Consecration to God—Illustrated by Abraham’s Circumcision
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, December 13, 1868, By C. H. Spurgeon, At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
And when Abram was ninety-nine years old, the Lord appeared to Abram, and said to him, “I am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be perfect. And I will make my covenant between me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly.” (Genesis 17:1,2)
1. We began our exposition of the life of Abram with his calling, when he was brought out of Ur of the Chaldees, and separated to the Lord in Canaan. We then passed on to his justification, when he believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness; and now you will bear with us if we continue to the same subject to a further stage, and attempt to describe the fuller development of Abram’s vital godliness in the open and clear revelation of his consecration to God. In the chapter before us we see his sanctification to the Lord, his ordination to service, and purification as a vessel prepared for the Master’s use. All the called are justified, and all the justified are by a work of the Holy Spirit sanctified, and made fit to be afterwards glorified with Christ Jesus.
2. Let me remind you of the order in which these blessings come. If we should speak of sanctification or consecration, it is not as a first thing, but as an elevation to be reached only by preceding stepping stones. In vain do men pretend to be consecrated to God before they are called by God’s Spirit; such have yet to be taught that no strength of nature can suffice to serve the Lord properly. They must learn what this means, “You must be born again,” for assuredly until men are brought into spiritual life by effectual calling of the Holy Spirit, all their talk about serving God may be answered in the words of Joshua, “You cannot serve the Lord.” I speak of consecration, but it is not as a first thing, nor even as a second thing, for a man must be justified by faith which is in Christ Jesus, or he will not possess the grace which is the root of all true sanctity; for sanctification grows out of faith in Jesus Christ. Remember holiness is a flower, not a root; it is not sanctification that saves, but salvation that sanctifies. A man is not saved by his holiness, but he becomes holy because he is already saved. Being justified by faith, and having peace with God, he no longer walks after the flesh, but after the Spirit, and in the power of the blessing which he has received by grace he dedicates himself to the service of his gracious God. Notice then the due order of heavenly benefits, consecration to God follows calling and justification.
3. Recalling your minds to Abram’s history, let me remind you that thirteen years had elapsed after the time in which God had said that Abram’s faith was accounted to him for righteousness, and those thirteen years, so far as we can gather from Scripture, were not at all so full of brave faith and noble deeds as we might have expected them to have been. How sure is that truth that the best of men are only men at the best, for that very man who had accepted God’s promise and had not staggered at it through unbelief, within a few months afterwards, or perhaps a few days, was taken with a fit of unbelief, and at the instigation of his wife, adopted means which were not justifiable, in order that he might obtain the promised heir. He used means which may not be so vicious to him, as they would be in men of modern times, but which were suggested by an unbelieving policy, and were fraught with evil. He takes Hagar for his wife. He could not leave it to God to give him the promised seed; he could not leave it with God to fulfil his promise in his own time, but justifies himself in turning aside from the narrow path of faith to accomplish by doubtful methods the purpose which God himself had promised and undertaken to accomplish.
4. How shorn of splendour is Abram seen when we read of him, “and Abram listened to the voice of Sarai!” That business of Hagar is to the patriarch’s deep discredit, and reflects no honour at all upon either him or his faith. Look at the consequences of his unbelieving procedure! Misery soon followed. Hagar despises her mistress; Sarai throws all the blame on her husband; the poor bondwoman is so harshly dealt with that she flees from the household. How much of real cruelty may be meant by the term “dealing harshly,” I cannot tell, but one marvels that such a man as Abram allowed one who had been brought into such a relationship with him, to be heedlessly chased from his house while in a condition requiring care and kindness. We admire the truthfulness of the Holy Spirit that he has been pleased to record the faults of the saints without extenuating them. Biographies of good men in Scripture are written with unflinching integrity, their evil recorded as well as their good. These faults are not written so that we may say, “Abraham did so and so, therefore we may do it.” No, brethren, the lives of these good men are warnings to us as well as examples, and we are to judge them as we should judge ourselves, by the laws of right and wrong. Abram did wrong both in taking Hagar for a wife and in allowing her to be used badly.
5. In later years the child of the bondwoman mocked the child of the free woman, and an expulsion of both mother and child was needful. There was deep sorrow in Abram’s heart, a bitterness not to be told. Polygamy, though tolerated under the Old Testament, was never approved of; it was only tolerated because of the hardness of men’s hearts. It is evil, only evil, and that continually. In the family relationship there can be opened no more abundant and fruitful source of misery to the sons of men than lack of chastity to the marriage bond made with one wife. Disguise that unchastity by whatever name you wish. All these thirteen years, as far as Scripture informs us, Abram had not a single visit from his God. We do not find any record of his either doing anything memorable or having so much as a single audience with the Most High. Learn from this, that if we once forsake the track of simple faith, once cease to walk according to the purity which faith approves, we strew our path with thorns, cause God to withhold the light of his countenance from us, and pierce ourselves through with many sorrows.
6. But notice, beloved, the
exceeding grace of God. The way to recover Abram from
his backsliding was that the Lord should appear to him;
and, consequently, we read in our text that at
ninety-nine years of age Abram was favoured with a
further visit from the Most High. This brings to my
remembrance the words in the book of Revelation,
concerning the church in Laodicea: “You are neither cold
nor hot: I would you were cold or hot. So then because
you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue
you out of my mouth”—a very solemn declaration; but what
follows? “Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any
man hears my voice, and opens the door, I will come in
to him, and will dine with him, and he with me,” which
means just this, that for recovery out of a horrible
state of languishing and lukewarmness there is no remedy
except the coming of Jesus Christ to the soul in near
and dear communion. Truly it was so with Abram. The Lord
would bring him out of his state of distrust and
distance into one of high dignity and sanctity, and he
does it by revealing himself to him, for the Lord talked
with Abram.
Midst darkest shades, if he appear,
My dawning is begun;
He is my soul’s bright morning star,
And he my rising sun.
Breathe a prayer, my brothers and sisters. “Lord, reveal yourself to my poor backsliding, languishing spirit. Revive me, oh Lord, for one smile from you can make my wilderness blossom as the rose.”
7. On the occasion of this gracious revelation, God was pleased to do for Abram what I think is to us an admirable and instructive illustration of the consecration of our redeemed spirits entirely to his service. I shall, this morning, as God may help me, first lead you to observe the model of the consecrated life; secondly, the nature of the higher life; and, thirdly, its results.
8. I. First, then, let us notice in the words of God to Abram, THE MODEL OF THE SANCTIFIED OR CONSECRATED LIFE.
9. Here it is: “I am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be perfect.” For a man to be thoroughly sanctified for the Master’s service, he must first realise the almightiness and all sufficiency and glory of God. Brethren, the God whom we serve fills all things, and has all power and all riches. If we think little of him we shall render little trust to him, and consequently little obedience, but if we have grand conceptions of the glory of God, we shall learn to confide in him most thoroughly, we shall receive mercies from him most plentifully, and we shall be moved to serve him most consistently. The cause of sin very frequently has its origin in low thoughts of God. Take Abram’s sin; he could not see how God could make him the father of many nations when Sarai was old and barren. Hence his error with Hagar. But if he had remembered what God now brings to his memory, that God is El Shaddai, the All Sufficient One, he would have said, “No, I will remain true to Sarai, for God can effect his own purposes without my taking tortuous means to accomplish them. He is all sufficient in himself, and not dependent upon creature strength. I will patiently hope, and quietly wait, to see the fulfilment of the Master’s promises.” Now, as with Abram, so with you, my brothers and sisters. When a man is in business difficulties, if he believes that God is all sufficient to carry him through them, he will not practise any of the common tricks of trade, nor degenerate into that shiftiness which is so usual among commercial men. If a man believes, being poor, that God is sufficient portion for him, he will not grow envious of the rich or discontented with his condition. The man who feels that God is an all sufficient portion for his spirit, will not look for pleasure in the pursuits of vanity; he will not go with the giddy multitude after their vain mirth. “No,” he says, “God has appeared to me as God all sufficient for my comfort and my joy. I am content as long as God is mine. Let others drink from broken cisterns if they wish, I live by the overflowing fountain, and am perfectly content.” Oh beloved, what glorious names our Lord deservedly wears! Whichever of his names you choose to dwell upon for a moment, what a mine of wealth and meaning it opens up to you! Here is this name, “El Shaddai”; “El,” that is, “the strong one,” for infinite power resides in Jehovah. How readily may we who are weak become mighty if we draw upon him! And then, “Shaddai,” that is to say, “the unchangeable, the invincible.” What a God we have then, who knows no variableness, neither shadow of turning, against whom no one can stand! “El,” strong; “Shaddai,” unchangeable in his strength; always therefore strong in every time of need, ready to defend his people, and able to preserve them from all their foes. Come, Christian, with such a God as this why do you need to abase yourself to win the good word of the wicked man? Why do you gad about to find earthly pleasures where the roses are always mixed with thorns? Why do you need to put your confidence in gold and silver, or in the strength of your body, or in anything that is beneath the moon? You have El Shaddai to be yours. Your power to be holy will much depend upon your grasping with all the intensity of your faith the cheering fact that this God is your God for ever and ever, your daily portion, your all sufficient consolation. You dare not, cannot, will not, wander into the ways of sin when you know that such a God is your shepherd and guide.
10. Following up this model of the consecrated life, notice the next words—“walk before me.” This is the style of life which characterises true holiness; it is a walking before God. Ah! Brethren, Abram had walked before Sarai; he had paid undue respect to her views and wishes; he had walked, too, in the sight of his own eyes and the inclinations of his own heart when he was married to Hagar; but now the Lord gently rebukes him with the exhortation, “Walk before me.” It is remarkable that on the former divine visit to the patriarch (which we tried to interpret last Sunday), (See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 844, “Justification by Faith—Illustrated by Abram’s Righteousness” 835) the Lord’s message was “Do not fear.” He was then, as it were, only a child in spiritual things, and the Lord gave him comfort, for he needed it. He is now grown into a man, and the exhortation is practical and full of activity—“walk.” The Christian man is to exert and use the strength and grace which he has received. The pith of the exhortation lies in the last words, “Walk before me,” by which I understand a habitual sense of the presence of God, or doing the right thing and shunning the wrong, out of respect for the will of God; a consideration of God in all actions, public and private. Brethren, I deeply regret when I see Christian men, even in religious societies, in their calculations leaving out the greatest item in the whole calculation—namely, the divine element, the divine power and faithfulness. I may say of the majority of mankind, without being censorious, that if there were no God their course of action would not be different from what it is, for they do not feel themselves either restrained or constrained by any sense of the divine presence. “The transgression of the wicked says within my heart, that there is no fear of God before his eyes.” But this is the sign of the truly sanctified man of God, that he lives in every place as standing in the presence chamber of the divine Majesty; he acts as knowing that the eye which never sleeps is always fixed on him. His heart’s desire is that he may never do the wrong thing out of respect for worldly greatness, and may never forget the right thing because he is in evil company, but may consider that God being everywhere, he is always in company where it would be impudent rebellion to sin. The saint feels that he must not, dare not, transgress, because he is before the very face of God. This is the model of the sanctified character, for a man to realise what the Lord is, and then to act as in the immediate presence of a holy and jealous God.
11. The next words are, “and be perfect.” Brethren, does this mean absolute perfection? I shall not dispute the belief of some, that we may be absolutely perfect on earth. I freely admit that the model of sanctification is perfection. It would be inconsistent with the character of God for him to give us anything other than a perfect command, and a perfect standard. No law except that of absolute perfection could come from a perfect God, and to give us a model that was not absolutely perfect, would be to ensure to us superabundant imperfections, and to give us an excuse for them. God sets before his servants no rule of this kind, “Be as good as you can,” but this, “Be perfect, even as your Father who is in heaven is perfect.” Has any man ever attained to it? Truly we have not, but for all that, every Christian man aims at it. I would far rather my child had a perfect copy to write by, although he might never write equal to it, than that he should have an imperfect copy set before him, because then he would never become a good writer at all. Our heavenly Father has given us the perfect image of Christ to be our example, his perfect law to be our rule, and it is for us to aim at this perfection in the power of the Holy Spirit, and, like Abram, to fall upon our faces in shame and confusion of face, when we remember how far we have come short of it. Perfection is what we wish for, pant after, and shall at the last obtain. We do not want to have the law toned down to our weakness. Blessed be God, we delight in the perfection of that law. We say with Paul, “The law is holy, and just, and good, but I am carnal, sold under sin.” The will of God is what we should be conformed to; and if we who are believers had only one wish, and it could be granted to us at once, it should be this, to make us perfect in every good work to do his will, working in us what is well pleasing in his sight. However, the word “perfect,” as I have said, bears commonly the meaning of “upright,” or “sincere”—“walk before me, and be sincere.” The Christian man must have no double dealing, no playing fast and loose with God or man; no hypocritical professions, or false principles. He must be as transparent as glass; he must be a man in whom there is no guile, a man who has cast aside deceit in every form, who hates it, and loathes it, and walks before God, who sees all things with absolute sincerity, earnestly desiring in all things, both great and small, to commend himself to the conscience of others as in the sight of the Most High.
12. Brethren, here is the model of the consecrated life. Do you not long to attain to it? I am sure every soul that is moved by God’s grace will do so. But if your feeling about it is like mine, it will be just that of Abram in the text, “Abram fell on his face before the Lord.” For oh, how far short we have come of this! We have not always thought of God as all sufficient; we have been unbelieving. We have doubted him here, and doubted him there. We have not gone to work in this world as if we believed the promise, “I will never leave you, nor forsake you.” We have not been satisfied to suffer, or to be poor, and we have not been content to do his will without asking questions. We might often have had addressed to us the rebuke, “Is the Lord’s hand waxed short? Is his arm shortened at all? Is his ear heavy, that he cannot hear?” Brethren, we have not always walked before the Lord. If one may speak for the rest, we do not always feel the presence of God as a restraint on us. There are angry words perhaps at the table; there is wrong doing in the place of business; there are carelessness, worldliness, pride, and I do not know what else beside of evil to mar the day’s labour; and when we come back at night we have to confess, “I have gone astray like a lost sheep, I have forgotten my Shepherd’s presence. I have not always spoken and acted as if I felt that you were always looking upon me.” Thus it has come to pass that we have not been perfect. I feel ready to laugh, not the laugh of Abram, but that of thorough ridicule, when I hear people talk about their being absolutely perfect. They must be of very different flesh and blood from us, or rather they must be great fools, full of conceit, and utterly ignorant of themselves; for if they only looked at a single action, they would find specks in it; and if they examined only one single day, they would perceive something in which they fell short, if there were nothing in which they had transgressed. You see your model, brethren, study it in the life of Christ, and then press forward to it with the zeal of the apostle who said, “I do not mean to say that I have already achieved these things or that I have already reached perfection. But I press on to possess that perfection for which Christ Jesus first possessed me. No, dear brothers and sisters, I have not achieved it, but I focus on this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead, I press on to reach the end of the race and receive the heavenly prize for which God, through Christ Jesus, is calling us.”
13. II. Secondly, THE NATURE OF THIS CONSECRATION as illustrated in this chapter. Briefly on each point.
14. Genuine spiritual consecration begins with communion with God. Notice the third verse:—“Abram fell on his face, and God talked with him.” By looking at Christ Jesus, his image is etched upon our mind, and we are changed from glory to glory, as by the presence of the Lord. Distance from God’s presence always means sin: holy familiarity with God engenders holiness. The more you think of God, the more you meditate upon his works, the more you praise him, the more you pray to him, the more constantly you talk with him, and he with you, by the Holy Spirit, the more surely are you upon the road to thorough consecration to his cause.
15. The next point in the
nature of this consecration is that it is fostered by
enlarged views of the covenant of grace. Read on:
“As for me, behold my covenant is with you, and you
shall be a father of many nations.” This is said to help
Abram to walk before God and to be perfect; from which
we conclude that to grow in sanctification a man should
increase in knowledge, and also in the tenacity of the
faith which grasps the covenant which God has made with
Christ for his people, which is “Ordered in all things
and sure.” With your Bibles open, notice attentively
that Abram was refreshed concerning his own personal
interest in the covenant. Notice the second personal
pronoun, how it is repeated: “As for me, behold, my
covenant is with you, and you shall be a
father of many nations.” Take the sixth verse, “I will
make you exceedingly fruitful, and I will make
nations of you, and kings shall come out of
you. And I will establish my covenant between me and
you, and your seed after you. . .to
be a God to you, and to your seed after you.”
Thus Abram has the covenant brought home to himself; he
is made to feel that he has a part and a lot in it. If
you are ever to be sanctified for God’s service, you
must have a full assurance of your interest in all the
covenant provisions. Doubts are like wild boars of the
forest, which tear up the flowers of sanctification in
the garden of the heart; but when you have in your soul
an assurance given by God of your interest in the
precious blood of Jesus Christ, then the foxes which
spoil the vines shall be hunted to death, and your
tender grapes shall give a good scent. Cry to God,
beloved brothers and sisters, for strong faith to
Read your title clear
To mansions in the skies.
Great holiness must spring from great faith. Faith is the root, obedience the branch; and if the root decays the branch cannot flourish. Ask to know that Christ is yours, and that you are his; for here you will find a fountain to water your consecration and make it yield fruit for Christ’s service. Some professors act as if this were not the case. They foment their doubts and fears in order to perfect holiness. I have known Christians, when they are conscious that they have not lived as they ought to live, begin to doubt their interest in Christ, and, as they say, humble themselves in order to reach after fuller sanctification of life. That is to say, they starve themselves in order to grow strong; they throw their gold out of the window in order to become rich; they pull up the very foundation stone of their house to make it stand secure. Beloved believer, sinner as you are, backslider as you are, still believe in Jesus, do not let a sense of sin weaken your faith in him. He died for sinners, “in due time Christ died for the ungodly.” Still cling to that cross: the more furious the storm the more need of the life belt—never leave it, but tighten your grip all the more. Trust in the virtue of that precious blood alone, for only in this way will you slay your sins and advance in holiness. If you say within your heart, “Jesus cannot save such a one as I am; if I had signs and evidences of being God’s child, I could then trust in Jesus, you have thrown away your confidence which has great reward”; you have thrown away your shield, and the arrows of the tempter will wound you terribly. Cling to Jesus even when it is a question whether you have a grain of grace in your hearts. Believe that he died for you, not because you are consecrated or sanctified, but died for you as sinners, and saves you as sinners. Never lose your simple trust in the Crucified, for only by the blood of the Lamb can you overcome sin and be made fit for the Lord’s work.
16. Notice, in reading these words, how this covenant is revealed to Abram particularly as a work of divine power. Notice how the passage reads, “I will make my covenant between me and you.” “I will make you fruitful.” “I will establish my covenant.” “I will give to you.” “I will be your God,” and so on. Oh! those glorious “wills” and “shalls.” Brethren, you cannot serve the Lord with a perfect heart until first your faith gets a grip of the divine “will” and “shall.” If my salvation rests upon this poor, puny arm, upon my resolves, my integrity, and my faithfulness, it is shipwrecked for ever; but if my eternal salvation rests upon the great arm which holds up the universe, if my soul’s safety is altogether in that hand that wheels the stars along, then blessed be his name, it is safe and well; and now out of love for such a Saviour I will serve him with all my heart. I will spend and be spent for him who has thus graciously undertaken for me. Notice this, brethren, be very clear about it, and ask to have the divine working made apparent to your soul, for that will help you to be consecrated to God.
17. Further, Abraham had a view of the covenant in its everlastingness. I do not remember that the word “everlasting” had been used before in reference to that covenant, but in this chapter we have it over and over again. “I will establish my covenant for an everlasting covenant.” Here is one of those grand truths which many of the babes in grace have not as yet learned, namely, that the blessings of grace are blessings not given today to be taken back tomorrow, but are eternal blessings. The salvation which is in Christ Jesus is not a salvation which will belong to us for a few hours, while we are faithful to it, and will then be taken away, so that we shall be left to perish. God forbid, “He is not a man that he should lie, nor the son of man that he should repent.” “I am God,” he says, “I do not change: therefore, you sons of Jacob are not consumed.” When we put ourselves into the hands of Christ, we do not confide in a Saviour who might permit us to be destroyed, but we rest in one who has said, “I give to my sheep eternal life, and they shall never perish, neither shall anyone pluck them out of my hand.” Instead of the doctrine of the security of the saints leading to negligence of life, you will find that, on the contrary, where it is thoroughly well received in the heart by the power of the Holy Spirit, it fosters such a holy confidence in God, such a flaming gratitude to him, that it is one of the best incentives for consecration. Treasure up these thoughts, dear brethren, and if you wish to grow in grace and in conformity to Christ, endeavour to perceive your personal interest in the covenant, the divine power which guarantees its fulfilment, and the everlastingness of its character.
18. In considering the nature of this consecration, I would observe next, that those who are consecrated to God are regarded as new men. The new manhood is indicated by the change of name—he is no longer called Abram, but Abraham, and his wife is no longer Sarai, but Sarah. You, beloved, are new creatures in Christ Jesus. The root and source of all consecration to God lies in regeneration. We are “born again,” a new and incorruptible seed is placed within us which “lives and remains for ever.” The name of Christ is named upon us: we are no longer called sinners and unjust, but we become the children of God by faith which is in Christ Jesus.
19. Notice further that the nature of this consecration was indicated to Abraham by the rite of circumcision. It would not be at all fitting or decorous for us to enter into any detail concerning that mysterious rite, but it will suffice to say that the rite of circumcision signified the taking away of the filthiness of the flesh. We have the apostle Paul’s own interpretation of circumcision in the verses which we read just now in his epistle to the Colossians. Circumcision indicated to the seed of Abraham that there was a defilement of the flesh in man which must for ever be taken away, or man would remain impure, and out of covenant with God. Now, beloved, there must be, in order for our sanctification to Christ, a giving up, a painful relinquishing of things as dear to us as right eyes and right hands. There must be a denying of the flesh with its affections and lusts. We must mortify our members. There must be self-denial if we are to enter upon the service of God. The Holy Spirit must pass a sentence of death and cutting away upon the passions and tendencies of corrupt humanity. Much must perish which nature would cherish, but die it must, because grace abhors it.
20. Notice, with regard to circumcision, that it was peremptorily ordained that it should be practised on every male of the descendants of Abraham, and if it were neglected, death followed. So the giving up of sin, the giving up of the body of the filth of the flesh is necessary to every believer. Without holiness no man shall see the Lord. Even the babe in Christ is as much to see death written upon the body of the filth of the flesh as a man who, like Abraham, has reached advanced years and come to maturity in spiritual things. There is not distinction here between the one and the other. “Without holiness no man shall see the Lord”; and where a supposed grace does not take away from us a love for sin, it is not the grace of God at all, but the presumptuous conceit of our own vain natures.
21. It is often said that the ordinance of baptism is analogous to the ordinance of circumcision. I will not dispute that point, although the statement may be questioned. But supposing it to be, let me urge upon every believer here to see to it that in his own soul he realises the spiritual meaning both of circumcision and baptism, and then consider the outward rites; for the thing signified is vastly more important than the sign. Baptism means far more than circumcision. Circumcision is the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but baptism is the burial of the flesh altogether. Baptism does not say, “Here is something to be taken away,” but everything is dead, and must be buried with Christ in his tomb, and the man must rise anew with Christ. Baptism teaches us that by death we pass into the new life. Just as Noah’s ark, passing through the death of the old world, emerged into a new world, even so, by a similar metaphor, baptism illustrates our salvation by the resurrection of Christ: a baptism of which Peter says, it is “not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience towards God.” In baptism, the man affirms to himself and others that he comes by death into newness of life, according to the words of the Holy Spirit, “Buried with him in baptism, in which also you are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who has raised him from the dead.” The most valuable point is the spiritual meaning, and on that we experience what it is to be dead to the world, to be dead and buried with Christ, and then to be risen with him. Still, brethren, Abraham was not allowed to say, “If I get the spiritual meaning, I can do without the outward rite.” He might have objected to that rite on a thousand grounds a great deal more strong than any which the hesitating have urged against baptism, but he first accepted the rite, as well as the thing which it intended, and immediately was circumcised; and so I exhort you, men and brethren, to be obedient to the precept upon baptism, as well as attentive to the truth which it signifies. If you are indeed buried with Christ, and risen with him, do not despise the outward and instructive sign by which this is illustrated. “Well,” one says, “a difficulty suggests itself concerning your views,” for an argument is often drawn from this chapter, “that inasmuch as Abraham must circumcise all his seed, we ought to baptise all our children.” Now, observe the type and do not interpret it according to prejudice, but according to Scripture. In the type the seed of Abraham are circumcised; you draw the inference that all typified by the seed of Abraham ought to be baptised, and I do not dispute the conclusion; but I ask you, who are the true seed of Abraham? Paul answers, “This means that Abraham’s physical descendants are not necessarily children of God. Only the children of the promise are considered to be Abraham’s children.” (Romans 9:8) As many as believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, whether they are Jews or Gentiles, are Abraham’s seed. Whether eight days old in grace, or more or less, every one of Abraham’s seed has a right to baptism. But I deny that the unregenerate, whether children or adults, are of the spiritual seed of Abraham. The Lord will, we trust, call many of them by his grace, but as yet they are “heirs of wrath, even as others.” At such time as the Spirit of God shall sow the good seed in their hearts, they are of Abraham’s believing seed, but they are not so while they live in ungodliness and unbelief, or are as yet incapable of faith or repentance. The answering person in type to the seed of Abraham is, by the confession of everyone, the believer; and the believer ought, seeing he is buried with Christ spiritually, to affirm that fact, by his public baptism in water, according to the Saviour’s own precept and example. “Thus,” said Christ, “it becomes us to fulfil all righteousness,” as he went down to the river Jordan. At the Jordan was he sprinkled? Why go down to a river to be sprinkled? Why did he go down into the water to be sprinkled? “Us.” Did he mean babes? Was he a babe? Was he not, when he said “us,” speaking of the faithful who are in him? “And thus it becomes us to fulfil all righteousness,” that is, all his saints. But how does baptism fulfil all righteousness? Typically like this:—It is the picture of the whole work of Christ. There is his immersion in suffering; his death and burial; his coming up out of the water represents his resurrection; his coming up the banks of Jordan represents his ascension. It is a typical representation of how he fulfilled all righteousness, and how the saints fulfilled it in him. But, brethren, I did not intend to go so far into the outward sign, because my soul’s deepest desire is this, that just like as Abraham by the outward sign was taught that there was a putting away of the filth of flesh, which must be, or death must follow, so we are taught by baptism that there is an actual death to the world, and a resurrection with Christ, which must be to every believer, however old or however young, or he has no part or lot in the matter of consecration to God, or, indeed, in salvation itself.
22. III. I have a third point, but my time is gone, and, therefore, just these hints. THE RESULTS OF SUCH A CONSECRATION.
23. Immediately after God’s appearing to Abraham, his consecration was revealed, first, in his prayer for his family. “Oh that Ishmael might live before you!” Men of God, if you are indeed the Lord’s, and feel that you are his, begin now to intercede for all who belong to you. Never be satisfied unless they are saved too; and if you have a son, an Ishmael, concerning whom you have many fears and much anxiety, since you are saved yourself, never cease to groan out that cry, “Oh that Ishmael might live before you!”
24. The next result of Abraham’s consecration was, that he was most hospitable to his fellow men. Look at the next chapter. He sits at the tent door, and three men come to him. The Christian is the best servant of humanity in a spiritual sense. I mean that for his Master’s sake he endeavours to do good to the sons of men. He is of all men the first to feed the hungry and to clothe the naked, and as much as lies in him to do good for all men, especially to such as are of the household of faith.
25. The third result was, Abraham entertained the Lord himself, for among those three angels who came to his house was the King of kings, the infinite One. Every believer who serves his God does, as it were, give refreshment to the divine mind. I mean this, God took an infinite delight in the work of his dear Son. He said, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased,” and he takes a delight also in the holiness of all his people. Jesus sees the travail of his soul, and is satisfied by the works of the faithful; and you, brethren, just as Abraham entertained the Lord, do entertain the Lord Jesus with your patience and your faith, with your love and your zeal, when you are thoroughly consecrated to him.
26. Once more, Abraham became the great intercessor for others. The next chapter is full of his pleadings for Sodom. He had not been able to plead before, but after circumcision, after consecration, he becomes the King’s remembrancer, he is installed into the office of a priest, and he stands there crying, “Will you not save the city? Will you destroy the righteous with the wicked?” Oh beloved, if we would only become consecrated to God, thoroughly so, as I have attempted feebly to describe, we shall become mighty with God in our pleadings. I believe one holy man is a greater blessing to a nation than a whole regiment of soldiers. Did they not fear more the prayers of John Knox than the arms of ten thousand men? A man who lives habitually near to God is like a great cloud for ever dropping with refreshing showers. This is the man who can say, “The earth is dissolved, I bear up its pillars.” France would never have seen so bloody a revolution if there had there been men of prayer to preserve her. England, amid the commotions which make her rock to and fro, is held firm because prayer is put up incessantly by the faithful. The flag of old England is nailed to her mast, not by the hands of her sailors, but by the prayers of the people of God. These, as they intercede day and night, and as they go about their spiritual ministry, these are those for whom God spares nations, for whom he still permits the earth to exist; and when their time is over, and they are taken away, the salt being taken from the earth, then the elements shall dissolve with fervent heat, the earth also, and the works that are in it, shall be burned up; but not until he has caught away the saints with Christ into the air shall this world pass away. He will spare it for the sake of the righteous. Seek after the highest degree of sanctity, my dear brothers and sisters, seek for it, labour for it; and while you rest in faith alone for justification, do not be slack concerning growth in grace, that the highest attainments be your ambition, and may God grant them to you, for his Son’s sake. Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—Genesis 17 Colossians 2:10-15]
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2011/08/11/consecration-to-god