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The Two Covenants |
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CHAPTER 17 |
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His Holy Covenant |
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BY Andrew Murray |
“To
remember His Holy Covenant; to grant unto us that we, being delivered out of the
hands of our enemies, should serve Him without fear, in holiness and
righteousness before Him, all our days. “ LUKE 1. 68-75.
WHEN
Zacharias was filled with the Holy Spirit and prophesied, he spoke of God’s
visiting and redeeming His people, as a remembering of His Holy Covenant. He
speaks of what the blessings of that Covenant would be, not in words that had
been used before, but in what is manifestly a Divine revelation to him by the
Holy Spirit; and gathers up all the former promises in these words “ That we
should serve Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him all the
days of our life.” Holiness in life and service is to be the great gift of the
Covenant of God’s Holiness. As we have seen before, the Old Covenant
proclaimed and demanded holiness; the New provides it; holiness of heart and
life is its great blessing.
There
is no attribute of God so difficult to define, so peculiarly a matter of Divine
revelation, so mysterious, incomprehensible, and inconceivably glorious, as His
Holiness. It is that by which He is specially worshipped in His majesty on the
throne of heaven (Isa. 6. 2 ; Rev. 4. 8, 15. 4). It unites His righteousness,
that judges and condemns, with His love, that saves and blesses. As the Holy One
He is a consuming fire (Isa. 10. 17) ; as the Holy One He loves to dwell among
His people (Isa. 12. 6). As the Holy One He is at an infinite distance from us;
as the Holy One He comes inconceivably near, and makes us one with, makes us
like Himself. The one purpose of His holy Covenant is to make us holy as He is
holy.
As
the Holy One He says: “I am holy; be ye holy; I am the Lord which hallow you,
which make you holy.” The highest conceivable summit of blessedness is our
being partakers of the Divine nature, of the Divine holiness.
This
is the great blessing, Christ the Mediator of the New Covenant brings. He has
been made unto us “both righteousness and sanctification” –righteousness
in order to, as a preparation for, sanctification (Remember that the words
sanctify, sanctity, saint are the same as make holy, holiness, holy one.) or
holiness. He prayed to the Father: “Sanctify them; for their sakes I sanctify
Myself, that they themselves may also be sanctified in truth.” In Him we are
sanctified, saints, holy ones (Rom. 1. 7 ; 1 Cor. 1. 2). We have put on the new
man which after God is created in righteousness and holiness. Holiness is our
very nature.
We
are holy in Christ. As we believe it, as we receive it, as we yield ourselves to
the truth, and draw nigh to God to have the holiness drawn forth and revealed in
fellowship with Him, its fountain, we shall know how divinely true it is.
It
is for this the Holy Spirit has been given in our hearts. He is the “Spirit of
Holiness.” His every working is in the power of holiness. Paul says: “God
hath chosen us unto salvation, in sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the
truth.” As simple and entire as is our dependence on the word of truth, as the
external means, must our confidence be in the hidden power for holiness which
the working of the Spirit brings. The connection between God’s electing
purpose, and the work of the Spirit, with the word we obey, comes out with equal
clearness in Peter: “Elect, in sanctification of the Spirit, unto
obedience.” The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of the life of Christ; as we know,
and honour, and trust Him, we shall learn and also experience that, in the New
Covenant, as the ministration of the Spirit, the sanctification, the holiness of
the Holy Spirit is our covenant right. We shall be assured that, as God has
promised, so He will work it in us, that we “should serve Him without fear, in
righteousness and holiness before Him, all the days of our life.” With a
treasure of holiness in Christ, and the very Spirit of holiness in our hearts,
we can live holy lives. That is, if we believe Him “who worketh in us both to
will and to work.”
In
the light of this Covenant promise, with the Blessed Son and the Holy Spirit to
work it out in us, what new meaning is given to the teaching of the New
Testament. Take the first epistle St. Paul ever wrote. It was directed to men
who had only a few months previously been turned from idols to serve the Living
God, and to wait for His Son from heaven. The words he speaks in regard to the
holiness they might aim at and expect, because God was going to work it in them,
are so grand that many Christians pass them by, as practically unintelligible (1
Thess. 3. 13): “The Lord make you to increase and abound in love, to the end
He may stablish your hearts unblamable in holiness at the coming of our Lord
Jesus with all His saints.” That promises holiness, unblamable holiness, a
heart unblamable in holiness, a heart stablished in all this by God Himself.
Paul might indeed say of a word like this: “Who hath believed our report?
“He had written of himself (1 Thess. 2. 10): “Ye know how holily and
righteously and unblamably we behaved ourselves.” He assures them that what
God has done for him He will do for them -give them hearts unblameable in
holiness. The Church believes so little in the mighty power of God, and the
truth of His Holy Covenant, that the grace of such heart-holiness is hardly
spoken of. The verse is often quoted in connection with “the coming of our
Lord Jesus with His saints”; but its real point and glory, -that when He comes
we may meet Him with hearts stablished unblamable in holiness by God Himself:
all too little this is understood or proclaimed or expected.
Or
take another verse in the Epistle (1 Thess. 5. 21), also spoken to these young
converts from heathenism, in reference to the coming of our Lord. Some think
that to speak much of the coming of the Lord will make us holy. Alas! how little
it has done so in many cases. It is the New Covenant Holiness, wrought by God
Himself in us, believed in and waited for from Him, that can make our waiting
differ from the carnal expectations of the Jews or the disciples. Listen- “THE
GOD OF PEACE HIMSELF” -that is the keynote of the New Covenant what you never
can do God will work in you “SANCTIFY YOU WHOLLY”; this you may ask and
expect,- “and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved entire,
UNBLAMABLE, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.” And now, as if to meet
the doubt that will arise: “Faithful is He that calleth you, WHO WILL ALSO DO
IT.” Again it is the secret of the New Covenant –what hath not entered into
the heart of man, –GOD WILL WORK in them that wait for Him. Until the Church
awakes to see and believe that our holiness is to be the immediate almighty
working of the Three-One God in us, and that our whole religion must be an
unceasing dependence to receive it direct from Himself, these promises remain a
sealed book.
Let
us now return to the prophecy of the Holy Spirit by Zacharias, of God’s
remembering the Covenant of His Holiness, to make us holy, to stablish our
hearts unblamable in holiness, that we should serve Him IN HOLINESS AND
RIGHTEOUSNESS. Note how every word is significant.
To
grant us. It is to be a gift from above. The promise given with the
Covenant was: “I the Lord have spoken it; I will perform it.” We need to
beseech God to show us both what He will do, and that He will do it. When our
faith expects all from Him, the blessing will be found.
“That
we, being delivered out of the hands of our enemies.” He had just
before said: He hath raised up an horn of salvation for us; salvation from our
enemies and the hand of all that hate us. It is only a free people can serve a
Holy God, or be holy. It is only as the teaching of Rom. 6.-8. is experienced,
and I know what it is that we are “ freed from sin,” and “ freed from the
law,” and that “the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from
the law of sin and death,” that in the perfect liberty from every power that
could hinder, I can expect God to do His mighty work in me.
Should
serve Him. My servant does not serve me by spending all his time in
getting himself ready for work, but in doing my work. The Holy Covenant sets us
free, and endows us with Divine grace, that God may have us for His work, -the
same work Christ began, and we now carry on.
Without
fear. In childlike confidence and boldness before God. And before men
too. A freedom from fear in every difficulty, because having learnt to know that
God works all in us we can trust Him to work all for us and through us.
Before
Him. With
His continued unceasing presence all the day, as the unceasing security of our
obedience and our fearlessness, the never failing secret of our being sanctified
wholly.
All
our days. Not only all the day for one day, but for every day, because Jesus is
a High Priest in the power of an endless life, and the mighty operation of God
as promised in the Covenant is as unchanging as is God Himself.
Is
it not as if you begin to see that God’s word does appear to mean more than
you have ever conceived of or expected? It is well that it should be so. It is
only when you begin to say, Glory to Him who is able to do exceeding abundantly
above all we can ask or think, and expect God’s almighty, supernatural,
altogether immeasurable power and grace to work out the New Covenant life in
you, and to make you holy, that you will really come to the place of
helplessness and dependence where God can work.
I
pray you, my Brother, do believe that God’s word is true, and say with
Zacharias, “ Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, who hath visited His
people, to remember HIS HOLY COVENANT, and to grant us, that we, being delivered
from the hand of our enemies, should serve Him without fear, in holiness and
righteousness before Him, all our days.”