- Righteousness
by Faith
- 1891 General Conference
- Sermons on Romans
- A.T. Jones
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- Sermon 10
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- The sixth chapter of Romans commences
with a continuation of the argument that is contained in the
fifth chapter. That argument is that the life of Christ is given
to us for our justification. Grace reigns through righteousness
unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Grace is favor, and
the psalmist tells us that in His favor there is life; and so
"being justified freely by His grace" is simply the
bestowal of the life of Christ upon us. That life is a sinless
life. Christ in us obeys and by His obedience we are made righteous.
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- "What shall we say then? Shall we
continue in sin that grace may abound? God forbid. How shall
we, that are dead to sin live any longer therein? Know ye not
that so many of us as were baptized unto Jesus were baptized
unto His death? Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism unto
death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the
glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of
life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of
His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection."
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- Now this chapter shows us how we make
the connection with Christ, and what that connection does for
us. In the preceding chapter we learned that judgment had passed
upon all men unto condemnation and that the sentence of death
had gone forth upon every man in this world. The death sentence
has been pronounced, and death works in men. Why does death work
in men? What is the peculiar power of death? It is sin! "The
sting of death is sin." Therefore sin working in men is
simply death working in them. Men who are sinners are stung by
death. Death is in them already and it is carrying on its work
in them, and it is only a matter of time till it shall hold them
in its grasp forever. But while probation is continued there
is a possibility that men may escape that sting and the execution
of that penalty. Nevertheless God must be just, even while He
is the justifier of them that believe on Him. Sentence of death
has been pronounced upon every man, and that sentence will be
executed. Every man must die, because that all men have sinned.
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- But there is given to every man a choice
as to when he will die. Christ died for all men. We can acknowledge
His death and die in Him and thus get His life, or on the other
hand we may, if we wish, refuse to acknowledge Him and die in
ourselves. But die we must. Death has passed upon all men and
all men must die. The life of every man is forfeited; of ourselves
we have no life at all.
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- The Scripture plainly says, "He that
hath not the Son of God hath not life." 1 John 5:12. Now
seeing that we are in that condition, when death claims her forfeit,
what are we going to do? Don't you see that we are left lifeless.
If I owe a thousand dollars and I have just exactly a thousand
dollars in my possession, when I pay that debt, I am left penniless
am I not? So it is with this life of ours. We all have a life
here in our possession, but it does not belong to us. It is forfeited
to the law. It does not belong to us at all. When the law exacts
that forfeit and that life of ours is gone, then there is nothing
left to us but eternal death.
- But Christ, the Son of God, has so much
life in Himself that He can give life to every man and still
have as much life left. He was not under any obligation to come
to earth and go through the experience that He did. He had glory
in heaven; He had the adoration of all the angels; He had riches
and power, but He left them all and even emptied Himself of His
glory and His honor; came to earth as a poor man, took upon Himself
the form of a servant and was made in all things like unto those
whom He came to save.
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- He worked out righteousness here in the
flesh. What did He do it for? For Himself? No. He did not have
any need of it. He had riches to begin with. He had everything
that He could have when He was in heaven. But here on earth,
as a man, He worked out righteousness and eternal redemption
that He might give them to us. That is the sole reason that brought
Him into the world. He has all that righteousness He wrought
out here and He will and does give it to men. So He paid the
penalty of the law--for Himself? No! He had no sin, consequently
the law had no claim upon Him.
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- In the second letter to the Corinthians,
chapter five and verse twenty-one, the apostle Paul says, "For
he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might
be made the righteousness of God in him." So it was that
He suffered the penalty, not for Himself but for us. When we
by faith lay hold on Christ and become united with Him so that
we are identified with Him, then we have that life which He has
to bestow.
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- But pay the penalty, suffer the forfeit,
we must; for the law will exact the forfeit. But as I said before,
we have the choice as to whether we will wait and let the law
take the forfeit from us, at a time when we will have nothing
left after it is gone, or whether we will give over the forfeited
life when we can take the life of Christ and have it left after
we have paid the forfeit.
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- Now how do we get hold of Christ? How
do we get the benefit of that righteous life of His? It is in
the act of death. At what point is it that we touch Christ and
make the connection? At what point in the ministry of Christ
is it that He touches us and effects the union? It is at the
lowest possible point where man can be touched and that is death.
In all points He is made like His brethren so He takes the very
lowest of these--the point of death--and there it is, when we
are actually dead, that we step into Christ.
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- The ceremony of baptism is simply the
symbol of Christ's death and resurrection. Says Paul in Galatians
3:27, "For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ
have put on Christ." In Romans he says, "As many of
us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into His
death." But if we died with Christ we are bound and certain
to live again, for Christ is alive. Here we can forcibly apply
the words of Peter in Acts 2:24: "Whom God hath raised up,
having loosed the pains of death, because it was not possible
that he should be holden of it." It was utterly impossible
that death should hold Christ. Therefore if we died with Him
and in our death are united with Him, we shall also live with
Him. The great thought around which the whole Bible clusters
is death and resurrection with Christ. If we die with Him, we
shall live again.
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- We die with Him--when? Now! When we acknowledge
our life forfeited and give up all claims to that life and everything
that is connected with it, that very moment we die with Christ.
Now what is this giving up of our life? Life stands for everything
that a man has. It stands for everything that pertains to life.
What is it, then, that pertains to the life that we naturally
have in ourselves? It is sin! It is the lust of the flesh and
the lust of the eyes and the pride of life. It is envy, malice,
evil speaking, evil thinking--all these things make up the natural
life, because we see that every man that has the natural life
has these things. They are a part of his life. They enter into
the life of every man on earth.
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- When we come to that place where we see
that we have those things and are ready to give them up and pay
the forfeit, then it is that we can die with Christ and take
His sinless life in their stead. In yielding up that life of
ours, we give up all these things, and when they are all given
up, then we are dead with Christ. But just as surely as we give
them up and die with Christ, just so surely must we be raised
again, for Christ is risen, and we then walk in newness of life.
That new life--that newness of life which we have, is the life
of Christ, and it is a sinless life. Knowing this, "that
our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might
be destroyed, that henceforth we might not serve sin."
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- Here is the secret of all missionary effort.
When a man comes to the point where in very deed he reckons that
he has no life of his own and he gives up the forfeited life
which he did have in his possession and the life he lives in
the flesh he lives by faith in the Son of God; then Christ is
his life, and his life is "hid with Christ in God."
He has been raised to newness of life by faith in the operation
of God. What can that man fear of what man can do to him? What
will he fear of what man will say of him? He will say to himself,
It is not I, but Christ that liveth in me.
- What will it matter to him if he is called
to go to an unhealthful locality? His life has already been yielded
up, so that death has no terrors for him. He goes willingly,
"not taking his life in his hand," but leaving it in
the keeping of Christ in God. If Christ, in whom his life is
hid, wishes to allow him to sleep for awhile, it is all right.
Moreover he is not discouraged by difficulties in the work to
which Christ has assigned him, for he has practical knowledge
of the power of Christ and he knows that He who cast down the
high things that had exalted themselves in his own heart against
Christ is able to subdue all things unto Himself. The life that
he lives is the life of Christ, provided only, that every moment
of his life he yields himself and is as thoroughly consecrated
as he was at the time he died.
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- It is necessary that we die continually
and that we continually know the power of God and of the resurrection
of Christ. For "we are saved by his life." We must
know and experience the same power that God wrought in Christ
when He raised Him from the dead. We take that power--How? "Buried
with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through
the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the
dead."
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- It is simply a matter of making the resurrection
of Christ a practical thing in our own lives. It is simply believing
that what God could do for Christ, as He lay in the grave, He
can do for us. That power which brought Christ from the dead
can keep us alive from the dead. If we have the life of Christ
and it is working in us, it must do for us all that it did for
Him when he was in Galilee and Judea.
- What a precious thought it is that our
lives are not our own. We have but the life of Christ. It is
this thought that makes a man triumph even in death. Why? The
sting of death is gone! Death does not sting the righteous man,
because he is freed from sin. It was the knowledge of this that
enabled the martyrs like Jerome and Huss to go to the stake,
singing songs of triumph and victory. "Fear not them that
kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; but rather
fear him that is able to destroy both soul and body in hell."
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- Our lives are hid with Christ in God,
so that we fear not the power of wicked men or of the devil himself.
When we have given ourselves to Christ and our life is hid with
Him, what matters it whether this life be cut off soon or not?
We walk with Christ and He controls our lives. Wicked men or
devils can no more touch our life than they could hold Christ
in the grave.
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- Oh, that we might feel the power of that
life and know that we are His! When we do get it, the power of
God will accompany the message, as we go forth bearing it. What
difference if men bring reproaches on us--we are dead and our
life is hid with Christ in God, and the life we live, we live
in Him and through faith in Him. This is the power of the gospel
and the hope that makes the Christian triumph even in death.
It is the hope of the resurrection, for when the man is called
to lie down and sleep, he sleeps in Jesus. His life is just as
sure and even surer then, than if he were alive upon the earth.
His probation is sealed; he has fought a good fight; he has finished
his course and kept the faith. Well might the apostle say that
he did not sorrow for those who slept, as for those who had no
hope.
- When the church of God and the ministers
of God have died indeed, giving up everything that has pertained
to their own life, then they will belong to Christ in deed and
in truth. If Christ is willing to intrust us with some of these
things; if we are to be spared on earth for awhile, it is all
right. If on the other hand He thinks best to take us away, that
is all right too. Whether sleeping in the grave or working for
the Master on the earth, matters not, for it is Christ all the
time.
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- When we get hold of these ideas and make
them ours and we may have them as soon as we please, they are
precious to us. Having counted the cost of giving up all those
things that have been dear to us, if we are prepared to count
them all but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus
Christ our Lord, then we can yield ourselves wholly to Christ.
Just as soon as we are willing to count the cost and to let ourselves
be crucified with Christ, by giving up the pride of life, the
lust of the flesh, and all those things which have pertained
to our old life, making no provision for the flesh, then the
power of Christ comes upon us. But we are living yet on earth!
Yes, but we have given up our life and all there is to us is
Christ working in us.
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- The very moment that a man denies everything
pertaining to the flesh, that very moment he can say that Christ
is his, and that he has the life of Christ. How does he know
it? Through faith in the operation of Him that raised Christ
from the dead!
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- "Knowing this, that our old man is
crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed,
that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead
is freed from sin. Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe
that we shall also live with him; knowing that Christ being raised
from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over
Him."
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- Christ's life is an eternal life. He voluntarily
went under the dominion of death. By doing this He demonstrated
His power over death. He went down into the grave to show that
right there, while bound by the chains of the prison house of
the grave itself, He had power to burst those fetters asunder
and come forth free and a conqueror. Therefore since He dies
no more and we take that sinless life of His, then we can reckon
ourselves dead unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ
our Lord. As death can have no dominion over Him, so sin, which
is the sting of death, can have no dominion over us.
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- A questioner may say, "You make it
out that we ought never to sin any more--you leave no room for
sin." But is not that what the Bible says? "For sin
shall not have dominion over you; for ye are not under the law,
but under grace." We belong to the Lord Jesus Christ. How?
By death, we make no provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts
thereof. There is such a thing as a complete surrender to Christ--when
we give up everything and then trust to His power to keep us
in that state. And I thank God that He is able to do it.
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- Men start out on dangerous expeditions--some
to conquer a country and when they reach that land, they burn
the boats they came in so they cannot go back if they desired
to. It is right for us to count well the cost. There is no use
to make a headlong plunge into the battle. Look over the whole
ground. Here is this pleasure and that indulgence. Can I give
them up? They have been very dear to me; they have become entwined
around my very life itself. They are identified with me, so that
they show themselves in my very countenance; they are imbedded
in my very character and are a part of myself. I have clung to
them as I have clung to life itself. But Christ was not in them;
they do not savor of the life of Christ at all. For the joy that
was set before Him, He endured the cross. Can I, for the sake
of sharing that joy, endure that cross? Can I give up the pleasures
of sin for a season in order to share the riches of Christ and
the joy of His salvation? These are the questions we must ask
ourselves.
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- Look up and place your eyes on Christ
and the joy of present salvation. They form the opposite side
of the picture. There is the joy of having an infinite power
working in us. For that joy which we can have now are we willing
to give up everything and to become sharers of the sufferings
of Christ and to be made partakers of His death and the power
of His resurrection? This is a joy that will last forever, so
let us burn the boats and the bridges behind us! Can we give
up all these things that have been so dear to us; can we give
them up forever? That is the hard part.
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- Says one, "I have tried to give up
these things before, and I have fallen again; now how do I know
but what I shall fall again?" Ah, no, you are not making
a new resolution this time; you are not turning over a new leaf
and saying that you are going to do better. You are merely letting
the old life and all the resolutions go. Simply say, "I
know that there is power in God. And that same power which spoke
the world into existence, that same power which brought Christ
forth from the tomb--into the hands of that power I will yield
myself and let it sustain and keep me in the new life."
And day by day as we do that, our hearts will go out in thankfulness
to God for His wonderful power.
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- It is not ours to make provision for the
flesh in the lusts thereof, but we must step out and take hold
of the life of Christ and feel that the power of God is working
in us. When we feel that power working--that miracle which is
wrought in us--the temptations to which we have yielded so often,
the sinful practices to which we have given way, will be overcome
and we will rise superior to them. Then we can go out into the
world, in the power of Christ and carry the message as we never
have done before.
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- How is it that we will have more power?
Because we know that if God can work that miracle for us, He
can do it for anyone. Our work from a human standpoint is an
impossible one; difficulties arise on every hand. But we have
a knowledge of what the power of God can do, and therefore go
forth in faith that He who can cast down imaginations in our
hearts and every high thing that exalteth itself against the
knowledge of God and can bring into captivity every thought to
the obedience of Christ can do that same work for others, since
He has done it for us. It was that same power which caused the
walls of Jericho to fall down before the people of God. I am
so thankful that the God who has called us to be His servants
is a God of infinite power. Take hold of that power and prove
it for yourselves.
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- "Likewise reckon ye also yourselves
to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus
Christ our Lord." "Likewise"--Like what? Like
as Christ was raised from the dead to be dead no more, so likewise
reckon yourselves to be dead unto sin to sin no more. Is that
true? Note it carefully--that sin shall have no more dominion
over you. That is what the Bible says. We are no longer under
the law but under grace. We are no longer under condemnation,
but the grace of God resteth upon us. The spirit of glory and
of grace is present with us.
- There is power in Christ. What is that
power? Notice. Grace is favor! In the favor of God there is life.
Then what is the power of the grace of Christ? It is the power
of an endless life. If men really believe that Christ is risen
from the dead, they can believe that they are dead unto sin,
but alive unto God and free from sin. Does the apostle mean free
from sin? It is a solemn, but a glorious thought. How thankful
ought men to be that they can have that confidence in the power
of God through Christ that they can without any mental reservation
take this chapter and believe it. Yes, believe these very words,
"He that is dead is freed from sin . . . reckon ye yourselves
to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus
Christ."
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- But is it true that man can live without
sin? In the last part of the chapter we read, "For when
ye were the servants of sin, ye were free from righteousness."
We all know what that means. Our past experience is not so pleasant
to look back over. In it we see no good. Now why was it that
we were free from righteousness? Because we were the servants
of Satan. "But now, being made free from sin, we are become
the servants of righteousness." Christ is the author of
righteousness. The service we render is His. Which are we, the
servants of Christ or the servants of Satan? When we were the
servants of Satan, we did not do any righteousness. But now we
are the servants of God. "Yield yourselves unto God, as
those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments
of righteousness unto God." "Know ye not that to whom
ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to
whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto
righteousness?
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- There are just two services. The service
of Satan, which is of sin unto death, and the service of Christ,
which is of obedience unto righteousness. A man cannot serve
two masters. All believe that. Then it is impossible to serve
sin and righteousness at the same time. Now we call ourselves
Christians. That mans what? Followers of Christ! But in all our
Christian experience we have left little loopholes along here
and there for sin. We have never dared to come to that place
where we would believe that the Christian life should be a sinless
life. We have not dared to believe it or preach it. But in that
case we cannot preach the law of God fully. Why not? Because
we do not understand the power of justification by faith. Then
without justification by faith it is impossible to preach the
law of God to the fullest extent. Then to preach justification
by faith does not detract from or lower the law of God but is
the only thing that exalts it.
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- Now can we be the servants of Christ while
we are committing sins and making provision for the flesh to
fulfill the lust thereof? Is Christ the minister of sin? Whose
servants are we while we are committing sin? We are the servants
of sin, and sin is of Satan. Now if a Christian (?) is committing
sin part of the time and doing righteousness the rest of the
time, it must be that Satan and Christ are in partnership, so
that he has only one master, for he cannot serve two masters.
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- But there is no consort between light
and darkness--between Christ and Belial. They are in deadly antagonism.
They are opposed to each other, and they have fought a fight
even to the death. There is no quarter on either side. Then it
is utterly impossible for man to serve these two masters. He
must be on the one side or the other. "Know ye not that
to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye
are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death or of obedience
unto righteousness?" We know enough about being servants
of sin. We have yielded ourselves as instruments of unrighteousness
unto sin.
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- Now the question comes: How am I going
to become a servant of Christ so that I will be able to die to
my old life? "To whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey,
his servants ye are whom ye obey." The word rendered "servant"
really means a "bond-servant." Just the moment that
I yield myself to Christ to become His servant, that very moment
I am His bond-servant. That very moment I belong to Him. How
do I know that Christ will accept my service if I do give it
Him? Because He has bought that service and paid the price for
it. And in all those years that I yielded myself a servant to
sin, I have been defrauding Him of His right. But all this time
that I have been keeping back my service, He has been going about
searching for me and seeking to draw me to Him. And when we say,
"Here, Lord, here I am; I give myself to Thee," that
very moment Christ has found us, for He has been seeking for
us and we are His servants.
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- But how do we know that we are going to
continue in His service? How do we know that we can live the
life of Christ? Just in the same way that we know we have lived
the life of sin. When we take this matter into account as to
whose servants we will be, we want to take into account the power
of the two masters. When we were the servants of sin, we were
free from righteousness, because Satan swayed us and used us
in whatever way he would, and we were at the mercy of his power.
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- Is sin stronger than righteousness? Is
Satan stronger than Christ? No! Then as Christ has proved Himself
to be the stronger of the two and just as surely as when we were
the bond-servants of sin it had power to keep us free from righteousness,
so when we yield ourselves as bond-servants unto Christ, He has
power to keep us from sin. The battle is not ours; it is God's.
I said that Christ and Satan were not in partnership, but that
there is the bitterest antagonism between them.
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- All are familiar with the words, "The
Great Controversy between Christ and Satan." It is a household
phrase among us. What is the controversy over? It is over the
souls of men and the place of their abode. Who shall have your
service and mine, is the question that they are fighting over.
The controversy is between Christ and Satan. They are not only
the principal ones in the controversy, but the whole controversy
is between them and them alone.
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- We have this much to say--neither one
of them can take our service against our will. Of ourselves we
have no power to stand against Satan; we have tried that. We
have no power to meet him; we cannot face him and conquer him.
We have no power at all, but at the same time we know that we
do not want to be his servants. Yes, and we will not only say,
I do not want to be his servant, but I will not be his servant.
So instead of putting our strength against Satan, we yield ourselves
to Christ and repeat over and over again, like David the psalmist,
"O Lord, truly I am thy servant; I am thy servant and the
son of thine handmaid; thou hast loosed my bonds." Psalm
116:15.
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- What? I was a bond-servant of Satan's
but just the moment I said to Christ, "I will be your servant,"
He loosed my bonds and took upon Himself the responsibility of
defending me against Satan, who has no right to me. So when Satan
comes to take me back and make me his bond-servant again, Christ
meets him, even as He met him when He was here upon the earth.
So simply tell your own heart, and Satan, that you are Christ's
and that He has loosed your bonds. Then you are loosed indeed.
You have counted the cost and now you can take the words of David
and repeat them over and over.
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- Your life is no longer your own, it is
the life of Christ. His life, His very existence, is pitted against
Satan. The battle goes over our heads, for we are dead and our
life is hid with Christ in God. Says the psalmist, "Thou
shalt keep them in the secret of thy presence from the pride
of man: Thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion from the
strife of tongues." The battle between Christ and Satan
is being waged over our heads and we are hid in the secret pavilion.
This is the victory that overcometh the world, for Christ has
gained the victory over Satan and by grasping the promises of
Christ by faith and laying hold upon the life of Christ, the
victory over Satan is ours.
- Does not Christ say that all power is
given Him in heaven and in earth? Note the precious words in
Ephesians 1:19-21: "And what is the exceeding greatness
of his power to us-ward who believe, according to the working
of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when he raised
him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly
places, far above all principality and power and might and dominion
and every name that is named."
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- That same power which placed Him in that
exalted position which is far above all principality and power--what
has it done for us? "Quickened us together with Christ and
hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly
places in Christ Jesus." Where is it that we are placed?
"Far above all principality and power."
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- Then the victory is ours in Christ and
He has gained the victory already. He has conquered a peace for
us. Just as surely as He gives His peace to us, just that surely
has He gained the victory for us. So in the hour of trial we
have a victory that is already gained. Well may we say that the
battle goes over our heads, and great is our peace. There is
peace all the time.
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- The strength of the Christian lies in
submitting--the victory in yielding to Christ, so that He may
keep us in His presence, and cover us up in His pavilion from
the strife of tongues. Then it does not matter how great the
trial may be, if we have Christ, there will be peace in our hearts.
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- O that every one in this house may be
filled with a desire to have Christ and His righteousness, that
this very night we may take His word and be inspired by its inspiration
and then we shall have and shall be able to live the life of
Christ. Then we can go about as missionaries for Christ and do
good. When we take that power which we have by faith in Him,
it will not be long till the work will be cut short in righteousness,
and we shall see Him, who not having seen, we love.
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- [Sermons on Romans Contents]