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IMPEACHMENT OF THE JEWS
1Th 2:13-16 (R.V.) THESE verses complete the treatment of the subject with which this
chapter opens. The Apostle has drawn a moving picture of his life
and
labours in Thessalonica; he has pointed to it as his sufficient
vindication from all the charges laid against him. Before carrying
the war into the enemies’ camp, and depicting the traditions and the
spirit of his traducers, he lingers again for a moment on the happy
results of his work. In spite of persecution and calumny, he has
cause to thank God without ceasing when he remembers the reception
of
the gospel by the Thessalonians. When the message was brought to them, they accepted it, he says, not
as the word of men, but as what it was in truth, the word of God. It
is in this character that the gospel always presents itself. A word
of men cannot address men with authority; it must submit itself to
criticism; it must vindicate itself on grounds which man’s
understanding approves. Now, the gospel is not irrational; it is its
own demand that the Christian shall be ready to answer everyone who
demands a rational account of the hope that is in him. But neither
does it, on the other hand, come to us soliciting our approval;
submitting itself, as a system of ideas, to our scrutiny, and
courting approbation. It speaks with authority. It commands
repentance; it preaches forgiveness on the ground of Christ’s
death—a supreme gift of God which may be accepted or rejected, but
is not proposed for discussion; it exhibits the law of Christ’s life
as the law which is binding upon every human being, and calls upon
all men to follow him. Its decisive appeal is made to the conscience
and the will; and to respond to it is to give up will and conscience
to God. When the Apostle says, "Ye received it as, what it is in
truth, the word of God," he betrays, if one may use the word, the
consciousness of his own inspiration. Nothing is commoner now than
to
speak of the theology of Paul as if it were a private possession of
the Apostle, a scheme of thought that he had framed for himself, to
explain his own experience. Such a scheme of thought, we are told,
has no right whatever to impose itself on us; it has only a
historical and biographical interest; it has no necessary connection
with truth. The first result of this line of thought, in almost
every
case, is the rejection of the very heart of the apostolic gospel;
the
doctrine of the atonement is no longer the greatest truth of
revelation, but a rickety bridge on which Paul imagined he had
crossed from Pharisaism to Christianity. Certainly this modern
analysis of the epistles does not reflect the Apostle’s own way of
looking at what he called "My gospel." To him it was no device of
man, but unequivocally Divine; in very truth, the word of God. His
theology certainly came to him in the way of his experience; his
mind
had been engaged with it, and was engaged with it continually; but
he
was conscious that, with all this freedom, it rested at bottom on
the
truth of God; and when he preached it
— for his theology was the sum of the Divine truth he held, and he
did preach it—he did not submit it to men as a theme for discussion.
He put it above discussion. He pronounced a solemn and reiterated
anathema on either man or angel who should put anything else in its
stead. He published it, not for criticism, as though it had been his
own device; but, as the word of God, for the obedience of faith. The
tone of this passage recalls the word of our Lord, "Whoso shall not
receive the kingdom of God as a little child shall in no wise enter
therein." There are difficulties enough connected with the gospel,
but they are not of a kind that disappear while we stand and look at
them, or even stand and think about them; unquestioning surrender
solves many, and introduces us to experiences which enable us to
bear
the rest with patience. The word of God, in other words the gospel, proved its Divine
character in the Thessalonians after it was received. "It also
worketh," says Paul, "in you that believe." The last words are not
superfluous. The word preached, we read of an earlier generation,
did
not profit, not being mixed with faith in them that heard. Faith
conditions its efficacy. Gospel truth is an active force when it is
within the heart; but it can do nothing for us while doubt, pride,
or
unacknowledged reserve, keep it outside. If we have really welcomed
the Divine message, it will not be inoperative; it will work within
us all that is characteristic of New Testament life—love, joy,
peace, hope, patience. These are the proofs of its truth. Here,
then,
is the source of all graces: if the word of Christ dwell in us
richly; if the truth of the gospel, deep, manifold, inexhaustible,
yet ever the same, possess our hearts, -the desert shall rejoice and
blossom as the rose. The particular gospel grace which the Apostle has here in view is
patience. He proves that the word of God is at work in the
Thessalonians by pointing to the fact that they have suffered for
His
sake. "Had you been still of the world, the world would have loved
its own; but as it is, you have become imitators of the Christian
churches in Judea, and have suffered the same things at the hands of
your countrymen as they from theirs." Of all places in the world
Judea was that in which the gospel and its adherents had suffered
most severely. Jerusalem itself was the focus of hostility. No one
knew better than Paul, the zealous persecutor of heresy, what it had
cost from the very beginning to be true to the name of Jesus of
Nazareth. Scourging, imprisonment, exile, death by the sword or by
stoning, had rewarded such fidelity. We do not know to what
extremity
the enemies of the gospel had gone in Thessalonica; but the distress
of the Christians must have been great when the Apostle could make
this comparison even in passing. He had already told them {1Th
1:6} that much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost, is the very
badge of God’s elect; and here he combines the same stern necessity
with the operation of the Divine word in their hearts. Do not let us
overlook this. The work of God’s word (or if you prefer it, the
effect of receiving the gospel), is in the first instance to produce
a new character, a character not only distinct from that of the
unconverted, but antagonistic to it, and more directly and
inevitably
antagonistic, the more thoroughly it is wrought out; so that in
proportion as God’s word is operative in us, we come into collision
with the world which rejects it. To suffer, therefore, is to the
Apostle the seal of faith; it warrants the genuineness of a
Christian
profession. It is not a sign that God has forgotten His people, but
a
sign that He is with them; and that they are being brought by Him
into. fellowship with primitive churches, with apostles and
prophets,
with the Incarnate Son Himself. And hence the whole situation of the
Thessalonians, suffering included, comes under that heartfelt
expression of thanks to God with which the passage opens. It is not
a
subject for condolence, but for gratitude, that they have been
counted worthy to suffer shame for the Name. And now the Apostle turns from. the persecuted to the persecutors.
There is nothing in his epistles elsewhere that can be compared with
this passionate outburst. Paul was proud with no common pride of his
Jewish descent; it was better in his eyes than any patent of
nobility. His heart swelled as he thought of the nation to which the
adoption pertained, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving
of the law, and the service of God, and the promises; whose were the
fathers, and of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came. Apostle
of the Gentiles though he was, he had great sorrow and unceasing
pain
in his heart, when he remembered the antagonism of the Jews to the
gospel; he could have wished himself anathema from Christ for their
sakes. He was confident, too, that in some glorious future they
would
yet submit to the Messiah, so that all Israel should be saved. The
turning of the heathen to God would provoke them to jealousy; and
the
Divine calling with which the nation had been called in Abraham
would
reach its predestined goal. Such is the tone, and such the
anticipation, with which, not very long afterwards, Paul writes in
the epistle to the Romans. Here he looks at his countrymen with
other
eyes. They are identified, in his experience, with a fierce
resistance to the gospel, and with cruel persecutions of the Church
of Christ. Only in the character of bitter enemies has he been in
contact with them in recent years. They have hunted him from city to
city in Asia and in Europe; they have raised the populace against
his
converts; they have sought to poison the minds of his disciples
against him. He knows that this policy is that with which his
countrymen as a whole have identified themselves; and as he looks
steadily at it, he sees that in doing so they have only acted in
consistency with all their past history. The messengers whom God
sends to demand the fruit of His vineyard have always been treated
with violence and despite. The crowning sin of the race is put in
the
forefront; they slew the Lord Jesus; but before the Lord came, they
had slain His prophets; and after He had gone, they expelled His
apostles. God had put them in a position of privilege, but only for
a
time; they were the depositaries, or trustees, of the knowledge of
God as the Saviour of men; and now, when the time had come for that
knowledge to be diffused throughout all the world, they clung
proudly
and stubbornly to the old position. They pleased not God and were
contrary to all men, in forbidding the apostles to preach salvation
to the heathen. There is an echo, all through this passage, of the
Words of Stephen: "Ye stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart and
ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost." There are sentences in
heathen authors, who repaid the contempt and hatred of the Jews with
haughty disdain, that have been compared with this terrible
impeachment by the Apostle; but in reality, they are quite unlike.
What we have here is not a burst of temper, though there is
undoubtedly strong feeling in it; it is the vehement condemnation,
by
a man in thorough sympathy with the mind and spirit of God, of the
principles on which the Jews as a nation had acted at every period
of
their history. What is the relation of God to such a situation as is here
described?
The Jews, Paul says, did all this "to fill up their sins at all
times." He does not mean that that was their intention; neither does
he speak ironically; but speaking as he often does from that Divine
standpoint at which all results are intended and purposed results,
not outside of, but within, the counsel of God, he signifies that
this Divine end was being secured by their wickedness. The cup of
their iniquity was filling all the time. Every generation did
something to raise the level within. The men who bade Amos begone,
and eat his bread at home, raised it a little; the men who sought
Hosea’s life in the sanctuary raised it further; so did those who
put
Jeremiah in the dungeon, and those who murdered Zechariah between
the
temple and the altar. When Jesus was nailed to the cross, the cup
was
full to the brim. When those whom He left behind to be His
witnesses,
and to preach repentance and remission of sins to all men, beginning
at Jerusalem, were expelled or put to death, it ran over. God could
bear no more. Side by side with the cup of iniquity the cup of
judgment had been filling also; and they overflowed together. Even
when Paul wrote he could say, "The wrath is come upon them to the
very end." It is not easy to explain the precise force of these words. They
seem
to point definitely to some event, or some act of God, in which His
wrath had been unmistakably made manifest. To suppose that ‘the fall
of Jerusalem is meant is to deny that Paul wrote the words. All that
is certain is that the Apostle saw in the signs of the times some
infallible token that the nation’s day of grace had come to an end.
Perhaps some excess of a Roman procurator, now forgotten; perhaps
one
of those famines that desolated Judea in that unhappy age; perhaps
the recent edict of Claudius, expelling all Jews from Rome, and
betraying the temper of the supreme power; perhaps the coming shadow
of an awful doom, obscure in outline but none the less inevitable,
gave shape to the expression. The Jews had failed, in their day, to
recognise the things that belonged to their peace; and now they were
hid from their eyes. They had disregarded every presage of the
coming
storm; and at length the clouds that could not be charmed away had
accumulated over their heads, and the fire of God was ready to leap
out. This striking passage embodies certain truths to which we do well to
give heed. It shows us that there is such a thing as a national
character. In the providential government of God a nation is not an
aggregate of individuals, each one of whom stands apart from the
rest; it is a corporation with a unity, life, and spirit of its own.
Within that unity there may be a conflict of forces, a struggle of
good with evil, of higher with lower tendencies, just as there is in
the individual soul; but there will be a preponderance on one side
or
the other; and that side to which the balance leans will prevail
more
and more. In the vast spirit of the nation, as in the spirit of each
man or woman, through the slow succession of generations as in the
swift succession of years, character gradually assumes more fixed
and
definite form. There is a process of development, interrupted
perhaps
and retarded by such conflicts as I have referred to, but bringing
out all the more decisively and irreversibly the inmost spirit of
the
whole. There is nothing which the proud and the weak more dread than
inconsistency; there is nothing, therefore, which is so fatally
certain to happen as what has happened already. The Jews resented
from the first the intrusion of God’s word into their lives; they
had
ambitions and ideas of their own, and in its corporate action the
nation was uniformly hostile to the prophets. It beat one and killed
another and stoned a third; it was of a different spirit from them,
and from Him who sent them; and the longer it lived, the more like
itself, the more unlike God, it became. It was the climax of its
sin,
yet only the climax—for it had previously taken every step that led
to that eminence in evil—when it slew the Lord Jesus. And when it
was ripe for judgment, judgment fell upon it as a whole. It is not easy to speak impartially about our own country and its
character; yet such a character there undoubtedly is, just as there
is such a unity as the British nation. Many observers tell us that
the character has degenerated into a mere instinct for trade; and
that it has begotten a vast unscrupulousness in dealing with the
weak. Nobody will deny that there is a protesting conscience in the
nation, a voice which pleads in God’s name for justice, as the
prophets pied in Israel; but the question is not whether such a
voice
is audible, but whether in the corporate acts of the nation it is
obeyed. The state ought to be a Christian state. The nation ought to
be conscious of a spiritual vocation, and to be animated with the
spirit of Christ. In its dealings with other powers, in its
relations
to savage or half civilised peoples, in its care for the weak among
its own citizens, it should acknowledge the laws of justice and of
mercy. We have reason to thank God that in all these matters
Christian sentiment is beginning to tell. The opium trade with
China,
the liquor trade with the natives of Africa, the labour trade in the
South Seas, the dwellings of the poor, the public-house system with
its deliberate fostering of drunkenness, all these are matters in
regard to which the nation was in danger of settling into permanent
hostility to God, and in which there is now hope of better things.
The wrath which is the due and inevitable accompaniment of such
hostility, when persisted in, has not come on us to the very end;
God
has given us opportunity to rectify what is amiss, and to deal with
all our interests in the spirit of the New Testament. Let no one be
backward or indifferent when so great a work is in hand. The
heritage
of sin accumulates if it is not put away by well-doing; and with
sin,
judgment. It is for us to learn by the word of God and the examples
of history that the nation and kingdom that will not serve Him shall
perish. Finally, this passage shows us the last and worst form which sin can
assume, in the words "forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that
they should be saved." Nothing is so completely ungodly, so utterly
unlike God and opposed to Him, as that spirit which grudges others
the good things which it prizes for itself. When the Jewish nation
set itself relentlessly to prohibit the extension of the gospel to
the Gentiles—when the word was passed round the synagogues from
headquarters that this renegade Paul, who was summoning the pagans
to
become the people of God, was to be thwarted by fraud or
violence—God’s patience was exhausted. Such selfish pride was the
very negation of His love; the ne plus ultra of evil. Yet
nothing
is more easy and natural than for men who have occupied a position
of
privilege to indulge this temper. An imperial nation, which boasts
of
its freedom, grudges such freedom to others; it seems to lose the
very consciousness of being free, unless there is a subject people
over which it can tyrannise. In many relations of minor consequence,
political and social, we have cause to make this reflection. Do not
think that what is good for you is anything else than good for your
neighbour. If you are a better man because you have a comfortable
home, leisure, education, interest in public affairs, a place in the
church, so would he be. Above all, if the gospel of Christ is to you
the pearl above all price, take care how you grudge that to any
human
soul. This is not an unnecessary caution. The criticism of
missionary
methods, which may be legitimate enough, is interrupted too often by
the suggestion that such and such a race is not fit for the gospel.
Nobody who knows what the gospel is will ever make such a
suggestion;
but we have all heard it made, and we see from this passage what it
means. It is the mark of a heart which is deeply estranged from God,
and ignorant of the Golden Rule which embodies both gospel and law.
Let us rather be imitators of the great man who first entered into
the spirit of Christ, and discovered the open secret of His life and
death, -the mystery of redemption, -that the heathen should be heirs
with God’s ancient people, and of the same body, and partakers of
the
same promises. "Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do
ye even so to them." |