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NEED FOR THE GOSPEL: GOD’S ANGER AND MAN’S SIN
Ro 1:18-23
WE have as it were touched the heart of the Apostle as he weighs the
prospect of his Roman visit, and feels, almost in one sensation, the
tender and powerful attraction, the solemn duty, and the strange
solicitation to shrink from the deliverance of his message. Now his
lifted forehead, just lighted up by the radiant truth of
Righteousness by Faith, is shadowed suddenly. He is not ashamed of
the Gospel; he will speak it out, if need be, in the Caesar’s own
presence, and in that of his brilliant and cynical court. For there
is a pressing, an awful need that he should thus "despise the
shame." The very conditions in human life which occasion an
instinctive tendency to be reticent of the Gospel, are facts of
dreadful urgency and peril. Man does not like to be exposed to
himself, and to be summoned to the faith and surrender claimed by
Christ. But man, whatever he likes or dislikes, is a sinner, exposed
to the eyes of the All-Pure, and lying helpless, amidst all his
dreams of pride, beneath the wrath of God. Such is the logic of this
stern sequel to the affirmation, "I am not ashamed." For God’s wrath is revealed, from heaven, upon all godlessness and
unrighteousness of men who in unrighteousness hold down the truth.
"God’s wrath is revealed"; Revealed in "the holy
Scriptures," in every history, by every Prophet, by every Psalmist;
this perhaps is the main bearing of his thought. But revealed also
antecedently and concurrently in that mysterious, inalienable
conscience, which is more truly part of man than his five senses.
Conscience sees that there is an eternal difference between
right
and wrong, and feels in the dark the relation of that difference
to a law, a Lawgiver, and a doom. Conscience is aware of a fiery
light beyond the veil. Revelation meets its wistful gaze, lifts the
veil, and affirms the fact of the wrath of God, and of His judgment
coming. Let us not shun that "revelation." It is not the Gospel. The
Gospel, as we have seen, is in itself one pure warm light of life
and
love. But then it can never be fully understood until, sooner or
later, we have seen something, and believed something, of the truth
of the anger of the Holy One. From our idea of that anger let us
utterly banish every thought of impatience, of haste, of what is
arbitrary, of what is in the faintest degree unjust, inequitable. It
is the anger of Him who never for a moment can be untrue to himself;
and He is Love, and is Light. But He is also, so also says His Word,
consuming Fire; {Heb 10:31,12:29} and it is "a fearful thing to
fall into His hands." Nowhere and never is God not Love, as the
Maker and Preserver of His creatures. But nowhere also and never is
He not Fire, as the judicial Adversary of evil, the Antagonist of
the
will that chooses sin. Is there "nothing in God to fear"? "Yea,"
says His Son, {Lu 12:5} "I say unto you, fear Him." At the present time there is a deep and almost ubiquitous tendency
to
ignore the revelation of the wrath of God. No doubt there have been
times, and quarters, in the story of Christianity, when that
revelation was thrown into disproportionate prominence, and men
shrank from Christ (so Luther tells us he did in his youth) as from
One who was nothing if not the inexorable Judge. They saw Him
habitually as He is seen in the vast Fresco of the Sistine Chapel, a
sort of Jupiter Tonans, casting His foes forever from His presence;
a
Being from whom, not to whom, the guilty soul must fly. But
the reaction from such thoughts, at present upon us, has swung to an
extreme indeed, until the tendency of the pulpit, and of the
exposition, is to say practically that there is nothing in God to be
afraid of; that the words hope and love are enough to neutralise the
most awful murmurs of conscience, and to cancel the plainest
warnings
of the loving Lord Himself. Yet that Lord, as we ponder His words in
all the four Gospels, so far from speaking such "peace" as this,
seems to reserve it to Himself, rather than to His messengers, to
utter the most formidable warnings. And the earliest literature
which
follows the New Testament shows that few of His sayings had sunk
deeper into His disciples’ souls than those which told them of the
two Ways and of the two Ends. Let us go to Him, the all-benignant Friend and Teacher, to learn the
true attitude of thought towards Him as "the Judge, Strong and
patient," "but who will in no wise clear the guilty" by unsaying
His precepts and putting by His threats. He assuredly will teach us,
in this matter, no lessons of hard and narrow denunciation, nor
encourage us to sit in judgment on the souls and minds of our
brethren. But He will teach us to take deep and awful views for
ourselves of both the pollution and also the guilt of sin. He
will constrain us to carry those views all through our personal
theology, and our personal anthropology too. He will make it both a
duty and a possibility for us, in right measure, in right manner,
tenderly, humbly, governed by His Word, to let others know what our
convictions are about the Ways and the Ends. And thus, as well as
otherwise, He will make His Gospel to be to us no mere luxury or
ornament of thought and life, as it were a decorous gilding upon
essential worldliness and the ways of self. He will unfold it as the
soul’s refuge and its home. From Himself as Judge He will draw us in
blessed flight to Himself as Propitiation and Peace. "From Thy
wrath, and from everlasting condemnation, Good Lord—Thyself—deliver
us." This wrath, holy, passionless, yet awfully personal, "is revealed,
from heaven." That is to say, it is revealed as coming from heaven,
when the righteous Judge "shall be revealed from heaven, taking
vengeance". {2Th 1:7,8} In that pure upper world He sits whose
wrath it is. From that stainless sky of His presence its white
lightnings will fall, "upon all godlessness and unrighteousness of
men," upon every kind of violation of conscience, whether done
against God or man; upon "godlessness," which blasphemes, denies,
or ignores the Creator; upon "unrighteousness," which wrests the
claims whether of Creator or of creature. Awful opposites to the
"two great Commandments of the Law"! The Law must be utterly
vindicated upon them at last. Conscience must be eternally verified
at last, against all the wretched suppressions of it that man has
ever tried. For the men in question "hold down the truth in unrighteousness."
The rendering "hold down" is certified by both etymology and
context; the only possible other rendering, "hold fast," is
negatived by the connection. The thought given us is that man,
fallen
from the harmony with God in which Manhood was made, but still
keeping manhood, and therefore conscience, is never naturally
ignorant of the difference between right and wrong, never naturally,
innocently, unaware that he is accountable. On the other hand he is
never fully willing, of himself, to do all he knows of right, all he
knows he ought, all the demand of the righteous law above him. "In
unrighteousness," in a life which at best is not wholly and
cordially with the will of God, "he holds down the truth," silences
the haunting fact that there is a claim he will not meet, a will he
ought to love, but to which he prefers his own. The majesty of
eternal right, always intimating the majesty of an eternal Righteous
One, he thrusts below his consciousness, or into a corner of it, and
keeps it there, that he may follow his own way. More or less, it
wrestles with him for its proper place. And its even half-understood
efforts may, and often do, exercise a deterrent force upon the
energies of his self-will. But they do not dislodge it; he would
rather have his way. With a force sometimes deliberate, sometimes
impulsive, sometimes habitual, "he holds down" the unwelcome
monitor. Deep is the moral responsibility incurred by such repression. For
man
has always, by the very state of the case, within him and around
him,
evidence for a personal righteous Power "with Whom he has to do."
Because that which is known in God is manifest in them; for God
manifested (or rather, perhaps, in our idiom, has manifested) it to
them. "That which is known"; that is, practically, "that which is
knowable, that which may be known." There is that about the Eternal
which indeed neither is nor can be known, with the knowledge of
mental comprehension. "Who can find out the Almighty unto
perfection?" All thoughtful Christians are in this respect agnostics
that they gaze on the bright Ocean of Deity, and know that they do
not know it in its fathomless but radiant depths, nor can explore
its
expanse which has no shore. They rest before absolute mystery with a
repose as simple (if possible more simple) as that with which they
contemplate the most familiar and intelligible event. But this is
not
not to know Him. It leaves man quite as free to be sure that He is,
to be as certain that He is Personal, and is Holy, as man is certain
of his own consciousness, and conscience. That there is Personality behind phenomena, and that this great
Personality is righteous, St. Paul here affirms to be "manifest,"
disclosed, visible, "in men." It is a fact present, however
partially apprehended, in human consciousness. And more, this
consciousness is itself part of the fact; indeed it is that part
without which all others would be as nothing. To man without
conscience—really, naturally, innocently without conscience—and
without ideas of causation, the whole majesty of the Universe might
be unfolded with a fulness beyond all our present experience; but it
would say absolutely nothing of either Personality or Judgment. It
is
by the world within that we are able in the least degree to
apprehend
the world without. But having, naturally and inalienably, the world
of personality and of conscience within us, we are beings to whom
God
can manifest, and has manifested the knowable about Himself, in His
universe. For His things unseen, ever since the creation of the universe, are
full in (man’s) view, presented to (man’s) mind by His things
made—His everlasting power and Godlikeness together—so as to leave
them inexcusable. Since the ordered world was, and since man was, as
its observer and also as its integral part, there has been present
to
man’s spirit—supposed true to its own creation—adequate testimony
around him, taken along with that within him, to evince the reality
of
a supreme and persistent Will, intending order, and thus intimating
Its own correspondence to conscience, and expressing Itself in
"things made" of such manifold glory and wonder as to intimate the
Maker’s majesty as well as righteousness. What is That, what is He,
to whom the splendours of the day and the night, the wonders of the
forest and the sea, bear witness? He is not only righteous Judge but
King eternal. He is not only charged with my guidance; He has rights
illimitable over me. I am wrong altogether if I am not in submissive
harmony with Him; if I do not surrender, and adore. Thus it has been, according to St. Paul, "ever since the creation of
the universe" (and of man in it). And such everywhere is the Theism
of Scripture. It maintains, or rather it states as certainty, that
man’s knowledge of God began with his being as man. To see the Maker
in His works is not, according to the Holy Scriptures, only the slow
and difficult issue of a long evolution which led through far lower
forms of thought, the fetish, the nature power, the tribal god, the
national god, to the idea of a Supreme. Scripture presents man as
made in the image of the Supreme, and capable from the first of a
true however faint apprehension of Him. It assures us that man’s
lower and distorted views of nature and of personal power behind it
are degenerations, perversions, issues of a mysterious primeval
dislocation of man from his harmony with God. The believer in the
Holy Scriptures, in the sense in which our Lord and the Apostles
believed in them, will receive this view of the primeval history of
Theism as a true report of God’s account of it. Remembering that it
concerns an otherwise unknown moment of human spiritual history, he
will not be disturbed by alleged evidence against it from lower down
the stream. Meanwhile he will note the fact that among the foremost
students of Nature in our time there are those who affirm the
rightness of such an attitude. It is not lightly that the Duke of
Argyll writes words like these:— "I doubt (to say the truth, I disbelieve) that we shall ever
come to know by science anything more than we now know about the
origin of man. I believe we shall always have to rest on that
magnificent and sublime outline which has been given us by the
great Prophet of the Jews." So man, being what he is and seeing what he sees, is "without
excuse": Because, knowing God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor
thank Him, but proved futile in their ways of thinking, and their
unintelligent heart was darkened. Asserting themselves for wise they
turned fools, and transmuted the glory of the immortal God in a
semblance of the likeness of mortal man, and of things winged,
quadruped, and reptile. Man placed by God in His universe, and
himself made in God’s image, naturally and unevitably "knew God."
Not necessarily in that inner sense of spiritual harmony and union
which is {Joh 17:3} the life eternal; but in the sense of a
perception of His being and His character adequate, at its faintest,
to make a moral claim. But somehow—a somehow which has to do with a
revolt of man’s will from God to self—that claim was, and is,
disliked. Out of that dislike has sprung, in man’s spiritual
history,
a reserve towards God, a tendency to question His purpose, His
character, His existence; or otherwise, to degrade the conception of
Personality behind phenomena into forms from which the multifold
monster of idolatry has sprung, as if phenomena were due to
personalities no better and no greater than could be imaged by man
or
by beast, things of limit and of passion; at their greatest
terrible,
but not holy; not intimate; not One. Man has spent on these unworthy "ways of thinking" a great deal of
weak and dull reasoning and imbecile imagination, but also some of
the rarest and most splendid of the riches of his mind, made in the
image of God. But all this thinking, because conditioned by a wrong
attitude of his being as a whole, has had "futile" issues, and has
been in the truest sense "unintelligent," failing to see inferences
aright and as a whole. It has been a struggle "in the dark"; yea, a
descent from the light into moral and mental "folly." Was it not so, is it not so still? If man is indeed made in the
image
of the living Creator, a moral personality, and placed in the midst
of "the myriad world, His shadow," then whatever process of thought
leads man away from Him has somewhere in it a fallacy unspeakable,
and inexcusable. It must mean that something in him which should be
awake is dormant; or, yet worse, that something in him which should
be in faultless tune, as the Creator tempered it, is all unstrung;
something that should be nobly free to love and to adore is being
repressed, "held down." Then only does man fully think aright when
he is aright. Then only is he aright when he, made by and for
the
Eternal Holy One, rests willingly in Him, and lives for Him. "The
fear of the Lord is," in the strictest fact, "the beginning of
wisdom"; for it is that attitude of man without which the creature
cannot "answer the idea" of the Creator, and therefore cannot truly
follow out the law of its own being. "Let him that glorieth, glory in this, that he understandeth
and knoweth {Jer 9:24} who necessarily and eternally
transcends our cognition and comprehension, yet can be known,
can be touched, clasped, adored, as personal, eternal, almighty,
holy Love."
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