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December i, 1909. THE PRESBYTERI/
deemed life as a gracious gift. Against such a covenant no
just mind can possibly complain.
It must be borne in mind furthermore that one of the parties
to this gracious covenant was One who called himself
the Son of Man and was and is "very man". He was made
of a woman, made under the law that he might redeem them
that are "under the law". The highest representative of our
humanity was a party to that covenant, and fulfilled literally
and completely all its conditions in our behalf, that God
"might be just and the Justifler of him that believeth in
Jesus". The benefits of this covenant of grace are accordingly
extended to us because its provisions have been complied
with on our behalf, and in Christ, its Mediator, all who
believe are entitled to the "riches of the inheritance" that
comes through him.
Sunday School
PAUL'S LAST WORDS.
December 12, 1909. 2 Tim. 4: 1-8, 16-18.
GOLDEN TEXT.?"For me to live is Christ, and to die is
gain." Philip 1:21.
DAILY HOME READINGS.
\f 9 Tim 1.1.1S TV. T???, 09.11/l
All ta X 1U1( ~X L'XU. X U U VJOliUCl 6(1 I'll.
T.?2 Tim. 2:1-13. F?Jude 17-25.
W.?Deut. 31:1-13. S.?Philip. 3:13-21.
S?Rev. 7:9-17.
SHORTER CATECHISM.
Q. 85. What does God require of us that we may escape
his wrath and curse due to us for sin?
A. To escape the wrath and curse of God due to us for sin,
God requireth of us faith in Jesus Christ, repentance unto life,
with the diligent use of all the outward means whereby
Christ communicateth to us the benefits of redemption.
TOPICAL OUTLINE.
How Paul Faced the End of Life?
His last charge to Timothy, vs. 1-5.
His readiness to depart, vs. 6-8.
His first trial before Nero, vs. 16-18.
LESSON COMMENT.
"Under the Republic, a Roman citizen could theoretically be
tried on a criminal charge only b ythe sovereign people." "But
under the EmDire this ancient system, thoueh not formallv
abolished, was gradually superseded." "The emperors from
the first claidied supreme judicial authority, both civil and
criminal," not only for themselves, but for the delegates
whom they appointed to act in their stead. These delegates
were called prefects, and it is evident that Paul's second trial
was conducted before this sort of officer, appointed by Nero,
the Caesar, or Emperor.
The place of trial was probably in one of the basilicas, or
public colonnade buildings of the forum, where merchants,
soldiers, etc., were accustomed to congregate, and where
trials, etc., were conducted. "Two of the most celebrated of
these edifices were called the Pauline Basilicas, from the we'lknown
"Lucius Aemilius Paulus, who had built one of them
and restored the other. It is not improbable that the greatest
man who ever bore the Pauline name was tried in one of
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of the great basilicas) appears plausible from the fact that in
bis defense, which he made alone and for himself, no man
standing with him, he spoke before a great audience, so that
"all the Gentiles might hear."
This defense appears to have been the culmination, the final
and triumphant speech of the Apostle's great career. Against
all accusers he seems to have demonstrated the fact that he
had no part (and could not have had) in burning the city of
Rome (this probably being the first item in the indictment).
Had his enemies succeeded in making good this charge, even
Dy raise witnesses, ine Apostie wouia nave Deen cast Derore
the lion as food; but, he adds, "I was delivered from the lion's
mouth." It was not appointed to him to go to his death as a
common criminal, though many believers were thus appointed.
*
IN OF THE SOUTH. 13
The next charge, that of propagating a new and illicit religion
(religio nova et illicita) was yet to be answered, and to
that Paul would have*to plead guilty. He knew that this
meant his death, and even now, while writing his last letter,
the second to Timothy, he frankly avers, "I am already being
offered, and the time of my departure is come."
Under the circumstances, the subject matter of the lesson
in hand, in addition to the fact that it is the utterance of
God's Holy Spirit, is clothed with unusual fervency, Incentive
and power. There Is not space to expound and illustrate. The
lesson should be read and re-read and committed to the
heart's memory.
The charge (vs. 1-5), "preach the Word," points out the limitations
of Timothy and of every one who has received the
sacred trust of doing or teaching in the' service of the Kingdom
of Jesus Christ. God has appointed the "Word of God",
Jesus Christ our Lord has both used it and directed that it,
and it only, be the weapon of conquest. It is by this Word
that he will save men; by this also will he judge in the last
day. How diligently, skillfully, persistently It should be
used! The time has come again and again, and will come
when men will object to the subject matter of that Word. It
is too plain, too harsh; it must be diluted, and, in fact, much
or it is probably traditional. Now, Paul was speaking of the
Old Testament. That was his Bible. This was (much of it),
In his case (not a cloak, I think), In Troas. These parchments
he loved and longed for. He had preached this Word
for thirty years and had set, not Rome only, but the world,
on fire. It was burning then, is burning yet, and will continue.
\
Vs. 7, 8 give us his personal confession, "I have fought a
good fight." It comes to this with all of us sooner or later.
Which have I done? What is the nature of the battle I have
fought? Without a personal battle, within (first) and without,
there can be no proper teaching or preaching of the
Word. The fight of Paul was "good" not because of any
innate goodness in him (that he did not claim), but because
it was (1) in a good cause, for truth against falsehood, for
righteousness against sin; (2) it was unselfish, not for himself,
but for God in Christ and his Kingdom; (3) it was sincere,
persistent and went to the limit of his ability; (4) it
issued in victory in his case, and will in every case that is
sincere. No fight is good that does not issue in victory. A
fight that fails utterly and finally is not "good", for the truth
is invincible and can never fail. After the fight comes the
crown assigned to contestants?Paul and all others?who
have "fought a good fight". A crown is nothing within itself,
but as a testimony of attainment its worth is beyond all computation.
This crown for Paul and all others who "fight the
good fight" is an award that a righteous verdict will surely
bestow, and will bestow because the winner is faithful, not in
a part, but in all the fight till death gives the signal for the
battle to cease. "Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give
thee a crown of life." There is a "righteousness", a "justification
unto life" that Christ gives to every believer at the
beginning of the battle. This the believer puts on as one of
his chief pieces of armor?the "breastplate of righteousness";
it is the great protection in the hour of darkest conflict, when
the darts of the devil are flying thick and fast. This righteousness
can not be won; it is bought by the blood of Christ,
and by him given to him who will receive it and enter the
fight. The crown comes at the close, when the Lord himself
aDDearH to his own who Invoo hla onnoorlror "T mill
m ^ , .. I .. ? w av WW ????J ?*y|/WM* <UQ, x n in V>UU1C
again and receive you unto myself."
Here we have Paul's version of death. It is a time of
"departure"; it is a time of receiving a crown; it is the time
of "the Lord's appearing" to those who love his appearing.
rayettevllle, Ark. R. B. Willis.
MORE AND MORE.
He who hath made thee whole will heal thee day by day;
He who hath spokfen to thy soul hath many things to say;
He who hath greatly taught yet more will make thee know;
He who so wondrously hath wrought yet greater things will
show;
He who hath given thee grace yet more and more will send;
He who hath set thee in the race will speed thee to the end.