The Best of all Sights
by C.H.Spurgeon
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892), famous Baptist preacher and
minister of the great Metropolitan Tabernacle in London from 1861,
suffered periodic bouts of illness which kept him out of his pulpit. In
November 1879 he went to Mentone in southern France to enjoy the
benefits of its genial climate. His absence from England did not
prevent the issue of a weekly printed sermon however and the following
piece written at Mentone, on the theme of seeing Christ by faith, shows
Spurgeon's devotional and pastoral warmth. It is found in Volume XXV of
the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit. The sight of their Saviour sustains the Lord's people in all their troubles and afflictions in this world.
Published in the
Presbyterian Standard
in two parts: Issue No. 17, January-March 2000, and Issue No. 19, July-September 2000.
"But we see Jesus."
— Hebrews 2:9.
I
N holy Scripture faith is placed in opposition to the sight of the
eyes, and yet it is frequently described as looking and seeing. It is
opposed to carnal sight because it is spiritual sight; a discernment
which comes not of the body, but arises out of the strong belief of the
soul, wrought in us by the Holy Spirit. Faith is sight in the sense of
being a clear and vivid perception, a sure and indisputable discovery,
a realising and unquestionable discernment of fact. We see Jesus, for
we are sure of his presence, we have unquestionable evidence of his
existence, we have an intelligent and intimate knowledge of his person.
Our soul has eyes far stronger than the dim optics of the body, and
with these we actually see Jesus. We have heard of him, and
upon the witness of that hearing we have believed, and through
believing there has come to us a new life, which rejoices in new light
and in opened eyes, and "we see Jesus." In the old sense of sight we
speak of him as of one "whom having not seen we love," but in the new
sense "we see Jesus." Beloved reader, have you such a renewed nature
that you have new senses, and have you with these senses discerned the
Lord? If not, may the Holy Spirit yet quicken you; and meanwhile, let
us whom he has made alive assure you that we have heard his voice, for he saith, "My sheep hear my voice"; we have "
tasted the good word of God"; we have
touched him and have been made whole; we have also known the
smell of his fragrance, for his name to us is "as ointment poured forth"; and now, in the words of our text, "we
see
Jesus." Faith is all the senses in one, and infinitely more; and those
who have it not are in a worse case than the blind and deaf, for
spiritual life itself is absent.
I. Come, then,
brethren beloved, whose eyes have been illuminated, let us muse awhile
upon our privileges, that we may exercise them with delight and praise
the Lord with them. First, let us regard the glorious sight of Jesus as
a COMPENSATION.
The text begins with "
but,"
because it refers to some things which we do not yet see, which are the
objects of strong desire. "We see not yet all things put under him." We
do not as yet see Jesus acknowledged as King of kings by all mankind,
and this causes us great sorrow, for we would fain see him crowned with
glory and honour in every corner of the earth by every man of woman
born. Alas, he is to many quite unknown, by multitudes rejected and
despised, and by comparatively few is he regarded with reverence and
love. Sights surround us which might well make us cry with Jeremiah,
"Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears"; for
blasphemy and rebuke, idolatry, superstition, and unbelief prevail on
every side. "But," saith the apostle, "we see Jesus," and this sight
compensates for all others, for we see him now, no longer made a little
lower than the angels, and tasting the bitterness of death, but
"crowned with glory and honour." We see him no more after the flesh, in
shame and anguish; far more ravishing is the sight, for we see his work
accomplished, his victory complete, his empire secure. He sits as a
priest upon the throne at the right hand of God, from henceforth
expecting till his enemies are made his footstool.
This is a divine compensation for the tarrying of his visible kingdom, because
it is the major part of it.
The main battle is won. In our Lord's endurance of his substitutionary
griefs, and in the overthrow of sin, death, and hell by his personal
achievements, the essence of the conflict is over. Nothing is left to
be done at all comparable with that which is already performed. The
ingathering of the elect, and the subjection of all things, are
comparatively easy of accomplishment now that the conflict in the
heavenly places is over, and Jesus has led captivity captive. We may
look upon the conquest of the kingdoms of this world as a mere routing
of the beaten host, now that the power of the enemy has been
effectually broken by the great Captain of our salvation.
The compensation is all the greater because our Lord's enthronement
is the pledge of all the rest.
"The putting of all things under him," which as yet we see not, is
guaranteed to us by what we do see. The exalted Saviour has all power
given unto him in heaven and in earth, and with this "all power" he
can, at his own pleasure, send forth the rod of his strength out of
Sion, and reign in the midst of his enemies. With him are all the
forces needful for universal dominion, his white horse waits at the
door, and whensoever he chooses he can ride forth conquering and to
conquer. At a word from his lips the harlot of Babylon shall perish,
and the false prophet shall die, and the idols of the heathen shall be
utterly abolished. The empire of wickedness is as a vision of the
night, a black and hideous nightmare pressing on the soul of manhood,
but when he awaketh he will despise its image, and it shall melt away.
Turn we then,
wiping our tears away, from the wretched spectacles of human
superstition, scepticism, and sorrow, to the clear vision above us in
the opened heaven. There we see "the Man," long promised, the desire of
all nations, the deliverer, the death of death, the conqueror of hell;
and we see him not as one who girdeth on his harness for the battle,
but as one whose warfare is accomplished, who is waiting the time
appointed of the Father when he shall divide the spoil. This is the
antidote to all depression of spirit, the stimulus to hopeful
perseverance, the assurance of joy unspeakable.
II. Nor is
this sight a mere compensation for others which as yet are denied us,
it is in itself the cause of present EXULTATION.
This is true in so many ways that time would fail us to enumerate them. "We see Jesus," and in him
we see our former unhappy condition for ever ended.
We were fallen in Adam, but we see in Jesus our ruin retrieved by the
second Adam. The legal covenant frowned upon us as we beheld it broken
by our first federal head; the new covenant smiles upon us with a whole
heaven of bliss as we see it ordered in all things and sure in him who
is head over all things to the church. Sin once doomed us to eternal
despair, but not now, for he who hath put away sin by the sacrifice of
himself hath justified his people by his resurrection. The debt no
longer burdens us, for there in eternal glory is the Man who paid it
once for all. A sight of Jesus kills each guilty fear, silences each
threat of conscience, and photographs peace upon the heart. There
remains nothing of all the past to cause a dread of punishment, or
arouse a fear of desertion; for Christ that died ever liveth to make
intercession for us, to represent us before the Father, and to prepare
for us a place of everlasting rest. We might see ourselves as dead
under the law were it not that he has blotted out the handwriting which
was against us; we might see ourselves under the curse were it not that
he who was once made a curse for us now reigns in fulness of blessing.
We weep as we confess our transgressions, but we see Jesus, and sing
for joy of heart, since he hath finished transgression, made an end of
sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness.
The same is sweetly true of the present, for
we see our present condition to be thrice blessed by virtue of our union with him.
We see not as yet our nature made perfect, and cleansed from every
tendency to evil; rather do we groan, being burdened, because of the
sin which dwelleth in us, the old man which lusteth and rebelleth
against the blessed dominion of grace; and we might be sorely cast down
and dragged into despair were it not that "we see Jesus," and perceive
that in him we are not what the flesh would argue us to be. He
represents us most truthfully, and looking into that mirror we see
ourselves justified in Christ Jesus, accepted in the beloved, adopted
of the Father, dear to the Eternal heart, yea, in him raised up
together, and made to sit together in the heavenlies. We see self, and
blush and are ashamed and dismayed; "but we see Jesus," and his joy is
in us, and our joy is full. Think of this, dear brother in Christ, the
next time you are upon the dunghill of self-loathing. Lift up now your
eyes, and see where he is in whom your life is hid! See Jesus, and know
that as he is so are you also before the Infinite Majesty. You are not
condemned, for he is enthroned. You are not despised nor abhorred, for
he is beloved and exalted. You are not in jeopardy of perishing, nor in
danger of being cast away, for he dwells eternally in the bosom of the
Lord God Almighty. What a vision is this for you, when you see Jesus,
and see yourself complete in him, perfect in Christ Jesus!
Such a sight effectually
clears our earthly future of all apprehension.
It is true we may yet be sorely tempted, and the battle may go hard
with us, but we see Jesus triumphant, and by this sign we grasp the
victory. We shall perhaps be subjected to pain, to poverty, to slander,
to persecution, and yet none of these things move us because we see
Jesus exalted, and therefore know that these are under his power, and
cannot touch us except as he grants them his permit so to do. Death is
at times terrible in prospect, but its terror ceases when we see Jesus,
who has passed safely through the shades of the sepulchre, vanquished
the tyrant of the tomb, and left an open passage to immortality to all
his own. We see the pains, the groans, and dying strife; see them,
indeed, exaggerated by our fears, and the only cure for the consequent
alarm is a sight of him who hath said, "He that believeth in me, though
he were dead, yet shall he live. And whosoever liveth and believeth in
me shall never die." When we see Jesus, past, present, and to come are
summed up in him, and over all shines a glorious life which fills our
souls with unspeakable delight.
III. Thirdly, "we see Jesus" with gladdest EXPECTATION.
His glorious
person
is to us the picture and the pledge of what we shall be, for "it doth
not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall
appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is." In
infinite love he condescended to become one with us here below, as
saith the apostle, "Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of
flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of thesame"; and
this descent of love on his part to meet us in our low estate is the
assurance that his love will lift us up to meet him in his high estate.
He will make us partakers of his nature, inasmuch as he has become partaker of
our
nature. It is written, "Both he that sanctifieth and they who are
sanctified are all of one: for which cause he is not ashamed to call
them brethren." What bliss is this, that we should be like to the
incarnate God! It would seem too good to be true, were it not after the
manner of our Lord to do great things for us, and unsearchable.
Nor may we alone derive comfort as to our future from his person, we may also be made glad by a hope as to his
place.
Where we see Jesus to be, there shall we also be. His heaven is our
heaven. His prayer secures that we shall be with him where he is, that
we may behold his glory. To-day we may be in a workhouse, or in the
ward of a hospital, or in a ruinous hovel, "but we see Jesus," and we
know that ere long we shall dwell in the palace of the great King.
The glory of Jesus strikes the eye at once, and thus we are made to exult in his
position,
for it, too, is ours. He will give to us to sit upon his throne, even
as he sits upon the Father's throne. He hath made us kings and priests
unto God, and we shall reign for ever and ever. Whatever of rest,
happiness, security, and honour our glorious Bridegroom has attained,
he will certainly share it with his spouse; yea, and all his people
shall know what it is to be heirs of God, joint heirs with Jesus
Christ, if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified
together.
How soon our
condition shall rise into complete likeness to the ascended Lord we
cannot tell, but it cannot be long, and it may be a very short time.
The veil of time is in some cases very thin, another week may be the
only separation. And then! Ah, then! We shall see Jesus, and what a
sight will it be! Heaven lies in that vision. 'Tis all the heaven our
loving hearts desire.
The sight of
Jesus which we now enjoy is a foretaste of the clearer sight which is
reserved for us, and therefore it will be a happy wisdom to be much in
the enjoyment of it. A thousand things tempt us away, and yet there is
not one of them worth a moment's thought in comparison. What are works
of art and discoveries of science if compared with our Beloved? What
are the gems which adorn the brow of beauty, or the eyes which flash
from the face of loveliness, if placed in rivalry with him? Other
matters, weighty and important, call for our thought; and yet even
these we may place in a second rank when Jesus is near.
We may not be
doctors of divinity, much as we would desire to be deeply instructed in
the truth; "but we see Jesus." Into many mysteries we cannot pry; "but
we see Jesus." Where the divine sovereignty harmonises with human
responsibility is too deep a problem for us; "but we see Jesus." The
times and the seasons baffle us, the dispensation of the end is dark to
us, "but we see Jesus." Glory over us, ye far-seeing prophets! Deride
us, ye deep-glancing philosophers! We leave you to your boastings. We
are poor, short-sighted beings, and know but little, but one thing we
know, whereas we were once blind, now we see, and "we see Jesus."
This sight has
made us unable to see many things which now dazzle our fellow men. They
can see priestly power in a certain set of men like themselves. This we
cannot see, for "we see Jesus," as ending the line of sacrificing
priests, and bestowing a common priesthood upon all the saints. Many
see great wisdom in the various schools of doubt, in which we see
nothing except pretentious folly, for "we see Jesus," and all human
wisdom pales before the wisdom of God, which is perfected in him.
Certain of our brethren see perfection in the flesh, "but we see
Jesus"; others see the church, and their own sect, "but we see Jesus."
A few see nothing but their own separateness from everybody else, and
the peculiar excellence of their exclusiveness, "but we see Jesus."
Come, beloved,
let us get to our secret chambers of communion, and see Jesus there as
from the hill of Pisgah. Let us turn the pages of Scripture, and see
Jesus there amid the beds of spices. Let us frequent ordinances,
especially the breaking of bread, and see Jesus there. Let us watch in
our experience, as we are conformed unto his sufferings, and see him
there. Let us go into the field of holy labour, and as we gird
ourselves and put on the yoke of service, let us see our Master there.
Yea, in all things let us learn to see our Lord, for nature and
Providence, experience and Scripture are hung with mirrors which
reflect him. Till the day break and the shadows flee away let us
continue to gaze upon him, till our eyes shall actually see him for
ourselves and not another. Be this the grand distinction of our lives:
whatever others may see or not see,
"We see Jesus."
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