
Gleanings in the Godhead
Part 2: Excellencies Which Pertain to God the
Son as Christ
26. The Fulness of Christ
It is fitting that we
should contemplate the excellencies of Christ the Mediator, for "the light
of the knowledge of the glory of God" is to be seen "in the face of
Jesus Christ" (2 Cor. 4:6). The fullest revelation that God is and what
He is, is made in the person of Christ. "No man hath seen God at any
time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath
declared" (1 John 1:18). But this knowledge of God is not a mere matter of
intellectual apprehension, which one man can communicate to another. But it is a
spiritual discernment, imparted by the Holy Spirit. God must shine in our hearts
to give us that knowledge.
When the materialistic
Philip said, "Lord, show us the Father," the Lord Jesus replied,
"he that hath seen me hath seen the Father" (John 14:9). Yes, He was
"the brightness of His glory, and the express image of His person"
(Heb. 1:3). In the eternal, incarnate Word "dwelleth all the fullness of
the Godhead bodily" (Col. 2:9). Amazing and glorious fact, it is in the
perfection of manhood that the fullness of the Godhead is in Christ revealed to
our faith. We could not ascend to God, so He descended to us. All that men can
ever know of God is presented to them in the person of His incarnate Son. Hence,
"That I may know him" (Phil. 3:10) is the constant longing of the most
mature Christian.
It is our design to declare
some part of that glory of our Lord Jesus Christ which is revealed in Scripture,
and proposed as the object of our faith, love, delight, admiration and
adoration. But after our utmost endeavors and most diligent inquiries we have to
say, "How little a portion" (Job 26:14) of Him we understand. His
glory is incomprehensible, His praises unutterable. Some things a divinely
illuminated mind can conceive of, but what we express, in comparison to what the
glory is in itself, is less than nothing. Nevertheless, that view which the
Spirit grants from the Scriptures concerning Christ and His glory is to be
preferred above all other knowledge or understanding. So it was declared, by him
who was favored to know Him, "Yea doubtless, and I count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord" (Phil.
3:8).
John Owen has well said:
The revelation made of Christ in the blessed
Gospel is far more excellent, more glorious, more filled with rays of Divine
wisdom and goodness than the whole creation, and the just comprehension of it,
if attainable, can contain or apprehend. Without the knowledge hereof, the
mind of man, however priding itself in other inventions and discoveries, is
wrapped up in darkness and confusion. This therefore deserves the severest of
our thoughts, the best of our meditations, and our utmost diligence in them.
For if our future blessedness shall consist in living where He is, and
beholding of His glory; what better preparation can there be for it, than in a
constant previous contemplation of that glory, in the revelation that is made
in the Gospel unto this very end, that by a view of it we may be gradually
transformed into the same glory.
The grandest of all
privileges which believers are capable of, either in this world or the next, is
to behold the glory (the personal and official excellencies) of Christ; now by
faith, then by sight. Equally certain, no man will ever behold the glory of
Christ by sight in heaven, who does not now behold it by faith. Where the soul
has not been previously purified by grace and faith, it is incapable of glory
and the open vision. Those who pretend to be greatly enamored by or to ardently
desire that which they never saw or experienced, only dote on their
imaginations. The pretended desires of many (especially on deathbeds) to behold
the glory of Christ in heaven, but who had no vision of it by faith while they
were in this world, are nothing but self-deceiving delusions.
There is no true rest for
the mind nor satisfaction for the heart until we rest in Christ (Matthew
11:28-30). God has proposed to us the "mystery of godliness," that is,
the person of His incarnate Son and His mediatorial work, as the supreme object
of our faith and meditation. In this "mystery" we are called upon to
behold the highest exhibition of the divine wisdom, goodness, and condescension.
The Son of God assumed manhood by union with Himself, thereby constituting the
same person in two natures, yet infinitely distinct as those of God and man.
Thereby the Infinite became finite, the Eternal temporal, and the Immortal
mortal, yet continued still infinite, eternal and immortal.
It cannot be expected that
those who are drowned in the love of the world will have any true apprehension
of Christ, or any real desire for it. But for those who have "tasted that
the Lord is gracious" (1 Pet. 2:3), how foolish we would be if we gave all
our time and strength to other things, to the neglect of diligent searching of
Scripture to obtain a fuller knowledge of Him.
Man is "born to
trouble as the sparks fly upward," but the same Scriptures reveal a
divinely appointed relief from all the evils to which fallen man is heir—so
that we may not faint under them, but gain the victory over them.
Listen to the testimony of
one who passed through a far deeper sea of trial than the great majority of men:
We are troubled on every side, yet not
distressed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not
forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed . . . For which cause we faint not: but
though our outward man perish, yet the inward is renewed day by day. For our
light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory: while we look not at the things which
are seen . . . but the things which are not seen are eternal (2 Cor. 4:8;
4:16-18).
It is beholding by faith
things which "are not seen" by the eye (which the spiritually
poverty-stricken occupants of palaces and millionaire mansions know nothing of),
the things that are spiritual and eternal, which alleviates the Christian’s
afflictions. Of these unseen, eternal things the supernal glories of Christ are
the principal. He who can contemplate Him who is "the Lord of glory,"
will, when "all around gives way," be lifted out of himself and
delivered from the prevailing power of evil.
Not until the mind arrives
at a fixed judgment that all things here are transitory and reach only to
outward man—that everything under the sun is but "vanity and vexation of
spirit," and there are other things incalculably better to comfort and
satisfy the heart—not till then will we ever be delivered from spending our
lives in fear, distress, and sorrow. Christ alone can satisfy the heart. And
when He does truly satisfy, the language of the soul is, "Whom have I in
heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee"
(Ps. 73:25).
How slight and shadowy, how
petty and puerile are those things from which the trials of men arise! They all
grow from the one root of the over-valuation of temporal things. Money cannot
purchase joy of soul. Health does not insure happiness. A beautiful home will
not satisfy the heart. Earthly friends, no matter how loyal and loving, cannot
speak peace to a sin-burdened conscience, nor impart eternal life. Envy,
covetousness, discontent, receive their death wound when Christ, in all His
loveliness, is revealed as the "chiefest among ten thousand" (Song
5:10).
