Sermons Preached at Brighton eBook

Frederick William Robertson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Sermons Preached at Brighton.

Sermons Preached at Brighton eBook

Frederick William Robertson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 336 pages of information about Sermons Preached at Brighton.
as taught sometimes, means simply this—­a succession of miraculous powers flowing in a certain line.  The true apostolic succession is—­not a succession in an hereditary line, or line marked by visible signs which men can always identify, but a succession emphatically spiritual.
The Jews looked for an hereditary succession; they thought that because they were Abraham’s seed, the spiritual succession was preserved; the Redeemer told them that “God was able of those stones to raise up children unto Abraham.”  Therefore is this ever a spiritual succession—­in the hands of God alone; and they are here called the God-born, coming into the world variously qualified; sometimes baptized with the spirit which makes them, like James and John, the “Sons of Thunder,” sometimes with a milder spirit, as Barnabas, which makes them “Sons of Consolation,” sometimes having their souls indurated into an adamantine hardness, which makes them living stones—­rocks like Peter, against which the billows of this world dash themselves in vain, and against which the gates of hell shall not prevail.  But whether as apostles, or visitors of the poor, or parents of a family, born to do a work on earth, to speak a word, to discharge a mission which they themselves perhaps do not know till it is accomplished—­these are the Church of God—­the children of the Most High—­the noble army of the Spirit-born!  Opposed to this stands the mighty confederacy called the World.  But beware of fixing on individual men in order to stigmatize them as the world.  You may not draw a line and say—­“We are the sons of God, ye are of the world.”  The world is not so much individual as it is a certain spirit; the course of this world is “the spirit which now worketh in the children of disobedience.”  The world and the Church are annexed as inseparably as the elements which compose the atmosphere.  Take the smallest portion of this that you will, in a cubic inch the same proportions are found as in a temple.  In the ark there was a Ham; in the small band of the twelve apostles there was a Judas.
The spirit of the world is for ever altering—­impalpable; for ever eluding, in fresh forms, your attempts to seize it.  In the days of Noah, the spirit of the world was violence.  In Elijah’s day it was idolatry.  In the day of Christ it was power concentrated and condensed in the government of Rome.  In ours, perhaps, it is the love of money.  It enters in different proportions into different bosoms; it is found in a different form in contiguous towns; in the fashionable watering place, and in the commercial city:  it is this thing at Athens, and another in Corinth.  This is the spirit of the world—­a thing in my heart and yours:  to be struggled against, not so much in the case of others, as in the silent battle to be done within our own souls.  Pass we on now to consider—­

 II.  The victory of faith.

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Sermons Preached at Brighton from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.