A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, January 3, 1869, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever. (Hebrews 13:8)
1. For a very considerable number of years an esteemed and venerable vicar of a Surrey parish has sent me at the New Year a generous testimony of his love, and an acknowledgment of the pleasure which he derives from the weekly reading of my sermons. Enclosed in the parcel which his kindness awards to me, is a text from which he hopes that I may preach on the first Sunday morning of the New Year. This year he sends me this golden line, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever.” I have preached from it before—you will find a sermon from this text in print; (See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 170, “The Immutability of Christ” 163) but we do not need to be at all afraid of preaching from the same text twice, the word is inexhaustible, it may be trodden in the winepress many times, and yet run with generous wine. We ought not to hesitate to preach a second time from a passage, any more than anyone going to the village well would be ashamed to put down the same bucket twice, or feel at all disappointed about sailing down the same river twice; for there is always a freshness about gospel truth, and though the matter may be the same, there are ways of putting it in a fresh light, in order to bring new joy to those who meditate upon it.
2. Moreover, what if we should repeat our teachings concerning Christ? What if we should hear over and over again the same things “touching the King?” We can afford to hear them. Repetitions concerning Jesus are better than varieties upon any other subject. As the French monarch declared that he would sooner hear the repetitions of Bourdaloue (a) than the novelties of another; so we may affirm concerning our Lord Jesus, we would sooner hear again and again the precious truths which glorify him, than listen to the most eloquent orations upon any other theme in all the world. There are a few works of art and wonders of creation which you might gaze upon every day in your life, and yet not weary of them. A great architect tells us there are very few buildings of this kind, but he names Westminster Abbey as one; and everyone knows who has ever looked upon the sea, or upon the Falls of Niagara, that look as often as you may, though you see precisely the same object, yet there are new tints, new motions of the waves, and new flashings of the light, which forbid the least approach of monotony, and give to the assembling of the waters an ever enduring charm. Even so it is with that sea of all delights which is found in the dear Lover of our souls.
3. We come, then, to the old subject of this old text, and may the blessed Spirit give us new unction while we meditate upon it. We notice first, our Lord’s personal name, Jesus Christ. Notice, secondly, his memorable attribute—“he is the same yesterday, and today, and for ever,” and then let us have a few words about his legitimate claims, derived from the possession of such a character.
4. I. First, then, the personal names of our Lord here mentioned “JESUS CHRIST.”
5. “JESUS” stands first. That
is our Lord’s Hebrew name, “Jesus,” or, “Joshua.” The
word means, a Saviour, “for he shall save his people
from their sins.” It was given to him in his cradle.
Cold on his cradle the dewdrops are shining;
Low lies his head with the beasts of the stall
Angels adore him, in slumber reclining,
Maker, and Monarch, and Saviour of all.
While he was still an infant nursing on his mother’s
breast, he was recognised as Saviour, for the fact of
God’s becoming incarnate was the sure pledge, guarantee,
and beginning of human salvation. At the very thought of
his birth the virgin sang, “My spirit has rejoiced in
God my Saviour.” There is hope that man shall be lifted
up to God, when God condescends to come down to man.
Jesus in the manger deserves to be called the Saviour,
for when it can be said that “the tabernacle of God is
with men, and he lives among them,” there is hope that
all good things will be given to the fallen race. He was
called Jesus, in his childhood—“The Holy Child
Jesus.” It was as Jesus that he went up with his parents
to the temple and sat down with the doctors, hearing
them and asking them questions. Indeed, and Jesus as a
Teacher in the very first principles of his doctrine is
a Saviour, emancipating the minds of men from
superstition, setting them loose from the traditions of
the fathers, scattering even with his infant hand the
seeds of truth, the elements of a glorious liberty which
shall emancipate the human mind from the iron bondage of
false philosophy and priestcraft. He was Jesus, too, and
is commonly called so both by his foes and by his
friends in his active life. It is as Jesus the
Saviour that he heals the sick, that he raises the dead,
that he delivers Peter from sinking, that he rescues
from shipwreck the ship tossed upon the Galilean lake.
In all the teachings of his middle life, in those
laborious three years of diligent service, both in his
public ministry and in his private prayer, he is still
Jesus the Saviour; for by his active, as well as by his
passive obedience, we are saved. All through his earthly
sojourn he made it clear that the Son of man had come to
seek and to save those who were lost. If his blood
redeems us from the guilt of sin, his life shows us how
to overcome its power. If by his death upon the tree he
crushes Satan for us, by his life of holiness he teaches
us how to break the dragon’s head within us. He is the
Saviour as a babe, the Saviour as a child, the Saviour
as the toiling, labouring, tempted man. But he comes out
most clearly as Jesus when dying on the cross;
named so in a writing of which the author said, “What I
have written, I have written,” for over the head of the
dying Saviour you read, “Jesus of Nazareth, the King of
the Jews.” There preeminently he was the Saviour, being
made a curse for us so that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him. After seeing the dying
agonies of his Master, the beloved apostle said, “We
have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to
be the Saviour of the world.” On Calvary it was seen
that the Son of Man saved others, although, through
blessed incapacity of love, “himself he could not save.”
When he was made to feel the wrath of God on account of
sin, and pangs unknown were suffered by him as our
substitute, when he was made to pass through the thick
darkness and burning heat of divine wrath, then he was,
according to Scripture, “the Saviour of all men,
especially of those who believe.” Yes, it is on the tree
that Christ is particularly a Saviour. If he were
nothing better than our example, alas for us! We might
be grateful for the example if we could imitate it, but
without the pardon which spares us, and the grace which
gives us power for holiness, the brightest example would
be a tantalising of our grief. To be shown what we ought
to be, without having any method set before us by which
we could attain to it, would be to mock our misery. But
Jesus first draws us up out of the horrible pit into
which we were fallen, takes us out of the miry clay, by
the efficacy of his atoning sacrifice, and then, having
set our feet upon a rock by virtue of his merits, he
himself leads the way onward to perfection, and so is a
Saviour both in life and in death.
That JESUS saves from sin and hell,
Is truth divinely sure;
And on this rock our faith may rest
Immovably secure.
6. Still bearing the name of
Jesus, our Lord rose from the dead. The
evangelists delight in calling him Jesus; in his
appearance to Magdalene in the garden, in his revealing
himself to the disciples, when they were met together,
the doors being shut. He is always Jesus with them as
the risen One. Beloved, since we are justified by his
resurrection, we may well regard him as Saviour under
that aspect. Salvation is still more linked with a risen
Christ, because we see him by his resurrection
destroying death, breaking down the prison of the
sepulchre, bearing away like another Samson the gates of
the grave. He is a Saviour for us since he has
vanquished the last enemy that shall be destroyed, that
we having been saved from sin by his death should be
saved from death through his resurrection. Jesus is the
title under which he is called in glory, for “him
has God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a
Saviour, for to give repentance to Israel, and
forgiveness of sins.” He is today “the Saviour of the
body.” We adore him as the only wise God, and our
Saviour. “He is able also to save to the uttermost those
who come to God by him, seeing he lives for ever to make
intercession for them.” As Jesus he shall shortly
come, and we are “Looking for that blessed hope, and
the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour
Jesus Christ.” Our daily cry is, “Even so, come, Lord
Jesus.” Indeed, and this is the name, the name “Jesus,”
by which he is known in heaven at this hour. Thus
the angel spoke of him before he was conceived by the
virgin; thus the angels serve him and do his bidding,
for he says to John in Patmos, “I, Jesus, have sent my
angel to testify of these things.” The angels prophesied
his coming under that sacred name. They came to those
who stood looking up into heaven, and they said, “You
men of Galilee, why do you stand gazing up into heaven?
This same Jesus, who is taken up from you into heaven,
shall so come in similar manner as you have seen him go
into heaven.” Under this name the demons fear him, for
did they not say, “Jesus we know, and Paul we know, but
who are you?” This is the spell that binds the hearts of
cherubim in chains of love, and this is the word that
makes the hosts of hell to tremble and to quail. This
name is the joy of the church on earth; it is the joy of
the church above. It is a common word, a household name
for our dear Redeemer among the family of God below, and
up there they still sing it.
Jesus, the Lord, their harps employs:—
Jesus, my Love, they sing!
Jesus, the life of both our joys,
Sounds sweet from every string.
That man of God, Mr. Henry Craik, of Bristol, who, so
much to our regret, was recently called away to his
rest, tells us in his little work upon the study of the
Hebrew language, as an example of how much may be
gathered from a single Hebrew word, that the name Jesus
is particularly rich and suggestive to the mind of the
Hebrew scholar. It comes from a root meaning amplitude,
spaciousness, and then it comes to mean setting at
large, setting free, delivering, and so comes to its
common use among us, namely, that of Saviour. There are
two words in the name Jesus. The one is a contraction of
the word “Jehovah,” the other is the word which I have
just now explained to you as ultimately coming to mean
“salvation.” Broken down, the word Jesus means
JEHOVAH-SALVATION. You have the glorious essence and
nature of Christ revealed to you as Jehovah, “I am that
I am,” and then you have in the second part of his name
his great work for you in setting you at large and
delivering you from all distress. Think, beloved fellow
Christian, of the amplitude, the spaciousness, the
breadth, the abundance, the boundless all sufficiency
laid up in the person of the Lord Jesus. “It pleased the
Father that in him should all fulness dwell.” You have
no contracted Christ, you have no narrow Saviour. Oh,
the infinity of his love, the abundance of his grace,
the exceeding greatness of the riches of his love
towards us! There are no words in any language that can
bring out sufficiently the unlimited, the infinite
extent of the riches of the glory of Christ Jesus our
Lord. The word which lies at the root of this name
“Jesus,” or “Joshua,” has sometimes the meaning of
riches; and who can tell what a wealth of grace and
glory are laid up in our Emmanuel? Mr. Craik tells us
that another form of the same word means “a cry.”
“Listen to the voice of my cry, my King and my
God.” Thus salvation, riches, and a cry, are all derived
from the same root, and all find their answer in our
Joshua or Christ. When his people cry out of their
prison houses, then he comes and sets them at large,
comes with all the amplitude and wealth of his eternal
grace, all the plenitude of his overflowing power, and
delivering them from every form of bondage, gives them
to enjoy the riches of the glory treasured up in
himself. If this interpretation should make the name of
Jesus one bit more dear to you, I am sure I shall be
exceedingly happy. What do you think, if there is so
much stored up in the one single name, what must be laid
up in himself! And if we can honestly say that it would
be difficult to give the full bearing of this one Hebrew
name which belongs to Christ, how much more difficult
will it ever be to give the full bearing of all his
character? If his bare name is such a mine of
excellence, what must his person be? If this, which is
only a part of his garment, does so smell of myrrh, and
aloes, and cassia, oh what must his blessed person be
but a bundle of myrrh, which shall lie for ever on our
hearts, to be the perfume of our life, and the delight
of our soul?
Precious is the name of Jesus,
Who can half its worth unfold?
Far beyond angelic praises,
Sweetly sung to harps of gold.
Precious when to Calvary groaning,
He sustain’d the cursed tree;
Precious when his death atoning,
Made an end of sin for me.
Precious when the bloody scourges
Caused the sacred drops to roll;
Precious when of wrath the surges
Overwhelm’d his holy soul.
Precious in his death victorious,
He the host of hell o’erthrows;
In his resurrection glorious,
Victor crown’d o’er all his foes.
Precious, Lord! beyond expressing,
Are thy beauties all divine;
Glory, honour, power, and blessing,
Be henceforth for ever thine.
7. Thus much have we spoken upon the Hebrew name. Now reverently consider the second title—Christ. That is a Greek name, a Gentile name—Anointed. So that you see you have the Hebrew Joshua, Jesus, then the Greek Christos, Christ; so that we may see that no longer is there either Jew or Gentile, but all are one in Jesus Christ. The word Christ, as you all know, means anointed, and as such our Lord is sometimes called “the Christ,” “the very Christ”; at other times “the Lord’s Christ,” and sometimes “the Christ of God.” He is the Lord’s Anointed, our King, and our Shield.
8. This word “Christ” teaches us three great truths; first, it indicates his offices. He exercises offices in which anointing is necessary, and these are three:—the office of the King, of the Priest, and of the Prophet. He is King in Zion, anointed with the oil of gladness above his companions, even as it was said of old, “I have found David my servant; I have anointed him with my holy oil: with whom my hand shall be established: my arm shall also strengthen him. . .I will set his hand also in the sea, and his right hand in the rivers. . .Also I will make him my firstborn, higher than the kings of the earth.” Saul, the first king of Israel, was anointed with only a vial of oil, David, with a horn of oil, as if to indicate the greater plenitude of his power and excellence of his kingdom; but as for our Lord Jesus Christ, he has received the spirit of anointing without any measure, he is the Lord’s Anointed, for whom an unquenchable lamp is ordained. “There I will make the horn of David to bud: I have ordained a lamp for my anointed.” Beloved, as we think of that name, Christ, let us reverently yield our souls up to him whom God has anointed to be King. Let us stand up for his rights over his church, for he is King of Zion, and no one has a right to rule there except under and in subjection to the great Head over all, who in all things shall have the preeminence. Let us stand up for his rights within our own hearts, seeking to thrust out all rival objects, desirous to keep our souls chaste for Christ, and to make every member of our body, though it may have surrendered itself previously to sin, to become subservient to the anointed King who has a right to rule over it.
9. Next, the Lord Christ is Priest. Priests were anointed. They were not to undertake this office by themselves, nor without passing through the ceremony which set them apart. Jesus Christ our Lord has grace given to him that no priest ever had. Their outward anointing was only symbolic, his was the true and the real. He has received what their oil only illustrated in type and shadow, he has the real anointing from the Most High. Beloved, let us always look at Christ as the anointed Priest. My soul, you can never come to God except through the only everliving and truly anointed High Priest of our profession. Oh never for a moment seek to come without him, nor through any pretender who may call himself a priest. High Priest of the house of God, we see you thus ordained, and we give our cause into your hands. Offer our sacrifices for us, present our prayers, take our praises and put them into the golden censer, and you yourself offer them before your Father’s throne. Rejoice, my brethren, every time you hear the name Christ; that he who wears it is anointed to be Priest.
10. So with regard to the prophetic office, we find Elisha anointed to prophesy, and so is Jesus Christ the prophet anointed among his people. Peter spoke to Cornelius of “how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power: who went around doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil; for God was with him.” He was anointed to preach the glad tidings, and to sit as Master in Israel. We accept no man’s teaching to be authoritative among us, except the testimony of the Christ. The teaching of the Lord’s Christ is our creed, and nothing else. I thank God that in this church we do not have to divide our allegiance between some venerable set of articles and the teaching of our Lord. One is our Master, and we acknowledge no right of any man to bind another’s conscience; even though they are great in piety and deep in learning, like Augustine and Calvin, whose names we honour, for God honoured them, still they have no dominance over private judgment in regard to the people of God. Jesus Christ is the Prophet of Christendom. His words must always be the first and the last appeal. This, then, is the meaning of the word “Christos.” He is anointed as King, Priest, and Prophet.
11. But it means more than that. The name Christ declares his right to those offices. He is not King because he sets himself up as such. God has set him as King upon his holy hill of Zion, and anointed him to rule. He is also Priest, but he has not taken the priesthood upon himself, for he is the propitiation whom God has offered for human sin. He is the mediator whom the Lord God has appointed, and set to be the only mediator between God and man. And as for his prophesying he does not speak of himself; those things which he has learned from the Father, he has revealed to us. He does not come as a prophet who assumes his office, but God has anointed him to preach glad tidings to the poor, and to come among his people with the welcome news of eternal love.
12. Moreover, this anointing
indicates a third thing, that just as he has the office,
and as it is his by right, so he has the
qualifications for the work. He is anointed to be
king. God has given him royal power, and wisdom, and
government; he has made him fit to rule in the church,
and to reign over the world. There is no better king
than Christ, no one is so majestic as he who wore the
thorn crown, but who shall put upon his head the crown
of universal monarchy. He has the qualifications for a
priest too, such qualifications as even Melchizedek did
not have; such as cannot be found in all the house of
Aaron, in all its length of pedigree. Blessed Son of
God, perfect in yourself, and not needing a sacrifice
for your own sake, you have presented to God an offering
which has perfected for ever those whom you have set
apart, and now not needing to make a further offering,
you have put away sin for ever. So it is with our Lord’s
prophesying, he has the power to teach. “Grace is poured
into your lips: therefore God has blessed you for ever.”
All the words of Christ are wisdom and truth. The
substance of true philosophy and certain knowledge are
to be found in him who is the wisdom and the power of
God. Oh, that word “Christ!” it seems to grow upon us as
we think it over; it shows us the offices of Christ, his
right to those offices, and his qualifications for them:
Christ, to thee our spirits bow!
Prophet, Priest, and King art thou!
Christ, anointed of the Lord,
Evermore be thou adored.
13. Now, put the two titles together and ring out the harmony of the two melodious notes: Jesus Christ, Saviour Anointed. Oh, how blessed! Do you not see that our Beloved is a Saviour duly appointed, a Saviour abundantly qualified! My soul, if God appoints Christ a Saviour of sinners, why do you raise a question? God appointed him as a sinner’s Saviour. Come, then, you sinners, take him, accept him, and rest in him. Oh, how foolish we are when we begin raising questions, quibbles, and difficulties! God declares that Christ is a Saviour to all who trust in him. My poor heart trusts him: she has peace. But why do some of you imagine that he cannot save you, or ask, “How can it be that this man shall save me?” God has appointed him, take him, rest in him. Moreover, God has qualified him, given him the anointing of a Saviour. What, do you think God has not girded him with enough power or furnished him with enough merit with which to save such as you are? Will you limit what God has done? Will you think that his anointing is imperfect and cannot qualify Jesus to handle your case? Oh do not slander the grace of heaven so! Do not do such despite to the wisdom of the Lord; but honour the Saviour of God’s anointing by coming now, just as you are, and putting your trust in him.
14. II. We shall now examine the second point, HIS MEMORABLE ATTRIBUTES.
15. He is said to be the same. Now, Jesus Christ has not been the same in condition at all times, for he was once adored by angels but afterwards spit upon by menials. He exchanged the supernal splendours of his Father’s court for the poverty of the earth, the degradation of death, and the humiliation of the grave. Jesus Christ is not, and will not be always the same with respect to occupation. Once he came to seek and to save those who were lost, but we very truly sing, “The Lord shall come, but not the same as once in lowliness he came.” He shall come with a very different object; he shall come to scatter his enemies and break them as with a rod of iron. We are not to take the expression then, “the same,” in the most unlimited sense conceivable. Looking at the Greek, one notices that it might be read thus, “Jesus Christ himself yesterday, and today, and for ever.” The anointed Saviour is always himself. He is always Jesus Christ; and the word “same” seems to me to bear the most intimate relationship to the two titles of the text, and does as good as say that Jesus Christ is always Jesus Christ, yesterday, and today, and for ever. Jesus Christ is always himself; at any rate, if that is not the correct translation, it is a very correct and blessed sentence: it is sweetly true that Jesus Christ is always himself.
16. Immutability is ascribed to Christ, and we remark that he was for evermore to his people what he now is, for he was the same yesterday. Distinctions have been drawn by certain exceedingly wise men (measured by their own estimate of themselves), between the people of God who lived before the coming of Christ, and those who lived afterwards. We have even heard it asserted that those who lived before the coming of Christ do not belong to the church of God! We never know what we shall hear next, and perhaps it is a mercy that these absurdities are revealed one at a time, in order that we may be able to endure their stupidity without dying of amazement. Why, every child of God in every place stands on the same footing; the Lord does not have some children best beloved, some second rate offspring, and others whom he hardly cares about. Those who saw Christ’s day before it came, had a great difference concerning what they knew, and perhaps in the same measure a difference concerning what they enjoyed while on earth in meditating upon Christ; but they were all washed in the same blood, all redeemed with the same ransom price, and made members of the same body. Israel in the covenant of grace is not natural Israel, but all believers in all ages. Before the first advent, all the types and shadows all pointed one way—they pointed to Christ, and to him all the saints looked with hope. Those who lived before Christ were not saved with a different salvation than what shall come to us. They exercised faith as we must; that faith struggled as ours struggles, and that faith obtained its reward as ours shall. Just as the reflection of man’s face to what he sees in a mirror so is the spiritual life of David to the spiritual life of the believer now. Take the book of Psalms in your hand, and forgetting for an instant that you have the representation of the life of one of the olden time, you might suppose—that David wrote only yesterday. Even in what he writes about Christ, he seems as though he lived after Christ instead of before, and both in what he sees of himself and in what he sees of his Saviour, he appears to be rather a Christian writer than a Jew; I mean that living before Christ he has the same hopes and the same fears, the same joys and the same sorrows, there is the same estimate of his blessed Redeemer which you and I have in these times. Jesus was the same yesterday as an anointed Saviour to his people as he is today, and under him they received the same precious gifts. If the goodly fellowship of the prophets could be here today, they would all testify to you that he was the same in every office in their times as he is in our days.
17. Jesus Christ is the same now as he was in times gone by, for the text says, “The same yesterday, and today.” He is the same today as he was from old eternity. Before all worlds he planned our salvation; he entered into covenant with his Father to undertake it. His delights were with the sons of men in prospect, and now today he is as steadfast to that covenant as ever. He will not lose those who were then given to him, nor will he fail nor be discouraged until every stipulation of that covenant shall be fulfilled. Whatever was in the heart of Christ before the stars began to shine, that same infinite love is there today. Jesus is the same today as he was when he was here on earth. There is much comfort in this thought. When he tabernacled among men, he was most willing to save. “Come to me, all you who labour and are heavy laden,” was the burden of his cry; he is still calling to the weary and the heavy laden to come to him. In the days of his flesh he would not curse the woman taken in adultery, neither would he reject the tax collectors and sinners who gathered to hear him; he is still full of pity for sinners, and still says to them, “Neither do I condemn you: go, and sin no more.” That delightful sentence which so graciously came from his lips, “Your sins, which are many, are forgiven you,” is still his favourite utterance in human hearts. Oh do not think that Christ in heaven has become distant and reserved, so that you may not approach him. Such as he was here, a Lamb, gentle and meek, a man to whom men drew near without a moment’s hesitation, he is such now. Come boldly to him, you lowliest and guiltiest ones, come near to him with broken hearts and weeping eyes. Though he is King and Priest, surrounded with unknown splendour, yet still he retains the same loving heart, and the same generous sympathies towards the sons of men. He is still the same in his ability as well as in his willingness to save. He is still Jesus Christ the anointed Saviour. In his earthly days, he touched the leper and said, “I will; be clean”; he called Lazarus from the tomb, and Lazarus came; sinner, Jesus is still as able to heal or quicken you now as then. “He is able also to save to the uttermost those who come to God by him, seeing he lives for ever to make intercession for them.” Now that the blood is spilt indeed, and the sacrifice is fully offered, there is no limit to the ability of Christ to save. Oh come and rely upon him, and find salvation in him now. Believer, it will cheer you also to remember that when our Lord was here upon earth, he showed great perseverance in his ability to save. He could say, “Of those whom you gave to me I have lost none.” Rejoice that he is the same today, he will not cast one of you away, nor allow his little ones to perish, he brought all safely in the days of his flesh; he takes care to keep all safely now in the days of his glory, he is the same today, then, as he was on earth.
18. Blessed be his name, Jesus Christ is the same today as in apostolic days. Then, he gave the fulness of the Spirit; then, when he ascended up on high, he gave gifts to men, apostles, preachers, teachers of the word. Do not let us think we shall not see as good days now as they saw at Pentecost. He is the same Christ. He could as readily convert three thousand under one sermon today, as in Peter’s time; his Holy Spirit is not exhausted, for God does not give it by measure to him. We ought to pray that he would raise up among us eminent men to proclaim the gospel. We do not pray enough for the ministry. The ministry is particularly the gift of the ascension. When he ascended on high he received gifts for men, and he gave—what? Why, men, apostles, teachers, preachers. If we ask for salvation, we plead the blood: why do we not ask for ministers, and plead the ascension? If we would do this more, we should see raised up among us more Whitfields and Wesleys, more Luthers and Calvins, more men of the apostolic stock, and the church would be revived. Jesus is the same to enrich his people with all spiritual gifts in this year, as in the year when he ascended to his throne. “He is the same yesterday, and today.”
19. He is the same today as he was to our fathers. These have gone to their rest, but they told us before they went what Christ was to them; how he helped them in their time of peril; how he delivered them in their hour of sorrow. He will do for us just what he did for them. Some who lived before us went to heaven in a chariot of fire, but Christ was very precious to them at the stake. We have our martyrologies which we read with wonder. How sustaining the company of Christ was to those who were imprisoned, to those who were thrown to the lions, to those who wandered around in sheep skins and goat skins! England, Scotland—all the countries where Christ was preached—have been dyed with blood and ennobled with the testimonies of the faithful. Whatever Jesus was to these departed worthies, he is to his people still. We have only to ask God, and we shall receive the very same benefit.
20. “Jesus Christ the same today,” says the text. Then he is the same today as he has been to us in the past. We have had great enjoyments of God’s presence; we do remember the love of our espousals, and if we do not have the same joys today, it is no fault of his. There is still the same water in the well, and if we have not drawn it, it is our fault. We have come away from the fire, and therefore we are cold; we have walked contrary to him, and therefore he walks contrary to us. Let us return to him and he will be as glad to receive us now as in our first moment of repentance. Let us return to him. His heart is as full of love, and as ready to weep upon our neck as when we first came and sought pardon from his hands. There is much sweetness in the text, but I cannot linger longer upon that part of the subject; it is enough for us to remember that Jesus Christ is the same today as he always was.
21. Now, further, Christ shall be tomorrow what he has been yesterday and is today. Our Lord Jesus Christ will be changed in no respect throughout our entire life. It may be long before we shall descend to our graves, but let these hairs all be grey, and these limbs begin to totter, and these eyes grow dim, Jesus Christ shall have the dew of his youth upon him, and the fulness of his love shall still flow to us. And after death, or if we do not die, at the coming of Christ and in his glorious reign, Jesus will be the same to his people then as now. There seems to be a notion abroad among some that after his coming Christ will deal differently with his people than now. I have been informed by a modern school of inventors (and, as I tell you, we live to learn) that some of us will be excluded from the kingdom when Christ comes. Saved by precious blood and brought near, and adopted into the family, and our names written upon the breastplate of Christ, and yet some of us will be excluded from the kingdom! Nonsense. I see nothing in the word of God, though there may be a great deal in the imaginations of men to support these novelties. The people of God, equally bought with blood, and equally dear to Jesus’ heart, shall be treated on the same scale and footing. They will never be put under the law, never come to Christ, and find him rule them as a legal Judge, and beat them with many stripes in a future state, or exclude them from his estate of millennial Majesty. He will give to no one, as a mere matter of reward, such rule and government in order to exclude others of his redeemed family; but they shall find him always treating them all as unchanging love and immutable grace shall dictate; and the rewards of the millennial state shall be always those of grace, shall be such as not to exclude the very least of all the family, but all shall have tokens of reward from the dear Saviour’s hand. I know he will not love me today, and give me the glimpses of his face, give me to delight in his name, and yet after all when he comes, tell me I must stand out in the cold, and not enter into his kingdom. I have not a shade of faith in the purgatory of banishment, which certain despisers of the ministry have chosen to set up. I marvel that in a Protestant sect there should rise up a dogma as villainous as the dogma of purgatory, and that, too, from those who say they are not sectarians. We all are wrong except these brethren; these are deeply taught and can discover what the most able divines have never seen. That Jesus will love his people in time to come as strongly as he does now, seems to be a doctrine which if destroyed or denied, would cause sorrow for the whole family of God. Throughout eternity, in heaven, there shall still be the same Jesus Christ, with the same love for his people, and they shall have the same close communion with him, indeed, shall see him face to face, and rejoice for ever in him as their unchangeably, anointed Saviour.
22. III. Our time has failed us, and therefore just two or three thoughts only upon our Lord’s LEGITIMATE CLAIMS.
23. If our Lord is “the same yesterday, and today, and for ever,” then, according to the connection of our text, he is to be followed to the end. Observe the seventh verse, “Remember those who have the rule over you, who have spoken to you the word of God; whose faith follow considering the end of their conduct”; the meaning being—these holy men ended their lives with Christ; their exit was to go to Jesus, and to reign with him. Beloved, if the Lord is still the same, follow him until you reach him. Your exit out of this life shall bring you where he is, and you will find him then what he always was. You shall see him as he is. If he were a will-oh’-the-wisp, for ever changing, it would be dangerous to follow him, but since he is always and equally worthy of your admiration and example, follow him for evermore. That was an eloquent speech of Henry the Sixth of France, when on the eve of battle, he said to his soldiers, “Gentlemen, you are Frenchmen, I am your King. There is the enemy!” Jesus Christ says, “You are my people; I am your leader. There is the foe!” How shall we dare to do anything unworthy of such a Lord as he is, or of such a citizenship as what he has bestowed upon us? If we are indeed his, and he is indeed immutable, let us by his Holy Spirit’s power persevere to the end, so that we may obtain the crown.
24. The next legitimate claim of Christ upon us is that we should be steadfast in the faith. Notice the ninth verse: “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever. Do not be carried about with various and strange doctrines.” There is nothing new in theology except what is false. All that is true is old, though I do not say that all that is old is true. Some speak of developments as though we did not have the whole Christian religion discovered yet; but the religion of Paul is the religion of every man who is taught by the Holy Spirit. We ought not, therefore, to indulge for a moment the idea that something has been discovered which may correct the teaching of Christ; that some new philosophy or discovery of science has uprisen to correct the declared testimony of our Redeemer. Let us hold firm to what we have received, and never depart from “the truth once delivered to the saints” by Christ himself.
25. If Jesus Christ is thus immutable, he has a legitimate claim to our most solemn worship. Immutability can be the attribute of no one except God. Whoever is “the same yesterday, and today, and for ever,” must be divine. Always, then, believer, bring your adoration to Jesus; cast down your crown at the feet of him who was crucified. Give royal and divine honours to him who stooped to the ignominy of crucifixion. Let no one stop you from glorying in this—you boast that the Son of God was made man for you. Worship him as God over all, blessed for ever.
26. He claims also of us next, that we should trust him. If he is always the same, here is a rock that cannot be moved; build on it. Here is an anchorage, cast your anchor of hope into it and hold it firmly in time of storm. If Christ were variable, he would not be worthy of your confidence. Since he is unchanged for evermore, rest on him without fear.
27. And, lastly, if he is
always the same, rejoice in him, and rejoice always. If
you ever had cause to rejoice in Christ, you always have
cause, for he never alters. If yesterday you could sing
of him, today you may sing of him. If he changed, your
joy might change; but, if the stream of your gladness
springs solely and only out of this great deep of the
immutability of Jesus, then it need never stop its flow.
Beloved, let us “rejoice in the Lord always: and again I
say, rejoice”; and, until the day breaks and the shadows
flee away, until the blest hour arrives when we shall
see him face to face, and be made like him, may this be
our joy, that “he is the same yesterday, and today, and
for ever.” Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—Hebrews
13]
(a) Bourdaloue, Louis: (August 20,
1632-May 13, 1704) was a French Jesuit and preacher.
See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Bourdaloue"