Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 3: The Spirituality of the Law
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Under the summer sky, with no sound to break the stillness but the song of birds, Jesus unfolded the principles of His kingdom. Yet He who spoke to the people that day in accents of love, was opening to them the principles of the law proclaimed upon Sinai.
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I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill." Matthew 5:17.
It was Christ who, amid thunder and flame, had proclaimed
the law upon Mount Sinai. The glory of God, like devouring fire, rested upon
its summit, and the mountain quaked at the presence of the Lord. The hosts of
Israel, lying prostrate upon the earth, had listened in awe to the sacred
precepts of the law. What a contrast to the scene upon the mount of the
Beatitudes! Under the summer sky, with no sound to break the stillness but the
song of birds, Jesus unfolded the principles of His kingdom. Yet He who spoke
to the people that day in accents of love, was opening to them the principles
of the law proclaimed upon Sinai. {MB 45.1}
When the law was given, Israel, degraded by the long bondage
in Egypt, had need to be impressed with the power and majesty of God; yet He
revealed Himself to them no less as a God of love.
"The Lord came from Sinai,
And rose from Seir unto them;
He shined forth from Mount Paran,
And He came from the ten thousands of holy ones:
At His right hand was a fiery law unto them.
Yea, He loveth the tribes;
All their holy ones are in Thy hand:
And they sat down at Thy feet;
Everyone received of Thy words."
Deuteronomy 33:2, 3, R.V., margin. [46] {MB 45.2}
It was to Moses that God revealed His glory in those
wonderful words that have been the treasured heritage of the ages: "The
Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in
goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression and sin." Exodus 34:6, 7. {MB 46.1}
The law given upon Sinai was the enunciation of the
principle of love, a revelation to earth of the law of heaven. It was ordained
in the hand of a Mediator—spoken by Him through whose power the
hearts of men could be brought into harmony with its principles. God had
revealed the purpose of the law when He declared to Israel, "Ye shall be
holy men unto Me." Exodus 22:31. {MB 46.2}
But Israel had not perceived the spiritual nature of the
law, and too often their professed obedience was but an observance of forms and
ceremonies, rather than a surrender of the heart to the sovereignty of love. As
Jesus in His character and work represented to men the holy, benevolent, and
paternal attributes of God, and presented the worthlessness of mere ceremonial
obedience, the Jewish leaders did not receive or understand His words. They
thought that He dwelt too lightly upon the requirements of the law; and when He
set before them the very truths that were the soul of their divinely appointed
service, they, looking only at the external, accused Him of seeking to
overthrow it. {MB 46.3}
The words of Christ, though calmly spoken, were uttered with
an earnestness and power that stirred the hearts of the people. They listened
for a repetition [47] of the lifeless traditions and
exactions of the rabbis, but in vain. They "were astonished at His
teaching: for He taught them as one having authority, and not as their
scribes." Matthew 7:29, R.V. The Pharisees noted the vast difference
between their manner of instruction and that of Christ. They saw that the
majesty and purity and beauty of the truth, with its deep and gentle influence,
was taking firm hold upon many minds. The Saviour's divine love and tenderness
drew the hearts of men to Him. The rabbis saw that by His teaching the whole
tenor of the instruction they had given to the people was set at nought. He was
tearing down the partition wall that had been so flattering to their pride and
exclusiveness; and they feared that, if permitted, He would draw the people
entirely away from them. Therefore they followed Him with determined hostility,
hoping to find some occasion for bringing Him into disfavor with the multitudes
and thus enabling the Sanhedrin to secure His condemnation and death. {MB 46.4}
On the mount, Jesus was closely watched by spies; and as He
unfolded the principles of righteousness, the Pharisees caused it to be
whispered about that His teaching was in opposition to the precepts that God
had given from Sinai. The Saviour said nothing to unsettle faith in the
religion and institutions that had been given through Moses; for every ray of
divine light that Israel's great leader communicated to his people was received
from Christ. While many are saying in their hearts that He has come to do away
with the law, Jesus in unmistakable language reveals His attitude toward the
divine statutes. "Think not," [48] He
said, "that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets." {MB 47.1}
It is the Creator of men, the Giver of the law, who declares
that it is not His purpose to set aside its precepts. Everything in nature,
from the mote in the sunbeam to the worlds on high, is under law. And upon
obedience to these laws the order and harmony of the natural world depend. So
there are great principles of righteousness to control the life of all
intelligent beings, and upon conformity to these principles the well-being of
the universe depends. Before this earth was called into being, God's law
existed. Angels are governed by its principles, and in order for earth to be in
harmony with heaven, man also must obey the divine statutes. To man in Eden
Christ made known the precepts of the law "when the morning stars sang
together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy." Job 38:7. The mission
of Christ on earth was not to destroy the law, but by His grace to bring man
back to obedience to its precepts. {MB 48.1}
The beloved disciple, who listened to the words of Jesus on
the mount, writing long afterward under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
speaks of the law as of perpetual obligation. He says that "sin is the
transgression of the law" and that "whosoever committeth sin
transgresseth also the law." 1 John 3:4. He makes it plain that the law to
which he refers is "an old commandment which ye had from the
beginning." 1 John 2:7. He is speaking of the law that existed at the
creation and was reiterated upon Mount Sinai. {MB 48.2}
Speaking of the law, Jesus said, "I am not come to
destroy, but to fulfill." He here used the word [49]
"fulfill" in the same sense as when He declared to John the Baptist
His purpose to "fulfill all righteousness" (Matthew 3:15); that is,
to fill up the measure of the law's requirement, to give an example of perfect
conformity to the will of God. {MB 48.3}
His mission was to "magnify the law, and make it
honorable." Isaiah 42:21. He was to show the spiritual nature of the law,
to present its far-reaching principles, and to make plain its eternal
obligation. {MB 49.1}
The divine beauty of the character of Christ, of whom the
noblest and most gentle among men are but a faint reflection; of whom Solomon
by the Spirit of inspiration wrote, He is "the chiefest among ten
thousand, . . . yea, He is altogether lovely" (Song of Solomon
5:10-16); of whom David, seeing Him in prophetic vision, said, "Thou art
fairer than the children of men" (Psalm 45:2); Jesus, the express image of
the Father's person, the effulgence of His glory; the self-denying Redeemer,
throughout His pilgrimage of love on earth, was a living representation of the
character of the law of God. In His life it is made manifest that heaven-born
love, Christlike principles, underlie the laws of eternal rectitude. {MB 49.2}
"Till heaven and earth pass," said Jesus,
"one jot or one tittle shall in nowise pass from the law, till all be
fulfilled." By His own obedience to the law, Christ testified to its
immutable character and proved that through His grace it could be perfectly obeyed
by every son and daughter of Adam. On the mount He declared that not the
smallest iota should pass from the law till all things should be accomplished—all
things that concern the human race, all that [50] relates
to the plan of redemption. He does not teach that the law is ever to be
abrogated, but He fixes the eye upon the utmost verge of man's horizon and
assures us that until this point is reached the law will retain its authority
so that none may suppose it was His mission to abolish the precepts of the law.
So long as heaven and earth continue, the holy principles of God's law will
remain. His righteousness, "like the great mountains" (Psalm 36:6),
will continue, a source of blessing, sending forth streams to refresh the
earth. {MB 49.3}
Because the law of the Lord is perfect, and therefore
changeless, it is impossible for sinful men, in themselves, to meet the
standard of its requirement. This was why Jesus came as our Redeemer. It was
His mission, by making men partakers of the divine nature, to bring them into
harmony with the principles of the law of heaven. When we forsake our sins and
receive Christ as our Saviour, the law is exalted. The apostle Paul asks,
"Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish
the law." Romans 3:31. {MB
50.1}
The new-covenant promise is, "I will put My laws into
their hearts, and in their minds will I write them." Hebrews 10:16. While
the system of types which pointed to Christ as the Lamb of God that should take
away the sin of the world was to pass away at His death, the principles of
righteousness embodied in the Decalogue are as immutable as the eternal throne.
Not one command has been annulled, not a jot or tittle has been changed. Those
principles that were made known to man in Paradise as the great law of [51]
life will exist unchanged in Paradise restored. When Eden shall bloom on earth
again, God's law of love will be obeyed by all beneath the sun. {MB 50.2}
"Forever, O Lord, Thy word is settled in heaven."
"All His commandments are sure. They stand fast for ever and ever, and are
done in truth and uprightness." "Concerning Thy testimonies, I have
known of old that Thou hast founded them forever." Psalm 119:89; 111:7, 8;
Psalm 119:152. {MB 51.1}
"Whosoever . . . shall break one of these least commandments, and shall
teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven."
Matthew 5:19.
That is, he shall have no place therein. For he who
willfully breaks one commandment, does not, in spirit and truth, keep any of
them. "Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he
is guilty of all." James 2:10. {MB 51.2}
It is not the greatness of the act of disobedience that
constitutes sin, but the fact of variance from God's expressed will in the
least particular; for this shows that there is yet communion between the soul
and sin. The heart is divided in its service. There is a virtual denial of God,
a rebellion against the laws of His government. {MB 51.3}
Were men free to depart from the Lord's requirements and to
set up a standard of duty for themselves, there would be a variety of standards
to suit different minds and the government would be taken [52] out of
the Lord's hands. The will of man would be made supreme, and the high and holy
will of God—His purpose of love toward His creatures—would
be dishonored, disrespected. {MB
51.4}
Whenever men choose their own way, they place themselves in
controversy with God. They will have no place in the kingdom of heaven, for
they are at war with the very principles of heaven. In disregarding the will of
God, they are placing themselves on the side of Satan, the enemy of God and
man. Not by one word, not by many words, but by every word that God has spoken,
shall man live. We cannot disregard one word, however trifling it may seem to
us, and be safe. There is not a commandment of the law that is not for the good
and happiness of man, both in this life and in the life to come. In obedience
to God's law, man is surrounded as with a hedge and kept from the evil. He who
breaks down this divinely erected barrier at one point has destroyed its power
to protect him; for he has opened a way by which the enemy can enter to waste
and ruin. {MB 52.1}
By venturing to disregard the will of God upon one point,
our first parents opened the floodgates of woe upon the world. And every
individual who follows their example will reap a similar result. The love of
God underlies every precept of His law, and he who departs from the commandment
is working his own unhappiness and ruin. [53] {MB 52.2}
"Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes
and Pharisees, shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven." Matthew
5:20.
The scribes and Pharisees had accused not only Christ but
His disciples as sinners because of their disregard of the rabbinical rites and
observances. Often the disciples had been perplexed and troubled by censure and
accusation from those whom they had been accustomed to revere as religious
teachers. Jesus unveiled the deception. He declared that the righteousness upon
which the Pharisees set so great value was worthless. The Jewish nation had
claimed to be the special, loyal people who were favored of God; but Christ
represented their religion as devoid of saving faith. All their pretensions of
piety, their human inventions and ceremonies, and even their boasted
performance of the outward requirements of the law, could not avail to make
them holy. They were not pure in heart or noble and Christlike in character. {MB 53.1}
A legal religion is insufficient to bring the soul into
harmony with God. The hard, rigid orthodoxy of the Pharisees, destitute of
contrition, tenderness, or love, was only a stumbling block to sinners. They
were like the salt that had lost its savor; for their influence had no power to
preserve the world from corruption. The only true faith is that which
"worketh by love" (Galatians 5:6) to purify the soul. It is as leaven
that transforms the character. {MB 53.2}
All this the Jews should have learned from the [54]
teachings of the prophets. Centuries before, the cry of the soul for
justification with God had found voice and answer in the words of the prophet
Micah: "Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the
high God? shall I come before Him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year
old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of
rivers of oil? . . . He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and
what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to
walk humbly with thy God?" Micah 6:6-8. {MB 53.3}
The prophet Hosea had pointed out what constitutes the very
essence of Pharisaism, in the words, "Israel is an empty vine, he bringeth
forth fruit unto himself." Hosea 10:1. In their professed service to God,
the Jews were really working for self. Their righteousness was the fruit of
their own efforts to keep the law according to their own ideas and for their
own selfish benefit. Hence it could be no better than they were. In their endeavor
to make themselves holy, they were trying to bring a clean thing out of an
unclean. The law of God is as holy as He is holy, as perfect as He is perfect.
It presents to men the righteousness of God. It is impossible for man, of
himself, to keep this law; for the nature of man is depraved, deformed, and
wholly unlike the character of God. The works of the selfish heart are "as
an unclean thing;" and "all our righteousnesses are as filthy
rags." Isaiah 64:6. {MB
54.1}
While the law is holy, the Jews could not attain
righteousness by their own efforts to keep the law. The disciples of Christ
must obtain righteousness of [55] a different character from that
of the Pharisees, if they would enter the kingdom of heaven. God offered them,
in His Son, the perfect righteousness of the law. If they would open their
hearts fully to receive Christ, then the very life of God, His love, would
dwell in them, transforming them into His own likeness; and thus through God's
free gift they would possess the righteousness which the law requires. But the
Pharisees rejected Christ; "being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
going about to establish their own righteousness" (Romans 10:3), they
would not submit themselves unto the righteousness of God. {MB 54.2}
Jesus proceeded to show His hearers what it means to keep
the commandments of God—that it is a reproduction in themselves of
the character of Christ. For in Him, God was daily made manifest before them. {MB 55.1}
"Everyone who is angry with his brother shall be in danger of the
judgment." Matthew 5:22, R.V.
Through Moses the Lord had said, "Thou shalt not hate
thy brother in thine heart. . . . Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any
grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself." Leviticus 19:17, 18. The truths which Christ presented were the
same that had been taught by the prophets, but they had become obscured through
hardness of heart and love of sin. {MB 55.2}
The Saviour's words revealed to His hearers the fact that,
while they were condemning others as [56]
transgressors, they were themselves equally guilty; for they were cherishing
malice and hatred. {MB
55.3}
Across the sea from the place where they were assembled was
the country of Bashan, a lonely region, whose wild gorges and wooded hills had
long been a favorite lurking ground for criminals of all descriptions. Reports
of robbery and murder committed there were fresh in the minds of the people,
and many were zealous in denouncing these evildoers. At the same time they were
themselves passionate and contentious; they cherished the most bitter hatred of
their Roman oppressors and felt themselves at liberty to hate and despise all
other peoples, and even their own countrymen who did not in all things conform
to their ideas. In all this they were violating the law which declares,
"Thou shalt not kill." {MB 56.1}
The spirit of hatred and revenge originated with Satan, and
it led him to put to death the Son of God. Whoever cherishes malice or
unkindness is cherishing the same spirit, and its fruit will be unto death. In
the revengeful thought the evil deed lies enfolded, as the plant in the seed.
"Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know that no murderer
hath eternal life abiding in him." 1 John 3:15. {MB 56.2}
"Whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca [vain
fellow], shall be in danger of the council." In the gift of His Son for
our redemption, God has shown how high a value He places upon every human soul,
and He gives to no man liberty to speak contemptuously of another. We shall see
faults and weaknesses in those about us, but God claims every soul as His
property—His by creation, and doubly His as purchased [57]
by the precious blood of Christ. All were created in His image, and even the
most degraded are to be treated with respect and tenderness. God will hold us
accountable for even a word spoken in contempt of one soul for whom Christ laid
down His life. {MB 56.3}
"Who maketh thee to differ from another? and what hast
thou that thou didst not receive? now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou
glory, as if thou hadst not received it?" "Who art thou that judgest
another man's servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth." 1
Corinthians 4:7; Romans 14:4. {MB 57.1}
"Whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of
the hell of fire." R.V. In the Old Testament the word "fool" is
used to designate an apostate, or one who has abandoned himself to wickedness.
Jesus says that whoever shall condemn his brother as an apostate or a despiser
of God shows that he himself is worthy of the same condemnation. {MB 57.2}
Christ Himself, when contending with Satan about the body of
Moses, "durst not bring against him a railing accusation." Jude 9.
Had He done this, He would have placed Himself on Satan's ground, for
accusation is the weapon of the evil one. He is called in Scripture, "the
accuser of our brethren." Revelation 12:10. Jesus would employ none of
Satan's weapons. He met him with the words, "The Lord rebuke thee."
Jude 9. {MB 57.3}
His example is for us. When we are brought in conflict with
the enemies of Christ, we should say nothing in a spirit of retaliation or that
would bear even the appearance of a railing accusation. He who [58]
stands as a mouthpiece for God should not utter words which even the Majesty of
heaven would not use when contending with Satan. We are to leave with God the
work of judging and condemning. {MB 57.4}
"Be reconciled to thy brother." Matthew 5:24.
The love of God is something more than a mere negation; it
is a positive and active principle, a living spring, ever flowing to bless
others. If the love of Christ dwells in us, we shall not only cherish no hatred
toward our fellows, but we shall seek in every way to manifest love toward
them. {MB 58.1}
Jesus said, "If thou bring thy gift to the altar, and
there rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee; leave there thy
gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and
then come and offer thy gift." The sacrificial offerings expressed faith
that through Christ the offerer had become a partaker of the mercy and love of
God. But for one to express faith in God's pardoning love, while he himself
indulged an unloving spirit, would be a mere farce. {MB 58.2}
When one who professes to serve God wrongs or injures a
brother, he misrepresents the character of God to that brother, and the wrong
must be confessed, he must acknowledge it to be sin, in order to be in harmony
with God. Our brother may have done us a greater wrong than we have done him,
but this does not lessen our responsibility. If when we come before God we
remember that another has aught [59] against us, we are to leave our
gift of prayer, of thanksgiving, of freewill offering, and go to the brother
with whom we are at variance, and in humility confess our own sin and ask to be
forgiven. {MB 58.3}
If we have in any manner defrauded or injured our brother,
we should make restitution. If we have unwittingly borne false witness, if we
have misstated his words, if we have injured his influence in any way, we
should go to the ones with whom we have conversed about him, and take back all
our injurious misstatements. {MB
59.1}
If matters of difficulty between brethren were not laid open
before others, but frankly spoken of between themselves in the spirit of
Christian love, how much evil might be prevented! How many roots of bitterness
whereby many are defiled would be destroyed, and how closely and tenderly might
the followers of Christ be united in His love! {MB 59.2}
"Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery
with her already in his heart." Matthew 5:28.
The Jews prided themselves on their morality and looked with
horror upon the sensual practices of the heathen. The presence of the Roman
officers whom the imperial rule had brought into Palestine was a continual
offense to the people, for with these foreigners had come in a flood of heathen
customs, lust, and dissipation. In Capernaum, Roman officials with their gay
paramours haunted the parades and promenades, [60] and often
the sound of revelry broke upon the stillness of the lake as their pleasure
boats glided over the quiet waters. The people expected to hear from Jesus a
stern denunciation of this class, but what was their astonishment as they
listened to words that laid bare the evil of their own hearts! {MB 59.3}
When the thought of evil is loved and cherished, however
secretly, said Jesus, it shows that sin still reigns in the heart. The soul is
still in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity. He who finds
pleasure in dwelling upon scenes of impurity, who indulges the evil thought,
the lustful look, may behold in the open sin, with its burden of shame and
heart-breaking grief, the true nature of the evil which he has hidden in the
chambers of the soul. The season of temptation, under which, it may be, one
falls into grievous sin, does not create the evil that is revealed, but only
develops or makes manifest that which was hidden and latent in the heart. As a
man "thinketh in his heart, so is he;" for out of the heart "are
the issues of life." Proverbs 23:7; 4:23. {MB 60.1}
"If thy right hand causeth thee to stumble, cut it off, and cast it from
thee." Matthew 5:30, R.V.
To prevent disease from spreading to the body and destroying
life, a man would submit to part even with his right hand. Much more should he
be willing to surrender that which imperils the life of the soul. {MB 60.2}
Through the gospel, souls that are degraded and [61]
enslaved by Satan are to be redeemed to share the glorious liberty of the sons
of God. God's purpose is not merely to deliver from the suffering that is the
inevitable result of sin, but to save from sin itself. The soul, corrupted and
deformed, is to be purified, transformed, that it may be clothed in "the
beauty of the Lord our God," "conformed to the image of His
Son." "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into
the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
Him." Psalm 90:17; Romans 8:29; 1 Corinthians 2:9. Eternity alone can
reveal the glorious destiny to which man, restored to God's image, may attain. {MB 60.3}
In order for us to reach this high ideal, that which causes
the soul to stumble must be sacrificed. It is through the will that sin retains
its hold upon us. The surrender of the will is represented as plucking out the
eye or cutting off the hand. Often it seems to us that to surrender the will to
God is to consent to go through life maimed or crippled. But it is better, says
Christ, for self to be maimed, wounded, crippled, if thus you may enter into
life. That which you look upon as disaster is the door to highest benefit. {MB 61.1}
God is the fountain of life, and we can have life only as we
are in communion with Him. Separated from God, existence may be ours for a
little time, but we do not possess life. "She that liveth in pleasure is
dead while she liveth." 1 Timothy 5:6. Only through the surrender of our
will to God is it possible for Him to impart life to us. Only by receiving His
life through self-surrender is it possible, said Jesus, for these hidden sins,
which I have pointed out, to be overcome. [62] It is
possible that you may bury them in your hearts and conceal them from human
eyes, but how will you stand in God's presence? {MB 61.2}
If you cling to self, refusing to yield your will to God,
you are choosing death. To sin, wherever found, God is a consuming fire. If you
choose sin, and refuse to separate from it, the presence of God, which consumes
sin, must consume you. {MB
62.1}
It will require a sacrifice to give yourself to God; but it
is a sacrifice of the lower for the higher, the earthly for the spiritual, the
perishable for the eternal. God does not design that our will should be
destroyed, for it is only through its exercise that we can accomplish what He
would have us do. Our will is to be yielded to Him, that we may receive it
again, purified and refined, and so linked in sympathy with the Divine that He
can pour through us the tides of His love and power. However bitter and painful
this surrender may appear to the willful, wayward heart, yet "it is
profitable for thee." {MB
62.2}
Not until he fell crippled and helpless upon the breast of
the covenant angel did Jacob know the victory of conquering faith and receive
the title of a prince with God. It was when he "halted upon his
thigh" (Genesis 32:31) that the armed bands of Esau were stilled before
him, and the Pharaoh, proud heir of a kingly line, stooped to crave his
blessing. So the Captain of our salvation was made "perfect through
sufferings" (Hebrews 2:10), and the children of faith "out of
weakness were made strong," and "turned to flight the armies of the
aliens" (Hebrews 11:34). So do "the lame take the prey" (Isaiah
33:23), and the [63] weak become "as David,"
and "the house of David . . . as the angel of the Lord"
(Zechariah 12:8). {MB
62.3}
"Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife?" Matthew 19:3.
Among the Jews a man was permitted to put away his wife for
the most trivial offenses, and the woman was then at liberty to marry again.
This practice led to great wretchedness and sin. In the Sermon on the Mount
Jesus declared plainly that there could be no dissolution of the marriage tie,
except for unfaithfulness to the marriage vow. "Everyone," He said,
"that putteth away his wife, saving for the cause of fornication, maketh
her an adulteress: and whosoever shall marry her when she is put away
committeth adultery." R.V. {MB 63.1}
When the Pharisees afterward questioned Him concerning the
lawfulness of divorce, Jesus pointed His hearers back to the marriage
institution as ordained at creation. "Because of the hardness of your
hearts," He said, Moses "suffered you to put away your wives: but
from the beginning it was not so." Matthew 19:8. He referred them to the
blessed days of Eden, when God pronounced all things "very good."
Then marriage and the Sabbath had their origin, twin institutions for the glory
of God in the benefit of humanity. Then, as the Creator joined the hands of the
holy pair in wedlock, saying, A man shall "leave his father and his
mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one" (Genesis
2:24), He enunciated the [64] law of marriage for all the
children of Adam to the close of time. That which the Eternal Father Himself
had pronounced good was the law of highest blessing and development for man. {MB 63.2}
Like every other one of God's good gifts entrusted to the
keeping of humanity, marriage has been perverted by sin; but it is the purpose
of the gospel to restore its purity and beauty. In both the Old and the New
Testament the marriage relation is employed to represent the tender and sacred
union that exists between Christ and His people, the redeemed ones whom He has
purchased at the cost of Calvary. "Fear not," He says; "thy
Maker is thine husband; the Lord of hosts is His name; and thy Redeemer, the
Holy One of Israel." "Turn, O backsliding children, saith the Lord;
for I am married unto you." Isaiah 54:4, 5; Jeremiah 3:14. In the
"Song of Songs" we hear the bride's voice saying, "My Beloved is
mine, and I am His." And He who is to her "the chiefest among ten
thousand," speaks to His chosen one, "Thou art all fair, My love;
there is no spot in thee." Song of Solomon 2:16; 5:10; 4:7. {MB 64.1}
In later times Paul the apostle, writing to the Ephesian
Christians, declares that the Lord has constituted the husband the head of the
wife, to be her protector, the house-band, binding the members of the family
together, even as Christ is the head of the church and the Saviour of the
mystical body. Therefore he says, "As the church is subject unto Christ,
so let the wives be to their own husbands in everything. Husbands, love your
wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave Himself for it; that He
might sanctify and [65] cleanse it with the washing of
water by the word, that He might present it to Himself a glorious church, not
having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and
without blemish. So ought men to love their wives." Ephesians 5:24-28. {MB 64.2}
The grace of Christ, and this alone, can make this
institution what God designed it should be—an agent for the blessing
and uplifting of humanity. And thus the families of earth, in their unity and
peace and love, may represent the family of heaven. {MB 65.1}
Now, as in Christ's day, the condition of society presents a
sad comment upon heaven's ideal of this sacred relation. Yet even for those who
have found bitterness and disappointment where they had hoped for companionship
and joy, the gospel of Christ offers a solace. The patience and gentleness
which His Spirit can impart will sweeten the bitter lot. The heart in which
Christ dwells will be so filled, so satisfied, with His love that it will not
be consumed with longing to attract sympathy and attention to itself. And through
the surrender of the soul to God, His wisdom can accomplish what human wisdom
fails to do. Through the revelation of His grace, hearts that were once
indifferent or estranged may be united in bonds that are firmer and more
enduring than those of earth—the golden bonds of a love that will
bear the test of trial. [66] {MB 65.2}
"Swear not at all." Matthew 5:34.
The reason for this command is given: We are not to swear
"by the heaven, for it is the throne of God; nor by the earth, for it is
the footstool of His feet; nor by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the great
King. Neither shalt thou swear by thy head, for thou canst not make one hair
white or black." R.V. {MB
66.1}
All things come of God. We have nothing that we have not
received; and, more than this, we have nothing that has not been purchased for
us by the blood of Christ. Everything we possess comes to us stamped with the
cross, bought with the blood that is precious above all estimate, because it is
the life of God. Hence there is nothing that we have a right to pledge, as if
it were our own, for the fulfillment of our word. {MB 66.2}
The Jews understood the third commandment as prohibiting the
profane use of the name of God; but they thought themselves at liberty to
employ other oaths. Oath taking was common among them. Through Moses they had
been forbidden to swear falsely, but they had many devices for freeing
themselves from the obligation imposed by an oath. They did not fear to indulge
in what was really profanity, nor did they shrink from perjury so long as it
was veiled by some technical evasion of the law. {MB 66.3}
Jesus condemned their practices, declaring that their custom
in oath taking was a transgression of the commandment of God. Our Saviour did
not, however, forbid the use of the judicial oath, in which God is solemnly
called to witness that what is said is truth [67] and
nothing but the truth. Jesus Himself, at His trial before the Sanhedrin, did
not refuse to testify under oath. The high priest said unto Him, "I adjure
Thee by the living God, that Thou tell us whether Thou be the Christ, the Son
of God." Jesus answered, "Thou hast said." Matthew 26:63, 64.
Had Christ in the Sermon on the Mount condemned the judicial oath, He would at
His trial have reproved the high priest and thus, for the benefit of His
followers, have enforced His own teaching. {MB 66.4}
There are very many who do not fear to deceive their fellow
men, but they have been taught, and have been impressed by the Spirit of God,
that it is a fearful thing to lie to their Maker. When put under oath they are
made to feel that they are not testifying merely before men, but before God;
that if they bear false witness, it is to Him who reads the heart and who knows
the exact truth. The knowledge of the fearful judgments that have followed this
sin has a restraining influence upon them. {MB 67.1}
But if there is anyone who can consistently testify under
oath, it is the Christian. He lives constantly as in the presence of God,
knowing that every thought is open to the eyes of Him with whom we have to do;
and when required to do so in a lawful manner, it is right for him to appeal to
God as a witness that what he says is the truth, and nothing but the truth. {MB 67.2}
Jesus proceeded to lay down a principle that would make oath
taking needless. He teaches that the exact truth should be the law of speech.
"Let your speech be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: and whatsoever is more than these
is of the evil one." R.V. [68] {MB 67.3}
These words condemn all those meaningless phrases and expletives
that border on profanity. They condemn the deceptive compliments, the evasion
of truth, the flattering phrases, the exaggerations, the misrepresentations in
trade, that are current in society and in the business world. They teach that
no one who tries to appear what he is not, or whose words do not convey the
real sentiment of his heart, can be called truthful. {MB 68.1}
If these words of Christ were heeded, they would check the
utterance of evil surmising and unkind criticism; for in commenting upon the
actions and motives of another, who can be certain of speaking the exact truth?
How often pride, passion, personal resentment, color the impression given! A
glance, a word, even an intonation of the voice, may be vital with falsehood.
Even facts may be so stated as to convey a false impression. And
"whatsoever is more than" truth, "is of the evil one." {MB 68.2}
Everything that Christians do should be as transparent as
the sunlight. Truth is of God; deception, in every one of its myriad forms, is
of Satan; and whoever in any way departs from the straight line of truth is
betraying himself into the power of the wicked one. Yet it is not a light or an
easy thing to speak the exact truth. We cannot speak the truth unless we know
the truth; and how often preconceived opinions, mental bias, imperfect
knowledge, errors of judgment, prevent a right understanding of matters with
which we have to do! We cannot speak the truth unless our minds are continually
guided by Him who is truth. {MB
68.3}
Through the apostle Paul, Christ bids us, "Let your [69]
speech be alway with grace." "Let no corrupt communication proceed
out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may
minister grace unto the hearers." Colossians 4:6; Ephesians 4:29. In the
light of these scriptures the words of Christ upon the mount are seen to
condemn jesting, trifling, and unchaste conversation. They require that our
words should be not only truthful, but pure. {MB 68.4}
Those who have learned of Christ will "have no fellowship
with the unfruitful works of darkness." Ephesians 5:11. In speech, as in
life, they will be simple, straightforward, and true; for they are preparing
for the fellowship of those holy ones in whose mouth "was found no
guile." Revelation 14:5. {MB 69.1}
"Resist not him that is evil: but whosoever smiteth thee on thy right
cheek, turn to him the other also." Matthew 5:39, R.V.
Occasions of irritation to the Jews were constantly arising
from their contact with the Roman soldiery. Detachments of troops were
stationed at different points throughout Judea and Galilee, and their presence
reminded the people of their own degradation as a nation. With bitterness of
soul they heard the loud blast of the trumpet and saw the troops forming around
the standard of Rome and bowing in homage to this symbol of her power.
Collisions between the people and the soldiers were frequent, and these
inflamed the popular hatred. Often as some Roman official with his guard of
soldiers hastened from point [70] to point, he would seize upon the
Jewish peasants who were laboring in the field and compel them to carry burdens
up the mountainside or render any other service that might be needed. This was
in accordance with the Roman law and custom, and resistance to such demands
only called forth taunts and cruelty. Every day deepened in the hearts of the
people the longing to cast off the Roman yoke. Especially among the bold,
rough-handed Galileans the spirit of insurrection was rife. Capernaum, being a
border town, was the seat of a Roman garrison, and even while Jesus was
teaching, the sight of a company of soldiers recalled to His hearers the bitter
thought of Israel's humiliation. The people looked eagerly to Christ, hoping
that He was the One who was to humble the pride of Rome. {MB 69.2}
With sadness Jesus looks into the upturned faces before Him.
He notes the spirit of revenge that has stamped its evil imprint upon them, and
knows how bitterly the people long for power to crush their oppressors.
Mournfully He bids them, "Resist not him that is evil: but whosoever
smiteth thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also." {MB 70.1}
These words were but a reiteration of the teaching of the
Old Testament. It is true that the rule, "Eye for eye, tooth for
tooth" (Leviticus 24:20), was a provision in the laws given through Moses;
but it was a civil statute. None were justified in avenging themselves, for
they had the words of the Lord: "Say not thou, I will recompense
evil." "Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me."
"Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth." "If he that hateth thee [71]
be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to
drink." Proverbs 20:22; 24:29, 17; Proverbs 25:21, 22, R.V., margin. {MB 70.2}
The whole earthly life of Jesus was a manifestation of this
principle. It was to bring the bread of life to His enemies that our Saviour
left His home in heaven. Though calumny and persecution were heaped upon Him
from the cradle to the grave, they called forth from Him only the expression of
forgiving love. Through the prophet Isaiah He says, "I gave My back to the
smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: I hid not My face
from shame and spitting." "He was oppressed, and He was afflicted,
yet He opened not His mouth: He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a
sheep before her shearers is dumb, so He openeth not His mouth." Isaiah
50:6; 53:7. And from the cross of Calvary there come down through the ages His
prayer for His murderers and the message of hope to the dying thief. {MB 71.1}
The Father's presence encircled Christ, and nothing befell
Him but that which infinite love permitted for the blessing of the world. Here
was His source of comfort, and it is for us. He who is imbued with the Spirit
of Christ abides in Christ. The blow that is aimed at him falls upon the
Saviour, who surrounds him with His presence. Whatever comes to him comes from
Christ. He has no need to resist evil, for Christ is his defense. Nothing can
touch him except by our Lord's permission, and "all things" that are
permitted "work together for good to them that love God." Romans
8:28. {MB 71.2}
"If any man would go to law with thee, and take [72]
away thy coat [tunic], let him have thy cloak [mantle] also. And whosoever
shall impress thee to go one mile, go with him twain." R.V., margin. {MB 71.3}
Jesus bade His disciples, instead of resisting the demands
of those in authority, to do even more than was required of them. And, so far
as possible, they should discharge every obligation, even if it were beyond
what the law of the land required. The law, as given through Moses, enjoined a
very tender regard for the poor. When a poor man gave his garment as a pledge,
or as security for a debt, the creditor was not permitted to enter the dwelling
to obtain it; he must wait in the street for the pledge to be brought to him.
And whatever the circumstances the pledge must be returned to its owner at
nightfall. Deuteronomy 24:10-13. In the days of Christ these merciful
provisions were little regarded; but Jesus taught His disciples to submit to
the decision of the court, even though this should demand more than the law of
Moses authorized. Though it should demand a part of their raiment, they were to
yield. More than this, they were to give to the creditor his due, if necessary
surrendering even more than the court gave him authority to seize. "If any
man would go to law with thee," He said, "and take away thy coat, let
him have thy cloak also." R.V. And if the couriers require you to go a
mile with them, go two miles. {MB 72.1}
Jesus added, "Give to him that asketh thee, and from
him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away." The same lesson had
been taught through Moses: "Thou shalt not harden thine heart, nor shut
thine hand from thy poor brother: but thou shalt open [73] thine
hand wide unto him, and shalt surely lend him sufficient for his need, in that
which he wanteth." Deuteronomy 15:7, 8. This scripture makes plain the
meaning of the Saviour's words. Christ does not teach us to give indiscriminately
to all who ask for charity; but He says, "Thou shalt surely lend him
sufficient for his need;" and this is to be a gift, rather than a loan;
for we are to "lend, hoping for nothing again." Luke 6:35.
"Who gives himself with his alms feeds three,
Himself, his hungering neighbor, and Me." {MB 72.2}
"Love your enemies." Matthew 5:44.
The Saviour's lesson, "Resist not him that is
evil," was a hard saying for the revengeful Jews, and they murmured
against it among themselves. But Jesus now made a still stronger declaration: {MB 73.1}
"Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love
thy neighbor, and hate thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them
which despitefully use you and persecute you; that ye may be the children of
your Father which is in heaven." {MB 73.2}
Such was the spirit of the law which the rabbis had
misinterpreted as a cold and rigid code of exactions. They regarded themselves
as better than other men, and as entitled to the special favor of God by virtue
of their birth as Israelites; but Jesus pointed to the spirit of forgiving love
as that which would [74] give evidence that they were
actuated by any higher motives than even the publicans and sinners, whom they
despised. {MB 73.3}
He pointed His hearers to the Ruler of the universe, under
the new name, "Our Father." He would have them understand how
tenderly the heart of God yearned over them. He teaches that God cares for
every lost soul; that "like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord
pitieth them that fear Him." Psalm 103:13. Such a conception of God was
never given to the world by any religion but that of the Bible. Heathenism
teaches men to look upon the Supreme Being as an object of fear rather than of
love—a malign deity to be appeased by sacrifices, rather than a
Father pouring upon His children the gift of His love. Even the people of
Israel had become so blinded to the precious teaching of the prophets
concerning God that this revelation of His paternal love was as an original
subject, a new gift to the world. {MB 74.1}
The Jews held that God loved those who served Him,—according
to their view, those who fulfilled the requirements of the rabbis,—and
that all the rest of the world lay under His frown and curse. Not so, said
Jesus; the whole world, the evil and the good, lies in the sunshine of His
love. This truth you should have learned from nature itself; for God
"maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on
the just and on the unjust." {MB 74.2}
It is not because of inherent power that year by year the
earth produces her bounties and continues her motion round the sun. The hand of
God guides the planets and keeps them in position in their orderly [75]
march through the heavens. It is through His power that summer and winter,
seedtime and harvest, day and night follow each other in their regular
succession. It is by His word that vegetation flourishes, that the leaves
appear and the flowers bloom. Every good thing we have, each ray of sunshine
and shower of rain, every morsel of food, every moment of life, is a gift of
love. {MB 74.3}
While we were yet unloving and unlovely in character,
"hateful, and hating one another," our heavenly Father had mercy on
us. "After that the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man
appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to
His mercy He saved us." Titus 3:3-5. His love received, will make us, in
like manner, kind and tender, not merely toward those who please us, but to the
most faulty and erring and sinful. {MB 75.1}
The children of God are those who are partakers of His
nature. It is not earthly rank, nor birth, nor nationality, nor religious
privilege, which proves that we are members of the family of God; it is love, a
love that embraces all humanity. Even sinners whose hearts are not utterly
closed to God's Spirit, will respond to kindness; while they may give hate for
hate, they will also give love for love. But it is only the Spirit of God that
gives love for hatred. To be kind to the unthankful and to the evil, to do good
hoping for nothing again, is the insignia of the royalty of heaven, the sure
token by which the children of the Highest reveal their high estate. [76]
{MB 75.2}
"Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is
perfect." Matthew 5:48.
The word "therefore" implies a conclusion, an
inference from what has gone before. Jesus has been describing to His hearers
the unfailing mercy and love of God, and He bids them therefore to be perfect.
Because your heavenly Father "is kind unto the unthankful and to the
evil" (Luke 6:35), because He has stooped to lift you up, therefore, said
Jesus, you may become like Him in character, and stand without fault in the
presence of men and angels. {MB
76.1}
The conditions of eternal life, under grace, are just what
they were in Eden—perfect righteousness, harmony with God, perfect
conformity to the principles of His law. The standard of character presented in
the Old Testament is the same that is presented in the New Testament. This
standard is not one to which we cannot attain. In every command or injunction
that God gives there is a promise, the most positive, underlying the command. God
has made provision that we may become like unto Him, and He will accomplish
this for all who do not interpose a perverse will and thus frustrate His grace.
{MB 76.2}
With untold love our God has loved us, and our love awakens
toward Him as we comprehend something of the length and breadth and depth and
height of this love that passeth knowledge. By the revelation of the attractive
loveliness of Christ, by the knowledge of His love expressed to us while we
were yet sinners, the stubborn heart is melted and subdued, [77]
and the sinner is transformed and becomes a child of heaven. God does not
employ compulsory measures; love is the agent which He uses to expel sin from
the heart. By it He changes pride into humility, and enmity and unbelief into
love and faith. {MB 76.3}
The Jews had been wearily toiling to reach perfection by
their own efforts, and they had failed. Christ had already told them that their
righteousness could never enter the kingdom of heaven. Now He points out to
them the character of the righteousness that all who enter heaven will possess.
Throughout the Sermon on the Mount He describes its fruits, and now in one
sentence He points out its source and its nature: Be perfect as God is perfect.
The law is but a transcript of the character of God. Behold in your heavenly
Father a perfect manifestation of the principles which are the foundation of
His government. {MB 77.1}
God is love. Like rays of light from the sun, love and light
and joy flow out from Him to all His creatures. It is His nature to give. His
very life is the outflow of unselfish love.
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"His glory is His children's good;
His joy, His tender Fatherhood."
He tells us to be perfect as He is, in the same manner. We
are to be centers of light and blessing to our little circle, even as He is to
the universe. We have nothing of ourselves, but the light of His love shines
upon us, and we are to reflect its brightness. "In His borrowed goodness
good," we may be perfect in our sphere, even as God is perfect in His. {MB 77.2}
Jesus said, Be perfect as your Father is perfect. If [78]
you are the children of God you are partakers of His nature, and you cannot but
be like Him. Every child lives by the life of his father. If you are God's
children, begotten by His Spirit, you live by the life of God. In Christ dwells
"all the fullness of the Godhead bodily" (Colossians 2:9); and the
life of Jesus is made manifest "in our mortal flesh" (2 Corinthians
4:11). That life in you will produce the same character and manifest the same
works as it did in Him. Thus you will be in harmony with every precept of His
law; for "the law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul." Psalm
19:7, margin. Through love "the righteousness of the law" will be
"fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit." Romans 8:4. {MB
77.3}
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"The True Motive in Service"
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