Newspaper Page Text
14 the presbyteri/
Prayer Meeting
Topic: COMPLETE IN HIM.
Cor. 2: 6-10.
For WpaU T^.nflin cr A nrll A
The doctrine of Christ, as the divine Redeemer, is the central
doctrine of the Christian faith now, as it has ever been.
Today, with an astuteness and a disguise that has scarcely,
if ever, been equaled, this central citadel of truth is being
assailed. Professed expositors of truth are its assailants. It
becomes those who love the name which is above every name
to jealously guard and invincibly defend this stronghold of
the Church's hope and its very life. Prom our pulpits the
testimony should be rung out over and over again, clearly,
aggressively and confidently. It is the one message that will
hold the Church in liolv alliance with Omnipotence, revive
hope in the hearts of our humanity and transform the earth.
By contact with paganism, Judaizing teachers at Colosse
fcppni tn hnvn (>nnif iiiwlpr flip flf>1n?ir>n nf ji jrrnrlunforl cvstom
of deities, or higher order of beings whose mediatorial ministrations
were to be sought and who were accordingly the
objects of worship. The apostle tells them that such teachings
are vain deceit, having their source in "the traditions of
men" and "the rudiments of the world." The entire fulness
of the God-head dwelt in Christ -and In him those who
believed were complete. For he is "head over all principality
and power." Their very profession, whether they were
Jews or Gentiles, was an acknowledgment of this. The fruits
of his redemption in conquering sin was a proclamation of
this truth, as for principalities and powers, that is the powerful
spiritual organization of which the apostle speaks in
Ephesians, when he says, "we wrestle against principalities,
against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this
world, against wicked spirits in high places," he spoiled
them and made a show of them, openly triumphing over them
"in the cross.
The truth for us, then, is that Christ completely supplies
our wants, meeting all legal and spiritual demands upon ue,
in himself. We are members of his mystical body; we arcquickened
and sanctified by his Spirit. He is "made of God,
unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption."
He is the source of our knowledge, the ground
of our acceptance, our deliverer from bondage, the author
of our libei ty, the giver of our victory, the fountain head
of holiness and happiness. Man-made ordinances and traditions,
the observance of days and ceremonials of human
device, reflect upon his completeness and are an offense
to him they are after the traditions of men, after the rudiments
of the world and not after Christ. The mediation of
saints and angels is of the very essence of idolatry. The worshipers
of saints are the detractors of our Lord.
The spirit of Christianity prompts us to turn with aversion
from human speculation, called "philosophy and vain deceit."
The renewed soul hungers and thirsts for its Redeemer. That
soul longs for his companionship, his counsel, his mighty
intervention, the breathings of his love, the charm of his
supreme personality, the tenderness of KTs sympathy, his
wise and kindly ministration, his ever living intercession.
That soul craves the most intimate, constant, vital and supreme
communion with him. "Whom have 1 in heaven but
thee, and there is none upon earth that I desire beside
thee."
Prayer has been the preparation of every new triumph and
the secret of all success of missions.
IN OF THE SOUTH. March 31, 1909.
Young People's Society
RISEN WITH CHRIST.
Topic for Sunday, April 11: Risen With Christ. Colossians
3: 1-4.
DAILY READINGS.
Monday: The rising of the soul. Epliesians 2: 1-7.
Tuesday: A symbol of resurrection. Romans 6: 1-5.
Wednesday: Our new life. Colossians 2: 8-16.
Thursday: Resurrection -power in us. Epliesians 1: 17-23.
Friday: The Risen Christ within. Romans 8: 9-14.
Saturday; The spiritual uprising. John 5: 24.
The resurrection was, to the apostles, both a doctrine and
h fact. Its hearing upon the whole system of faith was to
them significant and essential.
iiu juiiu vtjuiu oe an apostle who was not a witness of
the resurrection of Christ, through having seen him living
subsequent to his passage into the grave.
When the eleven met to choose a successor to Judas, this
qualification was clearly expressed, and two men were found
to be eligible, and from these two Matthias was chosen by lot.
. Paul stoutly maintained his apostleship on the ground of
the risen Christ's revelation of himself to him. "I was not
a whit behind the very chiefest apostles." Some in Corinth
had denied his apostleship.
The resurrection was the great declaration of God, that
tne atonement was complete and accepted. It was the high
priest's return from the Inner sanctuary, where he had gone
with the blood of atonement upon his hands.
It was also the proof of the deity of the a toner, "Declared
to be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of
holiness, by the resurrection from the dead." In his sermon
in Antioch, in Pisidia, Paul dwelt much on this. Read
Acts 13.
But the sweetness of Christ's resurrection is in its relation
to us. He became the first-fruits of them that slept.
He ever liveth to make intercession for us. He ascended on
MnU V- I ?4 ?*
"? iiugiit give gooa girts to men. Living in him
we rise with him.
Our rising with him is the practical side to us of the fact
and doctrine. It means present likeness to his life by a
resurrection from the old conditions, which were those of
death and death only.
It means certainty of eternal life and blessedness equal to
the life aud blessedness of Christ himself. "If the spirit of
him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he
that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your
mortal bodies by bis Spirit that dwelleth in you."
It means the taking away of the fears that come into
our soul at the thought of death and the grave. The sting
of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law. But
Christ, by his resurrection, has given us the victory over both
sin and the grave. He passed safely through both. He
v/iil carry us safely through them.
It means, a higher life here, as well as hereafter. "If je
be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above,
where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your
afTections on things above. Mortify your members which are
upon the earth. Put on mercy, kindness, humbleness of mind,
neekness, long-suffering, forgiveness, charity."
iu-j nuru rising .nas a peculiar signiticancy. It means
coming up, getting higher, reaching a loftier plane, exaltation.
It suggests elevation, progress. gr<|vth. One rising
carries with him to the new situation all that he is and
that ho has and that he can do. There is such a thing as
"the higher life." It begins as soon as Christ is born in
the soul, "the hope of glory."