SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON LXVI. ON THE WORDS OF
THE GOSPEL, LUKE XXIV. 36, "HE HIMSELF STOOD IN THE MIDST OF THEM, AND SAITH
UNTO THEM, PEACE BE UNTO YOU," ETC.
SERMON LXVI.
[CXVI. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, LUKE XXIV. 36, "HE HIMSELF STOOD IN THE MIDST OF
THEM, AND SAITH UNTO THEM, PEACE BE UNTO YOU," ETC.
1. THE Lord appeared to His disciples after His resurrection, as ye have
heard, and saluted them, saying, "Peace be unto you."[2] This is peace indeed,
and the salutation of salvation: for the very word salutation has received its
name from salvation.[3] And what can be better than that Salvation Itself should
salute man? For Christ is our Salvation. He is our Salvation, who was wounded
for us, and fixed by nails to the tree, and being taken down from the tree, was
laid in the sepulchre. And from the sepulchre He arose, with His wounds
healed, His scars kept. For this He judged expedient for His disciples, that His
scars should be kept, whereby the wounds of their hearts might be healed. What
wounds? The wounds of unbelief. For He appeared to their eyes, exhibiting real
flesh, and they thought they saw a spirit. It is no light wound, this wound of
the heart. Yea, they have made a malignant heresy who have abided in this wound.
But do we suppose that the disciples had not been wounded, because they were
so quickly healed? Only, Beloved, suppose, if they had continued in this wound,
to think that the Body which had been buried, could not rise again, but that a
spirit in the image of a body, deceived the eyes of men: if they had continued
in this belief, yea, rather in this unbelief, not their wounds, but their death
would have had to be bewailed.
2. But what said the Lord Jesus? "Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts
ascend into your hearts?"[4] If thoughts ascend into your heart, the thoughts
come from the earth. But it is s good for a man, not that a thought should
ascend. into his heart, but that his heart should itself ascend upwards, where the
Apostle would have believers place their hearts, to whom he said, "If ye be
risen with Christ, mind those things which are above, where Christ is sitting at
the right hand of God. Seek those things which are above, not the things which
are upon the earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God.
When Christ your life shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory."[5] In what glory? The glory of the resurrection. In what glory? Hear the
Apostle saying of this body, "It is sown in dishonour, it shall rise in glory."[6]
This glory the Apostles were unwilling to assign to their Master, their Christ,
their Lord: they did not believe that His Body could rise from the sepulchre:
they thought Him to be a Spirit, though they saw His flesh, and they believed
not their very eyes. Yet we believe them who preach but do not show Him. Lo,
they believed not Christ who showed Himself to them. Malignant wound ! Let the
remedies for these scars come forth. "Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts
ascend into your hearts? See My hands and My feet," where I was fixed with the
nails. "Handle and see." But ye see, and yet do not see. "Handle and see." What?
"That a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me have. When He had thus
spoken," so it is written, "He showed them His hands and His feet."[7]
3. "And while they were yet in hesitation, and wondered for joy."[8] Now
there was joy already, and yet hesitation continued. For a thing incredible had
taken place, yet taken place it had. Is it at this day a thing incredible, that
the Body of the Lord rose again from the sepulchre? The whole cleansed
world[9] has believed it; whoso has not believed it, has remained in his uncleanness.
Yet at that thee it was incredible: and persuasion was addressed not to the
eyes only, but to the hands also, that by the bodily senses faith might descend
into their heart, and that faith so descending into their heart might be preached
throughout the world to them who neither saw nor touched, and yet without
doubting believed. "Have ye," saith He, "anything to eat?" How much doeth the good
Builder still to build up the edifice of faith? He did not hunger, yet He asked
to eat. And He ate by an act of His power, not through necessity. So then let
the disciples acknowledge the verity of His body, which the world has
acknowledged at their preaching.
4. If haply there be any heretics who still in their hearts maintain that
Christ exhibited Himself to sight, but that Christ's was not very flesh; let
them now lay aside that error, and let the Gospel persuade them. We do but blame
them for entertaining this conceit: He will damn them if they shall persevere
in it. Who art thou who dost not believe that a body laid in the sepulchre could
rise again? If thou art a Manichee, who dost not believe that He was crucified
either, because thou dost not believe that He was even born, thou declarest
that all that He showed was false. He showed what was false, and dost thou speak
the truth? Thou dost not lie with thy mouth, and did He lie in His body? Lo
thou dost suppose that He appeared unto the eyes of men what He really was not,
that He was a spirit, not flesh. Hear Him: He loves thee, let Him not condemn
thee. Hear Him speaking: lo, He speaks to thee, thou unhappy one, He speaks to
thee, "Why art thou troubled, and why do thoughts ascend into thine heart?" "See,"
saith He, "My hands and My feet. Handle and see, because a spirit hath not
flesh and bones as ye see Me have." This spake the Truth, and did He deceive? It
was a body then, it was flesh; that which had been buried, appeared. Let
doubting perish, and meet praise ensue.
5. He showed himself then to the disciples. What is" Himself"? The Head of
His Church. The Church was foreseen by Him as in thee to be throughout the
world, by the disciples it was not yet seen. He showed the Head, He promised the
Body. For what did He add next? "These are the words which I spake to you, while
I was yet with you"[1] What is this," While I was yet with you"? Was He not
with them then when He was speaking to them? What is, "when I was yet with you"?
was with you as mortal, which now I am not. I was with you when I had yet to
die. What is, "with you"? With you who were to die, Myself to die. Now I am no
more with you: for I am with those who are to die, Myself to die no more for
ever. This then is what I said to you. What? "That all things must be fulfilled
which are written in the Law, and in the Prophets, and in the Psalms concerning
Me."[1] I told you that all things must be fulfilled. "Then opened He their
understanding."[2] Come then, O Lord, employ Thy keys, open, that we may understand.
Lo, Thou dost tell all things, and yet are not believed. Thou art thought to
be a spirit, art touched, art rudely handled,[3] and yet they who touch Thee
hesitate. Thou dost admonish them out of the Scriptures, and yet they understand
Thee not. Their hearts are closed, open, and enter in. He did so. "Then opened
He their understanding." Open, O Lord, yea, open the heart of him who is in
doubt concerning Christ. Open "his" understanding who believes that Christ was a
phantom. "Then opened He their understanding, that they might understand the
Scriptures."
6. And "He said unto them." What? "That thus it behoved. That thus it is
written, and thus it behoved." What? "That Christ should suffer, and rise from
the dead the third day."[4] And this they saw, they saw Him suffering, they saw
Him hanging, they saw Him with them alive after His resurrection. What then
did they not see ? The Body, that is, the Church. Him they saw, her they saw not.
They saw the Bridegroom, the Bride yet lay hid. Let him promise her too. "Thus
it is written, and thus it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead
the third day." This is the Bridegroom, what of the Bride? "And that
repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His Name among all nations,
beginning at Jerusalem."[5] This the disciples did not yet see: they did not yet see
the Church throughout all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. They saw the Head,
and they believed the Head touching the Body. By, this which they saw, they
believed that which they saw not. We too are like to them: we see something which
they saw not, and something we do not see which they did see. What do we see,
which they saw not? The Church throughout all nations. What do we not see, which
they saw? Christ present in the flesh. As they saw Him, and believed
concerning the Body, so do we see the Body; let us believe concerning the Head. Let what
we have respectively seen help us. The sight of Christ helped them to believe
the future Church: the sight of the Church helps us to believe that Christ has
risen. Their faith was made complete, and ours is made complete also. Their
faith was made complete from the sight of the Head, ours is made complete by the
sight of the Body. Christ was made known to them "wholly," and to us is He so
made known: but He was not seen "wholly" by them, nor by us has He been "wholly"
seen. By them the Head was seen, the Body believed. By us the Body has been
seen, the Head believed. Yet to none is Christ lacking: in all He is complete,
though to this day His Body remains imperfect. The Apostles believed; through them
many of the inhabitants of Jerusalem believed; Judaea believed. Samaria
believed. Let the members be added on, the building added on to the foundation. "For
no other foundation can any man lay," says the Apostle, "than that which is
laid, which is Christ Jesus."[6] Let the Jews rage madly, and be filled with
jealousy: Stephen be stoned, Saul keep the raiment of them who stone him, Saul, one
day to be the Apostle Paul.[7] Let Stephen be killed, the Church of Jerusalem
dispersed in confusion: out of it go forth burning brands, and spread themselves
and spread their flame. For in the Church of Jerusalem, as it were burning
brands were set on fire by the Holy Spirit, when they had all one soul, and one
heart to God-ward.[1] When Stephen was stoned, that pile suffered persecution:
the brands were dispersed, and the world was set on fire.
7. And then intent on his furious schemes, that Saul received letters from
the chief of the priests, and began his journey in his cruel rage, breathing
out slaughter, thirsting for blood, to drag bound and to hurry off to punishment
whomsoever he could, and from every quarter that he could, and to satiate
himself with the shedding of their blood. But where was God, where was Christ,
where He that had crowned Stephen? Where, but in heaven? Let Him now look on Saul,
and mock him in his fury, and call froth heaven, "'Saul, Saul, why persecutest
thou Me?'[2] I am in heaven, and thou in earth, and yet thou persecutest Me.
Thou dost not touch the body, but my members thou art treading down. Yet what art
thou doing? What art thou gaining? 'It is hard for thee to kick against the
pricks.' Kick as thou wilt, thou only distressest thyself. Lay aside thy fury
then, recover soundness. Lay aside evil counsel, seek after good succour." By that
voice he was struck to the earth. Who was struck to the earth? The persecutor.
Lo, by that one word was he overcome. After what wast thou going, after what
was thy fury carrying thee? Those whom thou wast seeking out, now thou
followest; whom thou wast persecuting, now for them thou sufferest persecution. He rises
up the preacher, who was struck to the earth, the persecutor. He heard the
Lord's voice. He was blinded, but in the body only, that he might be enlightened
in heart. He was brought to Ananias, catechised on sundry points, baptized, and
so came forth an Apostle. Speak then, preach, preach Christ, spread His
doctrine, O thou goodly leader of the flock,[3] but lately a wolf. See him, mark him,
who once was raging. "But for me, God forbid that I should glory, save in the
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world has been crucified to me and I
to the world."[4] Spread the Gospel: scatter with thy mouth what thou hast
conceived in thine heart. Let the nations hear, let the nations believe; let the
'nations multiply, let the Lord's empurpled spouse spring forth from the blood
of Martyrs. And from her how man), have come already, how many members have
cleaved to the Head, and cleave to Him still and believe! They were baptized, and
others shall be baptized, and after them shall others come. Then I say, at the
end of the world shall the stones be joined to the, foundation, living stones,
holy stones, that at the end the whole edifice may be built by that Church, yea
by this very Church which now sings the new song, while the house is in
building. For so the Psalm itself says," When the house was in building after the
captivity;" and what says it, "Sing unto the Lord a new song, sing unto the Lord
all the earth."[5] How great a house is this! But when does it sing the new song?
When it is in building. When is it dedicated? At the end of the world. Its
foundation has been already dedicated, because He hath ascended into heaven, and
dieth no more. When we too shall have risen to die no more, then shall we be
dedicated.