A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, November 2, 1862, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
For it was fitting for him, for whom are all things, and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings. (Heb 2:10)
1. Believing that God foreknows all things, we can only come to the conclusion that he foreknew the fall, and that it was only an incident in the great method by which he would glorify himself. Foreknowing the fall, and foreordaining and predestinating the plan by which he would rescue his chosen out of its ruins, he was pleased to make that plan a revelation of all his attributes, and, to a very great extent, a declaration of his wisdom. You do not find in the method of salvation a single tinge of folly. The Greeks may call it folly, but they are fools themselves. The gospel is the highest refinement of wisdom, indeed, of divine wisdom, and we cannot help perceiving that not only in its main features, but in its little points, in the details and the minutiae, the wisdom of God is most clearly to be seen. Just as in the making of the tabernacle in the wilderness not a single loop or tache was left to human chance or judgment, so in the great scheme of salvation, not a single fragment was left to the human will or to the folly of the flesh. It appears to be a law of the divine action that everything must be according to the fitness and necessity involved in perfect wisdom — “It behoved Christ to suffer”; and in our text we find, “It was fitting for him from whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, that he should make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.” It seemed to be only the order of natural fitness and congruity, in accordance with the nature and character of God, that the plan of salvation should be just what it is. Oh! how careful should we be who have to preach it never to alter it in the slightest degree. How we should lift our prayers to heaven that God would give us a clear understanding, first, of what we have to teach, and then a clear method of teaching what we have learned, so that no mistake may be made here, for a mistake here would mar that express image of God which shines in the gospel, and prevent our hearers from seeing the beautiful suitableness and proportion which are so adapted to reveal the perfect character of God. We say the plan must be what it is; it could not be otherwise so as to be in keeping with the divine character; and, therefore, it is imperative upon us that we make no alteration in it, no, not of a word, lest we should hear the Apostle’s anathema hissing through the air like a thunderbolt from God — “If we or an angel from heaven preach any other gospel than what you have received let him be accursed!”
2. Our text invites us to the consideration of three particulars: first, that Christ is a perfect Saviour; secondly, that he became so through suffering; and thirdly, that his being made perfect through suffering will ennoble and dignify the whole work of grace. “It was fitting for him that in bringing many sons to glory he should make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.”
3. I. To begin, then, first of all with the joyous thought, so well known to you all, but so necessary still to be repeated, that THE LORD JESUS IS A PERFECT SAVIOUR.
4. 1. For, first, he is perfectly adapted for the work of saving. The singular constitution of his nature adapts him to his office. He is God. It was necessary that he should be so. Who but God could sustain the enormous weight of human guilt? Who except Divinity was equal to bear the incredible load of wrath which was to be carried upon his shoulders? What knowledge except Omniscience could understand all the evil, and what power except Omnipotence could undo that evil? That Christ is God must always be a theme for grateful admiration to his people. Those who reject the divinity of Christ can have only a poor foundation to rest upon; the fickle sand, would seem to be more stable than the basis of their hope. It is enough for one man to work out his own obedience; more than enough for one man to bear wrath for himself; how, then, could he do it for others, and for those countless multitudes whose ruin was to be retrieved? But, beloved, we know that had he only been God yet still he would not have been suitable for a perfect Saviour, unless he had become man. Man had sinned; man must suffer. It was man in whom God’s purposes had been defeated for a while; it must be in man that God must triumph over his great enemy. He must take upon himself the seed of Abraham, so that he may stand in their room and place, and become their federal head. An angel, we believe, could not have suffered on the tree; it would not have been possible for an angelic nature to have borne those agonies which the wrath of God demanded as an expiation for guilt. But when we see the Lord Jesus before us, being truly the Son of Man, and as certainly the Son of God, we perceive that now Job’s desire is granted; we have a mediator who can lay his hand on both, and touch humanity in its weakness, and divinity in its strength; can make a ladder between earth and heaven; can bridge the distance which separates fallen manhood from the perfection of the eternal God. No nature except one so complex as that of Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God, would have been perfectly adapted for the work of salvation.
5. And just as he was adapted in his nature, so, beloved, it is very clear to us that he was also adapted by his experience. A physician should have some acquaintance with disease; how shall he know the remedy if he is ignorant of the malady? Our Saviour knew all because “he took our infirmities and he bore our sicknesses. He was tempted in all points, like as we are.” He did not look at sin from the distance of heaven but he walked, and lived in the midst of it. He did not pass hurriedly through the world as one might hastily walk through a hospital without clearly understanding the disease, but he lived his more than thirty years in its very centre, seeing sin in all its forms; yes, seeing it in forms that you and I have not yet seen. He saw it in demoniac forms, for hell was let loose for a time, that the combat might be the more terrible and the victory the more glorious. He saw sin carried to its most aggravated extent, when it crucified God himself, and nailed Jesus, the heir of heaven, to the accursed tree. He understood the disease; he was no empiric; he had studied the whole case through; deceitful as the human heart is, Jesus knew it; fickle as it is in its various appearances — Protean as it is in its constantly varying shapes, Christ knew and understood it all. His lifelong walking of the hospital of human nature had taught him the disease. He knew the subjects, too, upon whom to operate. He knew man, and what was in man; yes, better than the most skilled surgeon can know by experiment. He knew by experience. He himself took our infirmities and bore our sorrows. He was himself the patient, himself the medicine. He took upon himself the nature of the race he came to save, and so every feeling made him perfect in his work; every pang instructed him; every throb of anguish made him wise, and rendered him the more accomplished to work out the purposes of God in the bringing of the many sons to glory. If you will add to his perfect experience his marvellous character, you will see how completely adapted he was to the work. For a Saviour, we need one who is full of love, whose love will make him firm in his purpose, whose love will constrain him to yoke every power and talent that he has to the great work. We want one with zeal so flaming, that it will eat him up; of courage so indomitable, that he will face every adversary rather than forego his end; we want one, at the same time, who will blend with this brass of courage the gold of meekness and of gentleness; we want one who will be determined to deal fearlessly with his adversaries, who will put on zeal as a cloak, and will deal tenderly and compassionately with the disease of sin sick men, such a one we have in Christ. No man can read the character of Christ with any sort of understanding without saying, “That is the man I want as my friend.” The argument which Christ used was a very powerful one — “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me.” Why? “For I am meek and lowly in heart.” The character of Christ qualifies him to be the world’s Saviour, and there is something in his character, when properly understood, which is so attractive, that we may well say —
His worth if all the nations knew,
Sure the whole world would love him too.
If we had to make a Saviour ourselves, and it would be left to a parliament of the wisest senators of the race to form an ideal personage who should just meet man’s case, if the Divine One had lent us his own wisdom for the occasion, we could only have desired just such a person as Christ is. In character, we should have needed just such traits of nature and of spirit as we see in Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God. We think, therefore, we may safely say to every unconverted man, Christ is adapted to be a Saviour for you. We know that the saints, without our saying it, will respond, “Indeed, and he is just suited to be a Saviour for us.” Man, yet God; bone of our bone, and yet counting it no robbery to be equal with God; sufferer like ourselves, bearer of all the ills of manhood, and yet, unlike us, free from sin, holy, harmless, undefiled: qualified in all respects to undertake and accomplish the great work; Jesus, you are a perfect Saviour for us.
6. 2. Furthermore, just as Christ is thus perfectly adapted, so he is perfectly able to be a Saviour. He is a perfect Saviour by reason of ability. He is now able to meet all the needs of sinners. That need is very great. The sinner needs everything. The beggar at the door of Christ, does not ask for crumbs or groats,1 but needs all that Christ can give. Nothing short of all sufficiency can ever meet the needs of a poor son of Adam fallen by sin. Christ Jesus has all fulness dwelling in himself. “More than all in Christ we find”: pardon in his blood; justification in his righteousness; wisdom in his teaching; sanctification in his Spirit. He is the God of all grace to us. Deep as our miseries and boundless as our sins may be, the mines of his unfathomable love, his grace, and his power, still exceed them. Send a spirit throughout all nations to hunt up the most abject of all races; discover, at last, a tribe of men degenerated as low as the beasts; select out of these the vilest, one who has been a cannibal; bring before us one lost to all sense of morality, one who has put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter, light for darkness and darkness for light; let that man be red with murder, let him be black with lust; let villainies infest his heart as innumerable and detestable as the frogs of Egypt’s plague — yet Christ is able to meet that man’s case. It is impossible for us to produce an exaggeration of the work of sin and the devil, which Christ shall not be able to exceed by the plenitude of his power. “He is able to save to the uttermost those who come to God by him.” That divine word which made heaven and earth, is able to make a new creature in Christ Jesus; and that power which never can be exhausted, which after making ten thousand times ten thousand worlds could make as many more, is all in Christ, and is linked with the virtue of his merit and the prevalence of his blood, and therefore he has all power in heaven and in earth to save souls. Just as he has this power to meet all needs, so he can meet all need in all cases. There has never been brought to Christ a man whom he could not heal. If born blind, a touch of his finger has given sight; if lame he has made him leap like a hart; indeed, and although dead, the voice of Christ has made Lazarus come forth from his tomb. Some troubled consciences think their case is not in the list of possible cures, let us assure them it must be. I would like to know who is the vilest sinner, for if I knew him I should feel delighted to behold him, since I should see a platform upon which my Lord’s grace might stand to be the more gloriously resplendent in the eyes of men. Are you the vilest of the vile this morning? Do you feel so? Does Satan say you are so? Then I ask you to do my Master the honour to believe that he is still able to meet your case, and that he can save even you. Although you think yourselves the ends of the earth, the very tattered threads of the garment of manhood, yet “look to him and be saved, all you ends of the earth, for he is God, and besides him there is no one else.” Just as he can meet all cases, so he can meet all cases at all times. One villainy of hell is to tell sinners that it is too late. While the lamp holds out to burn, the vilest sinner who returns shall find mercy in him. At the eleventh hour he saved the thief; do not let this be a reason for your procrastination — that would be ungrateful let it, however, be a cause for hope — that would be reasonable. He is able to save you now. Now, at this hour, at this very moment, if you only trust him you are saved. If now, without an hour’s delay to retire to your room, without even five minutes’ time elapsing in which to prepare your soul for him, if now you can believe that Christ can save you, he will do it, do it at this moment. His cures are instantaneous; a word, and it is done. Swift as the lightning’s flash is the accomplishment of his purpose of grace. Just as the lightning flashes from the west even to the east, so shall the coming of the Son of Man be at his last great advent; and so it is in his marvellous advent into the hearts of sinners whom he ordains to save. Christ is able to meet all cases, able to meet them at this very hour. Sinner, Christ is perfectly able to save you, and to save you perfectly. I know the will and wit of man wants to be doing something to begin salvation. Oh, how wicked is this! Christ is Alpha, why would you take his place and be an Alpha to yourselves? I have had this week two cases in which I have had to hold a solemn argument with troubled souls about this matter. Oh! the “ifs” and “buts” they asked; the “perhaps,” and “and,” and “peradventures,” and “oh, I do not feel this,” and “I do not feel that!” Oh, that wicked questioning of Christ! While talking with them, endeavouring to comfort them, and I hope not unsuccessfully, I was led to feel in my own mind what an awful crime it is to doubt God, to doubt him who speaks from above, to doubt him when he hangs bleeding on the tree. While it seemed to me to be such a hard thing to bring a sinner to trust Christ, yet it did seem, on the other hand, such a sin of sins, such a masterpiece of iniquity that we do not trust Christ at once. Here is the plan of salvation — trust Christ and he will save you. But they say “I do not feel enough”; or else “I have been such a sinner”; or else “I cannot feel the joy I want”; or else “I cannot pray as I wish.” Then I ask them, “Do you trust Christ?” “Yes,” they will say, “I do trust Christ, and yet am not saved.” Now, this makes God a liar, for he says, “He who believes in him is not condemned, and he who believes on him has everlasting life.” When a soul professes to trust Christ, and yet says “I am afraid he will not save me,” what is this except telling the Eternal God to his face that he is false? Can you suppose a more gross infamy than this? Oh! that men were wise, that they would take God at his word, and believe that Christ is a perfect Saviour, not asking them to help him at the first, but able to begin with them just where they are, and to lift them up from all the hardness of their hearts and the blackness of their souls to the very gates of heaven. He is a perfect Saviour, soul, and a perfect Saviour for you. You know the old story of the brazen serpent. There may have been some very wise people who, when the brazen serpent was lifted up, would say “I cannot look there and be healed, for, you see, I do not feel the venom in my veins as my next door neighbour does.” The man is bitten, and his veins are swelling, but he says he does not feel the pain so acutely as his neighbour, and he does not feel the joy of those who are healed, or else he would look. “If some angel would come,” he says, “and tell me that the brazen serpent was set up on purpose for me, and that I am ordained to be healed by it, then I would look.” There is a poor ignorant man over there who asks no questions but does just as he is told. Moses cries “Look, look, you dying; look and live!” and, asking no questions about what he has felt, or what he was, or what he should feel, that poor soul just looks and the deed is done; the flush of health runs through him, and he is restored, while the questioner, the wise man in his own conceit, too wise indeed, to do as he is told, perishes through his own folly, a victim to the serpents, but yet more a victim to his own conceit. Christ is a perfect Saviour to begin with you, and he will also be a perfect Saviour to carry on the work. He will never need your help; he is a perfect Saviour to finish the work. He will bring you at last to his right hand, and enthroned with him in light you shall bless and praise the name of God that he provided a perfect Saviour for men.
7. 3. Once more, let me remind you that Christ is a perfectly successful Saviour. I mean by this that, in one sense, he has already finished the work of salvation. All that has to be done to save a soul Christ has already done. There is no more ransom to be paid; to the last drachma he has counted down the price. There is no more righteousness to be done; to the last stitch he has finished the garment. There is nothing to be done to reconcile God to sinners; he has reconciled us to God by his blood. There is nothing needed to clear the way to the mercy seat; we have a new and living way through the veil that was rent, even the body of Christ. There is no need of any preparation for our reception on the part of God. “It is finished,” was the voice from Calvary; it meant what it said, “It is finished.” Christ has finished transgression, made an end of sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness. And, just as he has been successful in doing all the work for us, so, in every case where that work has been applied, perfect success has followed. Produce a single case where an application has been made to Christ without success. Find a single soul in whom Christ has commenced his work, and then abandoned it. You do hear of some who fall from grace: produce them. We are told of some who are children of God today, and children of the devil tomorrow: produce them. We are told that whom once he loves he may leave; produce those whom he has ever left. Let them be seen. Hold them up to the gaze of men and demons — the patients in whom Christ’s medicine only worked for awhile, but failed to produce a lasting cure. Heaven were clothed in sackcloth if such a discovery were made, for if he has failed to keep on earth, why not in heaven? Hell would be echoing with infernal laughter if one such instance could be found, for where would be the honour of God’s word and promise? We challenge you, you princes of darkness, and you who make the vast assembly of the dammed in hell, we challenge you to produce in all your ranks a single case of one who trusted in Christ so that he would deliver him and yet Christ cast him away; or one in whom the new spirit was infused and regeneration performed, and who yet, after all fell and perished like the rest. Lift up your eyes to heaven; innumerable as the stars are the spirits redeemed by blood; so many as they are, they are all witnesses to the fact that Christ is a perfect Saviour; that he is no professor who does not perform, for he has carried them all there, and as we gaze upon them we can say, “You have redeemed them to God by your blood”; you can save, and perfectly save, oh Lord Jesus Christ.
8. Now I have thus dwelt upon the perfect adaptation, the perfect ability, and the perfect success of Christ, our text tells us that it was fitting for him for whom are all things that he should give us such a Saviour. “For whom are all things,” says the Apostle; that is, all things are made for his glory. Now, it could not have been for God’s glory to give us an imperfect Saviour; to send us one who would mock us with hopes which could not be fulfilled. It would have been a tantalizing of human hope, which I do not hesitate to pronounce to be an awful cruelty, if any except a complete and perfect Saviour had been presented to us. If it had been partly works and partly grace, there would have been no grace in it. If it had been needful for us to do something to make Christ’s atonement efficacious, it would have been no atonement for us; we must have gone down to the pit of hell with this as an aggravation, that a God who professed to be a God of mercy had offered us a religion of which we could not avail ourselves; a hope which only deludes us, and makes our darkness the blacker. I want to know what some of my brethren in the ministry, who preach such very high doctrine, do with their God’s character. They are told to preach the gospel to every creature, but they very wisely do not do it, because they feel that the gospel they preach is not a gospel suitable for every creature; so they neglect their Master’s mandate, and single out a few. I bless my Master that I have an available gospel, one that is available to you this morning, for “whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life,” and I hold that it would be inconsistent with the character of him “for whom are all things,” and that it would be derogatory to his honour if he should have sent to you a salvation that would not meet your case; if he should have sent me to preach a gospel to you which could not completely save. But, glory be to God, the salvation which is here preached, the salvation taught in this Book, brings all to you, and asks nothing from you.
9. Moreover, Paul calls our God — “him by whom are all things.” It would be inconsistent with the character of him by whom are all things if he had sent a part Saviour; for us to do part ourselves, and for Christ to do the rest. Look at the sun. God wills for the sun to light the earth; does he ask the earth’s darkness to contribute to the light? Does he question night, and ask it whether it has not in its sombre shades something which it may contribute to the brightness of noon? No, my brethren, the sun rises up in the morning, like a giant to run his race, and the earth is made bright. And shall God turn to the dark sinner, and ask him whether there is anything in him that may contribute to eternal light? No; the face of Jesus rises up, like the Sun of Righteousness, with healing beneath his wings, and darkness is, at his coming, light. See also the showers. When the earth is thirsty and parched, does the Lord say to the clouds, “Wait until the earth can help you, and can minister to its own fertility?” No, truly, but the wind blows and the clouds cover the sky, and the refreshing showers come down upon the thirsty earth. So it is with Christ; not waiting for man, and not tarrying for the Son of Man; asking nothing from us, he gives us from his own rich grace, and is a complete and perfect Saviour.
10. So much, then, upon our first point I wish we had more time for our second; but we will pass to it at once.
11. II. CHRIST WAS MADE A PERFECT SAVIOUR THROUGH SUFFERING. He was not made perfect in character by his suffering, for he always was perfect — perfect God, perfect man; but he was made officially perfect, perfect as the captain of our salvation through his sufferings, and that in four ways.
12. 1. By his sufferings he became perfect as a Saviour from having offered a complete expiation for sin. Sin could not have been put away by holiness. The best performance of an unsuffering being could not have removed the guilt of man. Suffering was absolutely necessary, for suffering was the penalty of sin. “In the day you eat of it,” said God to Adam, “you shall surely die.” Die then he must. Nothing short of death could meet the case. Christ must go to the cross; he must suffer there; indeed, and he must bow his head and give up the ghost, or else no atonement for sin could have been possible. The curse came upon us as the result of sin. “Cursed is everyone who does not continue in all things written in the book of the law to do them.” Now had Christ been ever so perfect, yet had he never suffered he never could have taken our curse. “Cursed is every one who hangs on the tree,” but without the tree, without the cross, Christ would not have been our substitute, and all he did could have been of no use to us. Being crucified he became accursed; being crucified he died, and thus he could make perfect expiation for sin. Sin demanded punishment; punishment must consist of loss and of pain; Christ lost everything, even to the stripping of his clothes; his glory was taken from him; they made nothing of him; they spat in his face; they bowed the knee, and mocked him with bitter irony. There must be pain too, and he endured it; in his body there were the wounds and the fever which the wounds produced, and in his soul there was an exceedingly great heaviness even to death, and an agony which no tongue can tell, for we have no words in which to speak of it. We believe that this agony was commensurate with the agonies of the lost in hell; not the same agony, but an equivalent for it; and remember, not the equivalent for the agony of one, but an equivalent for the hells of all that innumerable host whose sins he bore, condensed into one black draught to be drained in a few hours; the miseries of an eternity without an end, miseries caused by a God infinitely angry because of an awful rebellion, and these miseries multiplied by the millions for whom the man Christ Jesus stood as covenant head. What a draught was that, men and brethren! Well might it stagger even him! And yet he drained that cup, drained it to its utmost dregs not a drop was left. For you, my soul, there are no flames of hell; for Christ the Paschal lamb has been roasted in that fire. For you, my soul, there are no torments of the damned, for Christ has been condemned in your stead. For you, my spirit, there is no desertion of your God, for he was forsaken by God for you. It is done, it is finished, and by your sufferings, Jesus, you have become perfect as the expiation of your people’s sins. Do, my brethren, remember that your sins are perfectly expiated. Do not let them trouble you concerning punishment; the punishment has gone. Sins cannot lie in two places at one time; they were put on Christ, and they cannot be on you. In fact, your sins are not to be found; the scapegoat has gone, and your sins will never be found again. Your sins, if they were searched for, could not be discovered, nor by the piercing eye of God can a single blemish be found in you. As far as the punishment of the law is concerned it is finished, and Christ is a perfect Saviour.
13. 2. Again, if Christ had not suffered he could not have been perfect as a Saviour, because he could not have brought in a perfect righteousness. It is not enough to expiate sin. God requires perfect obedience from man. If man wishes to be in heaven he must be perfectly obedient. Christ, as he took away our guilt, has supplied us with a matchless righteousness. His works are our works; his doings are, by imputation, our doings. But a part of obedience is a patient endurance of God’s will. Patience is no small part of the full obedience of a sincere soul. Christ must therefore suffer hunger, and cold, and nakedness throughout life, so that he may be capable of the virtue of patience. An obedience even to death is now the only perfect form of obedience. The man who wishes to keep the law of God perfectly must not even recoil at martyrdom. “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength,” would now require death to consummate it. It was not possible for the Master to have made the robe, woven from the top throughout without seam, unless the scarlet thread of crucifixion had run along its edge. But now, my soul, Christ is your perfect Saviour, for he presents you with a perfect righteousness. There is nothing more to do. Neither my living nor my dying can make my righteousness more complete. No doing, no labouring, no denying, no suffering, are needed to finish what Christ began. “It is finished.” Put on your robe, oh Christian; always walk in it; let it be your wedding dress. Angels admire you; God himself accepts you; coming into his wedding feast he sees you with this garment on, and he does not ask you how you got here, but bids you sit down and feast for ever, for you are such as even he can keep company with in his glory.
14. 3. Yet, thirdly, it was necessary that Christ should suffer to make him a perfect Saviour so far as his sympathy goes. After sin is washed away, and righteousness imputed, we still need a friend, for we are in a land of troubles and of sorrows. Now, if Christ had not suffered he could not have been a faithful high priest, made like his brethren. We should never have had that sweet text — “He was tempted in all points, like as we are, yet without sin,” if he had not suffered. But now he knows all forms of suffering. It is not possible that even out of the thousands now in this house there should be one heart whose case Christ cannot meet.
In every pang that rends the heart
The man of sorrows had a part.
Disease, sickness of body, poverty, need, friendlessness, hopelessness, desertion — he knows all these. You cannot cast human suffering into any form that is new to Christ. “In all their afflictions he was afflicted.” If you feel a thorn in your foot, remember that it once pierced his head. If you have a trouble or a difficulty, you may see there the mark of his hands, for he has climbed that way before. The whole path of sorrow has his blood bedabbled footsteps all along, for the Man of Sorrows has been there, and he can now have sympathy with you. “Yes,” I hear one say, “but my sorrows are the result of sin.” So were his; although not his own, yet they were the result of sin. “Yes,” you say, “but I am slandered, and I cannot bear it.” They called him a drunken man, and a winebibber. Why, when you once think of the sufferings of Christ, yours are not worth a thought. Like the small dust of a balance that may be blown away with the breath of an infant, such are our agonies and our trials when compared with his. Drink your little cup; see what a cup he drained. The little vinegar and gall that fall to your share you may gladly recede, for these light afflictions, which are only for a moment, are not worthy to be compared to the sufferings through which he passed.
15. 4. Finally, upon this point; he thus became perfect as our exemplar. This, too, was necessary in bringing many sons to glory, for we come to heaven by following the example of Christ, as well as by being washed in his blood. “Without holiness no man shall see the Lord”; that holiness is best of all promoted by an investigation of Christ’s character, and a studious imitation of all its points. Now had Christ not suffered he could not have been an example for us. We should have said, “Yes, yes, he may be an example to unsuffering angels, but not to men who have to tread the hot coals of the furnace.” He could have afforded no example of patience if he had never suffered; he could never have taught us to forgive if he had never felt injuries; he could not have trained us to holy courage if he had never fought a battle; he could never have shown us the way to make tribulation work experience, and experience hope, if through tribulation he had not himself waded to his throne. We do not need an example taken from princes to be applied to peasants. We need a poor man to be an example for the poor; we need a man who lives in private to teach us how to live in retirement; we need one who does not fear the face of crowds to show us how to walk in our public ways. We need, if we would meet the case of fallen humanity, a man just like the Saviour, who passed through all the various phases of life, was in all companies, was shot at from all quarters, was tempted in all points like as we are, and this could not have been if he had been led in quiet ways along a path of joy. He must do business on the tempestuous deeps; his ship must rock, his anchor drag, the thick darkness and the lightnings must gather around him; they did so, and thus the captain of our salvation was made perfect through suffering, as an example for our imitation. I wish that each of us might know him in the efficacy of his blood, in the glory of his righteousness, in the sweetness of his sympathy, and in the perfection of his example, for then we would know him to the joy of our hearts for ever.
16. III. And now, lastly, our point — CHRIST’S HAVING BEEN MADE PERFECT THROUGH SUFFERING WILL ENNOBLE THE WHOLE WORK OF GRACE.
17. “It was fitting for him for whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory” — that is the great work — “to make the captain of their salvation perfect through suffering.” The whole thing will work for his glory. Oh, my brethren, how this will glorify God at the last, that Christ, the man, should have been perfect through suffering! How this will glorify him in the eyes of demons! Looking upwards from their beds of fire where they bite their iron bands in vain, how they will see the wisdom and power of God as more than a match for the wisdom and might of their leader! It was in man that they defeated God; in man God destroys them. They trampled on man’s heel; man has broken their head. They took away from man the transient crown of his Eden glory; man wears the unfading crown of immortality. Man, even man, sits upon the throne of the Godhead, and that man crowned with light and glory everlasting was a man who encountered Satan; who met him, too, on fair grounds; not a man shielded from pain; not a man who had an immunity from internal or external distress; but a man full of weakness, full of infirmity, like other men, and yet, through God in alliance with his manhood, more than a conqueror, and now reigning for ever and ever. Milton, I think it is, supposes that this may have been the reason for Satan’s first rebellion, because he could not bear that an inferior race should be lifted up to be set above himself on God’s throne. Whether this is so or not, it must certainly be an aggravation to the misery of that proud arch-traitor, that now the man, the man, the man in whose image God was defeated, is heir of all things, King of kings, and Lord of lords.
18. How greatly will God be exalted that day in the eyes of lost spirits. Ah! you who shall perish — God grant there may be none such here! — if you shall ever perish in hell, you will have to glorify God as you see Christ, who was made perfect through suffering, reigning there. You will not be able to say, “My damnation lies at God’s door,” for you will see in Christ a suitable Saviour. You will have to look up and say, “Yes, he who was preached to me on Sundays was God; he could save me. He whom I was bidden to trust in was man, and could sympathise with me, but I would not come to him so that I might have life.” In letters of fire you shall see it written, “You knew your duty, but you did not do it”; and even your moans and groans as you suffer shall be only an utterance of this awful truth — “Great God, you are just, indeed, you are doubly just; just, first, in damning me for sin, just, next, in trampling me underfoot, because I trampled under foot the blood of the Son of God and counted his covenant an unholy thing.” Your weepings and wailings shall be only the deep bass of the awful praise which the whole universe, willingly or unwillingly, must give to him who has provided a perfect Saviour, and made him perfect through suffering.
19. Oh, my brethren, what delight and transport will seize the minds of those who are redeemed! How will God be glorified then! Why, every wound of Christ will cause an everlasting song. As we shall circle his throne, rejoicing, will not this be the very summit of all our harmony — “You were slain, and have redeemed us to God by your blood.” We must not say what God could do or could not do, but it does seem to me that by no process of creation could he have ever made such beings as we shall be when we are brought to heaven; for if he had made us perfect yet then we should have stood through our own holiness; or if he had forgiven us without an atonement then we should never have seen his justice, nor his amazing love. But in heaven we shall be creatures who feel that we have everything but deserve nothing; creatures that have been the objects of the most wonderful love, and therefore so mightily attached to our Lord that it would be impossible for a thousand Satans ever to lead us astray. Again, we shall be such servants as even the angels cannot be, for we shall feel under deeper obligation to God than even they. They are only created happy; we shall be redeemed by the blood of God’s dear Son, and I am sure, brethren, day without night we shall circle God’s throne rejoicing, having more happiness than the angels, for they do not know what evil is, but we shall have known it to the full, and yet shall be perfectly free from it. They do not know what pain is, but we shall have known pain, and grief, and death, and yet shall be immortal. They do not know what it is to fall, but we shall look down to the depths of hell and remember that that was our portion. Oh! how we will sing, how we will chant his praise, and this, I say again, shall be the highest note, that we owe all to that bright One, that Lamb in the midst of the throne. We will tell it over, and over, and over again, and find it an inexhaustible theme for melodious joy and song that he became man, that he sweat great drops of blood, that he died, that he rose again. While the angels are singing “Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!” we will bid them stop the song for a moment, while we say, “He whom you thus adore was once covered with bloody sweat.” As we cast our crowns at his feet, we will say, “And he was once despised and rejected by men.” Lifting up our eyes and greeting him as God over all, blessed for ever, we will remember the reed, the sponge, the vinegar, and the nails; and as we come to him and have fellowship with him, and he shall lead us beside the living fountains of water, we will remember the black brook of Kidron from which he drank, and the awful depths of the grave into which he descended. Amid all the splendours of heaven, we shall never forget the agony, and misery, and dishonour of earth; and even when they sing the loudest sonnets of God’s love, and power, and grace, we will sing this after all, and before all, and above all, that Jesus the Son of God died for us, and this shall be our everlasting song — “He loved us and gave himself for us, and we have washed our robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/05/14/christ-perfect-through-sufferings