What then is the effect of the possession of life in Christ as applied to
death and judgment, the two natural objects of men's fears, the fruit of
sin? If our bodies are not yet transformed; and if that which is mortal is
not yet swallowed up, we are equally full of confidence, because, being
formed for glory, and Christ (who has manifested the victorious power that
opened the path of heaven to Him) being our life, if we should leave this
tabernacle and be absent from the body before we are clothed upon with the
glory, this life remains untouched; it has already in Jesus triumphed over
all these effects of the power of death. We should be present with the
Lord; for we walk by faith, not by the sight of these excellent things.
Therefore we prefer to be absent from the body, and to be present with the
Lord. For this reason we seek to be well-pleasing to Him, whether we are
found absent from this body, or present in this body, when Christ shall
come to take us to Himself and make us share His glory.
And this leads on to the second point-judgment. For we must all be
manifested before the tribunal of Christ, in order that each may receive
according to that which he shall have done in the body, be it good or evil.
A happy and precious thought, after all, solemn as it may be; for, if we
have really understood grace, if we are standing in grace, if we know what
God is, all love for us, all light for us, we shall like to be in the full
light. It is a blessed deliverance to be in it. It is a burden, an
encumbrance, to have anything concealed, and although we have had much sin
in us that no one knows (perhaps even some that we have committed, and
which it would be no profit for any one to know), it is a comfort-if we
know the perfect love of God-that all should be in perfect light since He
is there. This is the case by faith and for faith, wherever there is solid
peace: we are before God as He is, and as we are-all sin in ourselves alas!
except so far as He has wrought in us by quickening us; and He is all love
in this light in which we are placed; for God is light, and He reveals
Himself. Without the knowledge of grace, we fear the light: it cannot be
otherwise. But knowing grace, knowing that sin has been put away as regards
the glory of God, and that the offence is no longer before His eyes, we
like to be in the light, it is joy to us, it is that which the heart needs,
without which it cannot be satisfied, when there is the life of the new
man. Its nature is to love the light, to love purity in all that perfection
which does not admit the evil of darkness, which shuts out all that is not
itself. Now to be thus in the light, and to be manifested, is the same
thing, for the light makes everything manifest.
We are in the light by faith when the conscience is in the presence of God.
We shall be according to the perfection of that light when we appear before
the tribunal of Christ. I have said that it is a solemn thing-and so it is,
for everything is judged according to that light; but it is that which the
heart loves, because-thanks to our God!-we are light in Christ.
But there is more than this. When the Christian is thus manifested, he is
already glorified, and, perfectly like Christ, has then no remains of the
evil nature in which he sinned. And he now can look back at all the way God
has led him in grace, helped, lifted up, kept from falling, not withdrawn
His eyes from the righteous. He knows as he is known. What a tale of grace
and mercy! If I look back now, my sins do not rest on my conscience; though
I have horror of them, they are put away behind God's back. I am the
righteousness of God in Christ, but what a sense of love and patience, and
goodness and grace! How much more perfect then, when all is before me!
Surely there is great gain as to light and love, in giving an account of
ourselves to God; and not a trace remains of the evil in us. We are like
Christ. If a person fears to have all out thus before God, I do not believe
he is free in soul as to righteousness-being the righteousness of God in
Christ, not fully in the light. And we have not to be judged for anything:
Christ has put it all away.
But there is another idea in the passage-retribution. The apostle does not
speak of judgment on persons, because the saints are included, and Christ
has stood in their place for all that regards the judgment of their
persons: "There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ." They do
not come into judgment. But they shall be manifested before His tribunal,
and receive that which they have done in the body. The good deserves
nothing: they received that by which they have wrought what is good-grace
produced it in them; nevertheless they shall receive its reward. What they
have done is counted as their own act. If, by neglecting grace and the
witness of the Spirit in them, the fruits which He would have produced have
been turned aside, they will bear the consequences. It is not that, in this
case, God will have forsaken them; it is not that the Holy Ghost will not
act in them with regard to the condition they are in; but it will be in
their conscience that He acts, judging the flesh which has prevented the
man's bearing the natural fruit of His presence and operation in the new
man. So that the Holy Ghost will have done all that is necessary with
respect to their state of heart; and the perfect counsel of God with regard
to the person will have been accomplished, His patience manifested, His
wisdom, His ways in governing, the care which He deigns to take of each one
individually in His most condescending love. Each one will have his place,
as it was prepared for him of the Father. But the natural fruit of the
presence and operation of the Holy Ghost in a soul which has (or, according
to the advantages it has enjoyed, ought to have had) a certain measure of
light, will not have been produced. It will be seen what it was that
prevented. It will judge, according to the judgment of God, all that was
good and evil in itself, with a solemn reverence for that which God is, and
a fervent adoration on account of what He has been for us. The perfect
light will be appreciated; the ways of God known and understood in all
their perfection, by the application of the perfect light to the whole
course of our life and of His dealings with us, in which we shall
thoroughly recognise that love-perfect, sovereign above all things-has
reigned, with ineffable grace.
Thus the majesty of God will have been maintained by His judgment, at the
same time that the perfection and tenderness of His dealings will be the
eternal recollection of our souls. Light without cloud or darkness will be
understood in its own perfection. To understand it is to be in it and to
enjoy it. And light is God Himself. How wonderful to be thus manifested!
What love is that which in its perfect wisdom, in its marvellous ways
overruling all evil, could bring such beings as we are to enjoy this
unclouded light-beings knowing good and evil (the natural prerogative of
those only of whom God can say "one of us"), under the yoke of the evil
which they knew, and driven out by a bad conscience from the presence of
God, to whom that knowledge belonged, having testimony enough in their
conscience as to the judgment of God, to make them avoid Him and be
miserable, but nothing to draw them to Him who alone could find a remedy!
What love and holy wisdom which could bring such to the source of good, of
pure happiness, in whom the power of good repels absolutely the evil which
it judges!
With regard to the unrighteous, at the judgment-day they will have to
answer personally for their sins, under a responsibility which rests
entirely on themselves.
However great the happiness of being in the perfect light (and this
happiness is complete and divine in its character), it is on the side of
conscience that the subject is here presented. God maintains His majesty by
the judgment which He executes, as it is written, "The Lord is known by the
judgment that he executeth": there, in His government of the world; here,
final, eternal, and personal judgment. And, for my part, I believe that it
is very profitable for the soul to have the judgment of God present to our
minds, and the sense of the unchangeable majesty of God maintained in the
conscience by this means. If we were not under grace, it would be-it ought
to be-insupportable; but the maintenance of this sentiment does not
contradict grace. It is indeed only under grace that it can be maintained
in its truth; for who otherwise could bear the thought, for an instant, of
receiving that which he had done in the body? None but he who is completely
blinded.
But the authority, the holy authority of God, which asserts itself in
judgment, forms a part of our relationship with Him; the maintenance of
this sentiment, associated with the full enjoyment of grace, a part of our
holy spiritual affections. It is the fear of the Lord. It is in this sense,
that "Happy is he who feareth always." If this weakens the conviction that
the love of God rests fully, eternally, upon us, then we get off the only
possible ground of any relation whatever with God, unless perdition could
be so called. But, in the sweet and peaceful atmosphere of grace,
conscience maintains its rights and its authority against the subtle
encroachments of the flesh, through the sense of God's judgment, in virtue
of a holiness which cannot be separated from the character of God without
denying that there is a God: for if there is a God, He is holy. This
sentiment engages the heart of the accepted believer, to endeavour to
please the Lord in every way; and, in the sense of how solemn a thing it is
for a sinner to appear before God, the love that necessarily accompanies it
in a believer's heart urges him to persuade men with a view to their
salvation, while maintaining his own conscience in the light. And he who is
now walking in the light, whose conscience reflects that light, will not
fear it in the day when it shall appear in its glory. We must be
manifested; but, walking in the light in the sense of the fear of God,
realising His judgment of evil, we are already manifested to God: nothing
hinders the sweet and assured flow of His love. Accordingly the walk of
such a one justifies itself in the end to the consciences of others; one is
manifested as walking in the light.
These are therefore the two great practical principles of the ministry: to
walk in the light, in the sense of God's solemn judgment for every one;
and, the conscience being thus pure in the light, the sense of the judgment
(which in this case cannot trouble the soul for itself, or obscure its view
of the love of God) impels the heart to seek in love those who are in
danger of this judgment. This connects itself with the doctrine of Christ,
the Saviour, through His death upon the cross; and the love of Christ
constrains us, because we see that, if one died for all, it is that all
were dead. This was the universal condition of souls. The apostle seeks
them in order that they may live unto God by Christ. But this goes farther.
First, as regards fallen man's lot, death is gain. The saint, if absent
from the body, is present with the Lord. As to judgment, he owns the
solemnity of it, but it does not make him tremble. He is in Christ-will be
like Christ; and Christ, before whom he is to appear, has put away all the
sins he had to be judged for. The effect is the sanctifying one of bringing
him fully manifested into the presence of God now. But it stimulates his
love as to others, nor is it only by fear of judgment to come for them;
Christ's love constrains him-love manifested in death. But this proves more
than the acts of sin which bring judgment: Christ died because all were
dead. The Spirit of God goes to the source and spring of their whole
condition, their state, not merely the fruits of an evil nature-all were
dead. We find the same important instruction in John 5:24, "He that
heareth my word, and believeth him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and
shall not come into judgment [that which applies to sins], but is passed
from death unto life"; he has come out of the whole state and condition, as
an already lost one, into another and different one in Christ. This is a
very important aspect of the truth. And the distinction, largely developed
in Romans, is found in many passages.
The work of manifestation before God in the light is already true, in so
far as we have realised the light. Cannot I, being now in peace, look back
at what I was before conversion, and at all my failures since my
conversion, humbled but adoring the grace of God in all He has done for me,
but without a thought of fear, or imputation of sin? Does not this awaken a
very deep sense of all that God is in holy grace and love, in unbounded
patience towards me, both keeping and helping and restoring? Such will be
the case perfectly when we are manifested, when we shall know as we are
known.
That this point may be still more clear, for it is an important one, let me
add some further observations here. What we find in this passage is the
perfect manifestation of all that a person is and has been before a throne
characterised by judgment, without judgment as to the person in question
being guilty. No doubt when the wicked receives the things done in the
body, he is condemned. But it is not said "judged" here, because all then
must be condemned. But this manifestation is exactly what brings all
morally before the heart, when it is capable of judging evil for itself:
were it under judgment, it could not. Freed from all fear, and in the
perfect light and with the comfort of perfect love (for where we have the
conscience of sin, and of its not being imputed, we have the sense, though
in a humbling way, of perfect love), and at the same time the sense of
authority and divine government fully made good in the soul, all is judged
by the soul itself as God judges it, and communion with Himself entered
into. This is exceedingly precious.
We have to remember that, at our appearing before the judgment-seat of
Christ, we are already glorified. Christ has come Himself in perfect love
to fetch us; and has changed our vile body according to the resemblance of
His glorious body. We are glorified and like Christ before the judgment
takes place. And mark the effect on Paul. Does the thought of being
manifested awaken anxiety or dread? Not the least. He realises all the
solemnity of such a process. He knows the terror of the Lord; he has it
before his eyes; and what is the consequence? He sets about to persuade
others who are in need of it.
There are, so to speak, two parts in God's nature and character: His
righteousness, which judges everything; and His perfect love. These are one
for us in Christ, ours in Christ. If indeed we realise what God is, both
will have their place: but the believer in Christ is the righteousness
which God, from His very nature, must have before Him on His throne, if we
are to be with Him and enjoy Him. But the Christ, in the judgment-seat,
before whom we are, is our righteousness. He judges by the righteousness
which He is; but we are that righteousness, the righteousness of God in
Him. Hence this point can raise no question in the soul, will make us adore
such grace, but can raise no question, only enhance the sense we have of
grace ourselves, make us understand it, as suited to man as he is, and feel
the solemn and awful consequences of not having part in it, since there is
such a judgment. Hence that other and indeed essential part of the divine
nature, love, will work in us towards others; and, knowing the terror of
the Lord, we shall persuade men. Thus Paul (it is conscience in view of
that most solemn moment) possessed the righteousness which he saw in the
Judge, for that which judged was His righteousness; but then he
consequently seeks others earnestly, according to the work which had thus
brought him near to God, to which he then turns (v. 13, 14). But this view
of judgment and our complete manifestation in that day, has a present
effect on the saint according to its own nature. He realises it by faith.
He is manifested. He does not fear being manifested. It will unfold all
God's past ways towards him when he is in glory; but he is manifested now
to God, his conscience exercised in the light. It has thus a present
sanctifying power.
Observe here the assemblage of powerful motives, of pre-eminently important
principles; contradictory in appearance, but which, to a soul which walks
in light, instead of clashing and destroying each other, unite to give its
complete and thoroughly furnished character to the christian minister and
ministry.
First of all, the glory, in such a power of life, that he who realises it
does not desire death, because he sees in the power of life in Christ that
which can absorb whatever in him is mortal, and he sees it with the
certainty of enjoying it-such a consciousness of possessing this life (God
having formed him for it, and given him the earnest of the Spirit), that
death if it arrive to him is but a happy absence from the body in order to
be present with the Lord.
Now the thought of ascending to Christ gives the desire of being acceptable
to Him, and presents Him (the second motive or principle that gives a form
to this ministry) as the Judge who will render to every one that which he
has done. The solemn thought of how much this judgment is to be feared
takes possession of the apostle's heart. What a difference between this
thought and the "building of God," for which he was waiting with certainty!
Nevertheless this thought does not alarm him; but, in the solemn sense of
the reality of that judgment, it impels him to persuade others.
But here a third principle comes in, the love of Christ with reference to
the condition of those whom Paul sought to persuade. Since this love of
Christ's shews itself in His death, there is in it the witness that all
were already dead and lost.
Thus we have here set before us glory, with the personal certainty of
enjoying it, and death become the means of being present with the Lord; the
tribunal of Christ, and the necessity of being manifested before it; and
the love of Christ in His death, all being already dead. How are such
diverse principles as these to be reconciled and arranged in the heart? It
is that the apostle was manifested to God. Hence the thought of being
manifested before the tribunal produced, along with the present
sanctification, no other effect on him than that of solemnity, for he was
not to come into judgment; but it became an urgent motive for preaching to
others, according to the love which Christ had manifested in His death. The
idea of the tribunal did not in the least weaken his certainty of glory.
[see note #5]
His soul, in the full light of God, reflected what was in that light,
namely, the glory of Christ ascended on high as man. And the love of this
same Jesus was strengthened in its active operation in him by the sense of
the tribunal which awaits all men.
What a marvellous combination of motives we find in this passage, to form a
ministry characterised by the development of all that in which God reveals
Himself, and by which He acts on the heart and conscience of man! And it is
in a pure conscience that these things can have their force together. If
the conscience were not pure, the tribunal would obscure the glory, at
least as belonging to oneself, and weaken the sense of His love. At any
rate one would be occupied with self in connection with these things, and
ought to be so. But when pure before God, it only sees a tribunal which
excites no sense of personal uneasiness, and therefore has all its true
moral effect, as an additional motive for seriousness in our walk, and a
solemn energy in the appeal which the known love of Jesus impels it to
address to man.
As to how far our own relations with God enter into the service which we
have to render to others, the apostle adds another thing that characterised
his walk, and that was the result of the death and resurrection of Christ.
He lived in an entirely new sphere, in a new creation, which had left
behind, as in another world, all that belonged to a natural existence in
the flesh here below. The proof that Christ had died for all proved that
all were dead; and that He died for all in order that those who live should
live no longer to themselves but to Him who died for them and rose again.
They are in connection with this new order of things in which Christ exists
as risen. Death is on everything else. Everything is shut up under death.
If I live, I live in a new order of things, in a new creation, of which
Christ is the type and the head. Christ, so far as in connection with this
world below, is dead. He might have been known as the Messiah, living on
the earth, and in connection with promises made to men living on the earth
in the flesh. The apostle no longer knew Him thus. In fact Christ, as
bearing that character, was dead; and now, being risen, He has taken a new
and a heavenly character.
Therefore if any one is in Christ, he belongs to this new creation, he is
of the new creation. He belongs no more at all to the former; the old
things have passed away; all things are I become new. The system is not the
fruit of human nature and of sin, like all that surrounds us here below,
according to the I flesh. Already, looked at as a system existing morally
before God, in this new creation, all things are of God. All that is found
in it is of God, of Him who has reconciled us to Himself by Jesus Christ.
We live in an order of things, a world, a new creation, entirely of God. We
are there in peace, because God, who is its centre and its source, has
reconciled us to Himself. We enjoy it, because we are new creatures in
Christ; and everything in this new world is of Him, and corresponds with
that new nature. He had also committed to the apostle a ministry of
reconciliation, according to the order of things into which he had been
himself introduced. Being reconciled, and knowing it by the revelation of
God who had accomplished it for him, he proclaimed a reconciliation, the
effect of which he was enjoying .
All this flowed from an immense and all-powerful truth. God was in Christ.
But then, in order that others might have a part with him, and the apostle
be the minister of this, it was also necessary that Christ should be made
sin for us. One of these truths presents the character in which God has
drawn nigh to us, the other, the efficacy of that which has been wrought
for the believer.
Here is the first of these truths, in connection with the apostle's
ministry, which form the subject of these chapters. God was in Christ (that
is to say, when Christ was on earth). The day of judgment had not been
waited for. God had come down in love into the world alienated from Him.
Such was Christ. Three things were connected with and characterised this
great and essential truth: reconciling the world, not imputing
transgression, and putting the word of reconciliation into the apostle. As
the result of this third consequence of the incarnation, the apostle
assumes the character of ambassador for Christ, as though God exhorted by
his means, he besought men, in the name of Christ, to be reconciled to God.
But such an embassy supposed the absence of Christ; His ambassador acted in
His stead. It was in fact based upon another truth of immeasurable
importance, namely, that God had made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us,
in order that we should be made the righteousness of God in Him. This was
the true way to reconcile us, and that entirely, to God, according to the
perfection of God fully revealed. For He had set His love upon us where we
were, giving His Son, who was without spot or motion or principle of sin;
and making Him (for He offered Himself to accomplish the will of God) sin
for us, in order to make us in Him-who in that condition had perfectly
glorified Him-the expression of His divine righteousness, before the
heavenly principalities through all eternity; to make us His delight, as
regards righteousness; "that we should be the righteousness of God in him."
Man has no righteousness for God: God has made the saints, in Jesus, His
righteousness. It is in us that this divine righteousness is seen fully
verified-of course in Christ first, in setting Him at His right hand, and
in us as in Him. Marvellous truth! which, if its results in us cause
thanksgiving and praise to resound when looking at Jesus, silences the
heart, and bows it down in adoration, astonished at the sight of His
wonderful acts in grace. [see note #6]