In the Epistles, we find the exposition of the result of that glorious work
of grace, by which man is placed on entirely new ground with God, in
reconciliation with Him; as well as the development of the counsels of God
in Christ, according to which this new world is established and ordered. In
giving this exposition of the ways of God in connection with the work which
is their basis, the perfect efficacy of the work itself, and the order of
our relations with God, are plainly set forth; so that the whole system,
the whole plan of God, and the way in which it was put in execution, are
presented. And in doing this, that which man is, that which God is, that
which eternal life is, are clearly put before us.
The death and resurrection of Christ, as well as His exaltation to the
right hand of God, form the centre of all this instruction.
There are three great divisions in this instruction, which are connected in
general with the instrument used of God in the communication of each part.
1st. The counsels of God, which are developed by Paul in connection with
the revelation of true righteousness before God, the ground on which a man
can be truly righteous before God-God's righteousness, man being a sinner.
2nd. The life of God, eternal life manifested and imparted. This is in
John's epistle. [see note #1]
3rd. Christian life on the earth, in following a risen Christ. This we find
in the Epistle of Peter, in connection with God's government of the world
as such: the Christian is a pilgrim. There are also James and Jude. The
first presents moral life-the life of faith on earth-as the true
demonstration to men of our faith, and, in particular, of practical faith
in Christ as well as in God, who answers our requests and our wants. On
this account, while clearly and distinctly recognising faith in Christ, and
our being begotten by the mighty grace of God through His word, this
epistle scarcely rises in fact above such life as could have manifested and
developed itself at any period whatsoever in a believer; only that it was
the Christian, born of God, who now exemplified it, and that thus it was
the law of liberty, because the new nature and the will of God ran
together, and both were fully revealed in Christ. Thus the Epistle of James
is linked with the synagogue, and with Christians still in connection with
Judaism, as we have seen them historically at Jerusalem with James at their
head. The Epistle does not go beyond that position. It is the last
testimony rendered to Israel looked at as the people of God, while at the
same time distinguishing the quickened remnant who had faith in Christ,
although they were not yet separated from the nation. Our habits of
thought, founded not on imposed law without reason, but upon a much more
complete development of Christianity (a development which was the
manifestation of counsels much more ancient than the Jewish nation, for
they were the eternal counsels of God), make it difficult for us to
apprehend this form of the truth-a form in which it is connected with that
which, because of the promises made to Israel, was historically its cradle
here below.
If we have rightly understood the history of the Acts, it will make the
position of believers, as we find it in the Epistle of James, much more
intelligible to us. The Epistle is a correction of profession without life,
and most valuable in this respect.
Jude has a very different character. It is not the cradle of Christianity,
or of the assembly on earth: it is its decay and its death here below. It
does not keep its first estate. This Epistle resembles a part of the second
by Peter; but the latter speaks of the judgment brought in by the general
government of God; Jude, of the fall of that which has had its existence
since Pentecost under the eye of God, as responsible for the maintenance of
the glory of His grace on the earth-a fall which, with regard to the
present state of things, brings on the judgment of which Peter speaks, and
which he carries on even to the dissolution of the earth and its elements.
The evil that had already begun in its earliest germs gave rise to this
development in Jude, and to the distinction of the true assembly, or at
least of its members, who would be presented in glory before the presence
of the Lord in heaven. The Epistle to the Hebrews views the saint on earth,
perfected as to acceptance by the work of Christ, and as having thus
boldness to enter into the holiest, but as walking in weakness here on the
earth, not united to Christ in heaven; hence it sets forth the priesthood
of Christ as obtaining grace to help in time of need, while He appears
always in the presence of God for us. It is not intercession in respect of
sins (we have no more conscience of sins), but grace and help for us, such
as we are. Christ's Person as God and man also is very fully brought out.
A more complete and more precise development will be found in studying the
Epistles themselves.
We will begin with the Epistles of Paul. In the historical character of
their doctrine James and Peter should precede them; this is to say, in the
progress of the manifestations of God's counsels in their whole extent. But
as developing the foundations of truth, and laying open its range as a
whole, the Epistles of Paul have evidently the first place and throw light
on that of the others. The Epistle to the Romans especially establishes the
grand foundations of divine truth, and individual relationship with God, in
the most plain and complete manner, so that we have no motive for deviating
from the order in which we find them habitually placed. There is nothing in
that order which, as to its details, is connected with any moral or
chronological reason: it differs also in different countries and in
different versions; but it is most convenient to take that order which the
reader will find in his ordinary Bible. We may notice that which will be
interesting in this respect as we study each epistle. It is probable that
among the epistles of Paul that to the Thessalonians was the first. The
date of the Epistle to the Galatians is less certain, but it was written
after several years of labour; the two to the Corinthians, and that to the
Romans, at Ephesus, Macedonia, and Corinth, respectively, during his
journey round the Archipelago after his long sojourn at Ephesus; those to
the Ephesians, Philippians, and Colossians, during his captivity. I reserve
the others, Hebrews included, for the study of those epistles, pointing out
only that which it may be useful to know in those of which the date is
pretty certain.
The First Epistle of John, we may add, hardly belongs to any
particular period, save that (in setting forth the nature and character of
the life of God, the touchstone of all profession, and safeguard against
all error, against all that does not bear its stamp, and against all the
pretensions which, being devoid of it, betray themselves by that very fact)
this epistle supposes the entrance of these errors, and thus the latter
days of the apostolic age. And this indeed is more or less the case with
the epistles called catholic, from not being addressed to any particular
assembly, as Paul's, the master-builder's, were. In these we find
prophecies of the evil from the very first, and the fact that the mystery
of iniquity was at work already. But the catholic epistles take that
ground. Jude speaks of corruption entering in, John of apostates going out.
Let us now consider a little the epistles of Paul himself.
They have more than one character, whilst all displaying that spirit gifted
from on high, which expatiates on the wide range of the thoughts of God,
and in its wonderful energy can enter at the same time into every detail,
even into those of individual life; that knows how to place itself exactly
in the relations of a fugitive slave with his master, in view of grace, and
to set forth with divine clearness all the counsels by which the Father
glorifies His Son, by making Him the centre of all His purposes, of the
system which results from the exercises of all His power.
The care of the assemblies, the development of the counsels of
God, the exercise of brotherly affection, have each their place in his
thoughts and his labours; while he is often forced to develop the truth in
striving against errors which rend his heart, whether he thinks of the
Christ whom they dishonour, and of the truth-the instrument of
salvation-which they undermine; or whether he remembers the dear redeemed
ones of Christ who are troubled by these errors, perhaps turned aside from
the true path by them.