So on the cross, the Father justified himself to man;
yea, glorified himself in the glory of his crucified
Son. On the cross God proved himself to be perfectly
just, perfectly good, perfectly generous, perfectly
glorious, beyond all that man could ever have dared
to conceive or dream. That God must be good,
the wise heathens knew; but that God was so utterly
good that he could stoop to suffer, to die, for men,
and by men—that they never dreamed.
That was the mystery of God’s love, which was
hid in Christ from the foundation of the world, and
which was revealed at last upon the cross of Calvary
by him who prayed for his murderers—’Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do.’
That truly blessed sight of a Saviour-God, who did
not disdain to die the meanest and the most fearful
of deaths—that, that came home at once,
and has come home ever since, to all hearts which
had left in them any love and respect for goodness,
and melted them with the fire of divine love; as God
grant it may melt yours, this day, and henceforth
for ever.
I can say no more, my friends. If this good
news does not come home to your hearts by its own
power, it will never be brought home to you by any
words of mine.
SERMON III. THE LIFE OF GOD
1 John i. 2.
For the Life was manifested, and we have seen it,
and bear witness, and shew unto you that eternal life,
which was with the Father and was manifested unto
us!
What do we mean, when we speak of the Life everlasting?
Do we mean that men’s souls are immortal, and
will live for ever after death, either in happiness
or misery?
We must mean more than that. At least we ought
to mean more than that, if we be Christian men.
For the Bible tells us, that Christ brought life
and immortality to light. Therefore they must
have been in darkness before Christ’s coming;
and men did not know as much about life and immortality
before Christ’s coming as they know—or
ought to know—now.
But if we need only believe that we shall live for
ever after death in happiness or misery, then Christ
has not brought life and immortality to light.
He has thrown no fresh light upon the matter.
And why? For this simple reason, that the old
heathen knew as much as that before Christ came.
The old Greeks and Romans, and Persians, and our own
forefathers before they became Christians, believed
that men’s souls would live for ever happy or
miserable. The Mussulmans, Mahommedans, Turks
as they are called in the Prayer-book, believe as
much as that now. They believe that men’s
souls live for ever after death, and go to ‘heaven’
or ‘hell.’
So those words ‘everlasting Life’ must
needs mean something more than that. What do
they mean?
First. What does everlasting mean?
It means exactly the same as eternal. The two
words are the same: only everlasting is English,
and eternal Latin. But they have the same sense.
Copyrights
The Good News of God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.