The Fountain of Life
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 14, April-June 1999.
I
T has been said that a true prophet is a man with his feet on the
ground and his head in the clouds: one who is both a man of the people
and a man of God, declaring to his fellow-sinners the things that
belong to their peace. Such was Zechariah, who encouraged the Jews to
begin the rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem. (Ezra 5:1-2). What the
angel first showed him in vision he was to see with his own eyes as
God's holy and beautiful house was completed, the centre of Israel's
worship once again.
Hope
Zechariah saw something far more wonderful than a building. What can a
building, even the most ornate, do for needy sinners? The temple had
been ruined and would be torn down again. Like all true Jews, whose
circumcision is of the heart, the prophet's hope did not rest in a
ritual, in a multitude of sacrifices, in the blood of bulls and goats.
The eyes of his understanding were opened and he gazed down through
time to a different temple altogether, one not made with human hands. A
temple designed for all the true worshippers who have ever lived. A
temple that men would seek to destroy but could not.
What did Zechariah
see in his vision? What do all believers see by faith, such that they
cry out, "The Lord is my God" (Zech. 13:9)? Evidently something that
stirs the heart, excites the affections and moves the will to make free
choice of the living and true God as one's portion. That is not the
natural choice of men; sin is our choice and we spend our days fleeing
from God. How great a change then occurs in those who do draw near to
the Lord!
Reality
In the tabernacle there was a brass laver or washing-basin standing
between the door and the altar; it held water in which the priests were
to wash before offering sacrifice (Exod. 30:18-20). By external
cleansing they were made ceremonially fit for the service of the
earthly sanctuary; without this they were threatened with death (v.21.)
For the temple a laver of much greater size was cast. It rested upon
twelve brazen oxen looking outward to each corner of the world (2
Chron. 4:1-4). But the prophet saw beyond these symbols of his own day
to the blessed reality. He saw a fountain in which all men must wash if
they would escape everlasting death.
Sword
The man of God sees the Messiah entering Jerusalem: "Rejoice greatly, O
daughter of Zion...thy King cometh unto thee" (Zech. 9:9.) What would
the Jews do with their King? They would crucify Him; "and they shall
look upon me whom they have pierced" (12:10.) Jehovah pierced by the
people: how could this be?
Here is the sublime
mystery of Jesus Christ, that He is God manifest in the flesh. How else
could the Most High refer to Him as His "fellow" or equal? "Awake, O
sword, against my shepherd, and against the man that is my fellow..."
(13:7). In the foreground are wicked men with their wicked hands
nailing the Lord of glory to a tree in their ignorance. In the
background Zechariah sees the righteous hand of an all-holy God
wielding the sword of justice against His darling Son. He has no sins
of His own and therefore justice has no natural quarrel with Him. The
sword is lying in its scabbard. It has to be called upon to awake and
to do its awful deed. "Smite the shepherd"!
Opening
What is happening? The Shepherd is dying for the sheep, bearing their
sins. His holy soul is consumed by divine wrath as He is punished in
their place. His precious blood drops to the earth, the satisfaction of
divine justice and the provision of mercy. It is the fulfilment of the
whole ceremonial law, substance replacing shadow. In this way a great
fountain was thrown open for a guilty world (13:1.)
Life
The death of Jesus is truly a fountain of life. "For with thee is the
fountain of life" (Psa. 36:9). Because He is man Christ could be placed
under the law to keep its precepts and suffer its penalty, to provide a
perfect righteousness for sinners. Because He is God His obedience in
life and death has infinite value and virtue. In the Mediator God has
opened up a channel through which His life-giving mercy and grace can
flow to the guilty and condemned sons of Adam with no detriment to His
strict justice.
The righteousness
of Christ is life to believers in the legal sense, "justification of
life" (Rom. 5:18). It is also the basis upon which God creates in them
a new heart, that they should walk in newness of life. There is
refreshment and reviving for the weary soul as well as cleansing.
"There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God"
(Psa. 46:4). The electing love of the Father, the redeeming blood of
the Son, the sanctifying power of the Spirit, these "streams" flowing
together out of the heart of God and into our hearts bring us joy as we
know them. Truly Jesus could say, "I am come that they might have life,
and that they might have it more abundantly." (John 10:10). This
fountain was opened in God's account in eternity and will never be
sealed again: it shall never run dry however long time shall last.
Purpose
How can this fountain avail for us? God lays his finger upon our
plight. It is twofold. There is "sin" and there is "uncleanness" (Zech.
13:1). We have inherited moral guilt and moral pollution, we have a bad
record and a bad heart. To sin is to miss the mark, to fail to come up
to the standard that God has set for us in His holy law. It is to
contract guilt before Him and to render ourselves liable to punishment.
We are guilty of Adam's original sin and of the many actual sins we
have added to it. We are also "unclean", filthy or impure. Leprosy was
a tragic type of this spiritual separation from God (Lev. 13:45-46).
Our whole natures have become corrupt through sin: "From the sole of
the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it" (Isa. 1:6).
Is there a remedy
for such a helpless condition? Yes! By this fountain which the Lord has
opened there is a full pardon and cleansing. Deliverance from the
penalty of sin and also its power. In justification our legal debts are
cancelled and our guilt removed as the blood of atonement is applied to
us and we rest upon Christ and His righteousness (Rom. 3:25). In
regeneration the reigning power of sin is broken and it shall not have
dominion over us again (Rom. 6:13-14). In sanctification the pollution
of sin is progressively removed (2 Cor. 7:1). In glorification the very
presence of sin is gone out of our hearts (Heb. 12:23). Christ's blood
"cleanseth us from all sin" (1 John 1:7). How much we need the "washing
of re-generation and renewing of the Holy Ghost" (Tit. 3:5) to work in
us faith in Jesus Christ! This alone will make us acceptable to God.
Family
The fountain the prophet saw was promised to the "house" of David. When
God applies His redemption to us He creates in us His own likeness.
Believers are the spiritual seed of Christ, promised to Him in the
covenant of redemption (Psa. 22:30). Are we showing the family-likeness
of God's own children? Do we resemble the Son of David in His holy
character? Then we surely have been washed in the fountain. May we
never forsake our God "the fountain of living waters" (Jer. 2:13).
The fountain is
also for the "inhabitants" of Jerusalem, those who truly abide in Zion.
The blood of Christ will do no good to those who are indifferent to the
gospel, who merely "pass by" this way from time to time. Are you
without Christ? Then know that God is "the rewarder of them that
diligently seek him" (Heb. 11:6). Pray penitently with David, "blot out
all mine iniquities" and "create in me a clean heart" (Psa. 51:9-10).
Wash away your sins in the fountain of life, by calling on the name of
the Lord. |