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By Andrew Bonar
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"And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin,
and of righteousness, and of judgment" (John 16:8). (Notes
of an address given by Andrew Bonar at the Perth Convention of 1883
- Perth, Scotland).) Shall we not honor and bless and adore the Holy Spirit? Surely it might
well be expected that our love, our adoring and grateful love, should go
forth to Him to whom we owe so much; for every soul that has found the
Savior was brought to him by the Holy Spirit. Not one sinner, from Abel
down to our day, accepted the atoning sacrifice till He opened their
closed eyes to see their guilt, and the Savior's grace. No sinner in the world cares to seek a
Savior till the Spirit awakens the
conscience and guides him to the one great Remedy for sin. We might
suppose that sinners could have no quietness or ease in their minds while
in their natural state; but the contrary is awfully true. Most sinners
have "no bands" (Psalm 72:4), either in life or death; "their strength is
firm," their sleep in sin is very deep, until the Spirit breathe on them.
Their peace is an unreal peace; but still, it is true that they go on from
day to day unconcerned about meeting the Holy One, except when startled by
some flagrant act of transgression.
Dr. Malan tells how he enjoyed "an
entire freedom from all misgiving" as to the future, and lived on "in the
uttermost repose of ignorance" up to the time of his conversion. I could
tell of an infidel, outspoken and decided, who, within a few minutes of
his death, held out his arm and asked a Christian neighbor to put his
hand on his pulse that he might testify how calm and composed and fearless
he was in the moment of dying. The truth is, all the world over, that such
is the normal state of sinners; the world is in profound slumber and
indifference as to sin. But from day to day the Holy Spirit goes forth
"into all the earth" (Revelation 5:6) awaking slumberers and rescuing them from
Satan, who goes "to and fro in the earth," casting men into this deep
sleep, and thus deceiving the whole world. The kind, patient, longsuffering love of the Spirit is infinitely
wonderful. He works calmly, and (we may say) in self-hiding silence,
willing to be unnoticed in His working. Are not calmness and silence the
peculiar style of divinity? "In silence mighty things are wrought - Each nightly star in silence burns, And every day in silence turns The axle of the earth." So it was with the Spirit's mighty working in Creation; for Genesis 1:3
tells of His "moving on the face of the waters," a word which, as all
writers agree, refers to the brooding of the mother-bird when patiently
and in silence she sends forth penetrating warmth, instinct with life.
And, as the grand result, what a world was disclosed when the Father and
the Son bade light appear, and the wonders of the firmament, and the rich
furnishings of the dry land, and the abundant increase of all kinds in the
air and sea, till man, in the midst of Eden, crowned the whole. We are
never to forget that the Spirit has been working silently, but most
effectually, day after day. In the Courts of Israel's Sanctuary His emblem
was yonder Laver, filled to the brim with pure, crystal water. Silently it
gleamed in the bright sunshine, presenting to Israel the type of that Holy
Spirit, whose it is to sanctify, bestowing quietly the holy purity of
heaven. And at Christ's Baptism, when He ascended, was not His emblem the
Dove? — gentle, and still, and calm, like Him on whom He rested? And if
anyone should suggest that Acts 2:2 is not all stillness, we must
carefully notice that properly the words read, "Suddenly there came a
sound from heaven as of a mighty breathing, borne along." The word is the
word for "breath," or "breathing," the same as Genesis 2:7, reminding us of
Christ in the upper room (John 20:22), and of the mighty "breath" (Ezekiel
37:9) that "breathed upon the slain," like the gentle breeze in a summer
evening. But now we come to notice some of the things which Christ spoke concerning
Him who so deserves our love and praise, and whose it is to accomplish
such amazing changes in the hearts and lives of men. We shall dwell on
that summary of His work given in John 16:7-11: "If I depart, I will send
Him unto you" - to you, My disciples. "And when He is come (to you, My
disciples) He will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of
judgment." Here is a brief statement of His work in bringing sinners out
of their state of nature into the kingdom of God. (1) "He will reprove the world of sin; because they believe not on Me."
The word reprove is an old English word which has the same meaning as
convince (see Job 6:25, Psalm 50:21). The Spirit convinces, that is, He
gives to the soul a sight and a sense of sin. Just as at the great day, in
which Enoch's prophecy declares that the Lord as Judge will "convince all
that are ungodly of all their ungodly deeds and of all their hard
speeches"; so now, when the Spirit comes into the soul He makes the sinner
see and feel the tremendous evil of sin. The awakened sinner's
judgment-day may be said to be when he sees and feels his guilt, and looks
for deliverance to the very Lord against whom he has sinned. He sees and
feels that his greatest sin by far has been, not believing on Christ—neglecting Him, rejecting Him, letting Him stand at the door knocking in
vain, for months and years. Natural conscience never troubles a man in
regard to this sin; the man fancies (if he thinks of it at all) that it is
at most, a misfortune, and that himself is the only loser. But when the
Spirit touches the conscience, the sinner's eyes are opened to see that
this unbelief is the worst of sins, and the root-sin in his heart. The
sharpest arrow shot into his conscience is the sense of this sin. For now
he sees that Christ was more deeply wounded by this sin than by all other
sins. "Ye will not come to Me!" was the one only complaint He was heard
uttering. As if He had said, "I came to the gate of Eden, and opened it
for you at the cost of infinite suffering, letting the flaming sword be
sheathed in My soul. And yet ye would not come in! I rolled away the stone
from the Well of Life, letting Myself be crushed and bruised and broken as
I did it. And yet ye would not drink, nay, you hated Me because I brought
this life to you, and told you that without this you must die" (John 8:24). It was (to compare great things with small) like the act of the
Russian soldier, who, when approached by one who brought water for his
thirst, and help for his wounds, thrust his deadly bayonet into his
benefactor's heart. But more; the Spirit convinces the sinner that in thus refusing Christ he
has struck at the heart of the Father. He has "called God a liar, because
he has not believed the record God has given of His Son" (1 John 5:10).
The sinner disdained to listen to the Father, treating all He said about
the Beloved Son as mere words without meaning, idle tales. And so he made
God to be a LIAR! Who can tell the agony of a soul when first it discovers
all this sin?
In the Civil War it was not uncommon for such a scene to
occur as the following. Two brothers go out to the battlefield, but on
opposite sides. The battle begins; one brother takes his aim surely, and
sees a young soldier in the enemy's ranks fall dead. He watches his
opportunity, and triumphantly goes up to examine the foe whom he has
struck dead. But see, his countenance changes! He is in an agony of grief!
It was his own brother whose heart he pierced. Will the anguish of that
moment ever be forgotten? Will it not haunt him to the grave? Even such
the sinner's anguish when the discovery bursts upon him of what he has
done in rejecting Christ. Like John Newton, he cries, "I saw my sins His
blood had spilt"; and he looks round inquiring: "Where shall my trembling soul be hid, For I the Lord have slain?"
And then once more. The Spirit shows the sinner that by his unbelief he
was all along virtually refusing to take pardon for his sins, thrusting
the Savior from him, and saying, "Away with Him! Away with Him! Trouble
me not!" He was resolving to go up to the judgment-seat with all his guilt
upon him. And thus he was refusing peremptorily to part with his
corruptions and his sinful nature; he was determining to remain unholy and
impure, for there is no beginning of holiness until sin is pardoned. Oh,
what an abyss of evil is revealed to the sinner in the hour when the
Spirit convinces him, as Christ says, "of sin, because he believes not on
Me!" No wonder the 3000 souls (men, women, and children), on the day of
Pentecost so cried out in fear and anguish of heart, when the Spirit,
silently, but with almighty power, showed this sin of unbelief, and
charged it home on each, while Peter pointed to the crucified Son of God.
(2)
"Of righteousness, because I go to My Father, and ye see Me no more"
(verse 10). Carrying on conversion-work, the Spirit does not stop at
conviction of sin, but shows the awakened soul how that tremendous guilt
of unbelief and all other sin may be taken away. In other words, He goes
on to show where the sinner may find righteousness—may find all that
will set him right with God against whom he has sinned. Here also He works silently, but very powerfully. Go down to that
river-side, and notice how Lydia is made to drop the filthy rags of devout
self-righteousness while Paul is preaching Christ (Acts 16:14). Or, go to
the way that leads to Gaza, and watch the scales fall from the eyes of
that anxious Ethiopian, as he listens to Philip telling simply of the Lamb
led to the slaughter (Acts 8. 32, 37). It is the Holy Spirit, and only He,
who can persuade and enable a sinner to let go his rags and accept the
best robe. It is only He who convinces a man that his righteousness must
exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, if he would cross
the threshold and enter the kingdom of heaven (Matt. 5. 20). He carries
the sinner away to Palestine and shows him One there who has come down
from heaven to provide righteousness for sinners.
It is Emmanuel, God in
our nature, who, for thirty-years, lives for us and bears our burden. He
lives (so to speak) over again, the life of Abel, the life of Enoch, the
life of Noah, the life of Abraham, the life of all believers, in all ages,
giving for them to God, an obedience as broad as the law, and as pure as
the heart of God. He bears also, the penalty of our disobedience, the
wrath of God, submitting to all that justice demanded, baring His whole
human being to the infliction of the law's sentence, receiving the
execution of Divine vengeance on sin in all the sensibilities of His human
nature, and at last bowing His head in profound acquiescence. All was
FINISHED. "Finished!" was His own declaration; and on the third day, the
Father reechoed that testimony by raising Him from the tomb in glory and honor and power.
But over and over must the sure testimony be given, and
it must be given in heaven, and so, on the fortieth day, you see Him with
His eleven disciples, slowly climbing the Mount of Olives, in the
afternoon. All is peace and delight as He talks with them, when suddenly
He lifts His holy hands (they see on them the mark of the nails), and
breathing blessing on them, begins to ascend to the Father. He has gone up
to present, in person, His finished righteousness. If He is sent back to
earth again, then the Father has not accepted the righteousness as
entirely satisfying; but if "ye see Me no more" - if He is taken in at
once and welcomed - then all is well. His righteousness, wrought out for
us, has been accepted. And so He moved onward through the ranks of angels to the Father's Throne,
and, as He drew near, Oh, the ineffable delight that shone forth from the
Father, as He welcomed the Beloved Son. "Sit down at My right hand!" was
heard and seen by all the hosts of heaven; but His eleven disciples saw
Him no more. Most surely then, the righteousness He wrought out for
sinners has been accepted! There it is, that in the person of the God-Man,
as Peter (2 Peter 1:1) writes, we find, "The righteousness of Him who is
God and our Savior, Jesus Christ."
There was awful suspense that day at Derry, when the ship that was laden
with relief for the beleaguered city was approaching the boom; but oh, the
shouts of joy when the chain yielded and the vessel sailed safely in!
There was most anxious suspense when Esther passed into the presence of
the king—will he hold out the Golden Scepter? or shall she go forth
rejected? And so, may we suppose among the hosts of heaven something like
anxious emotion, at least, till the Father had spoken His infinite
satisfaction, and then all was immeasurable delight. Now may men know
where to find righteousness! Now may sinners be led by the Holy Spirit to
Him, in believing on whom they find themselves clothed with beauty, the
righteousness of God. For the Spirit shows the sinner that he becomes knit to, is united to, is
one with that Savior, the righteous One, the very moment he accepts Him
as his Savior. And so the sinner is taught by the Spirit to reason: "If
He and I are one, then His righteousness is mine, His merit is mine; I
need no more for my justification than what I find in Him."
It was when
the Spirit opened John Bunyan's eyes to see this truth, that he finally
gained the victory over all his sore temptations. "One day," he says, "as
I was passing in the field, suddenly this sentence fell upon my soul, "Thy
righteousness is in Heaven," and me thought withal I saw with the eyes of
my soul, Jesus Christ at God's right hand—there as my righteousness—so
that wherever I was, or whatever I was doing, God could not say of me, "He
wants (does not have) My righteousness, for there it was before Him."
John
Bunyan goes on to tell, "I saw that the good frame of my heart could not
make my righteousness better, nor yet the bad frame of my heart make my
righteousness worse; for my righteousness was Jesus Christ, who is the
same yesterday, to-day, and for ever. Now did my chains fall off—I was
loosed from affliction and iron. My temptations also fled away." From
that day he reckoned all his own feelings, and all grace in himself, as of
no consequence whatever, in his justification; a rich man cares nothing
for cracked coins in his purse, for he has his trunk full of gold at home.
"O, blessed Spirit, convince every anxious soul of righteousness!"
(3) "Of judgment, because the Prince of this world is judged." One of the
meanings of this word "judgment" is a law-suit or cause to be adjudicated
upon. In regard to the great cause on hand the Spirit will make all clear
to you. Ever since the Fall, Satan has claimed this world as his; but
Christ, the woman's seed, even Christ, came to dispute that claim on man's
behalf. At the Cross He gained His cause, and Satan lost his. Satan was
there "judged" or doomed; pronounced to be an infamous usurper, who shall
assuredly be cast out with all who are on his side. Three different times does Christ call the devil by the name Prince of
this World (John 12:31, 14:30, and here). It seems to me very likely
that our Master was wont, from time to time, to give His favored
disciples some notices of incidents in His history that were not public,
and among the rest He had related to them the story of the Temptation. He
would tell how Satan, on that occasion, boldly and daringly, claimed all
earth as his kingdom and property, "all the kingdoms of the world and the
glory of them, "and had said, "all this power and the glory of them, is
delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give it" (Luke 4:6). And
thus the disciples at once understood whom the Master meant, and why He
called him the "Prince of this World." When the Holy Spirit comes to the sinner in His saving operations, He
completes His work by causing the awakened and justified soul clearly to
see that Satan, "Prince of this World, "is judged, doomed, damned, though
for a short time still allowed to go to and fro on the earth. The sinner
now clearly sees that to take the glory of the world—the goodly things
of earth—as his portion, is to accept a gift from Satan and own him as
Lord over us. The glory of the world—earth's grandeur, wealth, gaieties,
pleasures, lusts, ungodly fashions, all belong to Satan, and he "gives
them to whomsoever he will." But the Spirit teaches the awakened and
justified sinner to shake himself loose from all that Satan thus offers as
a bribe to retain his dominion over sinners.
The man who delights in "the
glory of the world" as offered by Satan, is on Satan's side, and must be
"judged" with him. Very soon, all that "fashion of the world" will "pass
away" (1 Corinthians 7:31), and "the lust there-of" (1 John 2:17), swept into
the bottomless pit with "The Prince of this World" (see Revelation 18:14-24).
And the time is at hand. And so the Holy Spirit separates us from the
world lying in wickedness, and casts out of our hearts whatever is not of
God. For now He Himself not only comes, but dwells in the soul, which He
has "convinced of sin, and righteousness, and judgment."
People of God, you have thus learned Christ. And we wish you to remember
that the Spirit dwelling in you will repeat oftentimes the first great
lesson about sin, righteousness, and judgment. He will again and again
renew His first operations, thereby keeping you ever decided and watchful
and fervent for the Lord. And we seem justified in inferring from v. 7,
"come to you," compared with v. 8, "and when He is come (i.e., to you) He
will convince the world." That it is His method, as a rule, in going forth
to bring in more souls from the world, to begin by a fresh dealing with
you who are already His.
It was thus at Pentecost, and in all ages this
has been His usual manner of working. Revivals begin with God's own
people; the Holy Spirit touches their heart anew, and gives them new
fervor and compassion, and zeal, new light and life, and when He has thus
come to you, He next goes forth to the valley of dry bones.
Is this the
divine order? Oh, what responsibility it lays on the God's Church! You
first, then the unsaved world! If you grieve the Holy Spirit away from yourselves or
hinder His proffered visit, then the poor perishing world suffers sorely!
But every time you welcome the Spirit, and again get blessing through His
working in you, you may expect that He is on His way to save others. He
fills the well to the brim, and then its waters flow over and make all
green around. He does not, we have said, work without you. So true is this
that we might put the case in this startling form, viz., "Without Me ye
can do nothing," says the Master; but He also says, "And without you I can
do nothing!" This is a very solemn truth for the Church of God. And at the same time it
is a wonderful privilege that is involved in this truth, We are honored
to do what angels are not; saints are they who are sent in the footsteps
of the Son of Man to seek and save the lost. Angels can only say (almost
with envy), "Go you, stand in the temple, and preach all the words of this
life" (Acts. 5:20); they themselves are not employed on this high errand.
Let us do far more than we have done.
It has been often noticed that it is
the overflow from the well that spreads lush greenness. Even so, it is what a
Christian does for
Christ and souls, over and above mere duty, constrained not by law but by
burning love, it is this that is blessed to the saving of souls. When the
Spirit fills you thus, He has found a channel by which to flow out to
others! When you cannot help doing more than you are strictly called to
do, it seems as if then, He had "come to you," and were on His way to the
world around you.
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