THE THEOLOGY OF PAUL
2Th
2:13-17 (R.V.)
THE first part of this chapter is mysterious, awful, and oppressive.
It deals with the principle of evil in the world, its secret
working,
its amazing power, its final embodiment in the man of sin, and its
decisive overthrow at the Second Advent. The characteristic action
of
this evil principle is deceit. It deludes men, and they become its
victims. True, it can only delude those who lay themselves open to
its approach by an aversion to the truth, and by delight in
unrighteousness; but when we look round us, and see the multitude of
its victims, we might easily be tempted to despair of our race. The
Apostle does not do so. He turns away from that gloomy prospect, and
fixes his eyes upon another, serene, bright, and joyful. There is a
son of perdition, a person doomed to destruction, who will carry
many
to ruin in his train; but there is a work of God going on in the
world as well as a work of evil; and it also has its triumphs. Let
the mystery of iniquity work as it will, "we are bound to give
thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord, for that
God chose you from the beginning unto salvation."
The thirteenth and fourteenth verses of this chapter are a system of
theology in miniature. The Apostle’s thanksgiving covers the whole
work of salvation from the eternal choice of God to the obtaining of
the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ in the world to come. Let us
observe the several points which it brings out. As a thanksgiving,
of
course, God is the main subject in it. Every separate clause only
serves to bring out another aspect of the fundamental truth that
Salvation is of the Lord. What aspects, then, of this truth are
presented in turn?
(1) In the first place, the original idea of salvation is God’s. He
chose the Thessalonians to it from the beginning. There are really
two assertions in this simple sentence—the one, that God chose them;
the other, that His choice is eternal. The first of these is
obviously a matter on which there is an appeal to experience. These
Christian men, and all Christian men, could tell whether it was true
or not that they owed their salvation to God. In point of fact,
there
has never been any doubt about that matter in any church, or indeed,
in any religion. All good men have always believed that salvation
is of the Lord. It begins on God’s side. It can most truly be
described from His side. Every Christian heart responds to the word
of Jesus to the disciples "Ye have not chosen Me, but I have
chosen you." Every Christian heart feels the force of St. Paul’s
words to the Galatians: "After that ye have known God, or rather
were known of God." It is His taking knowledge of us which is the
original, fundamental, decisive thing in salvation. That is a matter
of experience; and so far the Calvinist doctrine of election, which
has sometimes an unsubstantial, metaphysical aspect, has an
experimental basis. We are saved, because God in His love has saved
us; that is the starting point. That also gives character, in all
the
Epistles, to the New Testament doctrine of election. The Apostle
never speaks of the elect as an unknown quantity, a favoured few,
hidden in the Church, or in the world, unknown to others or to
themselves: "God," he says, "chose you,"
— the persons addressed in this letter, -"and you know that He did."
So does everyone who knows anything of God at all. Even when the
Apostle says, "God chose you from the beginning," he does not leave
the basis of experience. "Known unto God are all His works from the
beginning of the world." The purpose of God’s love to save men,
which comes home to them in their reception of the gospel, is not a
thing of today or yesterday; they know it is not; it is the
manifestation of His nature; it is as eternal as Himself; they can
count on it as securely as they can on the Divine character; if God
has chosen them at all, He has chosen them from the beginning. The
doctrine of election in Scripture is a religious doctrine, based
upon
experience; it is only when it is separated from experience, and
becomes metaphysical, and prompts men to ask whether they who have
heard and received the gospel are elect or not—an impossible
question on New Testament ground—that it works for evil in the
Church. If you have chosen God, you know it is because He first
chose
you; and His will revealed in that choice is the will of the
Eternal.
(2) Further, the means of salvation for men are of God. "He
chose you," says the Apostle, "in sanctification of the Spirit and
belief of the truth." Perhaps "means" is not the most precise word
to use here; it might be better to say that sanctification wrought
by
the Spirit, and belief of the truth, are the state in which, rather
than the means by which, salvation is realised. But what I wish to
insist upon is, that both are included in the Divine choice; they
are
the instruments or the conditions of carrying it into effect. And
here, when we come to the accomplishment of God’s purpose, we see
how
it combines a Divine and a human side. There is a sanctification, or
consecration, wrought by the Spirit of God upon the spirit of man,
the sign and seal of which is baptism, the entrance of the natural
man into the new and higher life; and coincident with this, there is
the belief of the truth, the acceptance of God’s message of mercy,
and the surrender of the soul to it. It is impossible to separate
these two things, or to define their relation to each other.
Sometimes the first seems to condition the second; sometimes the
order is reversed. Now it is the Spirit which opens the mind to the
truth; again it is the truth which exercises a sanctifying power
like
the Spirit. The two, as it were, interpenetrate each other. If the
Spirit stood alone, man’s mind would be baffled, his moral freedom
would be taken away; if the reception of the truth were everything,
a
cold, rationalistic type of religion would sup, plant the ardour of
the New Testament Christian. The eternal choice of God makes
provision, in the combination of the Spirit and the truth, at once
for Divine influence and for human freedom; for a baptism of fire
and
for the deliberate welcoming of revelation; and it is—when the two
are actually combined that the purpose of God to save is
accomplished. What can we say here on the basis of experience? Have
we believed the truth which God has declared to us in His Son? Has
its belief been accompanied and made effectual by a sanctification
wrought by His Spirit, a consecration which has made the truth live
in us, and made us new creatures in Christ? God’s choice does not
become effective apart from this; it comes out in this; it secures
its own accomplishment in this. His chosen are not chosen to
salvation irrespective of any experience; none are chosen except as
they believe the truth and are sanctified by His Spirit.
(3) Once more, the execution of the plan of salvation in time is
of God. To this salvation, says Paul, He called you by our gospel.
The apostles and their companions were but messengers: the message
they brought was God’s. The new truths, the warnings, the summonses,
the invitations, all were His. The spiritual constraint which they
exercised was His also. In speaking thus, the Apostle magnifies his
office, and magnifies at the same time the responsibility of all who
heard him preach. It is a light thing to listen to a man speaking
his
own thoughts, giving his own counsel, inviting assent to his own
proposals; it is a solemn thing to listen to a man speaking truly in
the name of God. The gospel that we preach is ours, only because we
preach it and because we receive it; but the true description of it
is, the gospel of God. It is His voice which proclaims the coming
judgment; it is His voice which tells of the redemption which is in
Christ Jesus, even the forgiveness of our trespasses; it is His
voice
which invites all who are exposed to wrath, all who are under the
curse and power of sin, to come to the Saviour. Paul had thanked God
in the First Epistle that the Thessalonians had received his word,
not as the word of man, but as what
it was in truth, the word of the living God; and here he falls back
again on the same thought in a new connection. It is too natural for
us to put God as far as we can out of our minds, to keep Him forever
in the background, to have recourse to Him only in the last resort;
but that easily becomes an evasion of the seriousness and the
responsibilities of our life, a shutting of our eyes to its true
significance, for which we may have to pay dear. God has spoken to
us
all in His word and by His Spirit, God, and not only some human
preacher: see that ye despise not Him that speaketh.
(4) Lastly, under this head, the end proposed to us in obeying
the gospel call is of God. It is the obtaining of the glory of our
Lord Jesus Christ. Paul became a Christian and an Apostle, because
he
saw the Lord of Glory on the way to Damascus; and his whole
conception of salvation was shaped by that sight. To be saved meant
to enter into that glory into which Christ had entered. It was a
condition of perfect holiness, open only to those who were
sanctified
by Christ’s Spirit; but perfect holiness did not exhaust it.
Holiness
was manifested in glory, in a light surpassing the brightness of the
sun, in a strength superior to every weakness, in a life no longer
assailable by death. Weak, suffering, destitute—dying daily for
Christ s sake—Paul saw salvation concentrated and summed up in the
glory of Christ. To obtain this was to obtain salvation. "When
Christ who is our life shall appear," he says elsewhere, "then
shall ye also appear with Him in glory." "This corruptible must put
on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality." If
salvation were anything lower than this, there might be a plausible
case to state for man as its author; but reaching as it does to this
immeasurable height, who can accomplish it but God? It needs the
operation of the might of His power which He wrought in Christ when
He raised Him from the dead.
One cannot read these two simple verses without wondering at the new
world which the gospel created for the mind of man. What great
thoughts are in them—thoughts that wander through eternity, thoughts
based on the most sure and blessed of experiences, yet travelling
back into an infinite past, and on into immortal glory; thoughts of
the Divine presence and the Divine power interpenetrating and
redeeming human life; thoughts addressed originally to a little
company of working people, but unmatched for length and breadth and
depth and height by all that pagan literature could offer to the
wisest and the best. What a range and sweep there is in this brief
summary of God’s work in man’s salvation. If the New Testament is
uninteresting, can it be for any other reason than that we arrest
ourselves at the words, and never penetrate to the truth which lies
beneath?
On this review of the work of God the Apostle grounds an exhortation
to the Thessalonians. "So then, brethren," he writes, "stand fast,
and hold the traditions which ye were taught, whether by word, or by
epistle of ours." The objection that is brought against Calvinism is
that it destroys every motive for action on our part, by destroying
all need of it. If salvation is of the Lord, what is there for us to
do? If God conceived it, planned it, executes it, and alone can
perfect it, what room is left for the interference of man? This is a
species of objection which would have appeared extremely perverse to
the Apostle. Why, he would have exclaimed, if God left it to us to
do, we might well sit down in despair and do nothing, so infinitely
would the task exceed our powers; but since the work of salvation is
the work of God, since He Himself is active on that side, there are
reason, hope, motive, for activity on our part also. If we work in
the same line with Him, toward the same end with Him, our labour
will
not be cast away; it will be triumphantly successful. God is at
work;
but so far from that furnishing a motive to non-exertion on our
part,
it is the strongest of all motives to action. Work out your own
salvation, not because it is left to you to do, but because it is
God
who is working in you both will and deed in furtherance of His good
pleasure. Fall in, the Apostle virtually says in this place, with
the
purpose of God to save you; identify yourselves with it; stand fast,
and hold the traditions which ye were taught.
"Traditions" is an unpopular word in one section of the
Church because it has been so vastly abused in another. But it
is not an illegitimate word in any church, and there is always a
place for what it means. The generations are dependent on each
other; each transmits to the future the inheritance it has
received from the past; and that inheritance—embracing laws,
arts, manners, morals, instincts, religion—can all be
comprehended in the single word tradition. The gospel was handed
over to the Thessalonians by St. Paul, partly in oral teaching,
partly in writing; it was a complex of traditions in the
simplest sense, and they were not to let any part of it go.
Extreme Protestants are in the habit of opposing Scripture to
tradition. The Bible alone, they say, is our religion; and we
reject all unwritten authority. But, as a little reflection will
show, the Bible itself is, in the first instance, a part of
tradition; it is handed down to us from those who have gone
before; it is delivered to us as a sacred deposit by the Church;
and as such we at first regard it. There are good reasons, no
doubt, for giving Scripture a fundamental and critical place
among traditions. When its claim to represent the Christianity
of the apostles is once made out, it is fairly regarded as the
criterion of everything else that appeals to their authority.
The bulk of so-called traditions in the Church of Rome are to be
rejected, not because they are traditions, but because they are
not traditions, but have originated in later times, and are
inconsistent with what is known to be truly apostolic. We
ourselves are bound to keep fast hold of all that connects us
historically with the apostolic age. We would not disinherit
ourselves. We would not lose a single thought, a single like or
dislike, a single conviction or instinct, of all that proves us
the spiritual posterity of Peter and Paul and John. Sectarianism
destroys the historical sense; it plays havoc with traditions;
it weakens the feeling of spiritual affinity between the present
and the past. The Reformers in the sixteenth century—the men
like Luther, Melanchthon, and Calvin—made a great point of what
they called their catholicity, i.e., their claim to
represent the true Church of Christ, to be the lawful inheritors
of apostolic tradition. They were right, both in their claim,
and in their idea of its importance; and we will suffer for it,
if, in our eagerness for independence, we disown the riches of
the past.
The Apostle closes his exhortation with a prayer. "Now our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself, and God our Father which loved us and gave us
eternal comfort and good hope through grace, comfort your
hearts and stablish them in every good work and word." All human
effort, he seems to say, must be not only anticipated and called
forth, but supported, by God. He alone it is who can give
steadfastness to our pursuit of good in word and deed.
In his prayer the Apostle goes back to great events in the past, and
bases his request on the assurance which they yield: "God," he
says, "who loved us and gave us eternal comfort and good hope
through grace." When did God do these gracious things? It was—when
He sent His Son into the world for us. He does love us now; He will
love us forever; but we go back for the final proof, and for the
first conviction of this, to the gift of Jesus Christ. There we see
God who loved us. The death of the Lord Jesus is specially in view.
"Hereby know we love, because He laid down His life for us."
"Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and
sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins." The eternal
consolation is connected in the closest possible way with this grand
assurance of love. It is not merely an unending comfort, as opposed
to the transitory and uncertain joys of earth; it is the heart to
exclaim with St. Paul, "Who shall separate us from the love of
Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine,
or
nakedness, or peril, or sword? Nay, in all these things we
are more than conquerors through Him that loved us." Here, and now,
this eternal consolation is given to the Christian heart; here, and
now, rather, it is enjoyed; it was given, once for all, on the cross
at Calvary. Stand there, and receive that awful pledge of the love
of
God, and see whether it does not, even now, go deeper than any
sorrow.
But the eternal consolation does not exhaust God’s gifts. He has
also
in His grace given us good hope. He has made provision, not only for
the present trouble, but for the future uncertainty. All life needs
an outlook; and those who have stood beside the empty grave in the
garden know how wide and glorious is the outlook provided by God for
the believer in Jesus Christ. In the very deepest darkness, a light
is kindled for him; in the valley of the shadow of death, a window
is
opened to him. in heaven. Surely God, who sent His Son to die for us
upon the Cross; God, who raised Him again from the dead on our
behalf, and set Him at His own right hand in heavenly places,
-surely
He who has been at such cost for our salvation will not be slow to
second all our efforts, and to establish our hearts in every good
work and word.
How simply, one is tempted to say, it all ends—good works and good
words; are these the whole fruits which God seeks in His great work
of redemption? Does it need consolation so wonderful, hope so far
reaching, to secure patient continuance in well-doing? We know only
too well that it does. We know that the comfort of God, the hope of
God, prayer to God, are all needed; and that all we can make of all
of them combined is not too much to make us steadily dutiful in word
and deed. We know that it is not a disproportionate or unworthy
moral, but one befitting the grandeur of his theme, when the Apostle
concludes the fifteenth chapter of 1st Corinthians in a tone very
similar to that which rules here. The infinite hope of the
Resurrection is made the basis of the commonest duties. "Therefore,
my beloved brethren," he says, "be ye steadfast, unmovable, always
abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your
labour: is not in vain in the Lord." That hope is to bear fruit on
earth—in patience and loyalty, in humble and faithful service. It is
to shed its radiance over the trivial round, the common task; and
the
Apostle does not think it wasted if it enables men and women to do
well and not weary.
The difficulty of expounding this passage lies in the largeness of
the thoughts; they include, in a manner, every part and aspect of
the
Christian life. Let each of us try to bring them. near to himself.
God has called us by His gospel: He has declared to us that Jesus
our
Lord was delivered for our offences, and that He was raised again to
open the gates of life to us. Have we believed the truth? That
is—where the gospel begins for us. Is the truth within us, written
on hearts that God’s Spirit has separated from the world, and
devoted
to a new life? or is it outside of us, a rumour, a hearsay, to which
we have no vital relation? Happy are those who have believed, and
taken Christ into their souls, Christ who died for us and rose
again;
they have the forgiveness of sins, a pledge of love that disarms and
vanquishes sorrow, an infallible hope that outlives death. Happy are
those to whom the cross and the empty tomb give that confidence in
God’s love which makes prayer natural, hopeful, joyful. Happy are
those to whom all these gifts of grace bring the strength to
continue
patiently in well-doing, and to be steadfast in every good work and
word. All things are theirs—the world, and life, and death; things
present and things to come; everlasting consolation and good hope;
prayer, patience, and victory: all are theirs, for they are
Christ’s,
and Christ is God’s.