Ready

 •  12 min. read  •  grade level: 8
We want to dwell for a few moments on the word which forms the heading of this paper. If we are not mistaken, we will find it to be a word of immense depth and suggestive power, as used by the Holy Spirit in Scripture. We shall just now refer to four passages in which our word occurs; and may the One who wrote these passages be pleased to open and apply them in divine power and freshness to the heart of both writer and reader.
1) And first we shall turn to 1 Pet. 1:55Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. (1 Peter 1:5), where it is used in connection with the word "salvation." Believers are said to be "kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time."
Here then we are taught that salvation is ready to be revealed at this moment; for we are, as John tells us, in "the last times." Note that salvation as here used is not to be confined to the mere matter of the soul's deliverance from hell and perdition. It refers rather to the deliverance of the body of the believer from the power of death and corruption. In brief, it takes in all that stands in any wise connected with the glorious appearing of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We already possess the salvation of our souls, as we are told in the very context from which our text is taken. "Receiving the end of your faith, even the salvation of your souls.... Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ."
Thus we learn in the clearest way that the "salvation ready to be revealed" is linked on to "the revelation of Jesus Christ." This confirmed, were confirmation needful, by Heb. 9:2828So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation. (Hebrews 9:28), where we read, "So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and unto them that look for Him shall He appear the second time without sin [apart from sin] unto salvation."
From all this we may learn that the salvation which is ready to be revealed is the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. For this we are taught, as Christians, to look at any moment. There is literally nothing, so far as. God is concerned—nothing so far as the work of Christ is concerned—nothing so far as the testimony of the Holy Spirit is concerned -to hinder our hearing "the voice of the archangel, and... the trump of God" this very night, this very hour. All is done that needed to be done. Atonement is made, redemption is accomplished. God has been glorified by the work of Christ, as is proved by the fact of Christ's present place on the throne of the Majesty in the heavens. From the moment that our Lord Jesus Christ took His seat upon that throne, it could always be said that "salvation [is] ready to be revealed."
But it could not have been said before. Salvation could not be said to be ready until the divine groundwork was laid in the death and resurrection of the Savior. But, when once that most glorious work of all works was accomplished, it could at any moment be said that "salvation [is] ready to be revealed." "The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit Thou at My right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool." Psalm 110:11<<A Psalm of David.>> The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool. (Psalm 110:1).
2) But the Apostle Peter gives us another instance and application of our word, in chapter 4:5, where he refers to some "Who shall give account to Him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead."
Here the word stands before us in a form of awful solemnity. If, on the one hand, it is true that salvation is ready to be revealed for the everlasting joy of God's redeemed, it is equally true, on the other hand, that judgment is ready to take its course, for the everlasting misery of those who neglect God's proffered salvation. The one is as true, and as pointed, and as forcible, as the other. There is nothing to wait for in respect to the judgment, any more than there is in respect to the salvation. The one is as "ready" as the other. God has gone to the utmost in demonstrating His grace, and man has gone to the utmost in demonstrating his guilt. Both have reached their climax in the death of Christ; and when we see Him crowned with glory, and seated on the throne, we have the most powerful evidence that could possibly be afforded, that nothing remains but for salvation to be revealed, on the one hand, and for judgment to take its course, on the other.
It follows that man is no longer on probation. It is a mistake for anyone to think so. It is a fatal delusion. It falsifies man's entire position and state. If I am under probation—if God is still testing me—if He is, even now, occupied in testing whether I am good for anything—if I am capable of producing any fruit for Him—if this be indeed the case, then it is not and cannot be true, that He is "ready to judge." Nature is not ripe for judgment so long as a probationary process is pending—if there is yet something to wait for before judgment can take its course.
But no, reader, we feel bound to press upon you the fact that the period of your probation is over forever, and the period of God's long-suffering is nearly run out. It is of the utmost importance to seize this truth. It lies at the very foundation of the sinner's position. Judgment is actually impending. It is "ready" at this moment to fall upon the head of the unrepentant reader of these lines. The entire history of human nature—of man, of the world—has been wound up and closed forever. The cross of Christ has made perfectly manifest the guilt and ruin of the human race. It has put an end to man's probationary season; and from that solemn hour until now, the true position of the world as a whole, and of each individual sinner, man, woman, and child, has been that of a culprit, tried, found guilty, and condemned, but the sentence not executed. This is the present awful condition of the unbelieving reader.
Dear friend, will you not think of this? Fellow immortal, will you not, even this very moment, bend the undivided attention of thy soul to this eternal question? We must speak plainly and pointedly. We cannot do otherwise. We feel in some small degree the awfulness of the sinner's state and prospect, in view of these weighty words, "ready to judge." We are convinced that the present is a moment which calls for serious and faithful dealing with the souls of our readers. We do not, as God is our witness, want to write essays or sermons; we want to reach souls. We want the reader to be assured of this, that he is not now reading a dry article on a religious subject, prepared merely for the purpose of making a tract, but a solemn appeal made to his heart and conscience, in the immediate presence of "Him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead."
3) But this leads us to the third passage of Holy Scripture in which our weighty motto occurs. The reader will find it in Luke 12:4040Be ye therefore ready also: for the Son of man cometh at an hour when ye think not. (Luke 12:40). "Be ye therefore ready also: for the Son of man cometh at an hour when ye think not."
If salvation is "ready" to be revealed, and if judgment is "ready" to be executed, what becomes us but to be "ready" also?
And in what does this readiness consist? How are we to be ready? It strikes us that there are two things included in the answer.
First, we must be "ready" in title; and, second, we must be "ready" in our moral state—ready in conscience, and ready in heart. The one is founded upon the work of Christ for us; the other is connected with the work of the Spirit in us. If we are simply resting by faith on the finished work of Christ, if we are leaning exclusively on what He has done and what He is, then are we in very truth ready in title; and we may rest assured of being with. Him when He comes.
But, on the other hand, if we are leaning upon our fancied goodness; upon any righteousness which we think we possess; upon not having done any harm to anyone; upon our not being worse than some of our neighbors; upon our church membership; upon our attention to the ordinances of religion; if we are leaning upon any or all of these things, or if we are adding these things to Christ, then we may be assured we are not ready in title—not ready in conscience. God can accept nothing—absolutely nothing—as a title, but Christ. To bring anything else is to declare that Christ is not needful. To bring anything beside is to affirm that He is not enough. But God has borne ten thousand testimonies to the fact, that we can do with nothing less, and that we want nothing more, than Christ. Therefore, Christ is our all-essential and all-sufficient title.
But there is such a thing as professing to be ready in title while, at the same time, we are not ready in our moral condition or practical state.
This demands our gravest attention. There is a vast amount of easy-going evangelical profession abroad at the present moment. The atmosphere is permeated by the rays of gospel light. The darkness of the middle ages has been chased away by the brightness of a free gospel and an open Bible.
We are thankful for a free gospel and an open Bible. But we cannot shut our eyes to the fact that there is a fearful amount of laxity, unsubduedness, and self-indulgence going hand in hand with the evangelical profession of the day. We notice, with the deepest anxiety, many young professors who have, or seem to have, a very clear insight, so far as the intellect goes, into the truth of the sinner's title, who, if we are to judge from their style, deportment, and habits, are not "ready" in their moral condition—in the real state of their hearts. We are at times, we must confess, sadly cast down when we see our young friends dressing themselves in the empty fashions of an empty and sinful world; feeding upon the questionable literature that issues in such frightful profusion from the press; and engaging in activities that do not honor our Lord and Savior. It is impossible to reconcile such with "Be ye also ready."
We may perhaps be told that these things are externals, and that the grand point is to be occupied with Christ. It may be said—it has been said—"Provided we have Christ in our hearts, it does not matter what we have on our heads, or in our hands." We reply, "If we really have Christ in our hearts, it will regulate what we put on our heads and take into our hands; yes, it will exert a manifest influence upon our whole deportment and character."
We should like to ask some of our friends this question, Would you like the Lord Jesus Christ to come and find you engaged in questionable activities? We feel assured you would not. Well then let us in the name of the Lord see to it that we do not engage in anything which does not comport with our being "ready."
We especially urge this upon the Christian reader. Let this question be ever before us, Am I ready?—ready in title, ready in state, ready in conscience, ready in heart? The times are really very solemn, and we should think seriously of our true state. We feel persuaded that there is a lack of real godly heart exercise among us. There are, we fear, many—God only knows how many—who are not ready—many who would be taken aback and terribly surprised by death or the coming of the Lord. There are things said and done by those who occupy the very highest platform of profession, which we dare not indulge in if we are really looking for the Lord.
God grant that the reader may know what it is to be ready in title, and ready in state, that he may have a purged conscience and a truly exercised heart. Then he will be able to enter into the meaning of the fourth and last passage to which we call his attention. It occurs in Matt. 25:1010And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut. (Matthew 25:10).
4) "And while they [the foolish virgins] went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut."
How solemn! How awfully solemn! Those who were ready went in, and those who were not ready were shut out. Those who have life in Christ, and are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, will be ready. But the mere professor—the one who has truth in the head and on the lip, but not in the heart—who has the lamp of profession, but not the spirit of life in Christ—he will be shut out into outer darkness, in everlasting misery and gloom, the eternal monotony of hell.
O let us, as we take a solemn leave of you, put this question home to your very inmost soul, ART THOU READY?