|
The
opening verses of the second chapter of the Second Epistle
to Timothy are in essence a comprehensive exhortation to faithfulness.
The apostle Paul was lying imprisoned at Rome, with expectation
of no other issue than death. The infant Church had fallen
upon perilous times. False teachers were assailing the very
essence of the Gospel. Defection had invaded the innermost
circle of the apostle's companions. Treachery had attacked
his own person. Over against all these dreadful manifestations
of impending destruction, he strenuously exhorts his own son
in faith, Timothy, to steadfast faithfulness. Faithfulness
to himself, faithfulness to the cause he had at heart, faithfulness
to the truth as he preached it, faithfulness to Jesus Christ,
their common Redeemer and Lord.
The
temptations to unfaithfulness by which Timothy was assailed
were very numerous and very specious. Many good men had fallen
and were falling victims to them. The perverted teachings
of the errorists of the day were urged with a great show of
learning and with eminent plausibility. And they were announced
with a fine scorn which openly declared that only dull wits
could rest in the crude ideas with which Paul had faced the
world-and lost. The sword of persecution had been ruthlessly
unsheathed, and sufferings and a cruel death watched in the
way of those who would fain walk in the path Paul had broken
out. It seemed as if the whole fabric which the apostle had
built up at such cost of labor and pain was about to fall
about his ears.
Paul
does not for a moment, however, lose courage, either for himself,
or for his faithful followers. But neither does he seek to
involve Timothy unwittingly in the difficulties and dangers
in which he found himself. He rather bids him first of all
to count the whole cost. And then he points him to a source
of strength which will supply all his needs. We called the
passage an exhortation. We might better call it, more specifically,
an encouragement. And the encouragement culminates in a very
remarkable sentence. This sentence is pregnant enough to reveal
at once the central thought of Paul's Gospel and the citadel
of his own strength. Amid all the surrounding temptations,
all the encompassing dangers, Paul bids Timothy to bear in
mind, as the sufficing source of abounding strength, the great
central doctrine, - or rather, let us say, the great central
fact-of his preaching, of his faith, of his life. And he enunciates
this great fact, in these words: Jesus Christ raised from
the dead, of the seed of David.
It
is, of course, to the glorified Jesus that Paul directs his
own and Timothy's gaze. Or, to be more specific, it is to
the regal lordship of the resurrected Jesus that he points
as the Christian's strength and support. The language is compressed
to the extremity of conciseness. It is difficult to convey
its full force except in diluted paraphrase. Paul bids Timothy
in the midst of all the besetting perplexities and dangers
which encompassed him to strengthen his heart by bearing constantly
in remembrance, not Jesus Christ simpliciter, but Jesus Christ
conceived specifically as the Lord of the Universe, who has
been dead, but now lives again and abides for ever in the
power of an endless life; as the royal seed of David ascended
in triumph to His eternal throne. It is not from the exaltation
of Jesus alone, let us observe, that Paul draws and would
have Timothy draw strength to endure in the crisis which had
fallen upon their lives. It is to the contrast between the
past humiliation and the present glory of the exalted Lord
that he directs his eyes. He does not say simply, "Bear in
mind that Jesus Christ sits on the throne of the universe
and all things are under His feet," although, of course, it
is the universal dominion of Jesus which gives its force to
the exhortation. He says, "Bear in mind that Jesus Christ
has been raised from the dead, of the seed of David-that it
is He that died who, raised from the dead, sits as eternal
king in the heavens." No doubt a part of the apostle's object
in his allusion to the past humiliation of the exalted Lord
is to constitute a connection between Jesus Christ and his
faithful followers, that they may become imitators of Him.
They, the viatores, may see in Him, the consummator, one who
like them had Himself been viator, and may be excited to follow
after Him that they too may in due time become consummatores.
But the nerve of the exhortation, obviously, does not lie
in this, as the very language in which it is couched sufficiently
avouches. How could Timothy imitate our Lord in being of the
seed of David? How could he imitate Him by ascending the throne
of the universe? Fundamentally the apostle is pointing to
Christ not as our example, but as our almighty Savior. He
means to adduce the great things about Him. And the central
one of the great things he adduces about Him is that He has
been raised from the dead.
It
is not to be overlooked, of course, that Paul adverts to the
resurrection of Christ here with his mind absorbed not so
much in the act of His rising as in its issues. "Bear in mind,"
he says, "Jesus Christ as one who has been raised from the
dead": that is to say, as one who could not be holden of the
grave, but has burst the bonds of death, and lo! He lives
for evermore. But neither can it be overlooked that it is
specifically to the resurrection, which is an act, that he
adverts; and that he adverts to it in such a manner as to
make it manifest that the fact of the resurrection of Christ
held a place in his Gospel which deserves to be called nothing
less than central. The exalted Christ is conceived by him
distinctly as the resurrected Jesus; and it is clear that,
had there been no resurrection of Jesus, Paul would not have
known how to point Timothy to the exalted Christ as the source
of his strength to face with courage the hardships and defeats
of life. From this great fact, he derives, therefore, the
very phraseology with which he exhorts Timothy, with rich
reference to all that is involved in Christ our Forerunner,
to die with his Lord that he might also live with Him, to
endure with Him that he might also reign with Him. To Paul,
it is clear, the resurrection of Christ was the hinge on which
turned all his hopes and all his confidence, in life and also
in death.
Now,
there is a sense in which it is of no special importance to
lay stress on the place which the resurrection of Christ held
in Paul's thought and preaching. In this sense, to wit: that
nobody doubts that it was central to Paul's Gospel. It would
seem impossible, in fact, to read the New Testament and miss
observing that not only to Paul, but to the whole body of
the founders of Christianity, the conviction of the reality
of Christ's bodily resurrection entered into the very basis
of their faith. The fact is broadly spread upon the surface
of the New Testament record. Our Lord Himself deliberately
staked His whole claim to the credit of men upon His resurrection.
When asked for a sign He pointed to this sign as His single
and sufficient credential. The earliest preachers of the Gospel
conceived witnessing to the resurrection of their Master to
be their primary function. The lively hope and steadfast faith
which sprang up in them they ascribed to its power. Paul's
whole gospel was the gospel of the Risen Savior.: to His call
he ascribed his apostleship; and to His working, all the manifestation
of the Christian faith and life. There are in particular two
passages in Paul's Epistles, which reveal, in an almost startling
way, the supreme place which was ascribed to the resurrection
of Christ by the first believers in the Gospel.
In
a context of very special vigor he declares roundly that "if
Christ hath not been raised" the apostolic preaching and the
Christian faith are alike vanity, and those who have believed
in Christ lie yet unrelieved of their sins. His meaning is
that the resurrection of Christ occupied the center of the
Gospel which was preached alike by him and all the apostles,
and which had been received by all Christians. If, then, this
resurrection should prove to be not a real occurrence, the
preachers of the Gospel are convicted of being false witnesses
of God, the faith founded on their preaching is proved an
empty thing, and the hopes conceived on its basis are rendered
void. Here Paul implicates with him the whole Christian community,
teachers and taught alike, as suspending the truth of Christianity
on the reality of the resurrection of Christ. And so confident
is he of universal agreement in the indispensableness of this
fact to the integrity of the Christian message, that he uses
it for his sole fulcrum for prying back the doctrine of the
resurrection of believers into its proper place in the faith
of his skeptical readers. "If dead men are not raised, neither
hath Christ been raised," is his sole argument. And he plies
this argument with the air of a man who knows full well that
no one who calls himself a Christian will tolerate that conclusion.
The fact that Christ has been raised lay firmly embedded in
the depths of the Christian consciousness.
In
some respects even more striking are the implications of such
phraseology as meets us in another passage. Here the apostle
is contrasting all the "gains" of the flesh with the one great
"gain" of the spirit-Christ Jesus the Lord. As over against
"the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus, his Lord,"
he declares that he esteems "all things" as but refuse, -
the heap of leavings from the feast which is swept from the
table for the dogs, - if only he may "gain Christ and be found
in Him," if only, he repeats, he may "know Him, and the power
of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings,
becoming conformed into His death; if by any means he may
attain to the resurrection from the dead." The structure of
the sentence requires us to recognize the very essence of
the saving efficacy of Christ as resident in "the power of
His resurrection." It is through the power exerted by His
resurrection that His saving work takes effect on men. That
is to say, Paul discovers the center of gravity of the Christian
hope no less than of the Christian faith in the fact of the
resurrection of Christ. And of the Christian life as well.
From the great fact that Christ has risen from the dead, proceed
all the influences by which Christians are made in life and
attainments, here and hereafter, like Him.
In
the face of such evidence, spread broadcast over the New Testament,
no one has been able to question that the founders of Christianity
entrenched themselves in the fact of Christ's resurrection
as the central stronghold of their hope, faith, and proclamation.
We do not need to lay stress, therefore, on this implication
in such a passage as that before us, as if we were seeking
proof for a doubtful or even for a doubted fact. The importance
of our laying stress on its implication here and its open
assertion throughout the New Testament, is that we may be
able to estimate the real significance of a very widespread
tendency which has arisen in our own time to question the
importance of this event on which the founders of Christianity
laid such great emphasis, and to which they attached such
palmary consequence. If nobody doubts that the first preachers
of the Gospel esteemed the resurrection of Christ the foundation-stone
of their proclamation, the chief stay of their faith and hope
alike, there are nevertheless many who do not hesitate to
declare roundly that the first preachers of the Gospel were
grossly deceived in so esteeming it. This is an inevitable
sequence, indeed, of the chariness with respect to the supernatural
which so strongly characterizes our modern world. The "unmiraculous
Christianity" which has, in one or another of its modes of
conception, grown so fashionable in our day, as it could scarcely
allow that the most stupendous of all miracles really lay
at the basis of Christianity in its historical origins, so
cannot possibly allow that confidence in the reality of this
stupendous miracle lies today at the foundation of the Christian's
life and hope. To allow these things would be to confess that
Christianity is through and through a supernatural religion
- supernatural in its origin, supernatural in its sanctions,
supernatural in its operations in the world. And then, - what
would become of "unmiraculous Christianity"?
Accordingly,
we have now for more than a whole generation, been told over
and over again, and with ever-increasing stridency of voice,
that it makes no manner of difference whether Jesus rose from
the dead or not. The main fact, we are told, is not whether
the body that was laid in the tomb was resuscitated. Of what
religious value, we are asked, can that purely physical fact
be to any man? The main fact is that Jesus-that Jesus who
lived in the world a life of such transcendent attractiveness,
going about doing good, and by His unshaken and unshakable
faith in providence revealed to men the love of a Father-God,
this Jesus, though He underwent the inevitable experience
of change which men call death, yet still lives. Lives ! -
lives in His Church; or at least lives in that heaven to which
He pointed us as the home of our Father, and to which we may
all follow Him from the evils of this life; or in any event
lives in the influence which His beautiful and inspiring life
still exerts upon His followers and through them in the world.
This, this, we are told, is the fact of real religious value;
the only fact upon which the religious emotions can take hold;
by which the religious life can be quickened; and through
which we may be impelled to religious effort and strengthened
in religious endurance.
The
beauty of the language in which these assertions are clothed
and the fervor of religious feeling with which it is suffused,
must not be permitted to blind us to the real issue that is
raised by them. This is not whether our faith is grounded
in a mere resuscitation of a dead man two thousand years ago;
or rather in a living Lord reigning in the heavens. It is
not the peculiarity of this new view that it focuses men's
eyes on the glorified Jesus and bids them look to Him for
their inspiration and strength. That is what the apostles
did, and what all, since the apostles, who have followed in
their footsteps, have done. Paul did not say to Timothy merely,
"Remember that Jesus Christ, when He died, rose again from
the dead, "- although to have said that would have been to
have said much. Directing Timothy's eyes to the glorified
Jesus, reigning in power in the heavens, he said, "Remember
Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, of the seed of David."
It is not, then, the peculiarity of this new view that it
has discovered the living and reigning Christ. The living
and reigning Christ has always been the object of the adoring
faith of Christians. It is its peculiarity that it neglects
or denies the resurrected Christ.
It
does not pretend that in neglecting or denying the resurrected
Christ it does not break with the entirety of historical Christianity.
It freely allows that the apostles firmly believed in a resurrected
Christ, and that, following the apostles, Christians up to
today have firmly believed in a resurrected Christ. And it
freely allows that this firm belief in a resurrected Christ
has been the source of much of the enthusiasm of Christian
faith and of the Christian propaganda through all the ages.
But it heartily affirms that this emphasis on the resurrected
Christ nevertheless involves a gross confusion - no less a
confusion than that of the kernel with the husk. And it stoutly
maintains that the time has come to shell off the husk and
keep the kernel only. Religious belief, we are told, cannot
possibly rest on or be inseparably connected with a mere occurrence
in time and space. What others have seen in a different age
from ours-what is that to us? That Jesus rose from the dead
two thousand years ago and was seen of men - how can that
concern us today? All that can possibly be of any significance
to us is that He was "not swallowed up in death, but passed
through suffering and death to glory, that is, to life, power,
and honor." "Faith has nothing to do with the knowledge of
the form in which Jesus lives, but only with the conviction
that He is the living Lord."
Here
now is a brand-new conception of the matter, standing in express
contrast, and in expressly acknowledged contrast, with the
conception of the founders, and hitherto of the whole body
of the adherents, of Christianity. It is the outgrowth, as
we have already hinted, of a distaste for the supernatural.
To get rid of the supernatural in the origins of Christianity,
its entire historical character is surrendered. The Christianity
now to be proclaimed is to be confessedly a "I new Christianity
" - a different Christianity from any which has ever heretofore
existed on the face of the earth. And its novelty consists
in this, that it is to have no roots in historical occurrences
of any kind whatsoever. Religious belief, we are told, must
be independent of all mere facts.
We
must not forget that the professed purpose of this new determination
of the relation of Christianity to fact is to save Christianity.
If Christianity is independent of all historical facts, why,
it is clear that it cannot be assailed through the medium
of historical criticism. Let criticism reconstruct the historical
circumstances which have been connected with its origin as
it may; it cannot touch this Christianity which stands out
of relation with all historical occurrences whatever. Doubtless
it would be a great relief to many minds to be emancipated
from all fear of historical criticism. But it is certainly
a great price we are asked to pay for this emancipation. The
price indeed is no less an one than Christianity itself. For
the obvious effect of the detachment of Christianity from
all historical fact is to dismiss Christianity out of the
realm of fact.
Christianity
is a "historical religion," and a "Christianity" wholly unrelated
to historical occurrences is just no Christianity at all.
Religion, - yes, man may have religion without historical
facts to build upon, for man is a religious animal and can
no more escape from religion than he can escape from any other
of his persistent instincts. He may still by the grace of
God know something of God and the soul, moral responsibility
and immortality. But do not even the heathen know the same?
And what have we more than they? We may still call by the
name of "Christianity" the tattered rags of natural religion
which may be left us when we have cast away all the facts
which constitute Christianity, - the age-long preparation
for the coming of the Kingdom of God; the Incarnation of the
Son of God; His atoning death on the Cross; His rising again
on the third day and His ascension to heaven; the descent
of the Spirit on the Pentecostal birthday of the Church. But
to do so is to outrage all the proprieties of honest nomenclature.
For "Christianity" is not a mere synonym of "religion," but
is a specific form of religion determined in its peculiarity
by the great series of historical occurrences which constitute
the redemptive work of God in this sinful world, among which
occurrences the resurrection of Christ holds a substantial
and in some respects the key posit ion.
The
impossibility of sustaining anything which can be called "Christianity"
without embracing in it historical facts, may be illustrated
by the difficulty in carrying out their program which is experienced
by men who talk of freeing Christianity from its dependence
on facts. For do they not bid us to abstract our minds, indeed,
from that imagined resuscitation that occurred in Palestine
(if it occurred at all) two thousand years ago, but to focus
them nevertheless on the living Jesus, who has survived death
and still lives in heaven? Do they forget that when they say
"Jesus" they already say "history"? Who is this "Jesus" who
still lives in heaven, and the fact of whose still living
in heaven, having passed through death, is to be our inspiration?
Did He once live on earth? And, living on earth, did He not
manifest that unwavering faith in providence which reveals
the Father-God to us? Otherwise what is it to us that He "still"
lives in heaven? To be free from the entanglements of history;
to be immune from the assaults of historical criticism; it
is not enough to cease to care for such facts as His resurrection:
we must cease to care for the whole fact of Jesus. Jesus is
a historical figure. What He was, no less than what He did,
is a matter of historical testimony. When we turn our backs
on historical facts as of no significance to our, Christianity,"
we must turn our backs as well on Jesus-any Jesus we choose
to rescue for ourselves from the hands of historical criticism.
He who would have a really "unhistorical Christianity" must
know no Jesus whether on earth or in heaven. And surely a
Christianity without Jesus is just no Christianity at all.
Christianity
then stands or falls with the historical facts which, we do
not say merely accompanied its advent into the world, but
have given it its specific form as a religion. These historical
facts constitute its substance, and to be indifferent to them
is to be indifferent to the substance of Christianity. In
these circumstances it is a dangerous proceeding to declare
this or that one of them of no significance to the Christian
religion. Especially is it a dangerous proceeding to single
out for this declaration, one in which the founders of Christianity
discovered so much significance as they discovered in the
resurrection of Christ. When Paul says to us, not "Remember
Jesus Christ enthroned in heaven," but "Remember Jesus Christ,
risen from the dead, of the seed of David," we surely must
pause before we allow ourselves to say, "It is of no importance
whether He rose from the dead or not." And if we pause and
think but a moment, we certainly shall not fail to set our
seal to Paul's judgment of the significance of His rising
from the dead to the Christian religion. For once let us cast
our minds over the real place which the resurrection of Christ
holds in the Christian system and we shall not easily escape
the conviction that this fact is fundamental to its entire
message.
Let
us recall in rapid survey some of the various ways in which
the resurrection of Jesus evinces itself as lying at the basis
of all our hope and of all the hope of the world.
It
is natural to think, first of all, of the place of this great
fact in Christian apologetics. Opinions may conceivably differ
whether it would have been possible to believe in Christianity
as a supernaturally given religion if Christ had remained
holden of the grave. But it is scarcely disputable that the
fact that He did rise again, being once established, supplies
an irrefragable demonstration of the supernatural origin of
Christianity, of the validity of Christ's claim to be the
Son of God, and of the trust worthiness of His teaching as
a Messenger from God to man. In the light of this stupendous
miracle, all hesitation with respect to the supernatural accompaniments
of the life that preceded it, or of the succeeding establishment
of the religion to which its seal had been set,nay, of the
whole preparation for the coming of the Messenger of God who
was to live and die and rise again, and of the whole issue
of His life and death and resurrect ion-becomes at once unreasonable
and absurd. The religion of Christ is stamped at once from
heaven as divine, and all marks of divinity in its preparation,
accompaniments, and sequences become at once congruous and
natural. From the empty grave of Jesus the enemies of the
cross turn away in unconcealable dismay. Christ has risen
from the dead! After two thousand years of the most determined
assault upon the evidence which establishes it, that fact
stands. And so long as it stands, Christianity too must stand
as the one supernatural religion. The resurrection of Christ
is the fundamental apologetical fact of Christianity.
But
it holds no more fundamental place in Christian apologetics
than in the revelation of life and immortality which Christianity
brings to a dying world. By it the veil was lifted and men
were permitted to see the reality of that other world to which
we are all journeying. The whole relation they bore to life
and death, and the life beyond death, was revolutionized to
those who saw Him and companied with Him after He had risen
from the dead. Death had no longer any terrors for them: they
no longer needed to believe, they knew, that there was life
on the other side of death, that the grave was but a sojourning
place, and, though their earthly tent dwelling were dissolved,
they had a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal
in the heavens.
And
we who have come later may see with their eyes and handle
with their hands the Word of Life. We can no longer speak
of a bourne from which no traveler e'er returns. The resurrection
of Christ has broken the middle wall of partition down and
only a veil now separates earth from heaven. That He who has
died has been raised again and ever lives in the completeness
of His humanity is the fundamental fact in the revelation
of the Christian doctrine of immortality.
Equally
fundamental is the place which Christ's resurrection occupies
relatively to our confidence in His claims, His teachings,
and His promises. The Lord of Life could not succumb to death.
Had he not risen, could we have believed Him when He "made
Himself equal with God"? By His resurrection He set a seal
on all the instructions which He gave and on all the hopes
which He awakened. Had the one sign which He chose failed,
would not His declarations have all failed with it? Is it
nothing to us that He who said, "Come unto Me and I will give
you rest who has promised to be with those who trust Him always
even unto the end of the world"; who has announced to us the
forgiveness of sins; has proved that He has power to lay down
His life and to take it again? Whether is it easier to say,
"Thy sins be forgiven thee," or "I will arise and walk "?.That
He could not be holden of death, but arose in the power of
a deathless life, gives us to know that the Son of Man has
power to forgive sins.
And
there is a yet deeper truth: the resurrection of Christ is
fundamental to the Christian's assurance that Christ's work
is complete and His redemption is accomplished. It is not
enough that we should be able to say, "He was delivered up
for our trespasses." We must be able to add, "He was raised
for our justification." Else what would enable us to say,
He was able to pay the penalty He had undertaken? That He
died manifests His love and His willingness to save. It is
His rising again that manifests His power and His ability
to save. We cannot be saved by a dead Christ, who undertook
but could not perform, and who still lies under the Syrian
sky, another martyr of impotent love. To save, He must pass
not merely to but through death. If the penalty was fully
paid, it cannot have broken Him, it must needs have been broken
upon Him. The resurrection of Christ is thus the indispensable
evidence of His completed work, of His accomplished redemption.
It is only because He rose from the dead that we know that
the ransom He offered was sufficient, the sacrifice was accepted,
and that we are His purchased possession. In one word, the
resurrection of Christ is fundamental to the Christian hope
and the Christian confidence.
It
is fundamental, therefore, to our expectation of ourselves
rising from the dead. Because Christ has risen, we no more
judge that "if one died for all, then all died," "that the
body of sin might be done away," than that having died with
Him "we shall also live with Him." His resurrection drags
ours in its train. In His rising He conquered death and presented
to God in His own person the first-fruits of the victory over
the grave. In His rising we have the earnest and pledge of
our rising: "For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again,
even so them also that are fallen asleep in Jesus will He
bring with Him." Had Christ not risen could we nourish so
great a hope? Could we believe that what is sown in corruption
shall be raised in incorruption; what is sown in dishonor
shall be raised in glory; what is sown in weakness shall be
raised in power; what is sown a body under the dominion of
a sinful self shall be raised a body wholly determined by
the spirit of God?
Last
of all, to revert to the suggestion of the words of Paul with
which we began, in the resurrection of Christ we have the
assurance that He is the Lord of heaven and earth whose right
it is to rule and in whose hands are gathered the reins of
the universe. Without it we could believe in His love: He
died for us. We could believe in His continued life beyond
the tomb: who does not live after death? It might even be
possible that we should believe in His victory over evil:
for it might be conceived that one should be holy, and yet
involved in the working of a universal law. But had he not
risen, could we believe Him enthroned in heaven, Lord of all?
Himself subject to death; Himself the helpless prisoner of
the grave; does He differ in kind from that endless procession
of the slaves of death journeying like Him through the world
to the one inevitable end? If it is fundamental to Christianity
that Jesus should be Lord of all; that God should have highly
exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name;
that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, and every
tongue confess Him Lord: then it is fundamental to Christianity
that death too should be subject to Him and it should not
be possible for Him to see corruption. This last enemy too
He must needs, as Paul asserts, put under His feet; and it
is because He has put this last enemy under His feet that
we can say with such energy of conviction that nothing can
separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus
our Lord, - not even death itself: and that nothing can harm
us and nothing take away our peace.
O
the comfort, O the joy, O the courage, that dwells in the
great fact that Jesus is the Risen One, of the seed of David;
that as the Risen One He has become Head over all things;
and that He must reign until
He
shall have put all things under His feet. Our brother, who
has like us been acquainted with death, -He it is who rules
over the ages, the ages that are past, and the ages that are
passing, and the ages that are yet to come. If our hearts
should fail us as we stand over against the hosts of wickedness
which surround us, let us encourage ourselves and one another
with the great reminder: Remember Jesus Christ, risen from
the dead, of the seed of David!
|