Fear Not
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 17, January-March 2000.
I
T is a word that must come often to the Lord's people during their
sojourn in this world. It comes when they grow faint, discouraged or
anxious. When they hear it their drooping spirits revive, their
troubled breast is soothed and purpose returns to their step. It is a
word full of love, grace and tenderness. Though it be spoken at times
in a mere whisper it has omnipotence behind it. God says to His
precious children in their every time of need: "Fear not."
Foreigner
Fear, carnal fear, is a foreigner in this world: it was not found here
in the beginning of things. It came in with the serpent and sin. What
need had our parents in paradise to fear? They lacked for nothing.
Their souls were at peace. They enjoyed a blessedness in their
communion with God which we can only begin to imagine. Reverence
towards the Most High was the only sort of fear they knew: a good and
healthy fear to have.
When the forbidden
fruit was taken and eaten the change in their state was profound. An
unholy fear came over them: the same voice of the Lord which had
delighted them now filled their souls with dread (Gen. 3:8). A dread so
great that they sought to hide themselves from His gaze. Their
newly-discovered nakedness of body bore testimony to the stripping away
of original righteousness from their souls, leaving them exposed in
their sin to the wrath of God. Their prospect was hell; hope of heaven
was gone.
Legacy
This is the legacy which Adam left to his posterity: an estate of sin
and misery. The proven charge against mankind is that "they are all
under sin" (Rom. 3:9). The evidence is conclusive that "there is no
fear of God before their eyes" (v.18).
No man is
completely unaware of his true state before God. At some point in our
experience we all know pricks of conscience, a sense of horror, fear of
judgments in this world and damnation in the next. Cain, arrested by
the Lord after his brother's murder, could only lament, "My punishment
is greater than I can bear" (Gen. 4:13). King Belshazzar saw the
handwriting of judgment on the palace wall and "[his] countenance was
changed, and his thoughts troubled him, so that the joints of his loins
were loosed, and his knees smote one against another" (Dan. 5:6). Judas
hanged himself in remorse (Matt. 27:3-6). Felix trembled (Acts 24:25).
These tears and fears were no part of salvation but a foretaste of that
worm which dieth not, and of that fire which cannot be quenched.
Hypocrites
Religion, more than anything else in this world, puts souls to sleep.
Even the religion of the Bible, without the power of the Spirit of God
accompanying it, will not wake men from their natural slumber. Let
no-one think though that he can forever smother his conscience by
attention to duties. Listen to the prophet: "The sinners in Zion are
afraid; fearfulness hath surprised the hypocrites. Who among us shall
dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with
everlasting burnings?" (Isa. 33:14). A man may go to hell, even to the
deepest hell, from the borders of heaven. We long for those
self-deceived souls at ease in Zion to be made anxious. Is your
godliness more than form? is your faith more than notion and your
repentance more than regret?
Wisdom
Clever and learned men may miss salvation but wise men never do. The
Holy Scriptures with the blessing of the Lord upon them are able to
impart light to the eyes of the mind. The first rays which dawn upon
our souls are those tremendous truths concerning the God with whom we
have to do. By nature we are as spiritually ignorant as Pharaoh, who
asked, "Who is the Lord?" (Exod. 5:2); and as those wicked men who say,
"What is the Almighty?" (Job 21:15). By grace we come to know Jehovah
in all the glory of His attributes. And there is no truth we need to
learn more than His holiness — His pure, beautiful, incomparable
holiness. Have you acquainted yourself with Him? Remember: "The fear of
the Lord is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy is
understanding" (Prov. 9:10). Do you truly fear the Lord?
Assurance
If faith is to know Christ (John 17:3then assurance is to know that we
know Christ (1 John 5:13). What struggles believers may have before
they make their calling and election sure to themselves! They are
burdened in case they be found at the last to be hypocrites, castaways,
reprobates. In His own time the Lord says to them: "Fear not: for I
have redeemed thee" (Isa. 43:1). They hear it in the preaching, when
the marks of grace are spoken of; they know it at the throne of grace,
when the Spirit of adoption enables them to cry with feeling, "Abba,
Father" (Rom. 8:15, 16).
When Christians
have a good hope regarding the world to come they are able to bear with
much in this world: hardships, sicknesses, persecutions for Jesus'
sake. Redeemed from sin by Christ and delivered from Satan, death and
hell, there is nothing to be feared from these. An interest in the
cross of Christ is an antidote against the fear of any enemy. "I have
called thee by thy name; thou art mine." With such a claim upon us no
danger can really threaten us. We are called to glory and all things
are working together for our good. We are as safe as the saints in
heaven.
Strength
Another word which comes to Zion's travellers is: "Fear not; I will
help thee" (Isa. 41:13). The church in her march towards the heavenly
city is like Gideon and his three hundred men: "faint, yet pursuing"
(Judg. 8:4). These were the best troops in Israel, carefully selected,
eager for battle. Victory was promised but it would not be without much
effort.
The church has been
chosen by the Lord Himself and has found grace in His sight. The fight
of faith often makes her weary but she is sustained by the bread of
life and finds strength for the conflict. The Lord holds her right hand
and she is secure. As she leans upon her beloved she makes progress.
Enemies are overcome, one by one, even princes. He leads her onward and
upward. When the Jordan of death is crossed the final victory is
gained. The grace of God was her help from beginning to end.
Encouragement
The unconverted man is full of self-confidence and so never calls upon
God. Even the church at times may say foolishly of herself, "I am rich,
and increased with goods, and have need of nothing" (Rev. 2:17). But
the thing the true believer most fears is simply being left to himself.
He may be conscious
of particular sins, habitual sins. He knows that he often grieves the
blessed Holy Spirit. Mountains of provocations may be built up between
the erring Christian and his heavenly Father. They begin to seem
permanent, insurmountable. "Have I committed the unpardonable sin?" he
may even begin to fear. Or perhaps a believer is not aware of great
transgression and guilt but nonetheless cannot find the Lord, though he
seeks after Him. His soul is greatly cast down. He cries night and day
but is not heard. He moans: "Lord, why castest thou off my soul? why
hidest thou thy face from me?" (Psa. 88:14).
There is only one
remedy. The abandoned child of God must hear: "Fear not: for I am with
thee" (Isa. 43:5). He does not demand or wish an explanation of every
twist and turn of his providence here, or even to be spared his
severest trials — but he does need to see his Father's face.
Certainty
No word is more full of comfort for the saints than that spoken by the
glorified Christ: "Fear not; I am the first and the last" (Rev. 1:17).
All the fulness of the Godhead is here, pledged to them in the work of
their salvation, from predestination to consummation. We shall often
falter, but He cannot fail. |