When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory. Sermons I. CHRIST IS THE ESSENCE OF OUR SPIRITUAL LIFE. This is more than saying that our life is hid with him or that he is the Author of it. "He that hath the Son hath life" (1 John 5:12; Galatians 2:20; Philippians 1:21). We possess this life in virtue of our union with him and his resurrection (John 14:19). II. WE SHALL SHARE WITH HIM IN HIS FINAL MANIFESTATION. 1, The manifestation of Christ is the "blessed hope" of the saints. (Titus 2:13; 1 Timothy 6:14; 2 Timothy 1:10; 2 Timothy 4:1-8.) He will then be seen as he is (1 John 3:2), though mockers may ask, "Where is the promise of his coming?" (2 Peter 3:4). He will then appear glorious in his person, glorious in his retinue of angels, glorious in his authority. 2. We shall share in that manifestation. "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" (1 John 3:1, 2); "We wait for the Saviour" (Philippians 3:21); "The glory thou hast given me I have given them" (John 17:22); "If so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together" (Romans 8:17). We shall be manifested with Christ in the glory of our complete manhood, when the conjunction of soul and body shall be perfect and indissoluble. We may well set our mind on things above in view of such a glorious prospect. - T. C.
When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with Him in glory. What is meant by life? The word is very comprehensive, and includes —1. Appropriate activity. 2. Happiness. The life here intended is (1) (2) (3) I. ITS AUTHOR. 1. He saves us from death. (1) (2) 2. He is the author of inward spiritual life. Because — (1) (2) II. ITS OBJECT. 1. The exercises in which Christian life consists terminate on Him. 2. The happiness involved consists in fellowship with Him. He is our life as He is our joy, portion, inheritance. III. ITS END. It is Christ for us to live. While others live for themselves — some for their country, some for mankind — the believer lives for Christ. It is the great design of his life to promote Christ's glory and advance His kingdom. Inferences: 1. Test of character. The difference between the true and nominal Christian lies here. The one seeks and regards Christ as His life only as He delivers from death; the other as the end and object of life. 2. The true way to grow in grace, or to get life, is to come to Christ. 3. The happiness and duty of thus making Christ our life. (C. Hodge, D. D.) 2. Life is seen breaking out in the songs of birds, and displayed in the movements of the lower creatures and in the manifold activities of men — this is animal life. 3. Life is seen in the speculations of the philosopher, the research of the historian, the musings of the poet, and the contrivances of the architect and mechanician — this is intellectual life. 4. Life is seen in that hatred to sin, those yearnings after holiness, those graces of faith, hope, etc., the anticipation for heaven which characterize the true Christian — this is spiritual life, To Christ all these may be traced, but Paul is here speaking of the last. I. CHRIST ON THE CROSS IS THE SOURCE OF OUR LIFE. Spiritual life is no new principle; it was bestowed by Christ as the Almighty Creator. But here we have to view Christ not as the Lord of life, but the victim of death. What an amazing contrast. Yet by the latter He brought life and immortality to light. From this His life flows out to those dead in sin. II. CHRIST IN THE HEART IS THE ESSENCE OF OUR LIFE. He not only procures, but is our life. "I am the life." When we receive life we receive Him. The faith which saves embraces not an abstraction, a truth, but a Person. Many are satisfied with knowing about Christ — the Christian has vital union with Him. III. CHRIST IN HIS ORDINANCES IS THE SUPPORT OF OUR LIFE. All life requires sustenance. A flower that receives no rain or sunshine withers. God has appointed means for the nourishment of our life. 1. Secret prayer. What is this? An interview with a Person, not the mere utterance of desire breathed into the vacant air; growing intimacy with Christ; the soaring of the soul into the atmosphere of love and joy which makes the pulse of life beat more firmly. "The Christian's vital breath," etc. 2. The Sabbath, and its opportunities for sustained intercourse with Christ in sanctuary services (Psalm 63:2). The want of profit in these arises from not seeking God in them. Those who find Him receive augmentation of life. 3. The Lord's Supper, in which Christ brings Himself specially near, and to realize Him in it is to receive out of His fulness grace for grace. IV. CHRIST ON EARTH IS THE PATTERN OF OUR LIFE. All life has some outward manifestation. Every grace embodies itself in act. "Work of faith," etc. God has given us a rule in His Word after which we should conform ourselves. But He has taught us also by example. In Christ's lowly condition He has taught us not to be ashamed of our poverty. As a workman He ennobled trade. The sorrowful may be comforted by thinking of the Man of sorrows. What an example we have in Him of self-sacrifice, love, forgiveness, courage, etc. The closer we study His life the more we shall be assimilated to it as Moses was to the glory of God (2 Corinthians 3:18). V. CHRIST IN HEAVEN IS THE CONSUMMATION OF OUR LIFE. Here we have but grace, glory lies beyond. His presence in glory is a pledge that we shall share it. The bonds of union will be drawn closer. "For ever with the Lord," etc. Conclusion: There is no true life but in Christ. Let us beware lest Christ's lamentation, "Ye will not come unto Me," etc., be over us. (W. Steele, M. A.) I. TO THE CHRISTIAN'S RELATIVE LIFE: justification. 1. We are all dead in law. The soul destitute of the favour of God is dead. There remains only the execution of the sentence to complete our misery. 2. In this state Christ finds us and undertakes to be our life. One of the first questions of an awakened soul is, "How shall a man be just with God?" The gospel replies, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ." There was such merit in His cross that God, though just, becomes a Saviour. It is not by the works of the law or repentance, but by the atonement laid hold of by faith that we legally live. But this only justifies us instrumentally; Christ through it meritoriously. Whatever view the Scriptures take of it — release from curse, deliverance from wrath, remission of penalty, acceptance with God — Christ is always the author. II. TO THE CHRISTIAN'S ACTUAL LIFE: sanctification. 1. Our death in sin is not only a death in law, but a proper alienation from the life of God. Before we can be restored to communion with God a life of purity must be imparted. Of this Christ is the cause, His Spirit the agent, His word the instrument, His example the model. The outcome of all which is that as He was so are we in the world. 2. But Christ is our life not only as it respects the way in which we are made holy, but as it respects holiness in detail. He is(1) the life of all Christian graces.(a) Faith which gives life to good works, holy tempers, joyful affections; but faith is looking to an object; that object is Christ. It is receiving a gift; that gift is Christ.(b) Hope. Our anchor is cast within the vail, and is sure and steadfast; but if Christ had not entered first our attempts to cast it had been in vain.(c) Love. Christ is its object, purifier, director.(2) The life of all Christian duties. They are inspired by Him and directed to His glory.(3) The life of Christian ordinances. These will be wells without water if He be absent — sacraments, prayers, thanksgiving, preaching. III. THE CHRISTIAN'S FUTURE LIFE. 1. Of resurrection.(1) As His power is the agent to effect it.(2) Because His raised body will be its model.(3) Inasmuch as His appearance the second time will be its signal. 2. Of glory.(1) It is His to assign to each saint his proper place and occupation in heaven.(2) His presence mainly constitutes the bliss of heaven.(3) The degrees of heavenly glory will be regulated by the degrees of our nearness and intimacy to Christ. Conclusion: 1. The subject addresses itself most powerfully to the hearers of the gospel. Preachers labour in vain, hearers listen in vain, if there be no communication of life. 2. To earnest seekers of salvation the subject affords much encouragement. You want pardon, purity, strength, hope. Secure Christ for your life and you will have all. 3. Let Christians learn to be grateful, consistent, useful. (Jabez Bunting, D. D.) I. THE VITAL PRINCIPLE THAT IS RECOGNIZED. The relation between Christ and His people is vital. Christ is not merely the source and support of their life, but is it. There can be no life — physical, mental, or spiritual — apart from the action of the Divine mind. A- sculptor may carve a most life-like figure, but he cannot impart the vital principle. 1. This life is spiritual in its nature. The Christian is surrounded by material things, and resides in a material body; but his spiritual life is distinct. Christ creates and controls it. It is the life of faith, hope, love. 2. It is eternal in its duration. It does not prevent physical dissolution, but survives it. Christ has given us the fullest assurance of our immortality? It is part of the Divine life; therefore age cannot enfeeble its powers, disease cannot impair its beauty, and death cannot terminate its existence. 3. What is your life? Are you living to gratify the lowest or highest instincts of your nature? If the former your life is not worth living. II. THE SPLENDID SPECTACLE THAT IS PREDICTED. 1. The manner of Christ's appearing "in the glory of His Father with the holy angels." It is a splendid sight to witness a military review, to see the glittering swords, serried ranks, waving banners, to hear the clattering drums, martial strains, triumphant shout. But no earthly scene is worth comparing with the grandeur and solemnity of the second coming of Christ. Millions were ignorant of His first advent; all shall see His second. 2. Its purpose.(1) To be glorified. Once He appeared in weakness and humiliation; then in power and majesty.(2) To glorify us. 3. Its time. Unknown, and to attempt to settle it is to trifle with God's Word. When it comes it will be sudden and unexpected. III. THE GLORIOUS HOPE THAT IS AWAKENED. From the cradle to the grave our life is inspired by hope. The Christian hope is — 1. That one day we shall be with Christ. There are earthly companionships for which the heart sighs. Our affections cling to those we love. The believer clings to Christ who is the object of all his hope and desire. 2. That one day we shall participate in Christ's glory. What that glory is no mind can conceive. Can the seed understand the sweetness and beauty of the flower? the stone the form and grace of the statue? Here God's children are often poor and unknown. By and by Christ will recognize, honour, crown them. The poet's fame is brief, the soldier's glory uncertain, the king's crown perishable, but the Christian's triumph certain and eternal. (J. T. Woodhouse.) I. CHRIST IS OUR LIFE. 1. This is John's way of talking. "In Him was life," etc.(1) Christ is the source of our life. "As the Father raiseth up the dead," etc. Jesus is our Alpha as well as Omega. We should have been dead in sin if it had not been said, "You hath He quickened." He gives us the living water, which is in us a well springing up into everlasting life.(2) Its substance. There is much mystery in the new nature, but none as to what is its life. Penetrate the believer's heart and you will find Christ's love throbbing there; penetrate his brain and you will find Christ to be its central thought.(3) Its sustenance. He is the living bread which came down from heaven.(4) Its solace. His loving kindness is better than life.(5) Its object. As speeds the ship towards the port, the arrow to its goal, so flies the Christian towards the perfecting of His fellowship with Christ. As the soldier fights for his captain and is crowned in his captain's victory, so the Christian. "To me to live is Christ."(6) Its exemplar. The Christian has the portrait of Christ before him as the artist has the Greek sculptures. If he wants to study life, he studies from Christ. Husbands and wives truly knit together grow somewhat like each other in expression, if not in feature, and the heart in near fellowship with Jesus must grow like Him. Grace is the light, our loving heart the sensitive plate, Jesus the object who fills the lens of the soul, and soon a heavenly photograph of His character is produced — similarity of spirit, temper, motive, action. 2. What is true concerning our spiritual life now is equally true of our spiritual life in heaven. 3. This life of Christ marks our dignity. Kings cannot claim it as such. Talk of their blue blood and pedigree, here is something more. 4. This accounts for Christian holiness. How can a man remain in sin if Christ is his life? 5. See how secure the Christian is. Unless Christ dies he cannot die. II. CHRIST IS HIDDEN, SO, THEREFORE, IS OUR LIFE. 1. TO the unspiritual Christ is as though He did not exist. The worldling can neither see, taste, nor handle Him. Yet unseen as He is He is in heaven, full of joy, pleading before the throne, reigning, and having fellowship with His saints every where. 2. The servant is as his Lord, and is treated accordingly. III. CHRIST WILL ONE DAY APPEAR AND WE WITH HIM. 1. How? (1) (2) 2. When? No one knows, and it is impertinent to inquire. (C. H. Spurgeon.) I. CHRIST OUR LIFE. Many are Christ's glorious titles, but none more precious than this. Christ is our life inasmuch as He negatively delivers from death. But He does much more. In a positive sense He is our life. 1. In bringing spiritual and eternal life to the soul dead in sin. There is no life without light. When God said, "Let there be light," life soon came. So "in Him was light, and the light was the life of men." We cannot believe Christ till we know Him; when we know Him we believe, and by faith comes life. "This is life eternal," etc. 2. In being the indwelling life of the soul. An infidel once said to a man, "How can God dwell in man and man in God?" "How can fire be in iron and iron in fire? When the bar is in the furnace," was the reply. "In Christ." "Christ in you." 3. Through the soul's going out to Him for spiritual life and blessing. Plants stretch towards the light. If they are closed in a dark house, and there be a chink through which the light shines, they will stretch in that direction. Where there is spiritual life it will move towards Christ in faith and love. 4. In being the strength of our life. Herein lies alone our power for good against evil. It is no easy thing to live the Christian life; and forms afford little help against temptation and for duty. The old man must be thrown off and the new man put on, and Christ only is sufficient for that. .and just as we are strong in Christ shall we be able to discharge the duties here laid down. II. CHRIST OUR HOPE. 1. The present position of the Christian is good: his prospect is equally good. Hence not only Christ crucified, but Christ coming was the subject of apostolic Leaching. Christ's first coming was the desire of all nations; His second the grand hope of the Church. 2. His redeemed people will appear with Him.(1) They will for ever emerge from their obscurity.(2) They will be made glorious. The ambition of many is to shine in positions of honour; but surpassing every earthly distinction will be that of appearing with Christ. "If we suffer we shall also reign with Him," and "be like Him" A dying soldier said to his friend, "I am going to the front." The front is a position of danger and honour. This good soldier of Christ was going to the front to meet the last enemy, and also to receive the crown of victory. (T. West, B. A.) I. CHRIST IS OUR LIFE. 1. As its author (John 14:6). 2. As its matter (John 6:48). 3. As its exerciser and actor (John 15:5). 4. As its strengthener and cherisher (Psalm 138:3). 5. As its completer and finisher (Hebrews 12:2; Philippians 1:6). This being the case let us —(1) Not repent of anything done, suffered, or lost for Him. "All that a man hath will he give for his life."(2) Highly prize the Lord Jesus. He is worthy, and consider how highly He prizes you; and a Christ highly prized will be gloriously obeyed. II. BELIEVERS SHALL AT LAST APPEAR GLORIOUS (Judges 15:14; 1 Corinthians 15:43-44, 51-55; 1 Thessalonians 4:13; Matthew 19:26-28). The reasons are because — 1. The day of their appearing will be the marriage day of the lamb. Mourning weeds will be put off, and glorious robes put on. 2. They shall appear as kings crowned; here they are kings elected with the crown in reversion (2 Timothy 4:7-8). 3. Their enemies and persecutors will see them in their true character as God's favoured ones. 4. Their manifestation will make much for the honour of Christ. The more glorious the body or the bride, the more glorious the head or bridegroom. 5. The wicked will then justify the goodness and mercy of God in His dealings with His people. Objections will then be answered (Job 21:15; Malachi 3:14). 6. They shall be employed in glorious work (1 Corinthians 6:2-3). (T. Brooks.) II. CHRIST IS NOW HID. 1. He was so to the Old Testament Church, before His first coming; He is so to the New Testament Church before His second coming. There is nothing that speaks to our eyes or ears. But this is true also of God Himself. 2. But as the invisible things of God are manifested in creation, so the invisible things of Christ are made patent by the influence of His preached truth upon the mind and heart. We live "by faith not by sight." 3. This does not interfere with His purposes of mercy. Both God and Christ can bless without discovery to the senses, and if this fact becomes a snare and an affliction to those who trust Him, it is because they seek Him by sense not by faith. 4. By this arrangement the gospel appeals to the higher elements of our nature, to those faculties which identify us with the angels; and thus it tends to lift us above the seen and temporal. It compels us to think, and should call forth gratitude. III. CHRIST SHALL ONE DAY APPEAR. 1. This subject is shrouded in mystery, and every speculation as to the time, etc., has been falsified; which should warn us off, and turn us to practical preparation for His coming. 2. There is a sense in which Christ appears — (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) 3. His second coming is looked forward to not only by the Church on earth. Patriarchs, etc., who never saw Him on earth await it; so do glorified saints who have not forgotten the promises they learned here. 4. The purposes for which He shall appear are important in relation to —(1) His adversaries, who shall be completely subdued.(2) His friends, who have been aspersed and persecuted, and shall then be honoured and rewarded.(3) Himself; for His honour will then be vindicated in the presence of the Jew, unbeliever, and denier of His Godhead.(4) God, whose justice and mercy have been denied. IV. HIS PEOPLE SHALL APPEAR WITH HIM IN GLORY. 1. As Christ is hid so are His people. The angels know them (Luke 15.; Hebrews 1.) but not the world, and sometimes not one another; and many are hid in heaven. 2. When He appears so will they.(1) In countless multitudes; think of the millions of infants who have been saved the conflict, and the millions of believers who have triumphed over it.(2) In distinct individuality, as "every eye shall see Him," so they.(3) As identified with Christ. "Thine they were, and Thou hast given them Me."(4) In glory — free from sin and sorrow; publicly acquitted; possessed of the kingdom; body and soul happy for ever, and both like Christ. Let us hasten forward to meet this glory. (Joseph Davies.) ( Augustine.) (C. H. Spurgeon.) 1194 glory, divine and human 2336 Christ, exaltation May 5. "If Ye Then be Risen" (Col. Iii. 1). February 17. "Your Life is Hid" (Col. Iii. 3). May 18. "For Ye are Dead" (Col. Iii. 3). Fifth Sunday after Epiphany Easter Wednesday Also Suited to Easter Tuesday. Risen with Christ The Christian Training of Children. Unity and Peace. Christ is All Christ is All Some General Uses. Cups Running Over What have I to do with Idols? Christ Our Life. Meditations of the Misery of a Man not Reconciled to God in Christ. Christ all and in All. But, after that He had Made Mention of These Evils... "But Now do Ye Also," Saith He, "Put Down All... Epistle xxxiii. To Dominicus. How Servants and Masters are to be Admonished. How Subjects and Prelates are to be Admonished. Third Sunday after Trinity Humility, Trust, Watchfulness, Suffering What the Scriptures Principally Teach: the Ruin and Recovery of Man. Faith and Love Towards Christ. |