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7. GRACE ABOUNDING
"Where sin abounded grace did much more abound." Rom. v: 20.
We find in nature a beautiful approximation to the truth declared
in this verse, a sort of parable and symbol of the glory of redemption. It
is this. Go into the woods and cut a wound in the side of a living tree,
and then go back again a few years later and see how the tree has endeavored
to heal its wound and restore the breach by a very beautiful reproductive
force. The notch in the trunk is all grown up again. Not, however, with the
old fibres, but with far stronger materials; and you will find the grain
of the wood interlaced and twisted across the old fibres in a sort of tangle,
which all your efforts would frequently be found unable to cleave asunder.
In fact, the healed breach is much stronger than any other part of the tree,
and nature has not only made good the loss, but far more abundantly brought
good out of it.
So, it is said, a broken bone heals much more strongly than the natural bone,
as though nature were determined to fortify herself against a second attack,
and to turn to account, in double strength, the assault made upon her.
Very beautifully is this illustrated in the formation of the pearl. A little
grain of sand or a piercing thorn in the sensitive side of the pearl oyster,
irritating its nerves, provokes him, not to retaliate and thus inflict upon
himself a greater wound, but to throw around the intruding element a crystalline
liquid and to bury it out of sight in a smooth and beautiful gem; so that
out of the thorn and the wound come beauty and victory, and the value of
the little mollusk is enhanced a thousand-fold by the very incident that
threatened his destruction.
This is what the apostle means in a sublimer measure when he sums up his
splendid antithesis between sin and salvation, Adam and Christ, the fall
and the redemption, with the magnificent declaration, "where sin abounded
grace did much more abound." Out of the terrible attack which the powers
of darkness hurled against the world, the wisdom and grace of heaven have
brought the victory which is to prove the triumph of the ages. Out of the
catastrophe which threatened man's eternal destruction, God has evolved a
new creation transcendently greater and more glorious than the old. Out of
the ocean depths of sin, Christ has brought the Pearl of Great Price, the
church, which shall shine amid the glories of eternity with a lustre reflecting
His own. Let us endeavor by the help of God to realize a little more fully
this elevating and transporting truth.
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It is illustrated in the salvation of the most abandoned sinners and the
grace which is often so magnified in their conversion and subsequent usefulness.
God seems to love to take the worst materials for His greatest triumphs.
He chose a Jacob and a David in the Old Testament, both weak and wicked men
in many a terrible sense and measure, to become the respective heads of the
patriarchal and the kingly periods. He saved a Manasseh after half a century
of bloody crimes. He took a Rahab from the slums of Jericho, to be a mother
in the line of the Messiah's ancestry. And when He would choose His most
illustrious apostle to found the glorious work of the gospel among the infamous
Gentile races, He took "the chief of sinners." There is no doubt that Paul's
calm estimate of his own wickedness, given by the inspiration of the Holy
Spirit, was not exaggerated. Moral though he was, yet even his own testimony
leaves sufficient evidence of the atrocity of his religious crimes. Not satisfied
with insulting the name of Jesus and abetting the murderers of Stephen His
faithful martyr, he devoted himself to exterminating the followers of Christ;
and with a fiendish excess of cruelty he feared not to destroy their souls
as well as their bodies by committing the most fearful crimes and compelling
them to blaspheme the Name of Him on whom they believed. He must have known
full well the awfulness of the crimes he required of them, and that although
they might even be mistaken in their faith, yet to sin against their conscience
by profaning the name of Christ was, to them, the height of impiety, and
on his part the very extreme of refined and Satanic cruelty.
And yet he, "the chief of sinners," tells us that he obtained mercy for this
very purpose, that he might become the pattern of the principle on which
God was to act in the economy of grace, namely, to "show forth all long-suffering
unto them that should hereafter believe on the name of Jesus Christ to life
everlasting." And this does not merely mean that God will save the most guilty,
but that He will take peculiar pleasure in making more of their redeemed
lives just because of their former wickedness. And so Paul can say "the grace
of God was exceeding abundant towards me, with faith and love which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord." "Where sin abounded grace did much more abound,"
not only in forgiving the sin but in making the sinner a vessel of the riches
of divine grace and love, and an instrument in the hands of God for greater
usefulness than ever was permitted perhaps to a mortal.
So still, through all these succeeding centuries has He loved to take the
thorn and the thistle and turn them into the fir tree, and the myrtle and
make it unto himself "for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off."
And, therefore, a wicked Bunyan, a degraded Newton, a contemptible, thieving
Moorhouse, a polluted and criminal McAuley, yes, and many a woman whose name
is written upon His hands, if not on the tablets of Christian fame, has been
in like manner made an especial monument of this cardinal principle of divine
redemption, "where sin abounded grace did much more abound."
Oh, is there a soul reading these lines that conscience and the tempter have
conspired to discourage on account of aggravated sin? It matters not how
great the sin, how strange the aggravations, and how long the story of
impenitence and even of unbelief. To you is this message spoken and you may
echo back to the throne of grace the deep petition which inspiration long
ago breathed from the lips of David, "For thine own sake, 0 Lord, pardon
mine iniquity, for it is great."
But we, the people of God, must also fully realize this principle if we would
stand prepared to fulfill the purpose of our Master. In this age the messengers
have passed out with the last invitations to the gospel feast. No longer
are they to be chiefly addressed to the first invited guests, but it is from
the highways and from the hedges and from the streets and lanes of the city
that they are coming in today in great multitudes, and not only coming, but
becoming the brightest trophies of redeeming grace and the most useful and
honored instruments in the salvation of others. Shall we, beloved, fully
realize the significance of this truth that the more lost, degraded and hopeless
the soul may be to which we bring this precious gospel, the more willing
is our Master to welcome it and the more glorious may be the issues of the
redeemed life? As our faith in man decreases, thank God our faith in God
rises to sublimer heights, that "where sin abounded grace shall much more
abound."
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This text is illustrated in the sanctification of believers and especially
in their sanctification from qualities and tendencies naturally the most
unholy and contrary to their new and sanctified lives. Still it is literally
true in the deeper life of the soul that "where sin abounded grace much more
abounds." It is not that God will make the good better, but that He will
make the bad good, and the utterly and hopelessly bad divinely pure and holy.
Sanctification is not the refining and elevating of the naturally pure, but
the transforming of darkness into light, a selfish soul into a living sacrifice
of love, and a heart all steeped in corruption into the glorious counterpart
of Christ's own holiness. In the work of grace God takes peculiar delight
in contradicting natural probabilities and tendencies. He took a shrinking
Jeremiah to be a bold and courageous reprover of Israel's prophets, priests
and kings. He took a cowardly Peter to be the courageous and defiant apostle
of Pentecost. He took a Son of Thunder to be the gentle, loving disciple
of love. He took a raging persecutor to be the long-suffering apostle who
could say, "I beseech you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ." He can
make the weakest things in you the strongest, the worst things in you the
occasions for the grace which will magnify in you the best and divinest qualities
of the Christian life.
Beloved, shall we therefore cease to think and speak of the Christian life
as a mere matter of education, and fully realize that it is all a new creation
and a miracle of infinite and omnipotent grace? All that God requires in
each of us is an opportunity to show what He can do, and to prove over and
over again that "where sin abounded grace shall much more abound."
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The text is illustrated in the fact that divine grace not only saves and
sanctifies but counteracts the consequences of his sins and more than triumphs
over the sad and hurtful effects of the sin. Many a poor fellow thinks, and
many a sermon we fear has helped him to think, that though he has been forgiven
and saved yet he need never expect to be delivered from the fruits of his
life in harvests of sorrow and shame. He must not expect the consequences
to be obviated but cheerfully endure them in patience and humility, thanking
God that he has been saved from so much, and counting this but a reasonable
reminder of the past and a very small retribution compared with what he deserved.
He quotes, or others quote to him, a passage in Galatians vi: 7. "Whatsoever
a man soweth that shall he also reap," and so they expect to reap in their
bodies the physical infirmities and diseases which are the legitimate fruit
of a life of dissipation and sin. They expect that their social and secular
life may be embarrassed and impeded by the issues of their past, and that
only after a long and patient endurance can they expect to recover themselves
from the entanglement of the sins of their youth which encompassed them
about.
Now we believe that grace is able to do something better than this, and that
our blessed Lord has borne the bitter fruit of sin as our Substitute, and
that His atonement has power to cancel all the effects of sin and even turn
the curse into a blessing. The great Augustine, one of the fathers of the
Christian Church, found himself at his conversion a physical wreck in his
early youth. Every drop of his blood was poisoned by the virus of sin, and
his frame was literally dropping into corruption through every abominable
excess. But the grace of God not only saved his soul, but restored his body
and gave him nearly half a century of almost unparalleled usefulness in physical
health and strength and glorious service for his Master and the
church.
Many a redeemed drunkard today can tell the same story of physical forces
perfectly restored and every trace of a degraded life removed, not only from
the physical energies but even from the very countenance. And so the grace
of Christ can take the social life and counteract the innumerable currents
of evil that have gone forth from us to return in our own life in entanglements
and embarrassments and to work their lasting influences in the lives of others.
In proportion to our faith, God can undo these influences and give us back
all that we have lost and more. "I will restore to you," He says, "the years
that the locust hath eaten, the cankerworm and the caterpillar, my great
army which I sent among you." Sometimes the very life that the sinner has
lived in the service of Satan is made an opportunity for greater usefulness,
as he is enabled to reach classes to which the moral and respectable cannot
even have access. And so God is constantly taking men out of the dives and
slums, out of the saloons and dance-halls, out of the great lost world, that
He may send them back again to their own former sphere as messengers of redeeming
love. Fear not, then, poor trembling disciple, that you shall be drawn into
the vortex that your own past life has created. Reckon yourself dead indeed
unto it in all its issues, and go forth claiming the full redemption of your
risen Lord and walking with Him as though you were not even the same person
who once lived the life of sin and misery.
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The text is illustrated most sublimely of all in the work of redemption.
In a word its deep significance is simply this, that the work of Christ's
redemption has more than counteracted and will ultimately transcend all the
effects of the Fall. We believe that it has brought more glory to God than
if the human race had kept their first estate. It has led to a new revelation
of the divine character, which, but for sin, might never have been known.
Creation revealed God in His power, wisdom and purity, but only redemption
has revealed Him in His attitude of grace, that is, divine goodness dealing
with the sinful and the lost. Had man never fallen, God would certainly have
been known as a holy Being, through the terrible retribution which He visited
upon the angels which kept not their first estate; but the wreck of the human
race has exhibited Him in the most beautiful and attractive of all attitudes,
as the God of mercy and love to the unworthy and wicked. Heaven would often
have heard the song, "Alleluia! for the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth," even
if Christ never had died, but only redemption has given the key-note of the
new song, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain!"
But it is not only an exhibition of His love and grace, but of that transcendent
wisdom that could still vindicate His righteousness and guard the sanctity
of His holy will, and yet devise a way by which mercy could have free exercise
and God could be just and yet a Saviour. The cross of Jesus Christ becomes
a monument of God's infinite wisdom, righteousness and love, and through
all the ages to come will exhibit "the exceeding riches of His grace in His
kindness towards us by Jesus Christ." Take out of the coming eternity the
song of redemption, the millennial kingdom, the glory of Jesus and the prospects
of His redeemed people, and heaven will seem annihilated and the universe
a dreary waste, while even God Himself shall become enveloped in clouds of
thickest, darkest and remotest distance, and the Bible will be obliterated
from existence.
The benefits that come to men are still more manifest and deeply interesting.
The redemption of our fallen race brings us to a far higher place than the
first creation ever gave us. Unfallen man was only a creature made in the
image of God, but a little lower than the angels. Redeemed man has been raised
above the rank of angels to partake of the very nature of God, to be a joint-heir
with the Son of God and to share eternally the throne of his Creator and
the attributes of the eternal Son, our glorious Head. Redemption is therefore
not the restoration of Adamic holiness, happiness or honor, but it is the
uniting of man with the Son of God and the exalting of the redeemed sinner
to kindred fellowship with a higher Being, so that, eternally like his Lord;
the redeemed man shall be, not only a man, but a man united with God and
possessing in the depths of his being the very spirit and nature of the eternal
Jehovah.
This is so sublime that we would fear to boldly state it, had we not the
unmistakable language of the Holy Scriptures. "Behold what manner of love
the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God.
Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and 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," "Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious
promises that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature." "Your
life is hid with Christ in God, but when Christ, who is your life, shall
appear, then shall we also appear with Him in glory." Yes, the day is coming
when Satan shall gaze upon the consummated work of the Great Restorer and
see everything his hand has touched transformed into a monument of the grace
and power of the Redeemer, and even he shall bow the knee and bitterly confess
like one of his ancient disciples, "Oh, Nazarene! Thou hast conquered."
We may not be able to understand all sides of this great problem. Of course
it would not be right to say that God intended or desired the sin and fall
of His creatures and the sad train of still greater sin and misery that has
followed. But we can surely believe that while He discountenanced the
disobedience of Adam, as He does all disobedience, while He desires His children
to walk in His will in holy obedience, and while He still is deeply grieved
with every transgression and something is lost by it inevitably, yet the
resources of His grace and power are such that, being committed, He has ample
expedients to counteract its effects; and while all the consequences are
not averted, yet enough good is brought out of it to result, in the end,
in a higher aggregate of blessing, to turn the evil to the best possible
account, and to show that God's all-sufficiency is more than a match for
every emergency that can ever arise.
For ourselves, surely, the practical lessons are not hard to find. If there
be a discouraged life within reach of this message, if there is a heart that
has been held back by the iron fetters of the past and to whom Satan has
been whispering, "There is no hope, but we will go on in the imagination
of our hearts," oh, beloved, surely we have seen enough in this passage to
answer the unworthy thought and ignoble fear, and to encourage us just because
of the extremity of our situation, to claim more boldly the interposition
of our Almighty Friend and the over-ruling power of His grace and love. The
very hardest case is the one which He most loves to take. The most hopeless
situation is the one through whose relief He is most glorified. If everything
in your life seems against you, and if, worst of all, you feel that you alone
are to blame for everything that is against you; if it has been, not only
sorrow but sin, and every aggravation of sin-beloved, the grace of Jesus
Christ was prepared for you and such as you. Only prove its all-sufficiency
and you shall be among all that we have already specified, the crowning
illustration of this most blessed truth, that "where sin abounded grace did
much more abound."
God's great ultimate purpose for His redeemed people is the key to all the
"exceeding great and precious promises." This, and this alone, explains the
strong language in which He speaks to us of the provisions of His grace for
our needs. These promises are out of all proportion to our importance or
worth, and it is not strange that naturally we should hesitate to accept
such boundless and stupendous assurances of love and care, and that our faith
should be as narrow and paltry as it often is. It is not strange that the
beggar child should be content with rags and crumbs, and almost think it
is mocked when you talk to it about palaces and offer it the costly robes
and the princely treasures of royalty. The truth is, we are the children
naturally of low and shameful birth and spiritual destitution, but we have
been adopted into a higher rank, nay, we have been born into a heavenly life
and a divine sonship, and we are destined, as the very children of God, to
share the exceeding riches of His glory through all the ages to come; and,
therefore, we are recognized by Him now and treated in the manner befitting
our future glory. We are like the children of wealthy parents who are at
school in a foreign land, not having yet come into their inheritance, but
being supplied by their father, even in their minority, with boundless wealth
for every need. And so, although we have not entered upon our eternal
inheritance, yet God has given us a cheque book on the bank of heaven, and
on the back of every cheque He has Himself endorsed the vast and illimitable
guarantee, "My God shall supply all your need according to His riches in
glory by Jesus Christ."
And so this word "abound" has come to be a sort of a keynote to the New Testament
promises. Even of His promises He says, "God willing MORE ABUNDANTLY to
shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel confirmed
it by an oath" (Heb. vi: 17). His word is abundant, His promises boundless,
His loving, faithful heart struggles to express in ever ampler language and
larger utterance, the immeasurable and unspeakable fullness of His love,
so that His great promises are like mountains piled upon mountains until
His faithfulness truly reacheth unto the clouds.
So, again, His mercy and grace to the sinful are as abundant. "The grace
of our Lord," says the Apostle, "was EXCEEDING ABUNDANT with faith and love
which is in Christ Jesus." And again in Rom. v: 17, he speaks of those who
"receive ABUNDANCE OF GRACE and the gift of righteousness, who shall reign
in life by one, Jesus Christ." The life that Jesus brings to us is not only
life, but "life MORE ABUNDANTLY" (Jno. x: 10). Redemption and forgiveness
are declared in Eph. 1: 7, 8, to be "according to the riches of His grace
wherein HE HATH ABOUNDED toward us in all wisdom and prudence," that is,
in all the variety of the love and care that adapts and adjusts His mercy
and His grace to every shade of guilt and need, and which anticipates every
future emergency; for this is the meaning of "prudence," literally, foresight
and providence.
His purpose in our salvation is that "in the ages to come He might show the
EXCEEDING RICHES OF HIS GRACE in His kindness toward us by Christ Jesus"
(Eph. ii: 7). All the dispensations of His providence are destined to give
occasion for still larger manifestations of His grace, "For all things are
for your sakes that the ABUNDANT GRACE might through the thanksgiving of
many redound to the glory of God" (2 Cor. iv: 15). Even in our deepest sorrows
He has made provision for such overflowing abundance of comfort and joy that
the sorrow shall be lost in the joy, for, "As the sufferings of Christ abound
in us, so our CONSOLATION ALSO ABOUNDETH by Christ" (2 Cor. i: 5). The provisions
of grace for our Christian life and work are equally boundless, for "God
is able to make ALL GRACE ABOUND toward you that ye always having all-sufficiency
in all things, MAY ABOUND to every good work" (2 Cor. ix: 8). And like a
mountain-top, high above all the rest and lost in the clouds, it is all summed
up in the sublime hyperbole, "Now unto Him that is ABLE TO DO EXCEEDING
ABUNDANTLY above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh
in us, unto Him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus, throughout all ages,
world without end. Amen" (Eph. iii: 20, 21.)
This is the divine measure of redeeming grace, and, so on our side we are
called upon to meet God's high measure with corresponding fullness. We are
to abound in faith. "Rooted and built up in Him, and stablished in the faith,
as ye have been taught, ABOUNDING therein with thanksgiving" (Col. ii: 7).
We are to abound in love. "And this I pray, that your LOVE MAY ABOUND yet
more and more in knowledge and in all judgment" (Phil. i: 9). "And the Lord
make you to increase and ABOUND IN LOVE one toward another, and toward all
men, even as we do toward you" (1 Thess. iii: 12). We are to abound in holiness.
"Furthermore then we beseech you, brethren, and exhort you by the Lord Jesus,
that as ye have received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so
ye WOULD ABOUND MORE AND MORE " (1 Thess. iv: 1). We are to abound in joy.
"That your rejoicing may be more ABUNDANT in Christ Jesus" (Phil. i: 29);
and in hope, "Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing,
that ye may ABOUND IN HOPE, through the power of the Holy Ghost" (Rom. xv:
13). We are to abound in liberality, even in the depths of poverty. "The
abundance of their joy and their deep poverty ABOUNDED unto the riches of
their liberality." "Therefore as ye abound in everything, in faith and utterance,
in knowledge, and in all diligence, and in your love to us, see that ye ABOUND
IN THIS GRACE ALSO" (2 Cor. viii: 2, 7).
And our spiritual experience is to be not a strained but an ample one, ever
growing in breadth, depth, height and symmetry, through the abundant grace
of the divine nature in our heart. "And besides this, giving all diligence,
add to your faith virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance;
and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and to godliness,
brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity. For if these things
be in you, AND ABOUND, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor
unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2 Pet. i: 5-8). And
finally if we thus enter into His abundant grace we shall have His glorious
recompense in like proportion, and "So an entrance shall be ministered unto
you ABUNDANTLY into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ."
Beloved, shall we so receive "His fullness, even grace for grace," and so
enter in at last, not like a battered ship, with masts and sails all gone
and banner torn to shreds, and slowly drawn by some old tug boat across the
bar into the harbor or the dry-dock; but shall we rather, with flags all
flying, and sails swelling in the gales of heaven, and myriads on the shore
waiting to welcome us, shall we have an entrance ministered unto us abundantly
into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, while
wondering angels, looking back to the past and gazing in amazement on our
present glory, shall turn to each other and say, "where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound."
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