Evening and Morning
By Charles Haddon Spurgeon
September 25
Morning
"Just,
and the justifier of him which believeth."—Romans 3:26.
Being justified by faith,
we have peace with God. Conscience accuses no longer. Judgment now decides for
the sinner instead of against him. Memory looks back upon past sins, with deep
sorrow for the sin, but yet with no dread of any penalty to come; for Christ
has paid the debt of His people to the last jot and tittle, and received the
divine receipt; and unless God can be so unjust as to demand double payment for
one debt, no soul for whom Jesus died as a substitute can ever be cast into
hell. It seems to be one of the very principles of our enlightened nature to
believe that God is just; we feel that it must be so, and this gives us our
terror at first; but is it not marvellous that this
very same belief that God is just, becomes afterwards the pillar of our
confidence and peace! If God be just, I, a sinner,
alone and without a substitute, must be punished; but Jesus stands in my stead
and is punished for me; and now, if God be just, I, a sinner, standing in
Christ, can never be punished. God must change His nature before one soul, for
whom Jesus was a substitute, can ever by any possibility suffer the lash of the
law. Therefore, Jesus having taken the place of the believer—having rendered
a full equivalent to divine wrath for all that His people ought to have
suffered as the result of sin, the believer can shout with glorious triumph,
"Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?" Not God, for
He hath justified; not Christ, for He hath died,
"yea rather hath risen again." My hope lives not because I am not a
sinner, but because I am a sinner for whom Christ died; my trust is not that I
am holy, but that being unholy, He is my righteousness. My faith rests
not upon what I am, or shall be, or feel, or know, but in what Christ is, in
what He has done, and in what He is now doing for me. On the lion of justice
the fair maid of hope rides like a queen.
Evening
"Who of
God is made unto us wisdom."—1 Corinthians 1:30.
ManŐs intellect seeks after
rest, and by nature seeks it apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. Men of education
are apt, even when converted, to look upon the simplicities of the cross of
Christ with an eye too little reverent and loving. They are snared in the old
net in which the Grecians were taken, and have a
hankering to mix philosophy with revelation. The temptation with a man of
refined thought and high education is to depart from the simple truth of Christ
crucified, and to invent, as the term is, a more intellectual doctrine.
This led the early Christian churches into Gnosticism, and bewitched them with
all sorts of heresies. This is the root of Neology, and the other fine things which in days gone by were so fashionable in Germany,
and are now so ensnaring to certain classes of divines. Whoever you are, good
reader, and whatever your education may be, if you be
the Lord's, be assured you will find no rest in philosophizing divinity. You
may receive this dogma of one great thinker, or that dream of another profound reasoner, but what the chaff is to the wheat, that will these be to the pure word of God. All that reason, when
best guided, can find out is but the A B C of truth, and even that lacks
certainty, while in Christ Jesus there is treasured up all the fulness of wisdom and knowledge. All attempts on the part
of Christians to be content with systems such as Unitarian and Broad-church
thinkers would approve of, must fail; true heirs of heaven must come back to
the grandly simple reality which makes the ploughboy's eye flash with joy, and glads the pious pauper's heart—"Jesus Christ
came into the world to save sinners." Jesus satisfies the most elevated
intellect when He is believingly received, but apart from Him the mind of the
regenerate discovers no rest. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
knowledge." "A good understanding have all they that do His
commandments."