The True Workman: Part 2

Narrator: Chris Genthree
Matthew 11  •  14 min. read  •  grade level: 7
Listen from:
The reader will discern a very marked difference between Christ’s message to John and his testimony of John. In speaking to His servant, He lets him know, in a way not to be mistaken, that He felt his question. We can have no difficulty in seeing this. We feel persuaded that the Lord’s answer to His servant contained a sharp arrow. True, that arrow was enclosed in a very delicate case; but it was an arrow, and a sharp one too. “Blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me.” John would, doubtless, understand this. It was designed to go right home to his very inmost soul. That dear servant had said, in reference to Jesus, “He must increase, but I must decrease,” and he was called to enter practically into this, not merely in his ministry, but in his person. He had to be content to end his career by the sword of the executioner, after having spent his closing days in the gloom of a dungeon. How mysterious! What a profound lesson to be set down to! How difficult to flesh and blood! What need — what urgent need there was, at such a moment, for John to have whispered into his ear these words, afterward uttered to Peter, “What I do, thou knowest not note; but thou shalt know hereafter.”
What pregnant words! “Now” and “Hereafter.” How much we all need to remember them! often it happens with us that “Now” is involved in deep and impenetrable obscurity. Heavy clouds hang upon our path. The dealings of our Father’s hand are perfectly inexplicable to us. Our minds are bewildered. There are circumstances in our path for which we cannot account — ingredients in our cup the object of which we cannot understand or appreciate. We are confounded and feel disposed to cry out, “Why am I thus!” We are wholly engrossed with. “Now” and our minds are filled with dark and unbelieving reasonings until those precious words fall, in a still small voice upon the ear, “What I do thou knowest not now; but thou shalt know hereafter.” Then the reasonings are answered, the storm hushed, the dark and depressing “Now” is lighted up with the beams of a brilliant and glorious “Hereafter,” and the subdued heart breathes forth, in accents of holy and intelligent acquiescence, “As thou wilt, Lord.” Would that we knew more of this! Assuredly, we need it, whatsoever may be our lot in this world. We may not be called, like the Baptist, to the prison and the block; but each has his “Now” which must be interpreted in the light of “Hereafter.” We must look at the “seen and temporal” in the clear and blessed light of the “unseen and eternal.”
But let us now turn, for a moment, and hearken to Christ’s testimony of John. “And, as they departed, Jesus began to say unto the multitudes concerning John, What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the wind? But what went ye out for to see? A man clothed in soft raiment? behold they that wear soft clothing are in kings’ houses. But what went ye out for to see? A prophet? Yea, I say unto you, and more than a prophet.
For this is he of whom it is written, Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before thee. Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist: notwithstanding, he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.”
Such was the glowing testimony borne by Christ of His servant, John the Baptist. “Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than he.” There is a great principle in this — a principle which we may see illustrated, again and again, in the record of God’s dealings with His people. If the Lord had a message to send to His servant, He would send it. He would speak to him, plainly and pointedly. But, the moment He proceeds to speak of him, the case is totally different.
Thus it is always, and blessed be God that it is so. We have our ways and God has His thoughts; and while He will deal with us faithfully as to the former, He can only speak of us according to the latter. What relief for the heart is here! What comfort! What moral power! What solid ground for self-judgment! God has given us a standing, and He thinks of us, and speaks of us according to that. We have our practical ways, and He deals with us and speaks to us in reference to them. He will expose us to ourselves, and make us feel our ways and judge our doings; but the moment He begins to speak of us to others, He brings out the perfection of His own thoughts respecting us, and speaks of us according to the perfect standing which He has given us in His presence, the fruit of His own eternal counsels respecting us, and of His perfect work on our behalf.
Thus it was with Israel, in the plains of Moab. They had their ways, and God has His thoughts; and while He had, often and often, to reprove them for their ways, to speak plainly to them about their perverseness and stiff-neckness; yet no sooner did the covetous prophet appear upon the scene, to curse Israel, than the Lord placed Himself right between His people and the enemy to turn the curse into a blessing, and pour forth the most sublime and marvelous strains of testimony on their behalf. “God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good? Behold, I have received commandment to bless, and he hath blessed; and I cannot reverse it. He hath not beheld iniquity in Jacob, neither hath he seen perverseness in Israel: the Lord his God is with him, and the shout of a king is among them. God brought them out of Egypt: he hath as it were the strength of an unicorn. Surely there is no enchantment against Jacob, neither is there any divination against Israel; according to this time it shall be said of Jacob and of Israel, What hath God wrought!” Num. 23:19-23.
What grace is here! “I have not beheld iniquity, nor seen perverseness.” What could the enemy say to this? “What hath God wrought!” It is not, “What hath Israel wrought!” They had wrought folly, many a time; but God had wrought salvation. He had wrought for His own glory, and that glory had shone out in the perfect deliverance of a crooked, perverse, and stiff-necked people. It was no use the enemy’s talking of iniquity and perverseness, if Jehovah would not see either the one or the other. It is of very little consequence to us that Satan accuses, when God has acquitted — that Satan counts up our sins, when God has blotted them all out forever — that Satan condemns, when God has justified.
“I hear the accuser roar,
Of ills that I have done;
I know them well, and thousands more,
Jehovah findeth none.”
But some may feel disposed to ask, “Is there not danger in the statement of such a principle as this? Might it not lead us into the dark and perilous region of antinomian-ism?” Reader, be thou well assured of this, thou art never further removed from that, justly dreaded region than when thy soul is basking in the bright and blessed beams of God’s eternal favor, and exulting in the stability of His unconditional and everlasting salvation. There never was a greater mistake than to imagine that God’s free grace and full salvation could ever lead to unholy results. Man’s notions of these things may have that effect, but wherever grace is fully known and salvation enjoyed, there you will, most assuredly, find “The fruits of righteousness which are by Jesus Christ, unto the glory and praise of God.” But we know it is an old habit of ignorant and self-exalting legality to attribute an antinomian tendency to the free grace of God. “Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound?” is no modern objection to the precious doctrines of grace; and yet those doctrines remain untouched in all their purity and power, and find their divine center in the Person of Christ Himself, who, having died on the cross to put away our sins, has become our life and righteousness, our sanctification and redemption, our all in all. He has not only delivered us from the future consequences of sin, but from the present power thereof.
This is what God hath wrought, and this is the groundwork of the great principle on which we have been dwelling, and which we have seen variously illustrated in God’s dealings with Israel in the plains of Moab, and in Christ’s dealings with the Baptist in the dungeon of Herod. Jehovah was compelling Balaam to exclaim in the ears of Balak, “How goodly are thy tents, Ο Jacob, and thy tabernacles, Ο Israel,” at the very moment when those tents and tabernacles were furnishing ample material for judgment. So also, Jesus was telling out in the ears of the multitude the greatness of John the Baptist, at the very moment when the messengers were on their way back to their master, carrying with them an arrow for his heart.
Now, we want the reader to get a clear view of this principle, and to bear it in constant remembrance. If we mistake not, it will greatly help him, not only in the understanding of God’s word, but also in the interpreting of His ways. God judges His people. He will not and cannot pass over a jot or a tittle in their ways. The splendid testimony of Balaam on Moab’s heights, was followed by the sharp javelin of Phineas in Moab’s plains. “Our God is a consuming fire.” This is what our God is now. He cannot tolerate evil. He speaks of us, He thinks of us, He acts toward us according to the perfection of His own work; but He will judge our ways. Let an enemy come forth to curse, and what is it? Not a spot, not a stain, all perfect and comely and goodly. How could it be otherwise? How could the eye of God behold those sins which have been forever obliterated by the blood of the Lamb? Utterly impossible. What then? Does this make light of sin? Far be the thought. Does it open the door for licentiousness? Nay, it lays the only true foundation of personal holiness. “The Lord will judge his people.” He will look after the ways of His children. He will take care of His holiness, and not only so, but He will make His people partakers of that holiness, and chasten them with the rod of faithful discipline for that very purpose. It was just because Israel’s tents were goodly in the eyes of Jehovah, that he sent Phineas into those very tents with the javelin of righteous judgment in his hand. And so, now, it is because His people are precious to Him, and comely in His eyes, that He will not suffer aught in them, or in their ways, contrary to His holiness. “The time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God.” (1 Peter.) God is not judging the world now. He is judging His people now. He will judge the world by and by. But, be it remembered, that it is as a “holy Father” He judges His people; it is as a righteous God He will judge the world. The object of the former is practical holiness; the issue of the latter will be eternal perdition. Solemn thought!
But there is another point in connection with this which we desire to press upon the attention of the Christian reader — a point of very great practical moment, namely this, we must not measure our standing by our state, but ever judge our state by our standing. Many err in reference to this, and their error leads to most disastrous results. The standing of the believer is settled, perfect, eternal, divine. His state is imperfect and fluctuating, he is partaker of the divine nature which cannot sin; but he bears about with him also his old nature which can do nothing else but sin. Now his standing is in the new and not in the old. God sees him only in the new. He is not in the flesh, but in the Spirit. He is not under law, but under grace. He is in Christ. God sees him as such. This is his perfect and unalterable standing. His sins gone. His person accepted. All complete. His practical state can never touch his standing. It can very seriously affect his communion, his worship, his testimony, his usefulness, his spiritual enjoyment, his mental repose, the glory of Christ as involved in his practical career. These are grave consequences, in the estimation of every sensitive conscience and well-regulated mind; but the standing of the true believer remains, and must ever remain intact and unalterable. No power of men or devils can ever interfere, in the smallest degree, with that which has been given of God, and is perfect in Christ. The very feeblest member of the family of God has his place of security and settled repose behind the impregnable bulwarks of God’s salvation. To deny this is to remove the only true basis of self-judgment and practical holiness.
Hence, if the Christian sets about measuring his standing by his state, he must be miserable, and his mental misery must be commensurate with his honesty and intelligence. There may be cases in which ignorance, self-complacency, or want of sincerity, will lead to a sort of false peace; but where there is any measure of light, intelligence, and uprightness, there must be mental anguish if the standing is measured by the state.
But, on the other hand, let it never be forgotten, indeed the earnest Christian never could desire to forget, that the state must be judged by the standing. If this wholesome truth be lost sight of, we shall very speedily make shipwreck of faith and a good conscience. We have to keep the eye of faith steadily fixed on a risen Christ, and never be satisfied with anything short of perfect conformity to Him, in spirit, soul, and body.