preacher is conscious
of possessing it. It is not his own, certainly: it works through the
very consciousness of his own want of power; "when I am weak, then
am I strong." But it gives him hope and confidence in his work. Paul
knew that it needed a stupendous force to make bad men good; the
forces to be overcome were so enormous. All the sin of the world was
arrayed against the gospel; all the dead weight of men’s
indifference, all their pride, all their shame, all their
self-satisfaction, all their cherished wisdom. But he came to
Thessalonica strong in the Lord, confident that his message would
subdue those who listened to it; and therefore, he argued, the
Thessalonians were the objects of God’s electing grace. Power stands side by side with the "Holy Ghost." In a sense, the
Holy Ghost is the source of all spiritual virtues, and therefore of
the very power of which we have been speaking; but the words are
probably used here with some narrower meaning. The predominant use
of
the name in the New Testament bids us think of that divine fervour
which the spirit kindles in the soul—that ardour of the new life
which Christ Himself speaks of as fire. Paul came to Thessalonica
aglow with Christian passion. He took that as a good omen in his
work, a sign that God meant well to the Thessalonians. By nature men
do not care passionately for each other as he cared for those to
whom
he preached in that city. They are not on fire with love, seeking
each other’s good in spiritual things; consumed with fervent longing
that the bad should cease from their badness, and come to enjoy the
pardon, the purity, and the company of Christ. Even in the heart of
apostles—for though they were apostles they were men—the fire may
sometimes have burned low, and a mission have been, by comparison,
languid and spiritless; but at least on this occasion the
evangelists
were all on fire; and it assured them that God had a people waiting
for them in the unknown city. If "power" and the "Holy Ghost" are in some degree to be judged
only by their effects, there can be no question that "much
assurance," on the other hand, is an inner experience, belonging
strictly to the self-consciousness of the preacher. It means a full
and strong conviction of the truth of the gospel. We can only
understand this by contrast with its opposite; "much assurance" is
the counterpart of misgiving or doubt. We can hardly imagine an
apostle in doubt about the gospel—not quite certain that Christ had
risen from the dead; wondering whether, after all, His death had
abolished sin. Yet these truths, which are the sum and substance of
the gospel, seem, at times, too great for belief; they do not
coalesce with the other contents of our mind; they do not weave
easily into one piece with the warp and woof of our common thoughts;
there is no common measure for them and the rest of our experience,
and the shadow of unreality falls upon them. They are so great that
it needs a certain greatness to answer to them, a certain boldness
of
faith to which even a true Christian may feel momentarily unequal;
and while he is unequal, he cannot do the work of an evangelist.
Doubt paralyses; God cannot work through a man in whose soul there
are misgivings about the truth. At least, His working will be
limited
to the sphere of what is certain for him through whom He works; and
if we would be effective ministers of the word, we must speak only
what we are sure of, and seek the full assurance of the whole truth.
No doubt such assurance has conditions. Unfaithfulness of one kind
or
another is, as our Lord teaches, {Joh 7:17} the source of
uncertainty as to the truth of His word; and prayer, repentance, and
obedience due, the way to certainty again. But Paul had never been
more confident of the truth and power of his gospel than when he
came
to Thessalonica. He had seen it proved in Philippi, in conversions
so
dissimilar as those of Lydia and the jailor. He had felt it in his
own heart, in the songs which God had given him in the night while
he
suffered for Christ’s sake. He came among those whom he addresses
confident that it was God’s instrument to save all who believed.
This
is his last personal reason for believing the Thessalonians to be
elect. Strictly speaking, all this refers rather to the delivery of the
message than to the messengers, to the preaching than to the
preachers; but the Apostle applies it to the latter also. "Ye
know," he writes, "what manner of men we showed ourselves toward
you for your sakes." I venture to think that the word rendered
"we showed ourselves" has really the passive sense—"what God
enabled us to be"; it is God’s good will to the Thessalonians which
is in view, and the Apostle infers that good will from the character
which God enabled him and his friends to sustain for their sakes.
Who
could deny that God had chosen them, when He had sent them Paul and
Silas and Timothy; not mere talkers, cold and spiritless, and
dubious
of their message; but men strong in spiritual force, in holy fervour,
and in their grasp of the gospel? If that did not go to show that
the
Thessalonians were elect, what could? II The self-consciousness of the preachers, however, significant as
it was, was no conclusive evidence. It only became such when their
inspiration was caught by those who listened to them; and this was
the case at Thessalonica. "Ye became imitators of us and of the
Lord, having received the word in much affliction, with joy of the
Holy Ghost." This peculiar expression implies that the signs of
God’s election were to be seen in the evangelists, and eminently in
the Lord. Paul shrinks from making himself and his companions types
of the elect, without more ado; they are such only because they are
like Him, of whom it is written, "Behold my servant whom I uphold;
Mine elect, in whom My soul delighteth." He speaks here in the same
strain as in 1Co 11:1: "Brethren, be ye imitators of me, even
as I also am of Christ." They who have become like the Lord are
marked out as the chosen of God. But the Apostle does not rest in this generality. The imitation in
question consisted in this—that the Thessalonians received the word
in much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost. It is, of course, in
the last part of the sentence that the point of comparison is found.
In a sense it is true that the Lord Himself received the word which
He spoke to men. "I do nothing of Myself," He says; "but as the
Father hath taught Me, I speak these things." {Joh 8:28} But
such a reference is irrelevant here. The significant point is that
the acceptance of the gospel by the Thessalonians brought them into
fellowship with the Lord, and with those who continued His work, in
that which is the distinction and criterion of the new Christian
life
— much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost. That is a summary of
the life of Christ, the Apostle of the Father. {Joh 17:18} It is
more obviously a summary of the life of Paul, the apostle of Jesus
Christ. The acceptance of the gospel meant much affliction for him:
"I will show him how great things he must suffer for My name’s
sake." It meant also a new and supernatural joy, a joy arising from,
and sustained by, the Holy Spirit, a joy triumphant in and over all
sufferings. This combination of affliction and spiritual joy, this
original, paradoxical experience, is the token of election. Where
the
children of God live, as Christ and His apostles lived, in the midst
of a world at war with God and His cause, they will suffer; but
suffering will not break their spirit, or embitter them, or lead
them
to desert God; it will be accompanied with spiritual exaltation,
keeping them sweet, and humble, and joyful, through it all. Paul
knew
the Thessalonians were elect, because he saw that new power in
them.,
to rejoice in tribulations, which can only be seen in those who have
the spirit of God. This test, obviously, can only be applied when the gospel is a
suffering cause. But if the profession of the Christian faith, and
the leading of a Christian life entail no affliction, what shall we
say? If we read the New Testament. aright, we shall say that there
is
a mistake somewhere. There is always a cross; there is always
something to bear or to overcome for righteousness’ sake; and the
spirit in which it is met tells whether God is with us or not. Not
every age is, like the apostolic, an age of open persecution, of
spoiling of goods, of bonds, and scourging, and death; but the
imitation of Christ in His truth and faithfulness will surely be
resented somehow; and it is the seal of election when men rejoice
that they are counted worthy to suffer shame for His name. Only the
true children of God can do that. Their joy is in some sense a
present recompense for their sufferings; but for suffering they
could
not know it. "I never knew," said Rutherford, "by my nine years
preaching, so much of Christ’s love as He hath taught me in
Aberdeen,
by six months imprisonment." It is a joy that never fails those who
face affliction that they may be true to Christ. Think of the
Christian boys in Uganda, in 1885, who were bound alive to a
scaffolding and slowly burned to death. The spirit of the martyrs
at once entered into these lads, and together they raised their
voices and praised Jesus in the fire, singing till their shrivelled
tongues refused to form the sound:— "Daily, daily, sing to Jesus, Sing, my soul,
His praises due; All He does deserves our praises,
And our deep devotion too". For in deep humiliation, He for us did live
below; Died on Calvary’s cross of torture, Rose
to save our souls from woe. Who can doubt that these three are among the chosen of God? And who
can think of such scenes, and such a spirit, and recall without
misgiving the querulous, fretful, aggrieved tone of his own life,
when things have not gone with him exactly as he could have wished? The Thessalonians were so conspicuously Christian, so unmistakably
exhibited the new Divine type of character, that they became a model
to all the believers in Macedonia and Achaia. Their conversion
called
the attention of all men to the gospel, like a clear and
far-resounding trumpet blast. Thessalonica was a place of much
coming
and going on all sides; and the success of the evangelists there,
being carried abroad in various ways, advertised their work, and so
far prepared for their coming. Paul would naturally have spoken of
it
when he went to a new city, but found it unnecessary; the news had
preceded him; in every place their faith to God-ward had gone forth.
So far as we learn, it was the most impressive incident which had
yet
occurred in the progress of the gospel. A work of grace so
characteristic, so thorough, and so unmistakable, was a token of
God’s goodness, not only to those who were immediately the subjects
of it, but to all who heard, and by hearing had their interest
awakened in the evangelists and their message. This whole subject has a side for preachers, and a side for hearers
of the gospel. The preacher’s peril is the peril of coming to men in
word only; saying things which he does not feel, and which others,
therefore, will not feel; uttering truths, it may be, but truths
which have never done anything for him—enlightened, quickened, or
sanctified him—and which he cannot hope, as they come from his lips,
will do anything for others; or worse still, uttering things of
which
he cannot even be confident that they are true. Nothing could be
less
a sign of God’s grace to men than to abandon them to such a
preacher,
instead of sending them one full of power, and of the Holy Ghost,
and
of assurance. But whatever the preacher may be, there is something
left to the hearer. There were people with whom even Paul, full of
power and of the Holy Ghost, could not prevail. There were people
who
hardened their hearts against Christ; and let the preacher be ever
so
unworthy of the gospel, the virtue is in it, and not in him. He may
not do anything to commend it to men; but does it need his
commendation? Can we make bad preaching an excuse for refusing to
become imitators of the Lord It may condemn the preacher, but it can
never excuse us. Look steadily at the seal which God sets upon His
own—the union of affliction with spiritual joy—and follow Christ in
the life which is marked by this character as not human only, but
Divine. That is the way prescribed to us here to make our election
sure. |