No. 1915-32:415. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, August 22, 1886, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
And they truly were many priests, because they were not allowed to
continue by reason of death: but this man, because he continues for
ever, has an unchangeable priesthood. Therefore he is able also to
save to the uttermost those who come to God by him, since he lives
for ever to make intercession for them. {Heb 7:23-25}
For other sermons on this text:
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 84, “Salvation to the Uttermost” 79}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1915, “Ever-Living Priest, The” 1916}
Exposition on Hag 1:1-2:9 Heb 7:15-28 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3442, “Desire of All Nations, The” 3444 @@ "Exposition"}
1. The apostle Paul is very much at home with his theme whenever he is extolling his Master. When handling the Jewish types and figures, with which he was so familiar, he was charmed to point out how far superior the Lord Jesus Christ is to any and all the priests of the Old Testament economy. In this case he is dwelling on the special honour of our Lord, because his priesthood is without end, since, he himself is not put out from the priesthood by reason of death. A common priest served from thirty to fifty years of age, and then his work was done: priests of the house of Aaron, who because high priests, held their office through life. Sometimes a high priest would continue in his office, therefore, for a considerable length of time, but in many cases he was cut off as other men are by premature death; hence there was priest after priest of the order of Aaron to go within the veil for the people. Our Lord is of another race, being a priest according to the order of Melchizedek, “having neither beginning of days nor end of life.” He was made a priest not after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life. He continues to make intercession for the people of God by virtue of his eternal life and perpetual priesthood. In this respect the true Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ, rises above all former priests: they were indeed only types and shadows of himself.
2. This superiority of our Lord Jesus Christ is a topic which will not interest everyone. To many people it will seem a piece of devotional rapture, if not an idle tale. Yet there will always be a remnant according to the election of grace to whom this meditation will be inexpressibly sweet. Who are the people who will be interested by this theme? They are indicated in the text: those who come to God by Jesus Christ. The people who are in the habit of using Christ as their way of access to God are those who will value him beyond all price, and such people will delight to hear him extolled in the highest terms.
3. We will begin our discourse, then, by the enquiry: Do we come to God by Jesus Christ? Listen, and answer for yourselves. Do we come to God at all? Do we recognise the Lord our God as a person who should be approached? Are we now approaching to him? Are we among those who are always coming to God, to whom at the last the great Judge shall say, “You have been coming, continue to come. Come, you blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you?” Or are we departing from God by forgetting him, or rebelling against him, so that we shall be among that number to whom the Judge shall say, “You have long been departing, continue to do so. Depart, you cursed, into everlasting fire in hell, prepared for the devil and his angels?”
4. Are we coming to God? — that is the question. Is the direction of our lives towards God? We are either going to God or from God, and by this we may forecast our everlasting destiny. The direction in which the arrow is flying predicts the target in which it will be fixed: the way the tree is leaning, that way foretells the place of its fall, and where the tree falls, there it will lie. So let us judge ourselves today: which way are we drifting? Have we ever come to God by sincere repentance of our wanderings? Have we come to him by faith, and are we reconciled to him? Do we come to him in prayer? Do we come to him day by day, speaking with him and desiring to walk with him? Do we come to God by communion with him, having fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ? Do we, in fact, know the meaning of what it is to draw near to God? It is bad for us if we either have no God, or if he seems to be very far off, an almost unrecognisable phantom, an idea never fully comprehended, much less approached! Blessed are those who know the name of the Lord and who walk with him, rejoicing in the light of his countenance. It is to such people to whom Jesus is precious as their way of access to the Father.
5. In the description there is a little word of distinction, for the people who are said to be saved by the great Intercessor are those who come to God by him. Certain people talk of coming to God as Creator, and Ruler, and even as Father, but they do not think of his dear Son as their way of approach. They forget or else deny the declaration of our Lord Jesus — “No man comes to the Father, but by me.” Yet this saying is true. There is no true way of approach to God except through Jesus Christ, the one Mediator between God and man. A deep abyss separates us from God, and only that ladder which Jacob saw can bridge the gulf. Our Lord Jesus, being God and man in one person, reaches from side to side of the chasm. Coming near to us, this ladder stands at our foot in the human nature of our Lord, and it reaches right up to the infinite Majesty by reason of the divine nature of our Redeemer. God and man, in one person, unites God and man in one league of love. We come to God by Jesus Christ. Prayers in which Christ is forgotten are insults to the God of revelation: faith in which Jesus is not the foundation of our hope is a mere delusion. God cannot accept us if we will not accept his Son. Oh sinner, God has opened one door in heaven: if you will not go in by that door you shall never enter within the walls of the new Jerusalem. God invites you come to him by one in whom he is well pleased; and if you will not be pleased with Jesus you cannot come to the Father. Oh you who are daily users of this royal way to God, you will forgive me if I hide myself behind my Lord today, and seek to do nothing more than, in all simplicity, to present his unchangeable priesthood and endless life. Pray the Lord to help me to extol the great high priest of our profession, and also to help you all to join in the praise of Jesus in the power of his Holy Spirit.
6. In the text there are four subjects for your consideration: they are joined together as links of a golden chain, and they are all full of encouragement for you. Here is a great Saviour with an endless life, secondly, with an endless priesthood; thirdly, with an endless intercession; and fourthly, with an endless salvation: “He is able to save those to the uttermost who come to God by him, since he lives for ever to make intercession for them.”
7. I. First, we have in our Lord Jesus Christ a priest with AN ENDLESS LIFE.
8. I want you to think earnestly upon this very simple theme: it is in the simplicities that we find our greatest consolations. Our Lord Jesus is not as Aaron, who had to be stripped of his garments on the top of Mount Hor, and to die in the mount; neither is he like any of the sons of Aaron who in due time suffered the infirmities of age, and at last bowed their heads to inevitable death. He died once, but death has no more dominion over him; it is witnessed of him that he lives.
9. We clearly perceive that our Lord Jesus possesses endless life as God, for how shall the Godhead expire? It is not possible for the Godhead to cease or to suspend its existence. Our Lord is “God over all, blessed for ever”; and in this respect he is necessarily everlasting with respect to his life.
10. But our Lord lives for ever also with respect to his manhood. Though he died to sin once, he soon rose again from the dead, his body never having seen corruption. He died in his priesthood and for his priesthood, but never from his priesthood. By his resurrection his manhood was fully restored to a life which dies no more. We speak of him, as “he who lives, and was dead, and is alive for evermore.” This is a very sweet truth for those who are in Christ Jesus. The Lord Jesus Christ had lived one life as a man: why did he not end that life as a man when he died on the cross? It shows his deep attachment to our manhood, that he retained the human nature after his great sacrifice had been presented and accepted. The fact that he again appeared as a man among men, and carried human nature into his glorified estate is clear evidence of his deep attachment to our humanity. If some glorious spirit from on high, angel or archangel, had loved a race of ants, and had condescended for the salvation of these tiny creatures to assume their nature, and if in that nature he had died for them, you would naturally expect that at the conclusion of his labours and sufferings he would lay aside the form of his humiliation and return to the greatness of his former estate. But our Lord Jesus Christ, whose stoop of condescension when he assumed our nature was greater than any archangel could have achieved, having taken our human nature, and having bled and died in it, continued to wear it after he had said, “It is finished,” after he had risen from the dead, and after he had taken his seat at the divine right hand! He has become so wedded to us, so truly one flesh with us, that he will not be parted from us in nature. He sits upon the throne of God, not in his pure Godhead, but as one who has been slain, clothed in a body like our own. What manner of love is this! What bliss to know that my kinsman lives! Truly many waters could not quench his love for manhood, nor could death itself destroy it. The Son of God is still the Son of man. He whom angels worship is not ashamed to call us brethren, for as partaker of our nature he lives, and will live for ever.
11. He lives for ever, then, as God and as man; and I prolong the blended thoughts by saying that he lives for ever in his relationship to us. This you have already seen to be the case, because he lives in our nature: but now I ask you to note that he lives as God and men for us. I love to read these words — “He lives for ever to make intercession for them.” This is one great object for which he lives. To make intercession for those who come to God by him is the business of his life. Is this not wonderful? If some influential and powerful person should say to you, “I live to promote your interest; wherever I go and whatever I do, whatever I seek and whatever I obtain, I live for you” — it would show great friendship, and stir up in us great expectations. Would it not? Yet here is the Lord Jesus declaring that he lives for us: for us he appears in the presence of God, for us he has gone to the many mansions of the Father’s house, for us he constantly intercedes with God. Oh, the deep debt of gratitude we owe to this glorious One, who having died for us, now lives for us!
12. It is more than if a brother should say, “I live my whole life for you”; for, remember, this might be said to be the second life which our Lord gives to us. He lived for us here below a whole lifetime! He laid down that life for us, and now he lives again for us. I do not know how to speak what I feel concerning the surpassing greatness of his love. He could not be content to give his life once for us, but he needs to take it again and shall give it over again for us. See how he loves us: he died for us! See how he loves us: he lives again for us! He lives for sinners, for he lives to intercede, and for whom is intercession except for those who need an advocate? “If any man sins we have an advocate.” May I say that Jesus lives two lives for us?
13. Even more, it is said, “He lives for ever to make intercession for us”: so that the whole life of Christ throughout eternity, — his boundless, endless, glorified existence is still for his people. He glorifies the Father, and makes glad the hosts of heaven; but still this is the express purpose of his heart, to live for us. “He loved me, and gave himself for me” is true; but we may read it in the present tense if we like, and it is still true: “He loves me, and he gives himself for me.” Christ loved his church, and gave himself for it, and now he loves his church and gives himself to it. What inspiration lies in the endless life of Christ for us! Let our lives be lived entirely for him since he lives entirely for us.
14. This truth of the living Christ should be remembered in our greatest need. Dear friends, there is an almighty and divine One in heaven who lives for ever for our highest benefit. Let us adore him most lovingly. This should show us how great our need is, that we always need a living Saviour to intervene for us. A dying Saviour was not enough; we still require every moment of our lives a living Saviour engrossed with the care of our spirits, intervening on our behalf in all manner of ways, and delivering us from all evil. Our hour of necessity is always present, for Jesus is always guarding us, and his work is never a superfluity. Herein should lie our great comfort: we should fall back upon this truth whenever our burden presses too heavily on our shoulders. Jesus lives: my great Redeemer lives for me: lives in all fulness of power and glory, and devotes that life, with all that pertains to it, to the preservation of my soul from every evil. Can I not rest in this? With such a keeper why should I be afraid? Must I not be safe when One so vigilant and so vigorous devotes his life to my protection? What innumerable blessings must come to those for whom Jesus spends the strength of his endless life!
15. II. Secondly, I must carry you on to another and kindred subject: ENDLESS PRIESTHOOD. Our Lord is ordained to an unchangeable priesthood; or rather; as the margin has it, to a priesthood “which does not pass from one to another.” His office cannot be taken up by a successor: it is not transferable, but belongs to himself alone, since he lives for ever to carry it out in his own person. We have only one priest, and we have that one priest for ever.
16.
In this we are not like Israel of old; for, as we have already
seen, a high priest would die. I can conceive that to many Jewish
believers the death of a priest was a great affliction. I could
imagine an Israelite saying, “And so he is dead: that good man, that
tender-spirited minister, that gentle and affectionate shepherd. I
have told him all my heart, and now he is taken from me. I went to
him in my youth in deep distress of conscience: he offered a
sacrifice for me when I was unclean, and brought me near to the holy
place. Since then I have gone to him when I have needed guidance; he
has consulted the oracle on my behalf, and my way has been made
plain. He knows the secrets of my family; he knows those delicate
griefs which I have never dared to tell to anyone else. Alas! he is
dead, and half my heart has perished. What a gap is made in my life
by his decease!” The mourner would be told that his son had become
his successor; but I think I hear him say, “Yes, I am aware of it:
but the young man does not know what his father knew about me; and I
could never again lay bare my heart. The son can never be in entire
sympathy with all my sorrows as his good old father was. No doubt he
is a good man, but he is not the same person: I reverenced every hair
in the grey beard of the old high priest. I have grown up with him,
and he has helped me so many, many times; it is so sad that I shall
see his face no more.” There would always be the feeling in some
minds that the next high priest might not be quite so acceptable with
God, or so tender towards the congregation, as he who had passed
away. He might be a man superior in education, but inferior in
affection: he might be more austere and less tender, he might have
greater gifts and less fatherliness. At any rate, it would seem like
having to begin again when one went for the first time to the new
priest: it would be a break in the continuity of one’s comfort. The
quiet flow of life would be marred, as when a river comes to its
rapids, and an impassable falls causes an interruption in the
navigation, and a necessary unloading of the vessel and a laborious
portage instead of an easy passage down a gently flowing stream.
“Oh,” says one good Israelite, “the venerable high priest who has
just fallen asleep was my friend; we took sweet counsel together, and
walked to the house of God in company. He was in my house when my
beloved child died; he was with me when the partner of my bosom, the
light of my eyes, was taken away from me at a stroke. His long
experience he used for my instruction and comfort: but, alas! it is
all gone, for the saint of God is dead.” Beloved, here is our
comfort: we have only one priest, and he lives for ever. He had
no predecessor and he will have no successor, because he lives for
ever personally to exercise the office of high priest on our behalf.
My soul reposes in the faith of his one sacrifice, offered once and
no more. There is only one presenter of that one sacrifice, and never
can there be another, since the One is all-sufficient, and he never
dies. Jesus reads my heart, and has always read it since it began to
beat: he knows my griefs and has carried my sorrows from of old, and
he will bear both them and me when old age shall shrivel up my
strength. When I myself shall fall asleep in death he will not die,
but will be ready to receive me into his own undying blessedness.
Brethren, our Lord in glory —
Looks like a lamb that has been slain,
And wears his priesthood still.
Do we not rejoice in the unbroken continuity and everlasting perpetuity of the priesthood of Christ?
17. Again, we are not as Israel is at this moment. Alas, poor Israel! after all her privileges of the past, where is she now? She is without a high priest; she does not dare even to think of anointing one of her Cohens {a Jewish priest} to that office. She is without an altar or a sacrifice. Once a year on the day of atonement she has something which bears the shadow of sacrifice; but it is a worship of her own devising and not according to the law of Moses or the ordinances of God. She is left without priest, altar, temple, or sacrifice; and the outlook of her sons and daughters concerning the future life is for the most part extremely dark and dismal. I am assured that nothing is more unwelcome to a Jew than the thought of death; and it may well be so. Beloved, we are not without a priest. Our faith beholds Jesus passed into the heavens and residing there in the glory of his once offered sacrifice, living for ever to intercede for us. Jesus is to my soul at this moment as living a person as I am myself, and even more so. I have come to look on friends and dear ones as passing shadows; I see written across their brows the word “mortal”; but Jesus is the one and only friend who has immortality, and therefore can never be lost to me. His sacrifice is for ever effective, and his priesthood is for ever in exercise. Christ’s priesthood remains without end. What bliss it is to be a believer in Jesus, and so to have one priest, and never to desire another!
18. We are not as the votaries of Rome. That Babylon has many priests within her borders. Some say that these priests are substitutes for Christ; if so, the assertion is a flat blasphemy against him who is a priest for ever, and needs no substitute. Others say they are the vicars of Christ, carrying on his work now that he is gone, by presenting the bloodless sacrifice of the mass. This also is completely contrary to the teaching of the apostle in this passage, where he proves that this man, because he continues for ever, has a priesthood which cannot be passed from one to another. In this he shows that our Lord is different from the Aaronic priests who had their office taken up by those who followed them, whereas Jesus, like Melchizedek, has no successor, but exercises his office in his own proper person according to the power of an endless life. We know no priests on earth now, except that in a secondary sense the Lord Jesus has made all believers to be kings and priests to God. We have now no special order of people set apart to represent their peers before God. In Mosaic times there were many priests not allowed to continue by reason of death; but in Christian times we have only one priest, who continues for ever in an untransferable priesthood, this is the apostle’s argument. But this is not true if bishops and presbyters are priests in the sense in which they now claim to be so. I consider the very thought of our having other sacrificing priests than the Lord Jesus to be derogatory to the one unique, completely accomplished sacrifice of our Great High Priest who resides alone in his personal office for ever and ever. Therefore, brethren, despise in your very souls the pretensions of a human priesthood either in the Church of England, or in the Church of Rome. If any man calls himself a priest otherwise than as all the people of God are priests, we rate him at no higher value than Korah, Dathan and Abiram, to whom Moses said, “You take too much upon you, you sons of Levi.” They claimed a priesthood which did not belong to them, as all men do who intrude into the priesthood in these days. Our Lord Jesus walks in that supreme, solitary majesty which was foreshadowed in Melchizedek — and in that spirit he fulfils a priesthood which renders all other priests a superfluity and a mockery. What have we to do with more sacrifices when the one sacrifice is offered once and for all? Brethren, hold firmly this precious truth and rejoice in it.
19. III. Now I conduct you, thirdly, to the fact of ENDLESS INTERCESSION. — “Since he lives for ever to make intercession for them.”
20. If I were to read this passage, “Since he lives for ever to intervene for them,” it would not be an incorrect reading. The Lord Jesus Christ in his perpetual priesthood lives on purpose to be the advocate, defender, patron, mediator, and go-between for his people. You who come to God by him will highly esteem this constant service rendered to you by your Lord. Whereas Christ by his death provided all that was necessary for your salvation, he, by his life, applies that provision which he made in his death. He lives on purpose to see brought home to you, and enjoyed by you, all those blessings and privileges which he purchased upon the tree, when he died in your place and stead. Had he not lived for you, his death for you would have miscarried. He would then have begun the work, and provided all the materials for its completion, but there would have been no one to render those materials available, and to complete the building whose foundation had been laid in so costly a manner. We are pardoned by the death of Christ, but we are justified by his resurrection. We are saved because he died; but that salvation is brought home and secured to us because he sits at the right hand of God, and continually makes intercession for us. I want you today to think as much of a living Christ as you have ever thought of a dead Christ. You have sat down at the foot of Calvary, your eyes suffused with tears, and you have said, “How delightful it is to behold his love written out in crimson characters in those streams of blood, which his very heart pours out for our redemption!” I want you now to sit at the foot of his throne, and, as far as your dim eyes will permit, behold his splendour, and see how he spends his glory-life in perpetual intercession for you. He is as much ours on the throne as on the tree. He is living for ever to apply to us with his own hands what he purchased by the nailing of those hands and the piercing of his heart upon the cross of our redemption.
21. Why is it so necessary that Jesus living for ever should always be interceding for us? I answer, first, it is most becoming for God. The great principle which God would teach to men is this — that sin is so hateful to him that the sinner can only approach his justice through a Mediator. This truth is most clearly presented in the fact that even now that we are washed in the blood of the Lamb, there is no approach to God except through the intercession of Christ. Does this not teach the grand principle of the evil of sin, and teach it in the plainest manner? The distance which sin puts between the sinner and God, and the necessity of mediation in order that a just God may commune with the imperfect — are not these fully taught by the institution of the perpetual intercession of the Son of God? This is as much a declaration of the righteousness of God as was the substitutionary death on Calvary.
22. Moreover, the intercession of Christ is necessary for God to illustrate the union, co-operation, and intercommunion of the divine Trinity in the work of our salvation. The Son of God intercedes in heaven, and the Holy Spirit intercedes on earth. If Jesus intercedes, it is of necessity that the Father be there with whom he may intercede. The Son pleads and the Father hears and answers, and as a result conveys to us by the Holy Spirit the blessings purchased by his Son. So, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are brought before our minds as all concurring in the believer’s salvation. A mediator who is not only man, but also one person of the blessed Trinity, continues to intercede for us, and so we see how God remembers us.
23. Once again, our own communion with God is publicly declared, while there sits on the throne of God a man who is also God, pleading with the Godhead. Man is always standing in glory in connection with God. The perpetual intercession of Christ is a perpetual recognition of the communion which now exists between God and once fallen, but now restored, manhood. We ought to look upon Christ pleading in glory as the sign, token, and evidence, that man is reconciled to God, that man speaks with God, that God speaks with man, and that once again the old dominion is restored to man; for we see Jesus, who was made a little lower than the angels, for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour.
24. The perpetual intercession is necessary for God. But it is even more necessary for man. Think, brothers and sisters, though we have been forgiven through the precious blood, yet we in many things offend, and therefore every day we need a fresh application of the blood of sprinkling. Conscience accuses us for daily flaws and faults, and it is therefore good for us that it is written, “He makes intercession for the transgressors.” Where would our hope be of continual preservation from the weaknesses and sins of our nature if Jesus did not constantly plead for us? The way is rough, the world is sinful, our wanderings are many, our needs are incessant, and therefore we need the eternal intercession. We are never out of danger, and therefore always need the guardian prayer; we are never above weakness and folly, and therefore require the perpetual patronage of our protector. What man is there among you who is not full of needs? What woman is there among you who does not need to come to the mercy seat many times a day? Jesus is always there, waiting to present our petitions; always making us, our petitions, and our praise acceptable with God. Brethren, we are daily pressed, either with conflict with inbred sin or suffering in the body, with service of our Lord or sympathy for our brethren; and for all these we need help out of the holy place, help which can only come by way of the throne of heavenly grace. We need an intermediator, at whose feet we may lay down our burdens, into whose ears we may tell our sorrows: therefore Jesus lives for ever to make intercession for us.
25. Our great Intercessor also obtains for us those precious gifts and graces which are necessary for our growth and usefulness. His is the hand which leads us onward to those attainments of the spiritual life which are necessary for our service in this world, and for our preparation for the life to come. The higher virtues would be beyond our reach if his prayers did not bring us more and more of the Spirit of God to make us perfect in every good work to do his will.
26. Have you forgotten also that there is an enemy who is always alive and always full of malice? He acts as the accuser of the brethren, who accuses them day and night before God; and were it not for our glorious Advocate, who for Zion’s sake never holds his peace, what would become of us? This accuser is also a tempter, who subtly contrives plots for our overthrow. It is at times true of us as it was of Peter — “Simon, Simon, Satan has desired to have you, so that he may sift you as wheat: but I have prayed for you.” How often are we hidden from evil by the prayers of Jesus! We do not know, my brethren, how many poisoned arrows are caught upon the shield of our Lord’s intercession. The intercession of Christ as with ten thousand hands is always scattering blessings. Job asks, “Have you entered into the springs of the sea?” Surely our Lord’s intercession is the source of an ocean of blessedness. If we only had eyes enlightened by the Holy Spirit we should see the mountain full of horses of fire, and chariots of fire all around the people of God. Who guides those horses? Who directs those chariots? Who is the captain of the hosts of spirits who encompass the camp of God? Who, except the Prince Emmanuel, who by his all-powerful intercession rules all things for us.
27. The Lord Jesus by his unceasing pleas keeps all the powers of darkness in check, and moves all the powers of light for our rescue. His prayers form an atmosphere of blessing in which we live and move. We do not know, we cannot begin to calculate, the depths of our obligation to the ceaseless care of our unwearied Intercessor. Even when time shall be no more, and all the saints shall be saved, their continuance in bliss will be due to his endless intercession.
28. Think of it — Jesus always praying, never ceasing! His very appearance in heaven is a plea. The memory of his finished work is a plea. His constant thought of us is a pleading with God. He will not pray with tears and cries, as he did in the days of his flesh; nor perhaps he will plead even with words; for his spirit speaks to the spirit of God without such vocal instrumentality as creatures require. This much we know, he is always praying, always prevailing, and consequently always showering down upon us blessings beyond all calculation, the most of which we scarcely recognise; and yet if they were withheld we should perish miserably. Lord Jesus, your dying blood is well matched by your living plea, and our hearts rejoice in this because of these two sure proofs of your love and grace.
29. IV. That brings me to my fourth point, which is — For this cause, therefore, there is ENDLESS SALVATION in the power of Jesus. “He is able to save without end, or to the uttermost, those who come to God by him.”
30. That word “uttermost” includes within it a reference to time. Because our Lord Jesus never dies, he is endlessly able to save. At all times his power to save remains. He was able to save some of you forty years ago, but you would not come to him so that you might have life: he is able to save you now though you have passed your fourscore years in impenitence. If you come to God by him, he will save you however multiplied your sins are. Beloved, many years ago, as boys and girls, some of us put our trust in the Redeemer, and he forgave us our trespasses. Happy day! Happy day! We are much further advanced in life at this time, and our strength grows less as the shadows lengthen; but Jesus is for evermore the same, and is still able to save to the full. No diminution has taken place in his ability to save. He who helped us in the seven struggles of our youth, and the seventy burdens of our manhood, will help us to seventy times seven, if needs be. We need not fear old age or death, since he always has the dew of his youth, and is always our friend, laying out his life for us, even as once he laid it down for us.
31. He is abundantly able to save: from the uttermost of evil to the uttermost of good he can save us. Just as he lives for ever in the fulness of life, so he can save to the fulness of salvation. His name is Jesus — the Saviour, and as Jesus, the Saviour, he lives. He has not renounced his office, nor allowed any part of his life to be diverted for another purpose: he lives to save.
32. The Lord Jesus Christ is now, “since he lives for ever,” able to save to the uttermost in point of our sin. Whatever the sin of anyone here may be, if he comes to God by Jesus Christ, it shall be forgiven him. God forbid I should try to make a list of human crimes; what purpose would it serve? The reading of the details of vice is very defiling: I will not therefore attempt a catalogue of crimes into which mortals sink. Sorry scoundrels come here at times; there may be dreadful characters at this moment mingled with this vast congregation, and truly I am not sorry that they are hearing the gospel: but whoever you may be, the text draws a circle of hope around you, as it says — “He is able to save to the uttermost those who come to God by him.” Whatever your offence, if you will now come to God, and confess it, and ask for mercy through the name of Jesus, he is able to save you to the extreme limit of your need. If you have gone as far in sin as is possible, and are forced to admit that if you could have gone further you would have done so, yet there is forgiveness. Oh my hearer, though your hand were even red with murder, yet the blood of Christ could wash it clean. “All manner of sin and of blasphemy shall be forgiven to men.” Yes, let the silver trumpet sound it out! You chief of sinners, hear the news! The Saviour lives that to the uttermost he may save such as you. Come, then, to your living Lord, you who groan under the load of deadly guilt, for he can take it all away.
33. So, too, he saves to the uttermost of our need and misery. One old divine says if we were to climb a great hill from which we could see wide fields of spiritual distress and poverty, and if all this represented our experience, yet the Lord is able to spread salvation all around the far-off horizon, and encompass all our needs. Come, poor trembler, climb the mountain, and look far over this terrible wilderness. As far as you can ever see, or foresee, of dreaded need in years to come, so far and much further can the salvation of Jesus reach. As far as with the telescope of apprehension you can spy out trials in life and woes in death, so far is Jesus able to save you. The uttermost will never be reached by you, but it has long ago been provided for by him. All your capacious emptiness can ever need to fill it, he has provided. Though your heart should cry like a horse-leech, “Give, give,” Jesus can satisfy its hunger. Though like the sea that swallows up a navy and is not full, your soul should never cease its cravings, yet Jesus can satisfy you. All that you can require he can surely give you, since he lives for ever by the power of an endless life to be the fulness of every emptied soul.
34. Jesus can save you to the uttermost of your desires. I want you to think of all you would like to be in righteousness and true holiness; for all that Jesus will do for you before he has finished with you. I asked a young convert the other day, “Are you perfect yet?” “Oh dear, sir,” she said, “No.” I asked, “Would you not like to be?” Her eyes twinkled, as well they might, and she said, “That is what I long for.” It will be heaven to be perfect. Jesus is able to make us perfect, and he has resolved to do it; as it is written, “I shall be satisfied, when I awaken, with your likeness.” In that likeness he will cause us to awaken if we come to God through him. Jesus will save us to the highest degree.
35. The Lord Jesus Christ will also save us entirely: he will work out the salvation of the whole man, body, soul, and spirit. He lives for ever to save his people to the uttermost, that is to say, all his people, and all of every one of his people. Nothing essential to manhood shall be left to perish in the case of those whom he redeems. All what the first Adam ruined the second Adam shall restore. The Canaan of manhood from Dan to Beersheba shall be conquered by our Joshua. As yet the body is dead because of sin, though the spirit is life because of righteousness; but the day comes when the body also shall be delivered from the bondage which sin has brought upon it. Not a bone, nor a piece of a bone, of a redeemed one shall be left in the hands of the enemy. God’s deliverances are always complete. When the Lord sent his angel to bring Peter out of prison, he said to the slumbering apostle, “Wrap your garment around you, and follow me.” That garment might be only a fisherman’s cloak, but it must not be left in Herod’s hands. He said also, “Bind on your sandals”; for when the angel of the Lord sets a man free, he will not leave even a pair of old shoes behind him. The redemption of Christ is perfect: it reaches to the uttermost. He seems to say to sin, and Satan, and death, as the Lord said to Pharaoh: “Not a hoof shall be left behind.” All that he has redeemed by price he will also redeem by power, and to that end he makes ceaseless intercession before God.
36. “To the uttermost,” from all our doubts and fears, and follies, and failures, Jesus will bring us by his endless intercession. “To the uttermost,” from every consequence of the fall, and personal sin, and actual death, Jesus by his intercession will save us. “To the uttermost.” Oh, think of it! To the resurrection life, to clearance at the judgment seat, and to the highest glories of heaven, and to boundless bliss throughout the ages he will save us. Right on while you endure, oh eternity, the pleading of the High Priest shall save the chosen company, who for ever rising into something higher and even higher, shall prove more and more the heights and depths of everlasting bliss! Because he lives we shall live also, and because he intercedes for ever we shall for ever be glorified.
37.
There I leave my subject, only coming back to the one enquiry, Do
you come to God by Jesus Christ? If so, the text speaks comfort to
you. It speaks not only of the church as a whole, but also of each
individual believer: Jesus intercedes for each one of those who “come
to God by him.” You, dear friend, though unknown to fame are known to
Jesus. You, dear sister, hidden away in obscurity, are not hidden
from the all-seeing eye of the divine Mediator. His breastplate bears
your name, yes, he has inscribed it on the palms of his hands, and
he will never forget those whose memorials are so perpetually with
him. May the living blessing of the ever-living Saviour be with you
today and for ever! Amen.
[Portions Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Ps 110 Heb 7]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, Names and Titles — Priest” 395}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, In Heaven — ‘He Ever Liveth’ ” 326}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, In Heaven — ‘Touched With The Feeling Of Our Infirmities’ ” 327}
Attention is called by the preacher to his little book “All Of
Grace,” published by Messers. Passmore & Alabaster. Price One
Shilling. Its one objective is to guide men to Jesus.
Jesus Christ, Names and Titles
395 — Priest
1 Jesus, in thee our eyes behold
A thousand glories more
Than the rich gems, and polish’d gold,
The sons of Aaron wore.
2 They first their own burn offerings brought
To purge themselves from sin:
Thy life was pure without a spot,
And all thy nature clean.
3 Fresh blood as constant as the day,
Was on their altar spilt:
But thy one offering takes away
For ever all our guilt.
4 Their priesthood ran through several hands,
For mortal was their race;
Thy never changing office stands
Eternal as thy days.
5 Once in the circuit of a year,
With blood, but not his own,
Aaron within the veil appears,
Before the golden throne.
6 But Christ by his own powerful blood
Ascends above the skies,
And in the presence of our God
Shows his own sacrifice.
7 Jesus, the King of Glory, reigns
On Sion’s heavenly hill;
Looks like a lamb that has been slain,
And wears his priesthood still.
8 He ever lives to intercede
Before his Father’s face:
Give him, my soul, thy cause to plead,
Nor doubt the Father’s grace.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
Jesus Christ, In Heaven
326 — “He Ever Liveth”
1 He lives, the great Redeemer lives,
(What joy the blest assurance gives!)
And now before his Father God,
Pleads the full merit of his blood.
2 Repeated crimes awake our fears,
And justice arm’d with frowns appears;
But in the Saviour’s lovely face
Sweet mercy smiles, and all is peace.
3 Hence, then, ye black despairing thoughts;
Above our fears, above our faults,
His powerful intercessions rise;
And guilt recedes, and terror dies.
4 In every dark distressful hour,
When sin and Satan join their power,
Let this dear hope repel the dart,
That Jesus bears us on his heart.
5 Great Advocate, Almighty Friend,
On him our humble hopes depend:
Our cause can never, never fail,
For Jesus pleads, and must prevail.
Anne Steele, 1760.
Jesus Christ, In Heaven
327 — “Touched With The Feeling Of Our Infirmities”
1 Where high the heavenly temple stands,
The house of God not made with hands,
A great High Priest our nature wears,
The Patron of mankind appears.
2 He, who for men their Surety stood,
And pour’d on earth his precious blood,
Pursues in heaven his mighty plan,
The Saviour and the friend of man.
3 Though now ascended up on high,
He bends on earth a brother’s eye;
Partaker of the human name,
He knows the frailty of our frame.
4 Our fellow sufferer yet retains
A fellow feeling of our pains,
And still remembers in the skies,
His tears, and agonies, and cries.
5 In every pang that rends the heart,
The Man of Sorrows had a part;
He sympathizes in our grief,
And to the sufferer sends relief.
6 With boldness therefore at the throne,
Let us make all our sorrows known,
And ask the aid of heavenly power
To help us in the evil hour.
Michael Bruce, 1770, a.
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
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