“ I charge thee
therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and
the dead at His appearing and His kingdom, preach the word; be instant in
season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with all long suffering and
doctrine.” –2 Tim. 1v. 1,2.
I. Where faithful ministers stand—“Before God
and the Lord Jesus Christ.” There is
not a more awfully affecting situation in the whole world than that in which a
faithful minister stands.
(1.) Before God.—This is true in two ways:
1st,
As a sinner saved by grace—He was once far off, but is now brought nigh by
the blood of Jesus. Having “boldness to
enter the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way which He has
consecrated for us through the vail, that is to say His flesh,” He draws
near. He stands within the vail—in the
holiest of all—in the love of God. He is
justified before God. A faithful
minister is an example to his flock of a sinner saved, God says to him
as He did to Abraham, “Walk before Me and be thou perfect.” He can say with Paul, “I was a blasphemer,
and a persecutor, and injurious, but I obtained mercy.” A faithful minister is like Aaron’s rod that
was laid up beside the ark of God and budded there.
2nd, As a servant—In
the East, servants always stand in the presence of their master, watching his
hand. The Queen of Sheba said to
Solomon, “Happy are these servants which stand continually before thee, and
hear thy wisdom.” So it is said of the
angels, that “They do always behold the face of My Father, which is in
heaven.” Even when most engaged in the
service of His saints, they feel under His all-seeing, holy, living eye. So ought faithful ministers to
feel. They should feel constantly His
presence—under his soul-piercing, gentle guiding, holy, living eye. “I will guide thee with Mine eye.” “The eyes
of the Lord are over the righteous.” Ah!
how often we feel we are before man.
Then
all power withers, and we become weak, as other men; but oh! how sweet to feel
in the presence of God, as if there were no eye on us but God’s. In prayer, how sweet to feel before
Him; to kneel at His footstool, and to put our hand upon the mercy-seat—no
curtain, no veil, no cloud between the soul and God. In preaching, how sweet to say, like
Elijah, when he stood before Ahab, “I stand before the Lord God of
Israel.” To stand at His
feet, in His family, in His pavilion, O believers, it is then we get above the
billows. The applause of men, the rage and contempt of men, then pass by us
like the idle wind which we regard not.
Thus is a minister like a rock in the ocean; the mountain-billows dash
upon his brow, and ye it stands unshaken.
(2.) Before Jesus Christ.—This also is true
in two ways:
1st, The faithful minister has a present sight of
Christ as his Righteousness. He is like
John the Baptist, “Seeing Jesus coming unto him, he saith, Behold the Lamb of
God!” Or like Isaiah, he saw “His glory
and spake of Him.” His own soul is ever
watching at Gethsemane and at Golgotha.
O brethren, it is thus only we can ever speak with feeling, or with
power, or with truth, of the unsearchable riches of Christ. We must have the taste of the manna in our mouth, “milk
and honey under our tongue,” else we cannot tell of its sweetness. We must be drinking of the living water from
the smitten rock, or we cannot speak of its refreshing power. We must be hiding our guilty souls in the
wounds of Jesus, or we cannot, with joy, speak of the peace and rest to be
found there. This is the reason why
unfaithful ministers are cold and barren in their labours. They speak, like Balaam, of a Saviour whose
grace they do not feel. The speak like
Caiaphas, of the blood of Christ, without having felt its power to speak peace
to the troubled heart. This is the
reason why many good men have a barren ministry. They speak from clear head-knowledge, or from
past experience, but not from a present grasp of the truth—not from a present
sight of the Lamb of God. Hence their
words fall like a shower of snow—fair and beautiful but cold and freezing. The Lord give us to stand in the presence of
the Lord Jesus.
2d,
The faithful minister should feel the presence of a living Saviour. A minister should be like the bride in the
Song—“Leaning upon her beloved.” This
was Jeremiah’s strength (i.8), “Be not afraid of their faces: for I am with thee to deliver thee, saith the
Lord.” So it was with Paul (Acts xviii.
10), “For I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to
hurt thee: for I have much people in this city.” So Jesus told all the disciples, “Yet a
little while and the world seeth Me not, but ye see Me. Because I live, ye shall live also.” And again He says expressly, “Lo, I am with
you always, even to the end of the world.”
Yes, brethren, Christ is as truly walking in the midst of the seven
golden candlesticks, as truly in this place to-day, as if you saw Him with your
bodily eyes. His humanity is at the right hand of
God—appearing in the presence of God for us.
His Godhead fills all in all.
Thus He is with us—standing with our right hand, so that we cannot be
moved. It is sweet to know and feel
this. Thus only can we be sustained amid
all the trials of the ministry. Are we
weary? we can lean, like John, upon His bosom.
Are we burdened with a sense of sin? we can hide in the cleft of that
Rock of Ages. Are we empty? we can look
up to Him for immediate supply.
Are we hated of all men? we can hide under His wings. Stand before the Lord Jesus Christ, and then
you may smile at Satan’s rage, and face a frowning world. Learn here also the guilt of refusing a
Gospel ministry, “He that refuseth you refuseth Me; and he that refuseth Me
refuseth Him that sent Me.”
(3.)
Within the sight of judgment—“Who shall judge the quick and the dead.”—Ministers
of their flocks shall meet together before the throne of the Lord Jesus. That will be a solemn day. They may have many solemn meetings on earth. An Ordination day is a solemn day. Their meetings from Sabbath to Sabbath are
solemn meetings; and sacrament days are very solemn days. But their meeting at the judgment-seat will
be by far the most solemn of all. Then,
1st,
The minister will give in his account, either with joy, or with grief. He will no more meet to plead with the
people, or to pray with them, but to bear witness how they received the
Word. Of some he will give account with a joyful
countenance—they received the Word with all readiness of mind—that they were
converted and became like little children—these will be his joy and crown. Of most with grief—that he carried the
message to them, but they would not come—they made light of it; or perhaps they
listened for a while, but drew back into perdition. He will be a swift witness against them in
that day. “Depart ye cursed.”
2nd,
Then the
people will give in their account of the minister. If he was faithful—if he made it his meat and
drink to do the will of God—if he preached the whole truth wit seriousness,
urgency, love—if he was holy in his life—if he preached publicly, and from
house to house—then that minister shall shine like the stars. If he was unfaithful—if he fed himself but
not the flock—if he did not seek the conversion of souls—did not travail in
birth—if he sought his own ease, his own wealth, his own praise, and not their
souls—then shall the loud curses of the ruined souls fall on that wretched man,
and God shall say, Take the unfaithful servant, and bind him hand
and foot, and cast him into outer darkness.
O believers, it is the duty of ministers to preach with this solemn day
in their eye. We should stand, like
Abraham, looking down on the smoke of Sodom; like John, listing to the new song
and the golden harps of the New Jerusalem.
Would not this take away the fear of man? Would not this make us urgent in our
preaching?/ You must either get these
souls into Christ, or you will yet see them lying down in everlasting
burnings. O brethren, did I not say
truly that the place where a minister stand is the most solemn spot in all this
world?
II.
The grand business of the faithful minister.—Described in two ways; First,
Generally—Preach the Word. Second,
More in detail—Reprove, rebuke, exhort.