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PERSONAL PURITY
1Th 4:1-8 (R.V.) THE "finally" with which this chapter opens is the beginning of the
end of the Epistle. The personal matter which has hitherto occupied
us was the immediate cause of the Apostle’s writing; he wished to
open his heart to the Thessalonians, and to vindicate his conduct
against the insidious accusations of his enemies; and having done
so,
his main purpose is fulfilled. For what remains—this is the meaning
of "finally"—he has a few words to say suggested by Timothy’s
report upon their state. The previous chapter closed with a prayer for their growth in love,
with a view to their establishment in holiness. The prayer of a good
man avails much in its working; but his prayer of intercession
cannot
secure the result it seeks without the cooperation of those for whom
it is made. Paul, who has besought the Lord on their behalf, now
beseeches the Thessalonians themselves, and exhorts them in the Lord
Jesus, to walk as they had been taught by him. The gospel, we see
from this passage, contains a new law; the preacher must not only do
the work of an evangelist, proclaiming the glad tidings of
reconciliation to God, but the work of a catechist also, enforcing
on
those who receive the glad tidings the new law of Christ. This is in
accordance with the final charge of the Saviour: "Go and make
disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all
things whatsoever I have commanded you." The Apostle had followed
this Divine order; he had made disciples in Thessalonica, and then
he
had taught them how to walk and to please God. We who have been born
in a Christian country, and bred on the New Testament, are apt to
think that we know all these things; our conscience seems to us a
sufficient light. We ought to know that, though conscience is
universal in the human race, and everywhere distinguishes between a
right and a wrong, there is not one of our faculties which is more
in
need of enlightenment. No one doubts that men who have been
converted
from heathenism, like the Thessalonians, or the fruits of modern
missions in Nyassaland or Madagascar, need to be taught what kind of
life pleases God; but in some measure we all need such teaching. We
have not been true to conscience; it is set in our human nature like
the unprotected compass in the early iron ships: it is exposed to
influences from other parts of our nature which bias and deflect it
without our knowledge. It needs to be adjusted to the holy will of
God, the unchangeable standard of right, and protected against
disturbing forces. In Thessalonica Paul had laid down the new law,
he
says, through the Lord Jesus. If it had not been for Him, we should
have been without the knowledge of it altogether; we should have had
no adequate conception of the life with which God is well pleased.
But such a life is exhibited to us in the Gospels; its spirit and
requirements can be deduced from Christ’s example, and are
explicitly
set forth in His words. He left us an example, that we should follow
in His steps. "Follow Me," is the sum of His commandments; the one
all-embracing law of the Christian life. One of the subjects of which we should gladly know more is the use
of
the Gospels in the early Church; and this passage gives us one of
the
earliest glimpses of it. The peculiar mention of the Lord Jesus in
the second verse shows that the Apostle used the words and example
of
the Master as the basis of his moral teaching; the mind of Christ is
the norm for the Christian conscience. And if it be true that we
still need enlightenment as to the claims of God and the law of
life,
it is here we must seek it. The words of Jesus have still their old
authority. They still search our hearts, and show us all things that
ever we did, and their moral worth or worthlessness. They still
reveal to us unsuspected ranges of life and action in which God is
not yet acknowledged. They still open to us gates of righteousness,
and call on us to enter in, and subdue new territories to God. The
man who is most advanced in the life which pleases God, and whose
conscience is most nearly identical with the mind of Christ, will be
the first to confess his constant need of, and his constant
dependence upon, the word and example of the Lord Jesus. In addressing the Thessalonians, Paul is careful to recognise their
actual obedience. Ye do walk, he writes, according to this rule. In
spite of sins and imperfections, the church, as a whole, had a
Christian character; it was exhibiting human life in Thessalonica on
the new model; and while he hints that there is room for indefinite
progress, he does not fail to notice their present attainments. That
is a rule of wisdom, not only for those who have to censure or to
teach, but for all who wish to judge soberly the state and prospects
of the Church. We know the necessity there is for abounding more and
more in Christian obedience; we can see in how many directions,
doctrinal and practical, that which is lacking in faith requires to
be perfected; but we need not therefore be blind to the fact that it
is in the Church that the Christian standard is held up, and that
continuous, and not quite unsuccessful efforts, are made to reach
it.
The best men in a community, those whose lives come nearest to
pleasing God, are to he found among those who are identified with
the
gospel; and if the worst men in the community are also found in the
Church at times, that is because the corruption of the best is
worst.
If God has not cast off His Church altogether, He is teaching her to
do His will. "For this," the Apostle proceeds, "is the will of God,
even your sanctification." It is assumed here that the will of
God is the law, and ought to be the inspiration, of the
Christian. God has taken him out of the world that he may be
His, and live in Him and for Him. He is not his own any longer;
even his will is not his own; it is to be caught up and made one
with the will of God; and that is sanctification. No human will
works apart from God to this end of holiness. The other
influences which reach it, and bend it into accord with them,
are from beneath, not from above; as long as it does not
recognise the will of God as its rule and support, it is a
carnal, worldly, sinful will. But the will of God, to which it
is called to submit, is the saving of the human will from this
degradation. For the will of God is not only a law to which we
are required to conform, it is the one great and effective moral
power in the universe, and it summons us to enter into alliance
and cooperation with itself. It is not a dead thing; it is God
Himself working in us in furtherance of His good pleasure. To
tell us what the will of God is, is not to tell us what is
against us, but what is on our side; not the force which we have
to encounter, but that on which we can depend. If we set out on
an unchristian life, on a career of falsehood, sensuality,
worldliness, God is against us; if we go to perdition, we go
breaking violently through the safeguards with which He has
surrounded us, overpowering the forces by which He seeks to keep
us in check; but if we set ourselves to the work of
sanctification, He is on our side. He works in us and with us,
because our sanctification is His will. Paul does not mention it
here to dishearten the Thessalonians, but to stimulate them.
Sanctification is the one task which we can face confident that
we are not left to our own resources. God is not the taskmaster
we have to satisfy out of our own poor efforts, but the holy and
loving Father who inspires and sustains us from first to last.
To fall in with His will is to enlist all the spiritual forces
of the world in our aid; it is to pull with, instead of against,
the spiritual tide. In the passage before us the Apostle
contrasts our sanctification with the cardinal vice of
heathenism, impurity. Above all other sins, this was
characteristic of the Gentiles who knew not God. There is
something striking in that description of the pagan world in
this connection: ignorance of God was at once the cause and the
effect of their vileness; had they retained God in their
knowledge, they could never have sunk to such depths of shame;
had they shrunk from pollution with instinctive horror, they
would never have been abandoned to such ignorance of God. No one
who is not familiar with ancient literature can have the
faintest idea of the depth and breadth of the corruption. Not
only in writers avowedly immoral, but in the most magnificent
works of a genius as lofty and pure as Plato, there are pages
that would stun with horror the most hardened profligate in
Christendom. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that on the
whole matter in question the heathen world was without
conscience: it had sinned away its sense of the difference
between right and wrong; to use the words of the Apostle in
another passage, being past feeling men had given themselves up
to work all manner of uncleanness. They gloried in their shame.
Frequently, in his epistles, Paul combines this vice with
covetousness, -the two together representing the great interests
of life to the ungodly, the flesh and the world. Those who do
not know God and live for Him, live, as he saw with fearful
plainness, to indulge the flesh and to heap up gain. Some think
that in the passage before us this combination is made, and that
ver. 6—"that no man go beyond and defraud his brother in any
matter"—is a prohibition of dishonesty in business; but that
is almost certainly a mistake. As the Revised Version shows, the
Apostle is speaking of the matter in hand; in the Church
especially, among brethren in Christ, in the Christian home, the
uncleanness of heathenism can have no place. Marriage is to be
sanctified. Every Christian, marrying in the Lord, is to exhibit
in his home life the Christian law of sanctification and noble
self-respect. The Apostle adds to his warning against sensuality the terrible
sanction, "The Lord is an avenger in all these things." The want of
conscience in the heathen world generated a vast indifference on
this
point. If impurity was a sin, it was certainly not a crime. The laws
did not interfere with it; public opinion was at best neutral; the
unclean person might presume upon impunity. To a certain extent this
is the case still. The laws are silent, and treat the deepest guilt
as a civil offence. Public opinion is indeed stronger and more
hostile than it once was, for the leaven of Christ’s kingdom is
actively at work in society; but public opinion can only touch open
and notorious offenders, those who have been guilty of scandal as
well as of sin; and secrecy is still tempted to count upon impunity.
But here we are solemnly warned that the Divine law of purity has
sanctions of its own above any cognisance taken of offences by man.
"The Lord is an avenger in all these things." "Because of these
things cometh the wrath of God upon the sons of disobedience." Is it not true? They are avenged on the bodies of the sinful.
"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap." The holy law of
God, wrought into the very constitution of our bodies, takes care
that we do not violate it without paying the penalty. If it is not
at
the moment, it is in the future, and with interest, -in premature
old
age; in the torpor which succeeds all spendthrift feats, excesses of
man’s prime; in the sudden breakdown under any strain put on either
physical or moral courage. They are avenged in the soul. Sensual
indulgence extinguishes the capacity for feeling: the profligate man
would love, but cannot; all that is inspiring, elevating, redeeming
in the passions is lost to him; all that remains is the dull sense
of
that incalculable loss. Were there ever sadder lines written than
those in which Burns, with his life ruined by this very thing,
writes
to a young friend and warns him against it? "I waive the quantum o’ the sin, The hazard o’
concealing; But Och! it hardens a’ within, And
petrifies the feeling." This inward deadening is one of the most terrible consequences of
immorality; it is so unexpected, so unlike the anticipations of
youthful passion, so stealthy in its approach, so inevitable, so
irreparable. All these sins are avenged also in the will and in the
spiritual nature. Most men repent of their early excesses; some
never
cease to repent. Repentance, at least, is what it is habitually
called; but that is not really repentance which does not separate
the
soul from. sin. That access of weakness which comes upon the back of
indulgence, that breakdown of the soul in impotent self-pity, is no
saving grace. It is a counterfeit of repentance unto life, which
deludes those whom sin has blinded, and which, when often enough
repeated, exhausts the soul and leaves it in despair. Is there any
vengeance more terrible than that? When Christian was about to leave
the Interpreter’s house, "Stay," said the Interpreter, "till I
have showed thee a little more, and after that thou shalt go on thy
way." What was the sight without which Christian was not allowed to
start upon his journey? It was the Man of Despair, sitting in the
iron cage, -the man who, when Christian asked him, "How camest thou
in this condition?" made answer: "I left off to watch and be sober;
I laid the reins upon the neck of my lusts; I sinned against the
light of the word and the goodness of God; I have grieved the
Spirit,
and He is gone; I tempted the devil, and he is come to me; I have
provoked God to anger, and He has left me; I have so hardened my
heart that I cannot repent." This is no fancy picture: it is drawn
to the life; it is drawn from the life; it is the very voice and
tone
in which many a man has spoken who has lived an unclean life under
the cloak of a Christian profession. They who do such things do not
escape the avenging holiness of God. Even death, the refuge to which
despair so often drives, holds out no hope to them. There remaineth
no more a sacrifice for sin, but a fearful expectation of judgment. The Apostle dwells upon God’s interest in purity. He is the avenger
of all offences against it; but vengeance is His strange work. He
has
called us with a calling utterly alien to it, -not based on
uncleanness or contemplating it, like some of the religions in
Corinth, where Paul wrote this letter; but having sanctification,
purity in body and in spirit, for its very element. The idea of
"calling" is one which has been much degraded and impoverished in
modern times. By a man’s calling we usually understand his trade,
profession, or business, whatever it may be; but our calling in
Scripture is something quite different from this. It is our life
considered, not as filling a certain place in the economy of
society,
but as satisfying a certain purpose in the mind and will of God. It
is a calling in Christ Jesus; apart from Him it could not have
existed. The Incarnation of the Son of God; His holy life upon the
earth; His victory over all our temptations; His consecration of our
weak flesh to God; His sanctification, by His own sinless
experience,
of our childhood, youth, and manhood, with all their
unconsciousness,
their bold anticipations, their sense of power, their bent to
lawlessness and pride; His agony and His death upon the Cross; His
glorious resurrection and ascension, -all these were necessary
before
we could be called with a Christian calling. Can any one imagine
that
the vices of heathenism, lust or covetousness, are compatible with a
calling like this? Are they not excluded by the very idea of it? It
would repay us, I think, to lift that noble word "calling" from the
base uses to which it has descended; and to give it in our minds the
place it has in the New Testament. It is God who has called us, and
He has called us in Christ Jesus, and therefore called us to be
saints. Flee, therefore, all that is unholy and unclean. In the last verse of the paragraph the Apostle urges both his
appeals
once more: he recalls the severity and the goodness of God. "Therefore he that rejecteth, rejecteth not man, but God."
"Rejecteth" is a contemptuous word; in the margin of the
Authorised Version it is rendered, as in some other places in
Scripture, "despiseth." There are such things as sins of
ignorance; there are eases in which the conscience is
bewildered; even in a Christian community the vitality of
conscience may be low, and sins, therefore, be prevalent,
without being so deadly to the individual soul; but that is
never true of the sin before us. To commit this sin is to sin
against the light. It is to do what everyone in contact with the
Church knows, and from the beginning has known, to be wrong. It
is to be guilty of deliberate, wilful, high-handed contempt of
God. It is little to be warned by an apostle or a preacher; it
is little to despise him: but behind all human warnings is the
voice of God: behind all human sanctions of the law is God’s
inevitable vengeance; and it is that which is braved by the
impure. "He that rejecteth, rejecteth not man, but God." But God, we are reminded again in the last words, is not against us,
but on our side. He is the Holy One, and an avenger in all these
things; but He is also the God of Salvation, our deliverer from them
all, who gives His Holy Spirit unto us. The words put in the
strongest light God’s interest in us and in our sanctification. It
is
our sanctification He desires; to this He calls us; for this He
works
in us. Instead of shrinking from us, because we are so unlike Him,
He
puts His Holy Spirit into our impure hearts, He puts His own
strength
within our reach that we may lay hold upon it, He offers us His hand
to grasp. It is this searching, condescending, patient, omnipotent
love, which is rejected by those who are immoral. They grieve the
Holy Spirit of God, that Spirit which Christ won for us by His
atoning death, and which is able to make us clean. There is no power
which can sanctify us but this; nor is there any sin which is too
deep or too black for the Holy Spirit to overcome. Hearken to the
words of the Apostle in another place: "Be not deceived: neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor
abusers of themselves with men, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor
drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the Kingdom
of God. And such were some of you: but ye were washed, but ye were
sanctified, but ye were justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus
Christ, and in the Spirit of our God." |