A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, August 5, 1877, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
Now the God of peace, who brought again from the
dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep,
through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you
perfect in every good work to do his will, working in
you what is well-pleasing in his sight, through Jesus
Christ; to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
[Heb
13:20,21]
For other sermons on this text:
[See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 277, “Blood of the
Everlasting Covenant, The” 269]
[See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1186, “Blood of the
Covenant, The” 1177]
[See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1368, “God of Peace
and Our Sanctification, The” 1359]
Exposition on
Heb 13:1-21 [See Spurgeon_Sermons No.
3150, “Never, No Never, No Never” 3151 @@ "Exposition"]
Exposition on Heb 13 [See
Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2358, “Unchangeable Christ, The”
2359 @@ "Exposition"]
[See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "Heb
13:21"]
1. The apostle, in the eighteenth verse, had been earnestly asking for the prayers of the Lord’s people. On the behalf of all his brethren he said, “Pray for us”; and for himself he added, “I beseech you the rather to do this, so that I may be restored to you all the sooner.” If the apostle needed the prayers of his brethren, how much more do we who are so greatly inferior to him in all respects. We may, indeed, even with tears appeal to you who are our brethren in Christ, and entreat you to be earnest in your supplications to God on our behalf. What can we do without your prayers? They link us with the omnipotence of God. Like the lightning rod, they pierce the clouds and bring down the mighty and mysterious power from on high. But what the apostle was anxious to receive he was careful to bestow, and therefore he proceeded in the words of our text to plead for his brethren; from which we learn that if we desire others to pray for us we must set the example of praying for them. We cannot expect to be blessed by other men’s prayers unless the spirit of supplication dwells in us also. In this matter the Lord will give to us good measure pressed down and running over according as we give to others. Other hearts shall be stirred up to intercede for us if we are ourselves diligent in intercession. Pray, if you wish to be prayed for.
2. The prayer before us was an extremely expansive one, for Paul had learned to ask for great things from the Lord. The Holy Spirit had filled him with much love for the Hebrews, and with strong desire for their welfare; and, therefore, he asks for what is the greatest of all blessings for the people of God, that they may be fit for every good work, and that God may work in them to do what is well-pleasing in his sight. When we plead for God’s own beloved people we are safe in asking for the best of blessings: if we feel constrained in pleading for ourselves there can be no reason in being so in reference to them, since we know that the Lord loves them and abounds towards them in grace through Christ Jesus.
3. It is noteworthy that this prayer or benediction comes at the close of the epistle, even as in Christian assemblies the benediction is pronounced at the end of the worship. Let the last of all our acts be a blessing to men and a doxology to God. As long as you live, dear brethren, endeavour to bless others, and when you die conclude life with a blessing, even as your Lord and Master did, who as he ascended to heaven was seen with outstretched hands blessing his people. Just as Jacob would not let the angel go until he blessed him, so we should not cease from preaching or writing in the name of the Lord until we have a comforting persuasion that a blessing has come upon our brethren.
4. This prayerful benediction is an extremely instructive one. It has within itself the whole content of the gospel, as one might show if this were our object at this time. It is condensed spiritual food; much in little; all things in one blessing. Every word is as a pearl for value, and as the sea for depth. It is not the object of prayer to instruct our fellow men; a decided distinction ought always to be drawn between praying and preaching, and those err greatly who under the name of prayer not only instruct, but argue and exhort; yet it is a remarkable fact that there is no inspired prayer in Scripture except what is full of teaching for those who are willing to study it. Take any one of the psalms, — though they are addressed to God, yet within them the preacher finds a thousand texts from which to inculcate the doctrines and the precepts of the Lord. As for the prayers of our Lord Jesus, they drop richness; what is commonly called “the Lord’s prayer” contains a world of doctrine; and that glorious prayer in the seventeenth chapter of John is like honey from the honeycomb. Now, since the same Spirit that performed old works also in us, I conclude that he will lead us also to pray for the edification of those who hear us. Though the foremost object of prayer is not the instruction of our fellow men, yet prayer ought to be full of good matter and worthy of the consideration of those whom we invite to join in it! Public prayer would be a far better means of grace for the people if those who utter petitions in public would seek preparation of heart from the Lord and enter upon the exercise with careful thought. Surely it is not sufficient to repeat a round of godly expressions which have become current in the church, but we ought to speak with the Spirit and with the understanding in our approaches to God, so that the thoughts of our fellow Christians may be stirred, and their hearts united with us in our public devotions. He who prays in public a dull prayer, devoid of all thought and meditation, dampens the flame of devotion, whereas it was his duty to have added fuel to it. I invite those who take part in our prayer meetings to lay this matter to heart.
5. We must, however, further notice that though the prayer of Paul for the Hebrew believers is full of doctrine, yet all of it tends to the object which he had in view. He did not garnish his prayer with extraneous words, nor drag in needless doctrinal statements; but every word was meant to support his plea for personal, practical holiness, which was the one object of his prayer. While he shows us from where holiness must come, and how it must come, and how it is accomplished in us, and what it is like when it is accomplished in us, he is all along producing his strong arguments with the Lord that in the Hebrew believers this holiness might be accomplished abundantly. I am sure I shall have your earnest attention while I endeavour to weigh the very words of the text, since each one is full of meaning; I cannot hope in the short time of one sermon to bring out the whole fulness of its meaning, for who can hold the sea in the hollow of his hand, or encompass the fulness of such a text in one brief address? Yet I would labour to give you sufficient insight into it to let you see that its lengths and breadths and depths and heights are not easily to be measured by mortal mind.
6. I. I call your attention to THE PARTICULAR TITLE UNDER WHICH GOD IS ADDRESSED IN THIS PRAYER: “Now, the God of peace.”
7. The names of God employed in prayer in holy Scripture are always significant. Holy men of old were not so poverty-stricken in language as always to address God under one name, nor were they so careless as to speak with him under such a title as might first come to hand; but in their approaches to the Most High they carefully regarded that attribute of the divine nature from which they expected the blessing which they desired. If they needed that their enemies should be overthrown they pleaded with the arm of his strength; if they were wrongfully entreated, they prayed to the God of righteousness; if they needed pardon for their sins, they pleaded with the God of mercy; and such names as Jehovah, Elohim, Shaddai, are not used indiscriminately in the prayers of the saints of old, but always with selection and judgment. Why, then, did the apostle here call God “the God of peace?” He had a reason; what was it?
8. It is a Pauline expression. You find that title only in the writings of Paul. It is a name of Paul’s own coinage by the teaching of the Holy Spirit. There were reasons in Paul’s experience which led him to dwell upon this particular trait of the divine character. Each man, seeing with his own eyes, sees something particular in the name of the Lord; and the apostle of the Gentiles when writing to Hebrew believers saw with special clarity “the God of peace,” who had made both Jew and Gentile to be one in Christ, so making peace. If you look in the epistle to the Romans, you find him praying, “Now, the God of peace be with you all.” [Ro 15:33] Later in the same epistle, he says, “The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly.” [Ro 16:20] Again, in the second epistle to the Corinthians, he says, “Be perfect, be of good comfort, be of one mind, live in peace; and the God of love and peace shall be with you.” [2Co 13:11] In Philippians he concludes his exhortation like this: “Those things, which you have both learned, and received, and heard and seen in me, do; and the God of peace shall be with you”; [Php 4:9] but especially in first Thessalonians, there is a passage strikingly parallel to our text. He prays there, “And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly.” [1Th 5:23] Sanctification is the subject of the present prayer. Just as in our text he prays, “Perfect you in every good work to do his will,” so in Thessalonians he says, “And I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.” [1Th 5:23] It is evident, not only that the apostle delighted in the expression particular to himself, but that he saw a close connection between the peace of God and the sanctifying of believers, and for this reason, both in the Thessalonians and in the Hebrews, his prayer for their sanctification is addressed to the God of peace.
9. The title is a gospel one. God is not spoken of as the God of peace in the Old Testament; but there he is “a man of war, the Lord is his name”; “he shall cut off the spirit of princes; he is terrible to the kings of the earth.” He is frequently spoken of in the Psalms and the prophets as “the Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle,” and it is a part of Israel’s praise of him that he slew mighty kings, “for his mercy endures for ever.” Constantly, in the older volume of inspiration, we read of “the Lord of hosts,” and concerning this title an old divine says, “It has the sound of hostility in it”; but now no longer do we speak of the Lord of hosts, but of the God of peace; for, since Jesus is our peace, the enmity is slain. Messiah’s reign began with songs in heaven of “peace on earth, goodwill towards men,” his errand was peace, his spirit was peace, his teaching was peace, his last testament was peace, and, through his atonement, from the opened heavens the God of peace and consolation looks down upon the sons of men.
10. The appropriateness of the title to the particular prayer will readily strike you, for holiness is peace. “May the God of peace make you holy,” for he himself is peace and holiness. When holiness reigned over the whole universe peace reigned also. There was no war in heaven until one who had been an angel became a devil, and fomented a rebellion against the thrice-holy God. Sin produces strife, but holiness is the mother of peace. In perfection there is peace, and therefore Paul prays the God of peace to make his children perfect; holiness is well-pleasing to him, and when he is pleased all is peace, therefore he prays to him to work in them what is well-pleasing in his sight.
11. The God of peace has also graciously restored peace and reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ, but it has been by the putting away of sin, for while sin remained peace was impossible. “The blood of the everlasting covenant,” of which the text speaks, was the sealing of a covenant of peace which God made between himself and man; for of old there were thoughts of peace in the mind of God towards his chosen. In the fulness of time the gift of Christ and his atoning death was the actual establishment of peace, for he has made peace by the blood of his cross. He is the ambassador of God to us, and by his substitutionary sacrifice peace was effectively made, “for he is our peace”; by the blood of the everlasting covenant there was a treaty made between God and his elect, which shall stand firm for ever and ever. As for our Lord’s resurrection and ascension, of which the text speaks — “The God of peace, who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus,” — that was the public proclamation of peace. So long as Jesus was in the grave peace was not publicly declared; it was assuredly established, but not publicly announced; but when the Mediator arose, and especially when he ascended on high and received gifts for men, and sat down at the right hand of God, even the Father, then before the whole universe it was declared that God was at peace with the sons of men. For Jesus is in all things the Adam, the model man, the representative of his people, and peace with him means peace with all who are in him. He died for our sins, but he rose again for our justification, which is none other than the placing of us in a condition of reconciliation with God. He went into heaven to take possession of our inheritance; and what better evidence could there be that we are reconciled to God? If our representative sits at his right hand we may be confident that the Lord is reconciled to us.
12. Beloved, if you pursue the subject you will see more and more clearly the significance of the title, “the God of peace”; for, to make us perfect in every good work to do his will is to give us peace. Although every Christian by faith in Christ is justified, and so has a judicial peace with God, still we never can enjoy perfect peace with our own consciences as long as any sin is committed by us, or dwells in us. As long as there shall remain a solitary tendency to sin within these members we shall be disturbed, sin will contend with grace, and new-born grace will war with inbred sin. Sin and grace can no more agree than fire and water. Even the God of peace never tries to establish a peace between good and evil, for it would be monstrous even if it were possible. The way to peace is the way of holiness. Cast out sin, and you cast out contention. Subdue iniquity, and peace wins the victory. Beloved, it is of no use for us to seek happiness in life except by the way of holiness of conduct. I have already declared that we have peace with God through the atoning work of our Lord Jesus Christ; but for the deep calm of heart and quiet of conscience there must be a work of sanctification within us accomplished by the power which raised Jesus Christ from the dead. Sin is our enemy, and the new life within us is heartily at enmity with evil, and therefore peace can never be proclaimed in the triple kingdom of our nature until we always do what is well-pleasing in the sight of the Lord, through Jesus Christ.
13. Nor is this all. When the apostle, praying for our sanctification, prays to the God of peace, it is as much as to say to us that we must view God as the God of peace if we are to be led to do his will. Oh man, is God your enemy? Then you will never serve him, nor do what is well-pleasing in his sight. Do you at this moment feel a horror of God, a dread at the mention of his name? Then you can never do what will please him, for without faith it is impossible to please God, and faith is the opposite of horror. You must first of all know that there is peace between you and your God, and then you can please him. This knowledge can only come to you through Christ Jesus, for peace is made only by “the blood of the everlasting covenant.” When once you know that the Lord has made with you an everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure, then you have leverage to work with, then are you founded upon a rock upon which you may be built up in every form of obedience, but not until then. Peace with God is the root of virtue; reconciliation by the death of his Son is the door to conformity to the life of his Son. May we know our great Shepherd both in his dying atonement and living example as the Lord and giver of peace.
14. I think also that the apostle in praying to “the God of peace” had in his mind’s eye the entire church of the Hebrews, or, if you will, any one Christian church. Brethren, it is essential that we have peace in the church. Whatever is the enmity without, we must love each other. If we do not walk in love we certainly cannot have prosperity. God alone can give peace to a church, and he only gives it by sanctifying its members, stirring them up to good works, keeping them in sacred activity, making them fit to labour for him, and working in them to do what is well-pleasing in his sight. When you hear of disturbances in churches you need not so much seek to compose the differences among the members as to amend the men themselves. We should not gather so many thorns if the plants were fig trees; wars and fightings would never spring up among us if we were not carnal and unsanctified. If we were more spiritually-minded we should be more ready to forgive and less likely to offend or to be offended. “Are you not carnal?” says the apostle, “because one says, ‘I am of Paul,’ and another, ‘I am of Cephas,’ ” and the like; but once let the God of peace sanctify each believer, and then every man will seek his brother’s good, and the things which make for peace. When you pray for the peace of Jerusalem remember that you can promote it by labouring after holiness.
15. Before leaving this first point, I would call to your notice the fact that the title, “the God of peace,” sheds a light over the whole passage, and is beautifully in harmony with every word of the prayer. Let us read it line by line. “Now the God of peace, who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus.” War drives men down to the dead, and is the great jackal of the grave. Ah, how sadly the nations see this exemplified in the east at this moment. [a] War brings down to death; but the God of peace brings back from the dead. The restoration of the Lord Jesus from the grave was a peaceful act, and was meant to be the guarantee of peace accomplished for ever. “That great Shepherd of the sheep” — sheep are peaceful creatures, and a shepherd’s occupation does not have to do with bloody fields of strife. We always couple with the idea of peace the quietness and repose of the sheepfold, and the simple restfulness of flocks in green pastures. Peace is the very atmosphere of pastoral scenes. “Through the blood of the everlasting covenant.” The very word “covenant” is also full of peace; and especially it is so when we remember that it is a covenant of peace which eternal love has established between God and man. Where no covenant or league exists war may break out at any time, but where a covenant is once established there is peace and rest. The apostle goes on to pray, “Make you perfect in every good work to do his will.” If God’s will is done by us, then there must be peace, for no basis of difference can exist. “Working in you what is well-pleasing in his sight.” — Oh, the soft music of these words. When all in us is well-pleasing to God then indeed he is the God of peace to us. The final doxology is also very significant, for in effect it proclaims the universal and eternal reign of peace; “To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.” What can there be to disturb the universe when the Lord God omnipotent shall reign, and all nations shall glorify and extol the Ever-Blessed, world without end? Not without reason, therefore, did our apostle select the title, “The God of peace.”
16. II. We have now briefly to consider THE SPECIAL ACT DWELT UPON IN THIS PRAYER. “That brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant.”
17. Here I would have each one of you, for himself, read the passage of Scripture which I think the apostle had in his mind when he wrote these words. Turn to Isaiah where he said; “Then he remembered the days of old, Moses, and his people, saying, ‘Where is he who brought them up out of the sea with the shepherd of his flock? Where is he who put his Holy Spirit within him? That led them by the right hand of Moses with his glorious arm, dividing the water before them, to make for himself an everlasting name?’ ” [Isa 63:11] See how this making for himself an everlasting name tallies with the last clause, — “To whom be glory for ever and ever.” But let us proceed — “that led them through the depths as a horse in the wilderness, so that they should not stumble.” Truly, those do not stumble in whom the Lord works “what is well-pleasing in his sight.” “As a beast goes down into the valley, the Spirit of the Lord caused him to rest,” — there is the God of peace — “so you led your people, to make yourself a glorious name” — there again is the doxology, “To whom be glory for ever and ever.” The historical event to which he alludes is the deliverance from Egypt and the coming up from the Red Sea. Having saved his people by the blood of the covenant, which was smeared upon their doorposts, he led them to the Red Sea, their foes pursuing them. They descended into the Red Sea; they did not go to its banks only, but they passed into its very depths, and they were buried there; the sea was as the place of death to them. Between its liquid walls, and beneath the cloudy pillar, which hung over the passage, they were baptized to Moses and buried in baptism as in a liquid tomb; but lo, they came up out of it again, led safely up from what became the grave of Pharaoh, with songs and shoutings and rejoicings. The parallel is this: “That great Shepherd,” who is far greater than Moses and Aaron, must needs go down into the place of death on the behalf of his people; he must, as the representative of his flock, descend into the place of the sepulchre. He did this for he bowed his head and died; but lo, the Lord led him up again from the depths, and he arose to life and glory, and all his people with him. On that day the song might have been jubilant as that of Miriam when she chanted, “Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously. Your right hand, oh Lord, is become glorious in power.” But now in this greater deliverance by “the blood of the everlasting covenant” the psalm is not to the Lord who is a man of war, but to “the God of peace.” The honour is ascribed to the same Lord, but under a gentler name, and to him be glory for ever and ever. I have no doubt that Paul in part borrowed his imagery from the Red Sea, which is of all deliverances the most instructively typical. Is it not even in heaven the chosen type, for there they sing the song of Moses the servant of God and of the Lamb?
18. With that illustration to help us we shall notice that the bringing back of the Lord Jesus from the dead was the seal of his perfected work, and consequently of our peace and ultimate perfection in holiness. The Lord Jesus could no more be held by the bands of death, but might justly return to his throne. Because he had finished all his work, therefore the word of authority declared his freedom, and he was brought back to his former glory. Because he had accomplished all righteousness therefore he stood among living men; and because he had merited a crown of glory therefore he rose even to the throne of Jehovah, to sit there until his enemies are made his footstool. His work is finished, and therefore God acknowledges the fact by bringing him again from the dead. Most wisely the apostle prays that he who so recognised Christ’s finished work would finish his Spirit’s work in us. Christ is perfected; therefore, oh Lord, perfect your saints. Jesus has done your will; help us to do it. May he who brought Jesus from the dead as a sign of his completed righteousness bring up also his people from all remnants of their death of sin, and make them complete in holiness to the glory of his name.
19. Beloved, we still go further. The bringing again of Christ from the dead was in effect the leading back of all his people. The Shepherd does not come without the sheep, for that would be to return defeated. He went down into the grave to seek the lost sheep, and, finding it, he flung it on his shoulder, and as he came up from the grave he bore upon his mighty shoulders the sheep for whom he died. The text speaks of “Our Lord Jesus.” Did you notice that? Ours in his offices of Shepherd and Saviour, altogether ours as brought again from the dead. What he did was for us. He is the Great Shepherd of the sheep, and therefore what he did was for the sheep. We can give many reasons why the Lord Jesus is the Great Shepherd, because he is the Shepherd, not of one congregation, but of all the saints in all ages, and because the sheep are his own, and he who owns the sheep is far greater than he who only feeds the flock for another. But the reason which just now attracts my attention is this; — if there is a great shepherd there must be a great flock. You cannot truly call any man a shepherd if he has no sheep, nor call him a great shepherd if he does not have a great flock. So he “who brought again from the dead that great Shepherd of the sheep,” did by that act and deed bring up the great flock from the dead too, for as long as our Lord Jesus can truly be called a shepherd, he must have a living flock; they are inseparable from him and essential to him. The church is the fulness of Christ. A king is no king without subjects, a head is no head without a body, and a shepherd is no shepherd without sheep. The idea of the Great Shepherd involves the chosen flock; his bringing again from the dead as a Shepherd involves their being brought up with him. The resurrection and the glory of Christ are thus the resurrection and the glory of all his flock, for whom he laid down his life. Glory be to his name for this. Now you see the force of the petition, which may be interpreted like this: — Lord, you have brought your people up from the dead in Christ, therefore bring them up from all the death of sin; quicken them to fulness of life; perfect them in every good work to do your will; work in them what is well-pleasing in your sight; because this is their spiritual resurrection, this is the giving to them what you gave to Christ on their behalf, therefore fulfil it for them.
20. Beloved, it needs the same power to make us holy that it needed to bring our Saviour from the dead. That same power which raised the dead body of Christ must raise us from our death in sin; and the same power which enabled the living Christ to climb from earth to heaven, and take his throne, must be exercised in living saints to make them rise from one degree of holiness to another, until they shall be presented without spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing, before the Father’s presence. Yes, and that power comes to us because Christ has risen. “Because I live,” he says, “you shall live also”; and because he lives to intercede, therefore his people are preserved from evil. Satan desires to have us, so that he may sift us as wheat; but the great Shepherd, who was brought again from the dead, is daily watching over us, and pleading for us, and the power of his life, and of his kingdom, and of his plea, are revealed in us, so that we conquer temptation, and advance from strength to strength in our pilgrimage to heaven. The text is all of one thought, and each word is necessary and important. We do not have here pious expressions strung together without reason, but every single syllable adds to the weight of the whole thing.
21. The work described in this text must be accomplished in us by the Spirit of God. Jesus is the model to which we are to be conformed. Beloved, you must go down to death as Jesus did, and be buried with him, so that you may rise with him. There must be in you the death of all carnal power and strength, or the power of God cannot be revealed in you. You must know the depths as Moses did, even the depths where proud self-sufficiency is drowned; you must be baptized in the cloud and in the sea; you must have over you the sentence of condemnation; you must acknowledge in your own soul that in your flesh there resides no good thing, and that you are condemned under the law; and then there must be accomplished in you a quickening, a coming to life, a coming up out of the place of condemnation and death. Happy is he who has come out from the tomb of his former vain conduct, leaving the grave-clothes of worldliness and sin behind, coming up to be clothed with a heavenly mind, and to lead a new life, secret and divine as that of the risen Saviour; yes, like that of the ascended Lord, “for he has raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus.” “You are dead, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.” Have you experienced this? Many of you have been buried in baptism, but were you at that time partakers of your Lord’s death? You had no right to be buried if you were not dead. Did you really know that death had passed upon you before you were buried with your Saviour? And now do you feel the life of God within you, quickening you to newness of life? If so, it will daily lift you to something nobler and better, until you shall be ultimately raised to dwell where you shall never again be defiled by sin, where Satan shall be bruised under your feet, and the God of peace shall reign. When you shall dwell in perfect holiness then you shall reign in perfect peace. May he who brought our Lord Jesus from the grave to glory, bring you also along the upward way, until you are with him and like him for ever.
22. III. Thirdly, let us notice THE VERY REMARKABLE MANNER IN WHICH THE HOLINESS PRAYED FOR IS DESCRIBED in the text; “Make you perfect in every good work to do his will.”
23. That is the first clause, but the translation is not strictly accurate. The passage would be better rendered, “make you fit in every good work to do his will,” and the original Greek word (though I have not noticed that expositors observe it, yet anyone turning to the lexicon will see it,) properly means to reset a bone that is dislocated. The meaning of the text is this; by the fall all our bones are out of joint for the doing of the Lord’s will, and the desire of the apostle is that the Lord will set the bones in their places, and so make us able with every faculty and in every good work to do his will. If we take the arm joint for our illustration, he would have it so well set that it may be capable of every movement for which an arm was at first constructed by infinite wisdom. A dislocated bone may be so badly set as only to be capable of some of the motions natural to it; there may be a flaw in the surgery, so that certain movements cannot be performed; there may be a stiffness and an awkwardness, and even a positive inability for certain movements; this may be seen in some men’s minds, but it is by no means desirable. The apostle would have every bone in us to be well set, and our whole manhood fitted for performing every form of good work to do the will of the Lord thoroughly. What a blessed prayer! Oh Lord, you have raised your Son up in perfection, not a bone of him was broken; and now we, who are his body, need to be properly set together and fixed, every joint in its own place, and the whole church compactly knitted together by its muscles and tendons, so that it may be in perfect order for performing the divine will. I apprehend that our text refers not so much to any one believer as to the entire church, for the apostle speaks of the Great Shepherd of the sheep, by which he must mean the whole church; the apostle prays that the Lord would perfectly join together his church, put it into harmonious union, and so make it fit to do all that God meant the church to do here below. When shall we see our churches in such a case?
24. Alas, the disjointed members of our churches cause great pain and weakness to the body, and only holiness can put them into their proper position. If I must take the text as applying to each individual, the prayer is that you and I may be fitted to do the divine will everywhere, — fitted to suffer, fitted to labour, fitted for the lowliest office in the church (which requires a great deal of fitness, by the way), and fitted for the highest work in the church, and fitted for anything that God wishes us to do; so that we may not be competent for one set of duties only, but may be ready for all things. We shall greatly glorify God if we have a complete character, in which every grace shall be revealed, and in which no single sin is seen to mar its consistency. Such is the prayer. Who can work this, good Lord? Who can work this in us? You can, oh God of peace, for you brought up your Son from the grave to the throne, and you can bring up our mangled nature, and perfect it until it shall be fit to partake of the inheritance of the saints in light, world without end. The first part of the prayer, then, is for fitness for holiness.
25. The next is for actual service: “Working in us what is well-pleasing in his sight.” And here I ask you to notice how all things are by God. We might have thought that the apostle would have said, “Lord, when you have made us fit to work for you, then help us to serve you”; but he does not say so; he puts his prayer into a humbler form, and asks the Lord to work in us. What a heavy blow against all boasting! How instructive for us! Dear brother, when the Lord makes you fit for every good work, yet you will do no good work unless he works it in you. Even he who is best adapted for the performance of virtue and holiness, still does not perform these things until the Lord works in him to will and to do of his own good pleasure.
26. Over and above this mode of securing all the glory for God notice the next clause — “through Jesus Christ.” What we do even when the Lord works in us we only do through Jesus Christ. We are nothing without our Lord, and though we do what is acceptable in the Lord’s sight, yet it is only acceptable through Jesus Christ. What nothings and nobodies we are! Even when the Lord does the most for us that can be done, so that we dwell in his sight and our actions become well-pleasing to him, and he looks upon us with delight, yet even then we are nothing. It is the Lord who has accomplished everything in us, even the God of peace, who is all in all. He says to each fruitful bough, “Your fruit is found in me.” When your garments sparkle like the sun, it is he who transfigures you; when your face shines like Moses’ through secret communion upon the mount, it is God’s brightness which illuminates your brow. Our goodness is none of ours, “for we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to good works, which God has before ordained so that we should walk in them.”
27. IV. Our fourth point drops into its place very naturally, for we have already seen that EVERYTHING COMES TO A MOST APPROPRIATE CONCLUSION OF PRAISE: “To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.”
28. To glorify God is the object of it all. We too often forget this. Praise is the flower for which the stalk of prayer exists. Praise to God is the essence of all the flowers of holiness, the fragrant essence of all the roses in the garden of the church. God’s glory is the harvest for which all the ploughing and sowing of ministry, and evangelizing, must be done. Glory to God in the highest, and glory to his only-begotten Son for ever and ever — this is the pure gold for which we dig from the mines of godly service. It would be a very difficult question to decide to whom the last clause alludes, whether to “the God of peace,” or to “Our Lord Jesus,” and, therefore, I think, the safer way is to take them both together, for they are one. “To whom,” that is to God; “To whom,” that is to the Lord Jesus, “be glory for ever and ever. Amen.” Let it be so; it ought to be so, it must be so, it shall be so. Amen. Amen.
29. Tarry just a minute while we give glory to the Three-In-One God. Oh you hearts that love him, glorify him first as the God of peace, who had thoughts of peace, and intentions of peace, and executed a covenant of peace on your behalf. Glorify him who is at peace with all his believing ones today. He lays his thunder aside, he hangs his bow in the cloud as the sign of his love, he lays aside his javelin and his buckler; he loves, he smiles, he speaks in tenderness. He is the God of peace; approach him with holy delight; adore him; glorify his name for evermore.
30. Then magnify him, next, because he found for us a Shepherd. We were as sheep going astray, and he sent his Son to shepherd us; he took from his own dear bosom his equal and eternal Son, and sent him here to gather us from the wilds, and save us from the wolves. Glory be to you, you Shepherd of Israel, and to your Father who sent you for this purpose.
31. Glorify him next for the covenant. What mercy this is, that God should enter into a covenant with man! Adore him for the blood of the covenant, that he gave his only begotten to die to make that covenant sure, that the purchased, blood-begotten possession might never be alienated from one of those for whom he laid down his glorious life. Glory be to Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Praise him, praise him, praise him, you blood-bought sons of men! Lift up your hearts with gratitude and joy, and bless the Lord, who brought back the dying Shepherd to live and reign for you.
32. And then adore him because the power which he exerted upon Christ he is now exerting upon you. You are not perfect yet, but still in your measure you are outfitted for every good work. In many ways the Lord is qualifying you for service. In some of you he is working to do, and in others to suffer, the good pleasure of his will. Bless him for every grace received, for faith however little, for love even though it does not burn as you would desire; bless him for every conquered sin, bless him for every implanted grace, bless him for evermore.
33. Bless him that he deals
with you through Jesus Christ. Through the Mediator all
good has come to us, and through the Mediator it will
still come, until that day when he shall deliver up the
throne to God, even the Father, and God shall be all in
all. Meanwhile we will glorify the mediatorial Lord, and
extol the Father and the consoling Spirit. Even now we
join with cherubim and seraphim, and adore him to whom
only all worship belongs.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Heb 13]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, Resurrection and
Ascension — Praise The Risen Lord” 308]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Dismission — Benediction” 1054]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, Names and Titles —
Shepherd” 401]
[a] The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878: This was a
conflict between the Ottoman Empire and the Eastern
Orthodox coalition led by the Russian Empire and
composed of several Balkan countries. See Explorer
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Turkish_War_(1877%E2%80%931878)"
Jesus Christ, Resurrection and Ascension
308 — Praise The Risen Lord <148TH. />
1 Yes, the Redeemer rose;
The Saviour left the dead,
And o’er our hellish foes
High raised his conquering head:
In wild dismay
The guards around
Fell to the ground,
And sunk away.
2 Lo! the angelic bands
In full assembly meet
To wait his high commands,
And worship at his feet:
Joyful they come,
And wing their way
From realms of day
To Jesus’ tomb.
3 Then back to heaven they fly,
And the glad tidings bear;
Hark! as they soar on high,
What music fills the air!
Their anthems say,
“Jesus, who bled,
Hath left the dead,
He rose today.”
4 Ye mortals! catch the sound,
Redeem’d by him from hell,
And send the echo round
The globe on which you dwell;
Transported cry,
“Jesus, who bled,
Hath left the dead,
No more to die.”
5 All hail, triumphant Lord,
Who savest us with thy blood!
Wide be thy name adored,
Thou rising, reigning God!
With thee we rise,
With thee we reign,
And empires gain
Beyond the skies.
Philip Doddridge, 1755, a.
Dismission
1054 — Benediction
1 Now may the God of peace and love,
Who from thewy’ imprisoning grave
Restored the Shepherd of the sheep,
Omnipotent to save;
2 Through the rich merits of that blood
Which he on Calvary spilt,
To make the eternal covenant sure
On which our hopes are built;
3 Perfect our souls in every grace,
To accomplish all his will,
And all that’s pleasing in his sight
Inspire us to fulfil!
4 For the great Mediator’s sake,
We for these blessings pray;
With glory let his name be crown’d
Through heaven’s eternal day!
Thomas Gibbons, 1769.
Jesus Christ, Names and Titles
401 — Shepherd <8.7.4. />
1 Shepherd of the chosen number,
They are safe whom thou dost keep;
Other shepherds faint and slumber,
And forget to watch the sheep;
Watchful Shepherd!
Thou dost wake while others sleep.
2 When the lion came, depending
On his strength to seize his prey,
Thou wert there, thy sheep defending,
Thou didst then thy power display;
Mighty Shepherd!
Thou didst turn the foe away.
3 When the Shepherd’s life was needful
To redeem the sheep from death,
Of their safety ever heedful,
Thou for them didst yield thy breath;
Faithful Shepherd!
Love like thine no other hath.
Thomas Kelly, 1809.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2014/01/27/god-of-peace-and-our-sanctification