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At the first
advent of Christ, darkness, covered the earth, and gross
darkness the people. Light and truth seemed to have departed
from among men, and Satan appeared to reign in undisputed power.
Rival sects existed, and among those who professed to be the
servants of God were displayed love of preeminence and strife
for power and position. Souls who were desirous of light were
filled with perplexity and sorrow. Many were sighing, "What is
truth?" Ignorance prevailed, but many were looking for something
better, looking for light that would illuminate the moral
darkness of the world. They were thirsting for a knowledge of
the living God, for some assurance of a life beyond the tomb.
There were men not of the Jewish nation who prophesied that an
inspired instructor would come to teach them of the truth. There
were among the Jews who had not polluted their integrity, who
read with eager anticipation the sure word of prophecy that
pointed to the advent of the Redeemer. They rejoiced in the
promise that God had made to his servant Moses: "I will raise
them up a prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee, and
will put my words in his mouth; and he shall speak unto them all
that I shall command him. And it shall come to pass, that
whosoever will not hearken unto my words which he shall speak in
my name, I will require it of him."
Again they read
how the Lord should anoint Him to preach good tidings unto the
meek, to bind up the broken-hearted, proclaim liberty to the
captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound,
to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord. They read how he
would set judgment in the earth, how the isles should wait for
his law, how the Gentiles would come to his light, and kings to
the brightness of his rising.
Christ came just
as prophecy had foretold. He was the "way, the truth, and the
life," and the beams of the Sun of Righteousness dispelled the
moral darkness so that the honest in heart might see the truth.
The absence of outward display and worldly grandeur, called
forth comments of disapprobation from the people Doubt and
criticism met him on every side. Christ himself had chosen the
human conditions of his life. He had selected the lowliest place
in society. He was the Majesty of heaven, and he knew that the
world would bear sway by magnificence, carrying everything
before its display and grandeur; but Jesus honored those whom
the world looked upon with contempt. Christ's birthplace was
devoid of conveniences, not to speak of riches and luxury. And
his entire life in this world was in keeping with the humble
home of his early experience.
The Saviour of
the world proposed that no attraction of an earthly character
should call men to his side. The light and beauty of celestial
truth alone should be the drawing power. The outward glory, the
worldly honor, which attracts the attention of men, he would not
assume. He made himself accessible to all, teaching the pure,
exalted principle of truth as that which was only worthy of
their notice. But although so humbly born, so unpretending in
life, God did not leave him without a witness. The
principalities of heaven did him homage. Wonders in the heavens
above and signs in the earth beneath attested his power and
majesty. At his baptism a voice from heaven fell upon the ears
of men, declaring, "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased." The bright glory of God in the form of a dove of
burnished gold encircled him. John declared: "That was the true
light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. He
was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world
knew him not. He came unto his own, and his own received him
not."
Christ came to
represent the Father. We behold in him the image of the
invisible God. He clothed his divinity with humanity, and came
to the world that the erroneous ideas Satan had been the means
of creating in the minds of men, in regard to the character of
God, might be removed. We could not behold the glory of God
unveiled in Christ and live; but as he came in the garb of
humanity, we may draw nigh to our Redeemer. We are called upon
to behold the Lord our Father in the person of his Son. Christ
came in the robe of the flesh, with his glory subdued in
humanity, that lost man might communicate with him and live.
Through Christ we may comprehend something of him who is
glorious in holiness. Jesus is the mystic ladder by which we may
mount to behold the glory of the infinite God. By faith we
behold Christ standing between humanity and divinity, connecting
God and man, and earth and heaven.
Christ came to
save fallen man, and Satan with fiercest wrath met him on the
field of conflict; for the enemy knew that when divine strength
was added to human weakness, man was armed with power and
intelligence, and could break away from the captivity in which
he had bound him. Satan sought to intercept every ray of light
from the throne of God. He sought to cast his shadow across the
earth, that men might lose the true views of God's character,
and that the knowledge of God might become extinct in the earth.
He had caused truth of vital importance to be so mingled with
error that it had lost its significance. The law of Jehovah was
burdened with needless exactions and traditions, and God was
represented as severe, exacting, revengeful, and arbitrary. He
was pictured as one who could take pleasure in the sufferings of
his creatures. The very attributes that belonged to the
character of Satan, the evil one represented as belonging to the
character of God. Jesus came to teach men of the Father, to
correctly represent him before the fallen children of earth.
Angels could not fully portray the character of God, but Christ,
who was a living impersonation of God, could not fail to
accomplish the work. The only way in which he could set and keep
men right was to make himself visible and familiar to their
eyes. That men might have salvation he came directly to man, and
became a partaker of his nature.
The Father was
revealed in Christ as altogether a different being from that
which Satan had represented him to be. Said Christ, "Neither
knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever
the Son will reveal him." The love of Jesus, expressed for the
fallen race in his life of self-denial and sufferings, is the
manifestation of the Father's love for a sinful, fallen world.
Christ endured shame and grief and death for those who despised
his love and trampled upon his mercy. He paid the debt of man's
transgression upon the cross of Calvary with his own precious
blood. The men of his own nation, the leaders of the people,
were so ensnared by the deceptions of Satan that the plan of
redemption for a fallen race seemed to their minds indistinct
and unexplainable.
Man was God's
workmanship, made after his image, endowed with talents, and
fitted for a high destiny. But Satan has worked to obliterate
the divine image, and to impress his own image instead of the
image of God in man's nature. Jesus condescended to humble
himself, to take human nature, and by uniting divinity with
humanity, he proposed to elevate man in the scale of moral
value. All heaven was poured out in the gift of God's dear Son.
Through faith in him the sinner could be justified, and God
could yet be just in justifying the sinner; for Christ had
become a propitiation for the sins of the repentant soul. The
only plan that could be devised to save the human race was that
which called for the incarnation, humiliation, and crucifixion
of the Son of God, the Majesty of heaven. After the plan of
salvation was devised, Satan could have no ground upon which to
found his suggestion that God, because so great, could care
nothing for so insignificant a creature as man. The redemption
of man is a wonderful theme, and the love manifested to the
fallen race through the plan of salvation, can be estimated only
by the cross of Calvary. The depth of this love even angels
cannot sound. That God could consent to become flesh, and dwell
among fallen beings, to lift them up from their helplessness and
despair, is an unfathomed mystery. He whose kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom, whose dominion endureth throughout all
generations, made himself to be sin for us that he might lift up
all that are bowed down, and give life to those who are ready to
perish.
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is
revealed in his Son! Truth came forth from the lips of Jesus,
uncorrupted with human philosophy. His words were from heaven,
such as mortal lips had never spoken nor mortal ears ever heard.
His heart was an altar on which burned the flames of infinite
love. Goodness, mercy, and love were enthroned in the breast of
the Son of God. He set up his tabernacle in the midst of our
human encampment, pitched his tent by the side of the tents of
men, that he might dwell among them and make them familiar with
his divine character and love. No one could love Christ and pay
homage to him without serving and honoring the infinite God.
Those who had an appreciation of the character and mission of
Christ, were filled with reverence and awe, as they looked upon
him and felt that they were looking upon the temple of the
living God. Officers were sent to take the Son of God, that the
temple in which God was enshrined might be destroyed. But as
they drew near and heard the words of divine wisdom that fell
from his lips, they were charmed, and the power and excellence
of his instruction so filled their hearts and minds that they
forgot the purpose for which they had been sent. Christ revealed
himself to their souls. Divinity flashed through humanity, and
they returned so filled with this one thought, so charmed with
the ideas he had presented, that when the leaders of Israel
inquired, "Why have ye not brought him? they replied, "Never man
spake like this man." They had seen that which priests and
rulers would not see,--humanity flooded with the light and glory
of divinity. Those who would behold this glory would be drawn to
love Jesus and to love the Father whom he represented. Christ
exalted the character of God, attributing to him the praise, and
giving to him the credit, of the whole purpose of his own
mission on earth,--to set men right through the revelation of
God. In Christ was arrayed before men the paternal grace and the
matchless perfections of the Father. In his prayer just before
his crucifixion, he declared, "I have manifested thy name." "I
have glorified thee on the earth; I have finished the work which
thou gavest me to do." When the object of his mission was
attained,--the revelation of God to the world,--the Son of God
announced that his work was accomplished, and that the character
of the Father was made manifest to men. |