God's
Covenants With Man - The
Church
Our present subject is a wide one. It comprehends the covenants of
God - his covenant of works and covenant of grace. It is very obvious
that because God is an intelligence he must have a plan. If he be an
absolutely perfect intelligence, desiring and designing nothing but
good - if he be an eternal and immutable intelligence, his plan must be
one, eternal, all-comprehensive, immutable; that is, all things from
his point of view must constitute one system and sustain a perfect
logical relation in all its parts. Nevertheless, like all other
comprehensive systems, it must itself be composed of an infinite number
of subordinate systems. In this respect it is like these heavens which
he has made, and which he has hung before our eyes as a type and
pattern of his mode of thinking and planning in all providence. We know
that in the solar system our earth is a satellite of one of the great
suns, and of this particular system we have a knowledge because of our
position; but we know that this system is only one of myriads, with
variations, that have been launched in the great abyss of space. So we
know that this great, all-comprehensive plan of God, considered as one
system, must contain a great many subordinate systems which might be
studied profitably, if we were in the position to do so, as
self-contained wholes, separate from the rest.
Now, the great system of human redemption must in some respects stand
alone, conspicuous and pre-eminent, above all other plans and systems
of God. Even though God work through eternity, even though he work
through infinity, God has but one Son The incarnation of the Son of God
cannot be repeated. This is an event, even in the annals of eternity
and in the annals of the universe, without precedent, without parallel,
without equal. And this incarnation of the Son of God, this taking upon
himself the very nature of man, this uniting himself through the body
of man with the whole material universe, and through the soul of man
with the whole moral and spiritual universe, must in its very nature
have wrought a change affecting universally and intimately all the
provinces and kingdoms and all the individuals which it embraces.
Besides this, a system which is worthy of the incarnation and the death
of the Son of God must be something transcendently superior. I do
believe that among all the commonwealths of the sons of God - and I
believe these are infinite in number, in extent, and in variety - this
commonwealth of redeemed humanity must occupy a central and interior
position; that it is something unique, unparalleled, which cannot even
in the universe of God be frequently experienced by any of his
creatures. And this which seems to us to be possible and probable
appears to be absolutely confirmed by the apostle Paul in his Epistle
to the Ephesians, where he says, as you will remember, that in the
fulness of time this great undiscovered secret, which God had hitherto
kept to himself, he had now begun to unveil gradually and slowly
through the gospel; to wit, his purpose to make men "accepted through
the Beloved," his purpose to bring us under one Head in Christ, and to
consolidate under one Head in Christ all things which are in heaven or
upon the earth, "even in him."
Now, this plan is in effect a covenant. A great many, comparatively
recently, have come to doubt whether it is proper to apply terms so
human to the transactions and relations of God. And yet I do believe
that I can show to you that the very facts of the case justify this
language, and that they implicitly and necessarily contain all these
principles. The term "covenant" is not commonly found in ancient
theology. Hints of it - that is, the recognition of God's plan and
purpose - began to appear in the century preceding the Reformation in
the Roman Catholic Church, and then among the first Reformers. It was
developed very distinctly afterward by one of the authors of the
Heidelberg Catechism. That form of theology itself is generally
attributed to the agency of Dutch theologians, who introduced it about
the middle of the seventeenth century. But it is found in the early
part of that century, in a book of great simplicity, called The Body of
Divinity (compiled by Archbishop Usher, who was a man of very great
learning).
Now, I believe that some foreign divines, and some in England, carried
out this covenant form of theology in detail in a manner that might be
called anthropomorphic. Yet it is evident that if God's dealings with
man are ethical, if in their essential nature the system of redemption
grew out of the relations of persons, and if the process consisted in
the way of teaching, of commandments, of promises, of threatenings, of
the presence of motives addressed to the will, and of determinate
actions of form and character, then, in its last analysis, all the
dealings of God must necessarily come back to this form of a covenant.
What is the essence of a covenant between equals except a mutual
understanding and the agreement of two wills ? What is the essential
nature of a covenant formed between a superior and inferior but this -
a
conditional promise? The promise is a reward on the condition of
obedience, associated with threatening of punishment on the condition
of disobedience. It follows from this, necessarily, that if you begin
with an eternity, an eternal plan of God must be a mutual one in which
the three Persons come to an understanding and knowledge of that common
purpose in which they distribute among themselves reciprocally their
several functions. Then when God comes to deal with any intelligent
creature, whether it be an angel or a man, under any circumstances, if
he commands or promises, or if he threatens, you have there all the
elements of a covenant, because a, covenant is simply a mutual
understanding, and the covenant imposed by a superior upon an inferior
is simply a conditional promise. Hence we have the covenant of works,
the covenant of redemption, and the covenant of grace.
Now, the covenant of works is so called because its condition is the
condition of works. It is called also, and just as legitimately, the
covenant of life, because it promises life. It is called a legal
covenant, because it proceeded, of course, upon the assumption of
perfect obedience, conformity in character and action, to the perfect
law of God. And it is no less a covenant of grace, because it was a
covenant in which our heavenly Father, as a guardian of all the natural
rights of his newly-created creatures, sought to provide for this race
in his infinite wisdom and love and infinite grace through what we call
a covenant of works. The covenant of grace is just as much and just as
entire a covenant, receiving it as coming from an infinite superior to
an inferior.
Now look precisely to the facts in the case. Let there be no
speculation, let there be no inferences, but take the facts as they
are. In the first place, God created man, as we saw in our last
lecture, a newly-awakened being, intelligent, moral, with free-will,
with a natural character through which he was able to do right, able to
do wrong, apparently. In the second place, we know it to be a universal
principle - and as it is of God, it seems to us to be a very just
principle - that holy character is made to depend upon personal choice.
But it does not seem to me that this is always and absolutely
essential. We know that the immutable, holy character of God did not
originate in personal choice; that God's existence is eternal; his
existence is absolutely necessary, absolutely immutable, and that God
is from eternity and essentially God, rational, holy, and wise. And yet
it does seem as if God had determined to make the moral character of
all the subjects of his moral government to depend upon personal
choice; and it seems to us as if that was right. He made man, in the
first place, holy and capable of doing right, but without a confirmed
character he was liable to fall. Ought this confirmed character to
result from and depend upon his own personal actions.
I say that this seems to be God's plan everywhere, because we find it
true, without exception, wherever we have any record of God's doings.
In the first place, He created the angels, and gave the angels an
opportunity of obedience or an opportunity of falling. Each one of them
seems to have stood in his own person, and those who fell remained
fallen. Those who maintained their first state continued afterward
absolutely and eternally in the image of God. Then when God brings
forth the gospel, his method is to preach the gospel to every creature,
and to offer to all men this amazing gift of eternal life which
covenants confirmed moral character, and which we may receive or refuse
according to our personal choice.
Then, if this were so, obviously man must have had a probation - a
probation in its very essence, because a time of trial and state of
trial must be given. That is, God put man in a state of existence, in a
state of moral equilibrium. He was in equilibrium because he was holy.
His heart was disposed aright; his impulses were right. God endowed him
thus with original righteousness; but he was in a state of freedom. His
character was not confirmed; he was capable of either obeying or
sinning. Now, it would have been an infinite loss to us, an
inconceivable danger, if God had determined to keep us for ever,
throughout all the unending ages of eternity, hanging thus upon the
ragged edge of possible probation, and always in this unstable
condition, this unstable equilibrium, able to do right, and liable also
to fall; and, therefore, God offered to man in this gracious covenant
of works an opportunity of accepting his grace and receiving his
covenant gift of a confirmed, holy character, secured on the condition
of personal choice.
God gave Adam and Eve the best chance he could, and he put them surely
under absolutely the most favorable conditions that we can conceive of.
He brought them into a new garden, and he introduced them under the
most favorable circumstances, with one exception - he allowed the devil
to go into the camp. Why he did that I do not know; but with that
exception the conditions were the most favorable we can conceive of.
Then he reduced the test to the simplest and easiest - the test simply
of a personal violation of law, a test simply of loyal obedience. He
did not make the condition, Thou shalt not lie; which, under the
circumstances, would have been utterly impossible to Adam, who was a
holy, honest man. He did not make the condition, Thou shalt not abuse
thy wife Eve; which would have been impossible with Adam in his state
as he was originally created. But be reduced the condition to one of
specific obedience to a positive command, in itself absolutely
distinct. Now, the only difficulty that seems to inhere in this view of
man's original condition lies in the fact that the destinies of all
Adam's descendants were made to be suspended upon his action. We all
inherit what we call original sin. And two questions here start up, the
question as to how original sin comes upon us, and the question why
original sin, under the government of a holy God, is allowed to come
upon us.
These are two entirely distinct questions. You do not answer the
question why when you explain the method by which original sin comes
down to us in the order of generation; you must carry the question up
to a higher plane and solve it in the light of divine choice.
Undoubtedly, this bringing down upon each individual this original
taint of our nature, which is the fontal source of all evils - moral,
physical, temporal, eternal - is the greatest of all judgments, and it
is either a tyrannical act of the Creator or it is a sublime act of
justice. Every angel was created a spirit; every angel was constituted
self-determining in his own person. But constituted as we are,
possessing a responsible and moral nature like angels, which comes into
existence in connection with propagated animal bodies, such an
individual probation is absolutely impossible. From the very
constitution of the human body, and from the nature of the case,
anything that Adam did must determine his destiny and that of his
children. As Hugh Miller says:
"It is a universal law, just as wide as the providence of
God and as the history of man, that God has so constituted men
everywhere that the free-will of the parent becomes the destiny of the
child."
If this be so, we must believe in the covenant of works, and that God
has ordained this relation, not only in infinite wisdom and in infinite
power, but in infinite justice and righteousness.
But this fact of the covenant of works does not stand by itself. It is
a part of a great whole, and if you leave out any element of the system
you will not get an understanding of the covenant. This covenant of
works which God introduces, and the subject of which is the government
of man and his whole career in this world, is part of that greater
system which culminates in the covenant of grace, with its headship in
the first Adam introducing us into the headship of the second Adam.
There has been no Christ except among men. "Forasmuch then as the
children are partakers of flesh sad blood, he also himself likewise
took part of the same......For verily not of angels doth he take hold,
but he taketh hold of the seed of Abraham." Angels had a nature, but
angels did not have a seed. Christ's relation to the seed of Abraham
results from the generic nature of maxi, from the very constitution of
the covenant of works. If there had been no covenant of works, there
could have been no covenant of redemption; if there had been no fallen
Adam, there could have been no redemption in Christ. You must study the
covenant of works always in the light of that larger system wherein it
is established that where sin abounded grace has infinitely more
abounded.
Further: we say, then, that if the Father and Son and Holy Spirit
constitute one Trinity, the plan must be a mutual one, and must contain
within it all the elements of such a plan. According to the intimation
of this plan given in the Bible, the Father must be an absolute God;
the Son must represent his own people, whose nature he was to take. We
know such an arrangement was made. Christ often speaks of the work
which his Father, God, had, sent him to do. Be says, " This commandment
have I received from my Father." Then he says, "All that the Father
giveth Me shall come to Me." Here are all the elements of a covenant.
There was an understanding between the Father and the Son as to the
reward which the Son was to gain, so that we have all the elements of
the covenant of redemption. The Father undertook all the providential
conditions; the Son was to do all the work in the world, and to that
end the world is to be prepared for it, and that he might have the
proper conditions of life, and afterward that he should see his seed
and be satisfied with the results, with the crowning fruits that he
should receive. Then the Son undertook, on behalf of his own people, to
take upon himself their nature, to meet their obligations, and to
suffer the penalty which had been pronounced upon them. The Holy Ghost
undertook also afterward to apply these benefits, and undertook this
part of the work because it is the covenant of three Persons, you must
remember. He undertook the work of generating the body of the Son, of
preparing his human nature, an entire human nature in its fulness, so
as to render Him , on the human side, a proper. being. The Holy Ghost
undertook to co-operate with him in every part of his earthly being,
and then to constitute himself the other Advocate, which completes the
whole work of redemption. He comes to us and takes the things of Christ
and applies them to us. He makes continual intercession within us as
Christ makes continual intercession for us.
Now, what is commonly called the covenant of grace as distinct from the
covenant of redemption is just the human and external side of this
eternal covenant of redemption.
Both the covenants are executed in our behalf, both under one name, the
covenant of grace. It is better, however, to distinguish them, and to
call the covenant between the Persons of the eternal Godhead, the
covenant of redemption, which is eternally transcendent, and which is
full of light and love, and life and power, the provisions and scope of
whose grace transcend the imaginations of man or the tongues of angels.
But the covenant of grace is just the human temporal side, which makes
human redemption possible and gives its benefits freely to us. In the
case of every one to whom the gospel comes, and to whom it gives
salvation, it is done upon the condition of faith. Now, here is a
covenant with a condition whosoever believes shall be saved, whosoever
believeth not shall be damned. Then the Lord Jesus Christ comes to view
and is represented as the Mediator of the covenant, because it all
depends upon his mediatorial work, and, above all, he is represented as
the Surety. We promise and he indorses. You promise faith upon your
knees, and the Lord Jesus Christ indorses for you. You promise service
upon your knees, and the Lord Jesus Christ indorses for you. You see
how much it is that God asks of you. He says you hall be saved. If we
have no belief, we are utterly incompetent to attain to that salvation.
Christ gives us faith: we promise trust, and Christ indorses it. We are
offered salvation if we will serve; but we have no strength, no merit.
Christ gives us the grace: we promise, since Christ indorses it. We are
offered salvation if we fight the battle and persevere unto the end: we
make our pledge, Christ indorses it. Thus our salvation is absolutely
and infinitely secure.
Now, of course this covenant sustains to the whole work in the whole
sphere of redemption the same relation as the constitution of a
republic or of a limited monarchy sustains to the government of a land.
Potentially, all the powers of government, all the elements of
political society, are represented and granted in the provisions of our
constitution; and so, potentially, all the elements of salvation,
everything that can be experienced in the body of Christians in the
earth, everything that can be distinct to the soul of the Christian on
earth, everything that can be experienced throughout all eternity,
everything that can be realized in the individual, everything that can
be realized in the community, the whole body of the redeemed - all this
is contained potentially in the provisions of the covenant of grace.
But this covenant, like all other covenants and constitutions, must be
administered; and there is a difference between the covenant and its
administration. The covenant is one; it is the administration which
varies continually.
This is a form of language which it would have been very well for the
translators of our Bible to have adopted. The Greek word diatheke means
constitution as much as anything else in the world. It is a
constitution. In the old classical language it was used to express that
kind of a constitution which a man makes when he makes a will, a
testament. You have the unalterable inheritance, and you can never get
rid of it. I prefer the old Latin word "dispensation'' to the words New
Testament and Old Testament. These are not proper terms. The diatheke
occurs dozens of times in the Bible; you can see the use of it and
determine the sense - the constitution, the administration of the
constitution. That is, it is a covenant or it is a dispensation of God.
If you will then just go back to your Greek concordance and take up
your New Testament where this word first occurs, and carry it through,
you will find how exactly it has this meaning. You see that covenant,
or constitution of grace in the form of a covenant, which provides for
the salvation of man from the beginning of the history of the human
race to the present.
So there has been but one redemption, there has been but one atonement
and one offer of justification, there has been but one offer of
regeneration, there has been but one principle of sanctification, there
has been but one operation of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, from the
time that the first gospel was preached to the woman in the garden,
until the present day. But then this wonderful constitution has been
administered in an infinite variety of ways, and it is capable of
twofold unfolding. You take up this constitution, and subject it to a
logical unfolding, and you have in it, of course, all possible
theology. It has been shown over and over again how all the unfolding
of God's plans, as far as those plans have been disclosed to us, and
can be exhibited, makes manifest infinite variations and provisions for
the redemption of men which can be exhibited under this form, logically
and unvaryingly.
There is a second unfolding of the covenant of grace which is
chronological: not only is it unfolded logically in itself, but it
brings out all the different elements in time. It has been unfolded
chronologically from the Garden of Eden up to the present time in the
wonderful development of the Church of the first-born, the Church of
the covenant, the Church purchased by Christ's blood.
THE CHURCH AND ITS UNITY
What is the Church ? There is one thing certain about it: the Church
has a great many attributes, but that which is absolutely essential is
its absolute unity. There is no doubt if there be but one God, there is
but one Church; if there be but one Christ, there is but one Church; if
there be but one cross, there is but one Church; if there be but one
Holy Ghost, there is but one Church. This is absolutely settled - there
can be but one Church. We have heard about the visible and invisible
Church, as if there were two churches. There cannot be two churches,
one that is visible and another that is invisible. There is but one
Church, and that Church is visible or invisible just according to the
eye that is looking, just according to the point of view taken.
Now, I take the true distinction to be, the Church as we see it, the
normal Church, and the Church as God sees it. In respect to this matter
our vision is limited in the way of discrimination. You and I cannot
discriminate in regard to the Church; we have to take presumptions, we
have to take the outward indications, when we make an examination.
God's eye is absolutely discriminating. Looking down, he sees the line
of demarcation which separates the Church and the world; his vision is
sharp and keen. Then, again, our view is not very comprehensive; we see
what we call the Church, and we conclude that it is the Church. I have
often thought of this as an illustration. I ask a man, "Have you seen
the planet, the Earth? " he would say, "Yes, I live on it." That is one
of the reasons you never saw it. You never saw the planet Earth as you
see the planet Jupiter; you never saw the planet Earth as you see its
satellite, the moon. It is absolutely impossible; you are too near it;
you see but one little segment of it; nothing but a fraction - a very
little at a time. You must get away from the object in order to take it
in as a whole, and you must have the advantage of perspective. So in
regard to the Church: it is so vast, it has been gathering through the
ages, through the centuries, through millenniums; its members come from
the ends of the earth; and myriads, ten thousand times ten thousand and
thousands of thousands beyond the calculations of angels, have been
gathering there in white robes around the throne of Christ. Can you see
it ? We are too purblind, too earthly in our conditions; but we may see
a part of it. What is called the invisible Church is the most
conspicuous object in the universe; it has come to shine, to be like
the Sun, and like an army with banners. What is called the invisible
Church is the only Church that exists. We see parts of it; it becomes
visible to us in sections, in partial glimpses; but yet it is the same
Church. Now, the distinction I make is, the Church as God sees it, and
the Church as man sees it.
There have been two distinct conceptions of the Church: one is the
theory that the Church consists of an organized society which God has
constituted, that identity consists in its external form as well as in
its spirit, and that its life depends upon continuity of officers from
generation to generation This is held by a great many able men, men of
intellect, and by many respectable, level-headed Christians as well.
I hold this to be simply impossible. The marks of the Church are
catholicity, apostolicity, infallibility, and purity. Now, apply that
to any corporation - to the Church in Jerusalem or to the Church in
Antioch; to the Congregational Church, to the Presbyterian, or to the
Prelatical Churches. I do not care as to the form; but there never did
exist, and there does not now exist, any organized society upon the
face of the earth of which these qualities could be predicated. Not one
of these societies has apostolicity - that is, precisely the apostolic
form as well as the apostolic spirit; not one of these societies has
had an absolute organic continuity, or has, without modification,
preserved it. Societies, like the Church of Rome, which are most
conspicuous in claiming these marks for themselves, are most
conspicuously unworthy of them, because there is no comparison between
their ritual of service, their organization, and the apostolic Church
with which they claim to be identified.
The only possible definition of a Church is that it consists of what is
termed "the body of Christ" - that is, human souls regenerated by the
presence and power of the Holy Ghost, kept in immediate union with
Christ. Of this you can predicate apostolicity, catholicity, and the
sanctifying power and perpetual presence of the Holy Ghost, which
belongs to the Church of Christ. This is the true Church, which exists
through all the successive generations of men, which is united to
Christ, and which shares in the benefits of his redemption through the
indwelling of the Holy Ghost. This great body is one because the Holy
Ghost dwells in it and makes it one. This Church is apostolical,
because it is unchanging as to apostolic doctrine; it is catholic,
because it contains in one body all of God's people in all worlds and
in all time; it unites all from the creation of the world to the coming
of Christ, and all from the coming of Christ to the end of the world,
in one body - absolutely one, both visible and invisible.
But you may ask me, as a good Presbyterian, a High Church
Presbyterian - because we have a High Church as well as a Low
Church - -you may ask me, Do you not think there is a visible Church?
Yes, I believe the true Church is visible. It consists of men and women
who are regenerated, who have divine life, and whose divine life is
shown in their holy walk and conversation. You ask if the Church must
not be organized ? I say yes; but organization is never an essential of
the Church. Organization is a simple accident; it is a necessary
accident; it is a very important one with us; it is, according to our
mode of thinking, obligatory, because it is commanded. By means of
organization we have solidification and growth, and it is a great means
of self-propagation in accomplishing the great missionary work of
carrying the gospel to the ends of the earth. But Christ never did make
organization needful in the sense that our being Presbyterians is an
essential of the Church.
You and I believe that immortality is provided for all souls before
birth, as well as after birth, and for infants that have not come to
free morel agency, irrespective of their knowledge of Christ. Now,
think of the history of the world since Adam: all the souls of those
that have died before birth or between birth and moral agency have been
redeemed in Christ. You see that organization cannot be the essence of
the Church. I tell you that the infinite majority of the spiritual
Church of Jesus Christ come into existence outside of all organization.
Through all the ages, from Japan, from China, from India, from Africa,
from the islands of the sea, age after age, multitudes flocking like
birds have gone to heaven of this great company of redeemed infants of
the Church of God; they go without organization. Now this is
demonstration: that if the great majority of the Church always has
existed outside of organization, then organization, while of
assistance, is not essential to the Church. You may add church to
church; these are but the incidental forms which the universal Church
of God assumes on different occasions under the guidance of the Spirit,
under the guidance of God's providence, as great propaganda for the
purpose of accomplishing the great and divine work of carrying the
gospel to the ends of the earth.
The Church had its beginning in the family. The plan of redemption
assumes and presumes the original state of human beings as in the
family. How has the Church been logically and chronologically composed?
In the first place, we have what is called the patriarchal
administration in the original constitution of the race. There was no
organization of the Church then; there was not much organization in the
world, none of the state as distinct from the family. The father was
the sovereign; the great father - that is, the patriarch - was the head
of the Church; and just as Adam had led his descendants away from God,
so under the covenant of redemption did these patriarchal fathers,
these prophets, priests, and kings, lead their people back to him. In
that age there was no priesthood, there were no sacraments. The next
form was the Abrahamic dispensation, which was a more specific promise
to the Church, the promise connected with the covenant of grace. There
was more light, more doctrine, and we have here the specific sacrament
of circumcision which was added to the specific covenant.
Then we come, in the third place, to the Mosaic dispensation. It is
well recognized that the wonderful phenomena of this dispensation must
be understood as presenting a threefold aspect or character, and it
becomes very much more simple when we do this.
In the first place, these Jews were a people who, in their own time,
constituted a distinct nation. God was their God, and a large portion
of his providences toward them had reference simply to their temporal
interests and to their relations as a specific people. They had a
government which guarded the relations they sustained. to other
nations; therefore you must understand a great many of their laws with
reference to this specific characteristic. The Jews were constituted a
kingdom, and God was their God.
Another far more important aspect of the Jewish system was this: it was
a promulgation of the covenant of works which was introduced at Sinai,
and the design of this promulgation was to lead those generations to
the gospel, for the gospel presupposes the law. The law has been from
the beginning the schoolmaster to lead us to Christ. Therefore in this
aspect it was a missionary institution, and must be understood as
preparatory; it was the preaching of the doctrine of sin and
condemnation in order to prepare man for the preaching of the doctrine
of grace and salvation.
Then, again, it did most characteristically in the specific form of its
administration outline the covenant of redemption; it was the setting
forth of Christ - Christ as the Prophet, Priest, and King - in the
method
of his redemption and our personal reception of its benefits. The
conditions of salvation were the same, and salvation was secured by the
same plan. The Jew, if he believed in Christ's coming, was justified
and received the Holy Ghost, although without understanding it, and was
regenerated, sanctified, and justified; and being thus justified and
sanctified, when he died he went to be, not with Christ - there was at
that time no incarnate Christ; he did not exist - but he went into that
happy place in which God gathered all his Old Testament people - in
Abraham's bosom.
Now, how shall we regard the logical unfolding of the covenant from the
time of Moses to the time of Christ? First, we have the breaking down
of the middle wall of partition by the taking away of the limitation
presented by the institution of the Church as a nation: it was confined
under these circumstances to one people; it was incapable of being
expanded among the nations of the earth. It is a remarkable fact that
the Old Dispensation opened with the tower of Babel and the confusion
of tongues, and the New opens with the Pentecost and the gift of
tongues. The Old Dispensation began with the process of selection and
exclusion: there was an election of the children of Israel out of all
mankind, and a rejection of all the rest; a selection of the Israelites
out of the Hebrews, and the rejection of the rest; and the selection of
Judah out of Israel, and the rejection of the rest. But now see how the
principle changes. Under the Old Dispensation it was exclusion and
segregation; under the New Testament it is expansion and comprehension.
The new Church begins in a little upper chamber in Jerusalem. The
Church becomes the Church of the Jews; it becomes the Church of the
Roman empire; it becomes the Church of Europe; it becomes the Church of
the world.
Now, as to the unity of this Church I have something to say. A great
many are agitated at present with regard to Church unity and its
manifestations, and I think there is a great deal of confusion of
thought as to the original conception of the Church itself. If the
Church be an external society, then all deviation from that society is
of the nature of schism; but if the Church be in its essence a great
spiritual body, constituted by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost through
all the ages and nations, uniting all to Christ, and if its external
organization is only accidental and temporary, and subject to change
and variation, then deviation of organization, unless touched by the
spirit of schism, is not detrimental to the Church. I do believe that
God's purpose, on the contrary, has been to differentiate his Church
without end. You know that the very highest form of beauty of which you
can conceive, the very highest form of older, is multiplicity in unity
and unity in multiplicity; the higher the order of unity, the greater
must be the multiplicity.
This is so everywhere. Go to the ocean: every drop of water is the
repetition of every other drop, and there is union simply without
diversity. Go to the desert of Sahara, and every grain of sand is the
duplicate of every other grain of sand; but there is no unity, no life.
You could not make a great cathedral by piling up simple identical
rhomboids or cubes of stone. It is because you differentiate, and make
every stone of a different form in order to perform a different
function, and then build them up out of this multitudinous origination
into the continuity and unity of the one plan or architectural idea,
that you have your cathedral. You could not make a great piece of music
by simply multiplying the same tone or sound. In order to obtain the
harmony of a great orchestra, you get together a large number of
musical instruments, or you have a great number of human voices in a
choir, and you combine them, then you have an infinite variety of
quality and infinite variety of tone. You combine them in the absolute
unit of the one great musical idea which you seek to express.
But if this is true of such things, it is more true of Christ's Church.
If God had followed our idea, how simple a thing it would have been to
make a united Church descending from Adam and Eve! We might think that
was all that could be done, and there would be then no stones of
stumbling. You could then watch this Church, and it would go on
indefinitely and without limit.
Now, what has God been doing? He has broken humanity up into infinite
varieties. This has been his method. He has been driving it into every
clime. He has been driving it into every age through the succession of
centuries. He has been molding human nature under every variety of
influences through all time, until he has got men in every age, every
tribe, every tongue, every nation, every color, every fashion - in
order
to do what? Simply to build up a, variety, to build up the rich,
inexhaustible variety which constitutes the beauty in unity of this
great infinite Church of the first-born, whose final dwelling-place is
to be in heaven.
I say, under this dispensation God has left us free to form
organizations. He has left us free to experience Christianity under all
the conditions in which he has placed us; and the Christian religion
which we receive takes various colors and tones from the nationality,
from the tribe, and from the race. Undoubtedly, there is such a thing
as schism. Schism is a great sin. But if the Church is a spiritual
body, the sin is a sin against spiritual unity.
All high-churchism, all claims that our Church is the one Church and
only Church, are of the essence of schism; all pride and bigotry are of
the essence of schism; all want of universal love, all jealousy, and
all attempts to take advantage of others in controversy or in Church
extension, are of the essence of schism. But surely it is not schism
for each one of us to go out and develop in our own way. What is the
result? I trust in this I am not narrow. I am not making any claim for
Presbyterianism; I am talking of the whole Church of God that is truly
loyal to Christ, animated by one Spirit, comprehended in one body. On
the other hand, I hold that it is our interest to have denominational
differences in order to maintain what God has given us.
I believe the Church is like the world, and consists of many forms,
many races. I say to every race, Maintain the integrity of your race;
and to every nation, Maintain the integrity of your nation, that it be
not antagonized by other nations. This is the duty which God has
historically devolved upon us. I say, then, if Presbyterianism be true,
maintain the type which God has given you; and I would say the same to
our Baptist friends, and to our Episcopal friends and Methodist
friends. I believe all our denominations are historically justified;
that they all represent great ideas, either theoretically or
practically, which God commits to them, in order to have them act upon
them; that our duty is to maintain our true inheritance, and to prove
true to the stock from which we came. We do desire comprehensively to
work together toward unity, but mongrelism is not the way to get it. It
is not by the uniting of types, but by the unity of the Spirit; it is
not by working from without, but from within outward; by taking on more
of Christ, more of the Spirit, that we will realize more and more the
unity of the Church in our own happy experience.