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THE SAME SUBJECT: THE LORD’S EXAMPLE: HIS RELATION TO US ALL
Ro 15:1-13
THE large and searching treatment which the Apostle has already
given
to the right use of Christian Liberty, is yet not enough. He must
pursue the same theme further; above all, that he may put it into
more explicit contact with the Lord Himself. We gather without doubt that the state of the Roman Mission, as it
was reported to St. Paul, gave special occasion for such fulness of
discussion. It is more than likely, as we have seen from the first,
that the bulk of the disciples were ex-pagans; probably of very
various nationalities, many of them Orientals, and as such not more
favourable to distinctive Jewish claims and tenets. It is also
likely
that they found amongst them, or beside them, many Christian Jews,
or
Christian Jewish proselytes, of a type more or less pronounced in
their own direction; the school whose less worthy members supplied
the men to whom St. Paul, a few years later, writing from Rome to
Philippi, refers as "preaching Christ of envy and strife." {Php
1:15} The temptation of a religious (as of a secular) majority is
always to tyrannise, more or less, in matters of thought and
practice. A dominant school, in any age or region, too easily comes
to talk and act as if all decided expression on the other side were
an instance of "intolerance," while yet it allows itself
sufficiently severe and censorious courses of its own. At Rome, very
probably, this mischief was in action. The "strong," with whose
principle, in its true form, St. Paul agreed, were disposed to
domineer in spirit over the "weak," because the weak were
comparatively the few. Thus they were guilty of a double fault; they
were presenting a miserable parody of holy liberty, and they were
acting off the line of that unselfish fairness which is essential in
the Gospel character. For the sake not only of the peace of the
great
Mission Church, but of the honour of the Truth, and of the Lord, the
Apostle therefore dwells on mutual duties, and returns to them again
and again after apparent conclusions of his discourse. Let us listen
as he now reverts to the subject, to set it more fully than ever in
the light of Christ. But (it is the "but" of resumption, and of new material) we are
bound, we the able, οίδυνατοί (perhaps a sort of soubriquet for
themselves among the school of "liberty," "the capables")—to
bear the weaknesses of the unable, (again, possibly, a soubriquet,
and in this case an unkindly one for a school,) and not to please
ourselves. Each one of us, let him please not himself, but his
neighbour, as regards what is good, with a view to edification. "Please";
άρέσκειν άρεσκέτω. The word is one often
"soiled with ignoble use," in classical literature; it tends
to mean the "pleasing" which fawns and flatters; the
complaisance of the parasite. But it is lifted by Christian
usage to a noble level. The cowardly and interested element
drops out of it; the thought of willingness to do anything to
please remains; only limited by the law of right, and aimed only
at the other’s "good." Thus purified, it is used elsewhere of
that holy "complaisance" in which the grateful disciple aims
to "meet halfway the wishes" of his Lord. {see Col 1:10}
Here, it is the unselfish and watchful aim to meet halfway, if
possible, the thought and feeling of a fellow disciple, to
conciliate by sympathetic attentions, to be considerate in the
smallest matters of opinion and conduct; a genuine exercise of
inward liberty. There is a gulf of difference between interested timidity and
disinterested considerateness. In flight from the former, the ardent
Christian sometimes breaks the rule of the latter. St. Paul is at
his
hand to warn him not to forget the great law of love. And the Lord
is
at his hand too, with His own supreme Example. For even our Christ did not please Himself; but, as it stands
written,
{Ps 69:9} "The reproaches of those who reproached Thee, fell
upon Me." It is the first mention in the Epistle of the Lord’s Example. His
Person we have seen, and the Atoning Work, and the Resurrection
Power, and the great Return. The holy Example can never take the
place of anyone of these facts of life eternal. But when they are
secure, then the reverent study of the Example is not only in place;
it is of urgent and immeasurable importance. "He did not please Himself." "Not My will, but Thine, be
done." Perhaps the thought of the Apostle is dwelling on the
very hour when those words were spoken, from beneath the olives
of the Garden, and out of a depth of inward conflict and
surrender which "it hath not entered into the heart of
man"—except the heart of the Man of men Himself—"to
conceive." Then indeed "He did not please Himself." From pain
as pain, from grief as grief, all sentient existence naturally,
necessarily, shrinks; it "pleases itself" in escape or in
relief. The infinitely refined sentient Existence of the Son of
Man was no exception to this law of universal nature; and now He
was called to such pain, to such grief, as never before met upon
one head. We read the record of Gethsemane, and its sacred
horror is always new; the disciple passes in thought out of the
Garden even to the cruel tribunal of the Priest with a sense of
relief; his Lord has risen from the unfathomable to the
fathomable depth of His woes—till He goes down again, at noon
next day, upon the Cross. "He pleased not Himself." He who
soon after, on the shore of the quiet water, said to Peter, in
view of his glorious and God-glorifying end, "They shall carry
thee whither thou wouldest not"—along a path from which
all thy manhood shall shrink—He too, as to His Human
sensibility, "would not" go to His own unknown agonies. But
then, blessed be His Name, "He would go" to them, from that
other side, the side of the infinite harmony of His purpose with
the purpose of His Father, in His immeasurable desire of His
Father’s glory. So He "drank that cup," which shall never now
pass on to His people. And then He went forth into the house of
Caiaphas, to be "reproached," during some six or seven
terrible hours, by men who, professing zeal for God, were all
the while blaspheming Him by every act and word of malice and
untruth against His Son; and from Caiaphas He went to Pilate,
and to Herod, and to the Cross, "bearing that reproach." "I’m not anxious to die easy, when He died hard!" So said,
not long ago, in a London attic, lying crippled and comfortless,
a little disciple of the Man of Sorrows. He had "seen the
Lord," in a strangely unlikely conversion, and had found a way
of serving Him; it was to drop written fragments of His Word
from the window on to the pavement below. And for this silent
mission he would have no liberty if he were moved, in his last
weeks, to a comfortable "Home." So he would rather serve his
beloved Redeemer thus, "pleasing not himself," than be soothed
in body, and gladdened by surrounding kindness, but with less
"fellowship of His sufferings." Illustrious confessor—sure to
be remembered when "the Lord of the servants cometh"! And with
what an—a fortiori does his simple answer to a kindly
visitor’s offer bring home to us (for it is for us as much as
for the Romans) this appeal of the Apostle’s! We are called in
these words not necessarily to any agony of body or spirit; not
necessarily even to an act of severe moral courage; only to
patience, largeness of heart, brotherly love. Shall we not
answer Amen from the soul? Shall not even one thought of "the
fellowship of His sufferings" annihilate in us the miserable
"selfpleasing" which shows itself in religious bitterness, in
the refusal to attend and to understand, in a censoriousness
which has nothing to do with firmness, in a personal attitude
exactly opposite to love? He has cited Ps 69 as a Scripture which, with all the solemn
problems gathered round its dark "minatory" paragraph, yet lives
and moves with Christ, the Christ of love. And now—not to confirm
his application of the Psalm, for he takes that for granted—but to
affirm the positive Christian use of the Old Scriptures as a whole,
he goes on to speak at large of "the things forewritten." He does
so with the special thought that the Old Testament is full of truth
in point for the Roman Church just now; full of the bright, and
uniting, "hope" of glory; full of examples as well as precepts
for "patience," that is to say, holy perseverance under trial; full
finally of the Lord’s equally gracious relation to "the Nations"
and to Israel. For all the things forewritten, written in the Scriptures of the
elder time, in the age that both preceded the Gospel and prepared
for
it, for our instruction were written—with an emphasis upon
"our"—that through the patience and through the encouragement of
the Scriptures we might hold our hope, the hope "sure and
steadfast" of glorification in the glory of our conquering Lord.
That is to say, the true "Author behind the authors" of that
mysterious Book watched, guided, effected its construction, from end
to end, with the purpose full in His view of instructing for all
time
the developed Church of Christ. And in particular, He adjusted thus
the Old Testament records and precepts of "patience," the patience
which "suffers and is strong," suffers and goes forward,
and of "encouragement,"
παράκλησις, the word which is more than
"consolation," while it includes it; for it means the voice of
positive and enlivening appeal. Rich indeed are Pentateuch, and
Prophets, and Hagiographa, alike in commands to persevere and be of
good courage, and in examples of men who were made brave and patient
by the power of God in them, as they took Him at His word. And all
this, says the Apostle, was on purpose, on God’s purpose. That
multifarious Book is indeed in this sense one. Not only is it, in
its
Author’s intention, full of Christ; in the same intention it is full
of Him for us. Immortal indeed is its preciousness, if this was His
design. Confidently may we explore its pages, looking in them first
for Christ, then for ourselves, in our need of peace, and strength,
and hope. Let us add one word, in view of the anxious controversy of
our day, within the Church, over the structure and nature of those
"divine Scriptures," as the Christian Fathers love to call them.
The use of the Holy Book in the spirit of this verse, the persistent
searching of it for the preceptive mind of God in it, with the belief that it was "written for our instruction," will be
the surest and deepest means to give us "perseverance" and
"encouragement" about the Book itself. The more we really know
the Bible, at first hand, before God, with the knowledge both of
acquaintance and reverent sympathy, the more shall we be able with
intelligent spiritual conviction, to "persist" and "be of good
cheer" in the conviction that it is indeed not of man (though
through man), but of God. The more shall we use it as the Lord and
the Apostles used it, as being not only of God, but of God for us;
His Word, and for us. The more shall we make it our divine daily
Manual for a life of patient and cheerful sympathies, holy fidelity,
and "that blessed Hope"—which draws "nearer now than when we
believed." But may the God of the patience and the encouragement. He
who is Author and Giver of the graces unfolded in His Word, He
without whom even that Word is but a sound without significance in
the soul, grant you, in His own sovereign way of acting on and in
human wills and affections, to be of one mind mutually, according to
Christ Jesus; "Christwise," in His steps, in His temper, under His
precepts; having towards one another, not necessarily an identity of
opinion on all details, but a community of sympathetic kindness. No
comment here is better than this same Writer’s later words, from
Rome;
{Php 2:2-5} "Be of one mind; having the same love; nothing by
strife, or vainglory; esteeming others better than yourselves;
looking on the things of others; with the same mind which was also
in
Christ Jesus," when He humbled Himself for us. And all this, not
only for the comfort of the community, but for the glory of God:
that
unanimously, with one mouth, you may glorify the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ; turning from the sorrowful friction worked by
selfwill when it intrudes into the things of heaven, to an antidote,
holy and effectual, found in adoring Him who is equally near to all
His true people, in His Son. Wherefore welcome one another into
fellowship, even as our Christ welcomed you, all the individuals of
your company, and all the groups of it, to our God’s glory. These
last words may mean either that the Lord’s welcome of "you
glorified" His Father’s grace; or that that grace will he
"glorified" by the holy victory of love over prejudice among the
Roman saints. Perhaps this latter explanation is to be preferred, as
it echoes and enforces the last words of the previous verse. But why
should not both references reside in the one phrase, where the
actions of the Lord and His disciples are seen in their deep
harmony?
For I say that Christ stands constituted Servant of the
Circumcision,
Minister of divine blessings to Israel, on behalf of God’s truth, so
as to ratify in act the promises belonging to the Fathers, so as to
secure and vindicate their fulfilment, by His coming as Son of
David,
Son of Abraham, but (a "but" which, by its slight correction,
reminds
the Jew that the Promise, given wholly through him, was not
given
wholly for him) so that the Nations, on mercy’s behalf, should
glorify God, blessing and adoring Him on account of a salvation
which, in their case, was less of "truth" than of "mercy,"
because it was less explicitly and immediately of covenant; as it
stands written, {Ps 18:49} "For this I will confess to Thee,
will own Thee, among the Nations, and will strike the harp to Thy
Name"; Messiah confessing His Eternal Father’s glory in the midst of
His redeemed Gentile subjects, who sing their "lower part" with
Him. And again it, the Scripture, says, {De 32:43} "Be
jubilant, Nations, with His people." And again, {Ps 117:1}
"Praise the Lord, all the Nations, and let all the peoples praise
Him again." And again Isaiah, {Isa 11:10} "There shall come
(literally, "shall be") the Root ofJesse, and He who rises
up—"rises," in the present tense of the divine decree to rule
[the] Nations; on Him [the] Nations shall hope" with the hope which
is in fact faith, looking from the sure present to the promised
future. Now may the God of that hope, "the Hope" just cited from
the Prophet, the expectation of all blessing, up to its crown and
flower in glory, on the basis of Messiah’s work, fill you with all
joy and peace in your believing, so that you may overflow in that
hope, in the Holy Spirit’s power: "in His power," clasped as it
were within His divine embrace, and thus energised to look upward,
heavenward, away from embittering and dividing temptations to the
unifying as well as beatifying prospect of your Lord’s Return. He closes here his long, wise, tender appeal and counsel about the
"unhappy divisions" of the Roman Mission. He has led his readers as
it were all round the subject. With the utmost tact, and also
candour, he has given them his own mind, "in the Lord," on the
matter in dispute. He has pointed out to the party of scruple and
restriction the fallacy of claiming the function of Christ, and
asserting a divine rule where He has not imposed one. He has
addressed the "strong" (with whom he agrees in a certain sense), at
much greater length, reminding them of the moral error of making
more
of any given application of their principle than of the law of love
in which the principle was rooted. He has brought both parties to
the
feet of Jesus Christ as absolute Master. He has led them to gaze on
Him as their blessed Example, in His infinite self-oblivion for the
cause of God, and of love. He has poured out before them the
prophecies, which tell at once the Christian Judaist and the
ex-pagan
convert that in the eternal purpose Christ was given equally to
both,
in the line of "truth," in the line of "mercy." Now lastly he
clasps them impartially to his own heart in this precious and
pregnant benediction, beseeching for both sides, and for all their
individuals, a wonderful fulness of those blessings in which most
speedily and most surely the spirit of their strife would
expire.
Let that prayer be granted, in its pure depth and height, and how
could "the weak brother" look with quite his old anxiety on the
problems suggested by the dishes at a meal, and by the dates of the
Rabbinic Calendar? And how could "the capable" bear any longer to
lose his joy in God by an assertion, full of self, of his own
insight
and "liberty"? Profoundly happy and at rest in their Lord, whom
they embraced by faith as their Righteousness and Life, and whom
they
anticipated in hope as their coming Glory; filled through their
whole
consciousness, by the indwelling Spirit, with a new insight into
Christ; they would fall into each other’s embrace, in Him. They
would
be much more ready, when they met, to speak "concerning the King"
than to begin a new stage of their not very elevating discussion. How many a Church controversy, now as then, would die of inanition,
leaving room for a living truth, if the disputants could only
gravitate, as to their always most beloved theme, to the praises
and glories of their redeeming Lord Himself! It is at His feet, and
in His arms, that we best understand both His truth, and the
thoughts, rightful or mistaken, of our brethren. Meanwhile, let us take this benedictory prayer, as we may take it,
from its instructive context, and carry it out with us into all the
contexts of life. What the Apostle prayed for the Romans, in view of
their controversies, he prays for us, as for them, in view of
everything. Let us "stand back and look at the picture."
Here—conveyed in this strong petition—is St. Paul’s idea of the
true Christian’s true life, and the true life of the true Church.
What are the elements, and what is the result? It is a life lived in direct contact with God. "Now the God of
hope fill you." He remits them here (as above, ver. 5) from even
himself to the Living God. In a sense, he sends them even from "the
things forewritten," to the Living God; not in the least to
disparage the Scriptures, but because the great function of the
divine Word, as of the divine Ordinances, is to guide the soul into
an immediate intercourse with the Lord God in His Son, and to
secure it therein. God is to deal direct with the Romans. He is to
manipulate, He is to fill, their being. It is a life not starved or straitened, but full. "The God of hope
fill you." The disciple, and the Church, is not to live as if
grace were like a stream "in the year of drought," now settled into
an almost stagnant deep, then struggling with difficulty over the
stones of the shallow. The man, and the Society, are to live and
work
in tranquil but moving strength, "rich" in the fruits of their
Lord’s "poverty"; {2Co 8:9} filled out of His fulness; never,
spiritually, at a loss for Him; never, practically, having to do or
bear except in His large and gracious power. It is a life bright and beautiful; "filled with all joy and
peace." It is to show a surface fair with the reflected sky of
Christ, Christ present, Christ to come. A sacred while open
happiness
and a pure internal repose are to be there, born of "His presence,
in which is fulness of joy," and of the sure prospect of His Return,
bringing with it "pleasures for evermore." Like that mysterious
ether of which the natural philosopher tells us, this joy, this
peace, found and maintained "in the Lord," is to pervade all
the contents of the Christian life, its moving masses of duty or
trial, its interspaces of rest or silence; not. always
demonstrative,
but always underlying, and always a living power. It is a life of faith; "all joy and peace in your believing."
That is to say, it is a life dependent for its all upon a Person and
His promises. Its glad certainty of peace with God, of the
possession
of His Righteousness, is by means not of sensations and experiences,
but of believing; it comes, and stays, by taking Christ at His word.
Its power over temptation, its "victory and triumph against the
devil, the world, and the flesh," is by the same means. The man, the
Church, takes the Lord at His word; -"I am with you always";
"Through Me thou shalt do valiantly"; -and faith, that is to say,
Christ trusted in practice, is "more than conqueror." It is a life overflowing with the heavenly hope; "that ye may abound
in the hope." Sure of the past, and of the present, it is—what
out of Christ no life can be—sure of the future. The golden age, for
this happy life, is in front, and is no Utopia. "Now is our
salvation nearer"; "We look for that blissful (μακαρίαν) hope, the
appearing of our great God and Saviour"; "Them which sleep in Him
God will bring with Him"; "We shall be caught up together with
them; we shall ever be with the Lord"; "They shall see His face;
thine eyes shall see the King in His beauty." And all this it is as a life lived "in the power of the Holy
Ghost." Not by enthusiasm, not by any stimulus which self applies to
self; not by resources for gladness and permanence found in
independent reason or affection; but by the almighty, all-tender
power of the Comforter. "The Lord, the Life Giver," giving life by
bringing us to the Son of God, and uniting us to Him, is the Giver
and strong Sustainer of the faith, and so of the peace, the joy, the
hope, of this blessed life. "Now it was not written for their sakes only, but for us
also," in our circumstances of personal and of common
experience. Large and pregnant is the application of this one
utterance to the problems perpetually raised by the divided
state of organisation, and of opinion, in modern Christendom. It
gives us one secret, above and below all others, as the sure
panacea, if it may but be allowed to work, for this multifarious
malady which all who think deplore. That secret is "the secret
of the Lord, which is with them that fear Him". {Ps 25:14}
It is a fuller life in the individual, and so in the community,
of the peace and joy of believing; a larger abundance of "that
blessed hope," given by that power for which numberless hearts
are learning to thirst with a new intensity, "the power of the
Holy Ghost." It was in that direction above all that the Apostle gazed as he
yearned for the unity, not only spiritual, but practical, of the
Roman saints. This great master of order, this man made for
government, alive with all his large wisdom to the sacred
importance,
in its, true place, of the external mechanism of Christianity, yet
makes no mention of it here, nay, scarcely gives one allusion to it
in the whole Epistle. The word "Church" is not heard till the final
chapter; and then it is used only, or almost only, of the scattered
mission stations, or even mission groups, in their individuality.
The
ordered Ministry only twice, and in the most passing manner, comes
into the long discourse; in the words {Ro 12:6-8} about
prophecy, ministration, teaching, exhortation, leadership; and in
the
mention {Ro 16:1} of Phoebe’s relation to the Cenchrean Church.
He is addressing the saints of that great City which was afterwards,
in the tract of time, to develop into even terrific exaggerations
the
idea of Church Order. But he has practically nothing to say to them
about unification and cohesion beyond this appeal to hold fast
together by drawing nearer each and all to the Lord, and so filling
each one his soul and life with Him. Our modern problems must be met with attention, with firmness, with
practical purpose, with due regard to history, and with submission
to
revealed truth. But if they are to be solved indeed they must be met
outside the spirit of self, and in the communion of the Christian
with Christ, by the power of the Spirit of God.
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