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FALLACIOUS PRESUMPTIONS
IN discussing the question regarding "things offered unto idols,"
Paul is led to treat at large of Christian liberty, a subject to
which he was always drawn. And partly to encourage the Christians of
Corinth to consider their weak and prejudiced brethren, partly for
other reasons, he reminds them how he himself abridged his liberty
and departed from his just claims in order that the Gospel he
preached might find readier acceptance. Besides, not only for the
sake of the Gospel and of other men, but for his own sake also, he
must practise self-denial. It would profit him nothing to have been
an apostle unless he practised what he preached. He had felt that in
considering the spiritual condition of other men and trying to
advance it he was apt to forget his own: and he saw that all men
were
more or less liable to the same temptation, and were apt to rest in
the fact that they were Christians and to shrink from the arduous
life which gives that name its meaning. By means of two
illustrations
Paul fixes this idea in their minds, first pointing them to their
own
games. in which they saw that not all who entered for the race
obtained the prize, and then pointing them to the history of Israel,
in which they might plainly read that not all who began the journey
to the promised land found entrance into it.
The Israelites of the Exodus are here introduced as exemplifying a
common experience. They accepted the position of God’s people, but
failed in its duties. They perceived the advantages of being God’s
subjects, but shrank from much which this implied. They were willing
to be delivered from bondage, but found themselves overweighted by
the responsibilities and risks of a free life. They were in contact
with the highest advantages men need possess, and yet failed to use
them.
The amount of conviction which prompts us to form a connection with
Christ may be insufficient to stimulate us to do and endure all that
results from that connection. The children of Israel were all
baptised unto Moses, but they did not implement their baptism by a
persistent and faithful adherence to him. They were baptised unto
Moses by their acceptance of his leadership in the Exodus. By
passing
through the Red Sea at his command they definitely renounced Pharaoh
and abandoned their old life, and as definitely pledged and
committed
themselves to throw in their lot with Moses. By passing the Egyptian
frontier and following the guidance of the pillar of cloud they
professed their willingness to exchange a life of bondage, with its
security and occasional luxuries, for a life of freedom, with its
hazards and hardships; and by that passage of the Red Sea they were
as certainly sworn to support and obey Moses as ever was Roman
soldier who took the oath to serve his emperor. When, at Brederode’s
invitation, the patriots of Holland put on the beggar’s wallet and
tasted wine from the beggar’s bowl, they were baptised unto William
of Orange and their country’s cause. When the sailors on board the
"Swan" weighed anchor and beat out of Plymouth, they were baptised
unto Drake and pledged to follow him and fight for him to the death.
Baptism means much; but if it means anything it means that we commit
and pledge ourselves to the life we are called to by Him in whose
name we are baptised. It draws a line across the life, and proclaims
that to whomsoever in time past we have been bound, and for
whatsoever we have lived, we now are pledged to this new Lord, and
are to live in His service. Such a pledge was given by every
Israelite who turned his back on Egypt and passed through that sea
which was the defence of Israel and destruction to the enemy. The
crossing was at once actual deliverance from the old life and
irrevocable committal to the new. They died to Pharaoh, and were
born
again to Moses. They were baptised unto Moses.
And as the Israelites had thus a baptism analogous to the one
Christian sacrament, so had they a spiritual food and drink in the
wilderness which formed a sacrament analogous to the Christian
communion. They were not shut out of Egypt, and imprisoned in the
desert, and left to do the best they could on their own resources.
If
they failed to march steadily forward and fulfil their destiny as
the
emancipated people of God, this failure was not due to any neglect
on
God’s part. The fare might be somewhat Spartan, but a sufficiency
was
always provided. He who had encouraged them to enter on this new
life
was prepared to uphold them in it and carry them through.
One of the expressions used by Paul in describing the sustenance of
the Israelites has given rise to some discussion. "They did all
drink," he says, "the same spiritual drink, for they drank of that
spiritual Rock that followed them; and that Rock was Christ." Now
there happened to be a Jewish tradition which gave out that the rock
smitten by Moses was a detached block or boulder, "globular, like a
beehive," which rolled after the camp in its line of march, and was
always at hand, with its unfailing water supply. This is altogether
too grotesque an idea. The fact is that the Israelites did not die
of
thirst in the wilderness. It was quite likely they should; and but
for the providential supply of water, so large a company could not
have been sustained. And no doubt not only in the rock at Rephidim
at
the beginning of their journey and the rock of Kadesh at its close,
but in many most unlikely places during the intervening years, water
was found. So that in looking back on the entire journey. it might
very naturally be said that the rock had followed them, not meaning
that wherever they went they had the same source to draw from, but
that throughout their journeyings they were supplied with water in
places and ways as unexpected and unlikely.
Paul’s point is that in the wilderness the food and drink of the
Israelites were "spiritual," or, as we should more naturally say,
sacramental; that is to say, their sustenance continually spoke to
them of God’s nearness and reminded them that they were His people.
And as Christ Himself, when He lifted the bread at the Last Supper,
said, "This is My body," so does Paul use analogous language and
say, "That Rock was Christ," an expression which gives us
considerable insight into the significance of the Israelitish types
of Christ, and helps to rid our minds of some erroneous impressions
we are apt to cherish regarding them.
The manna and the water from the rock were given to sustain the
Israelites and carry them towards their promised land, but they were
so given as to quicken faith in God. To every Israelite his daily
nourishment might reasonably be called spiritual, because it
reminded
him that God was with him in the wilderness, and prompted him to
think of that purpose and destiny for the sake of which God was
sustaining the people. To the devout among them their daily food
became a means of grace, deepening their faith in the unseen God and
rooting their life in a true dependence upon Him. The manna and the
water from the rock were sacramental, because they were continuous
signs and seals of God’s favour and redeeming efficiency and
promise.
They were types of Christ, serving for Israel in the wilderness the
purpose which Christ serves for us, enabling them to believe in a
heavenly Father who cared for them and accomplishing the same
spiritual union with the unseen God which Christ accomplishes for
us.
It was in this sense that Paul could say that the rock was Christ.
The Israelites in the wilderness did not know that the rock was a
type of Christ. They did not, as they drank of the water, think of
One who was to come and satisfy the whole thirst of men. The types
of
Christ in the old times did not enable men to forecast the future;
it
was not through the future they exercised an influence for good on
the mind. They worked by exciting there and then in the Jewish mind
the same faith in God which Christ excites in our mind. It was not
knowledge that saved the Jew, but faith, attachment to the living
God. It was not the fragmentary and disjointed picture of a Redeemer
thrown on the screen of his hopes by the types, nor was it any
thought of a future Deliverer, which saved him, but his belief in
God
as his Redeemer there and then. This belief was quickened by the
various institutions, providences, and objects by which God
convinced
the Jews that He was their Friend and Lord. Sacrifice they accepted
as an institution of God’s appointment intended to encourage them to
believe in the forgiveness of sin and in God’s favour; and without
any thought of the realised ideal of sacrifice in Christ, the
believing and devout Israelite entered through sacrifice into
fellowship with God. Every sacrifice was a type of Christ; it did
foreshadow that which was to be: but it was a type, not because it
revealed Christ to those who saw or offered it, but because for the
time being it served the same purpose as Christ now serves, enabling
men to believe in the forgiveness of sins.
But while in the mind of the Israelite there was no connection of
the
type with the Christ that was to come, there was in reality a
connection between them. The redemption of men is one, whether
accomplished in the days of the Exodus or in our own time. The idea
or plan of salvation is one, resting always on the same reasons and
principles. The Israelites were pardoned in view of the incarnation
and atonement of Christ just as we are. If it was needful for our
salvation that Christ should come and live and suffer in human
nature, it was also needful for their salvation. The Lamb was slain
"from the foundation of the world," and the virtue of the sacrifice
of Calvary was efficacious for those who lived before as well as for
those who lived after it. To the mind of God it was present, and in
His purpose it was determined, from the beginning; and it is in view
of Christ’s incarnation and work that sinners early or late have
been
restored to God. So that everything by which God instructed men and
taught them to believe in His mercy and holiness was connected with
Christ. It was to Christ it owed its existence, and really it was a
shadow of the coming substance. And as the shadow is named from the
substance, it may be truly said, "That Rock was Christ."
These outward blessings then of which St. Paul here speaks had very
much the same nature as the Christian sacraments to which he tacitly
compares them. They were intended to convey greater gifts and be the
channels of a grace more valuable than themselves. But to most of
the
Israelites they remained mere manna and water, and brought no firmer
assurance of God’s presence, no more fruitful acceptance of God’s
purpose. The majority took the husk and threw away the kernel; were
so delayed by the wrappings that they forgot to examine the gift
they
enclosed; accepted the physical nourishment, but rejected the
spiritual strength it contained. Instead of learning from their
wilderness experience the sufficiency of Jehovah and gathering
courage to fulfil His purpose with them, they began to murmur and
lust after evil things, and were destroyed by the destroyer. They
had
been baptised unto Moses, pledging themselves to his leadership and
committing themselves to the new life he opened to them; they had
been sustained by manna and water from the rock, which plainly told
them that all nature would work for them if they pressed forward to
their God-appointed destiny: but the most of them shrank from the
hardships and hazards of the way, and could not lift their heart to
the glory of being led by God and used to fulfil His greatest
purposes.
And so, says Paul, it may be with you. It is possible that you may
have been baptised and may have professedly, committed yourself to
the Christian career, it is possible you may have partaken of that
bread and wine which convey undying life and energy to believing
recipients, and may yet have failed to use these as spiritual food,
enabling you to fulfil all the duties of the life you are pledged
to.
Had it been enough merely to show a readiness to enter on the more
arduous life, then all Israel would have been saved, for "all"
without exception passed through the Red Sea and committed
themselves
to life under God’s leadership. Had it been enough outwardly to
participate in that which actually links men to God, then all Israel
would have been inspired by God’s Spirit and strength, for "all"
without exception partook of the spiritual food and the spiritual
drink. But the disastrous and undeniable result was that the great
mass of the people were overthrown in the wilderness and did never
set foot in the land of promise. And men have not yet outlived this
same danger of committing themselves to a life they find too hard
and
full of risk. They see the advantages of a Christian career, and
connect themselves with the Christian Church; they instinctively
perceive that it is there God is most fully known, and that the
purposes of God are there concentrated and running on to direct and
perfect results; they are drawn by their better self to throw in
their lot with the Church, to forget competing advantages, and spend
themselves wholly on what is best: and yet the difficulty of
standing
alone and acting on individual conviction rather than on current
understandings, the wearing depression of personal failure and
insufficiency for high and spiritual attainment, the distraction of
the haunting doubt that after all they are making sacrifices and
suffering privations which are fruitless, unwise, unnecessary,
gradually betray the spirit into virtual renunciation of all
Christian hopes and into a practical willingness to return to the
old
life. And thus as the wilderness came to be spotted all over with
the
burial places of those who had left the Red Sea behind them with
shouts of triumph and with hopes that broke out in song and dancing,
as the route of that once jubilant host might at last have been
traced, as the great slave routes of Africa are traceable, by the
bones of men and the skeletons of children, so, alas! might the
Church’s march through the centuries be recognised by the far more
horrifying remains of those who once, with liveliest hope and
unbroken sense of security, joined themselves to the people of
Christ, but silently lost hold of the hope that once drew them on
and
either stole away on private enterprises of their own and were
destroyed of the destroyer, or withered in helpless imbecility,
murmuring at their lot and stone blind to its glory. As the retreat
of Napoleon’s "grand army" from Moscow was marked by corpses
wearing the French uniform, but bringing neither strength nor lustre
to their cause, so must shame be reflected on the Church by the
countless numbers of those who can be identified with Christ’s cause
only by the uniform they wear, and not by any victories they have
won. There were in the wilderness districts through which no
Israelite would willingly pass, districts in which many thousands
had
fallen, and which were branded as vast "graves of lust," places
whose very name stirred a deeper horror and raised a quicker blush
on
the Israelite’s cheek than is raised on the Englishman’s by the
mention of Majuba Hill or Braddock’s defeat. And the Church’s
territory also is spotted with those vast charnel houses and places
of defeat where even her mighty have fallen, where the earth refuses
to cover the disgrace and blot out the stain. These are not things
of
the past. While women and children are starved though they toil all
day and half the night, with eagerest energy and the skill necessity
gives; while life is to so many thousands in our land a joyless and
hopeless misery; while trade not only panders to covetousness and
selfishness, but directly contributes to what is immoral and
destructive, we can scarcely speak of the "glorious marching" of
the Church of Christ. We have our places of horror, which no
right-hearted Christian can think of without a shudder.
But while the distinction between the life we naturally seek and
that
to which God calls us is felt by all from age to age, the forms in
which this distinction makes itself felt vary as the world grows
older. To all men living in a world of sense it is difficult to live
by faith in the unseen. To every man it is the ultimate, severest
test of character to determine for what ends he will live and to
carry out this determination; but the temptations which avail to
draw
men aside from their reasonable decision are various as the men
themselves. Paul names the temptations to which the Corinthians, in
common with the Israelites, were exposed idolatry, fornication,
murmuring, tempting Christ. He saw clearly how difficult it was for
the Corinthians to discard all heathen customs, how much of what had
been brightest in their life they must sacrifice if they were to
renounce absolutely the religion of their parents and friends and
all
the joyous, if licentious, customs associated with that religion.
Apparently some of them thought they might pass from the Christian
communion to the heathen temple, and after partaking of Christ’s
sacrament eat and drink in the idolatrous festival, entering into
the
entire service. They seemed to think that they might be both
Christians and pagans.
Against this vain attempt to combine the incompatible Paul warns
them. Do not tempt Christ, he says, by experimenting how far He will
bear with your conformity to idolatry. Some of the Israelites did so
and were destroyed by serpents. Do not murmur that you are hereby
severed from all the enjoyments of life, dissociated from your
heathen friends, blackballed in society and in business, excluded
from all national festivals and from many private entertainments; do
not count up your losses, but your gains. Your temptations are
severe, but "there hath no temptation taken you but such as is
common to man." Every man must make up his mind to a certain kind of
life and go through with it. No man can unite in his own life all
advantages. He must deliberate and choose; and having made his
choice, he must not lament what he loses or be tempted from striving
to gain what he judges best by weakly and greedily craving for the
second best also. He may win the first prize; he may win the second:
he cannot win both, and if he tries, he will win neither.
The practical outcome of all that Paul has thus rapidly passed in
review he utters in the haunting words, "Let him that thinketh he
standeth take heed lest he fall." In this life we are never beyond
the reach of temptation. And these temptations to which all of us
are
exposed are real; they do sufficiently test character and show what
it actually is. Our suppositions regarding ourselves are often
untrue. There is no reality corresponding, Our state is actually not
such as we conceive it to be. We are at ease and complacent when we
ought not to be at ease. We think we stand secure when we are on the
point of falling. We live as if we had reached the goal when the
whole journey is yet before us. Our future may be very different
from
what we wish or expect. Mere satisfaction with our present condition
is a very insecure foundation on which to build our hope for the
future. Mere reliance on a profession we have made, or on the fact
that we are within reach of means of grace, tends only to slacken
our
energies.
Heedlessness, taking things for granted, failure to sift matters
thoroughly out, an indolent unwillingness to probe our spiritual
condition to the quick—this is what has betrayed multitudes of
Christians. "Wherefore let himthat thinketh he standeth take heed
lest he fall."
If determined wickedness has slain its thousands, heedlessness has
slain its tens of thousands. Through lack of watchfulness men fall
into sin which entangles them for life and thwarts their best
purposes. Through want of watchfulness men go on in sin which
exceedingly provokes God, till at last His hand falls heavily upon
them. Every man is apt to lay too much stress on the circumstance
that he has joined himself to the number of those who own the
leadership of Christ. The question remains, How far has he gone with
his Leader? Many an Israelite compassionated the poor heathen whom
he
left behind in the land of Egypt, and yet found that, with all his
own apparent nearness to God, his heart was heathen still. Whoever
takes it for granted that things are welt with him, whoever
"thinketh he standeth"—he is the man who has especial and urgent
need to "take heed lest he fall."
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