What do you think about the cross
of Christ? The question may be one that you consider of little
importance: but it deeply concerns the everlasting welfare of your
soul.
Eighteen hundred years ago there
was a man who said that he "gloried" in the cross of
Christ. He was one who turned the world upside down by the doctrines
he preached. He was one who did more to establish Christianity than
any man that ever lived. Yet what does He tell the
Galatians?—"God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross
of our Lord Jesus Christ" (Gal. vi. 14).
Reader, the "cross of
Christ" must needs be an important subject, when an inspired
apostle can speak of it in this way. Let me try to show you what the
expression means. Once know what the cross of Christ means, and then
you may be able, by God's help, to see the importance of it to your
soul.
The cross in the Bible sometimes
means that wooden cross on which the Lord Jesus was nailed
and put to death on Mount Calvary. This is what St. Paul had in his
mind's eye when he told the Philippians that Christ "became
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross" (Phil. ii.
8). This is not the cross in which St. Paul gloried. He would have
shrunk with horror from the idea of glorying in a mere piece of
wood. I have no doubt he would have denounced the Roman Catholic
adoration of the crucifix as profane, blasphemous, and idolatrous.
The cross sometimes means the afflictions
and trials which believers in Christ have to go through if they
follow Christ faithfully, for their religion's sake. This is the
sense in which our Lord uses the word, when He says, "He that
taketh not his cross, and followeth after Me, is not worthy of
Me" (Matt. x. 38). This also is not the sense in which Paul
uses the word when he writes to the Galatians. He knew that cross
well. He carried it patiently: but he is not speaking of it here.
But the cross also means in some
places the doctrine that Christ died for sinners upon the
cross,—the atonement that He made for sinners, by His
suffering for them on the cross,—the complete and perfect
sacrifice for sin which He offered up, when He gave His own body to
be crucified. In short, this one word, "the cross," stands
for Christ crucified, the only Saviour. This is the meaning in which
Paul uses the expression, when he tells the Corinthians, "The
preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness" (1
Cor. i. 18). This is the meaning in which he wrote to the Galatians,
"God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross." He
simply meant, "I glory in nothing but Christ crucified, as the
salvation of my soul."
Reader, Jesus Christ crucified was
the joy and delight, the comfort and the peace, the hope and the
confidence, the foundation and the resting-place, the ark and the
refuge, the food and the medicine of Paul's soul. He did not think
of what he had done himself and suffered himself. He did not
meditate on his own goodness, and his own righteousness. He loved to
think of what Christ had done, and Christ had suffered,—of the
death of Christ, the righteousness of Christ, the atonement of
Christ, the blood of Christ, the finished work of Christ. In this he
did glory. This was the sun of his soul.
This is the subject he loved to
preach about. He was a man who went to and fro on the earth,
proclaiming to sinners that the Son of God had shed His own heart's
blood to save their souls. He walked up and down the world telling
people that Jesus Christ had loved them, and died for their sins
upon the cross. Mark how he says to the Corinthians, "I
delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that
Christ died for our sins" (1 Cor. xv. 3); "I determined
not to know anything among you save Jesus Christ and Him
crucified" (1 Cor. ii. 2). He,—a blaspheming, persecuting
Pharisee,—had been washed in Christ's blood: he could not hold his
peace about it. He was never weary of telling the story of the
cross.
This is the subject he loved to
dwell upon when he wrote to believers. It is wonderful to
observe how full his epistles generally are of the sufferings and
death of Christ,—how they run over with "thoughts that
breathe and words that burn" about Christ's dying love and
power. His heart seems full of the subject: he enlarges on it
constantly; he returns to it continually. It is the golden thread
that runs through all his doctrinal teaching, and practical
exhortations. He seems to think that the most advanced Christian can
never hear too much about the cross.
This is what he lived upon all
his life, from the time of his conversion. He tells the Galatians,
"The life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of
the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me" (Gal.
ii. 20). What made him so strong to labour? What made him so willing
to work? What made him so unwearied in endeavouring to save some?
What made him so persevering and patient? I will tell you the secret
of it all. He was always feeding by faith on Christ's body and
Christ's blood. Jesus crucified was the meat and drink of his soul.
And, reader, you may rest assured
that Paul was right. Depend upon it, the cross of Christ,—the
death of Christ on the cross to make atonement for sinners,—is the
centre truth in the whole Bible. This is the truth we begin with
when we open Genesis. The seed of the woman bruising the serpent's
head, is nothing else but a prophecy of Christ crucified. This is
the truth that shines out, though veiled, all through the law of
Moses and the history of the Jews. The daily sacrifice, the passover
lamb, the continual shedding of blood in the tabernacle and the
temple,—all these were emblems of Christ crucified. This is the
truth that we see honoured in the vision of heaven, before we close
the book of Revelations. "In the midst of the throne and of the
four beasts," we are told, "and in the midst of the
elders, stood a Lamb, as it had been slain" (Rev. v. 6). Even
in the midst of heavenly glory we catch a view of Christ crucified.
Take away the cross of Christ, and the Bible is a dark book. It is
like the Egyptian hieroglyphics, without the key that interprets
their meaning,—curious and wonderful, but of no real use.
Reader, mark what I say. You may
know a good deal about the Bible. You may know the outlines of the
histories it contains, and the dates of the events described, just
as a man knows the history of England. You may know the names of the
men and women mentioned in it, just as a man knows Caesar, Alexander
the Great, or Napoleon. You may know the several precepts of the
Bible, and admire them, just as a man admires Plato, Aristotle, or
Seneca. But if you have not yet found out that Christ crucified is
the foundation of the whole volume, you have read your Bible
hitherto to very little profit. Your religion is a heaven without a
sun, an arch without a key-stone, a compass without a needle, a
clock without spring or weights, a lamp without oil. It will not
comfort you. It will not deliver your soul from hell.
Reader, mark what I say again. You
may know a good deal about Christ, by a kind of head knowledge. You
may know who He was, and where He was born, and what He did. You may
know His miracles, His sayings, His prophecies, and His ordinances.
You may know how He lived, and how He suffered, and how He died. But
unless you know the power of Christ's cross by experience,—unless
you know and feel within that the blood shed on that cross has
washed away your own particular sins—unless you are willing to
confess that your salvation depends entirely on the work that Christ
did upon the cross,—unless this be the case, Christ will profit
you nothing. The mere knowing Christ's name will never save you. You
must know His cross and His blood, or else you will die in your
sins.
Reader, as long as you live, beware
of a religion in which there is not much of the cross. You live
in times when the warning is sadly needful. Beware, I say again, of
a religion without the cross.
There are hundreds of places of
worship in this day, in which there is almost everything except the
cross. There is carved oak, and sculptured stone; there is stained
glass, and brilliant painting; there are solemn services, and a
constant round of ordinances: but the real cross of Christ is not
there. Jesus crucified is not proclaimed in the pulpit. The Lamb
of God is not lifted up, and salvation by faith in Him is not freely
proclaimed. And hence all is wrong. Reader, beware of such places of
worship. They are not apostolical. They would not have
satisfied St. Paul.
There are thousands of religious
books published in our times, in which there is everything except
the cross. They are full of directions about sacraments, and praises
of the Church; they abound in exhortations about holy living, and
rules for the attainment of perfection; they have plenty of fonts
and crosses, both inside and outside but the real cross of Christ
is left out. The Saviour and His dying love, are either not
mentioned, or mentioned in an unscriptural way. And hence they are
worse than useless. Reader, beware of such books. They are not
apostolical They would never have satisfied St. Paul.
Reader, St. Paul gloried in
nothing but the cross. Strive to be like him. Set Jesus crucified
fully before the eyes of your soul. Listen not to any teaching which
would interpose any thing between you and Him. Do not fall into the
old Galatian error. Think not that anyone in this day is a better
guide than the apostles. Do not be ashamed of the old paths in which
men walked who were inspired by the Holy Ghost. Let not the vague
talk of men who speak great swelling words about catholicity, and
the church, and the ministry, disturb your peace, and make you loose
your hands from the cross. Churches, ministers, and sacraments are
all useful in their way, but they are not Christ crucified. Do not
give Christ's honour to another. "He that glorieth, let him
glory in the Lord."
Reader, I lay these thoughts
before your mind. What you think now about the cross of Christ I
cannot tell; but I can wish you nothing better than this,—that you
may be able to say with the apostle Paul, before you die or meet the
Lord, "God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our
Lord Jesus Christ." Amen.
J.C. Ryle