Christ Crucified
J. C. Ryle
There is no doctrine in Christianity so important as the
doctrine of Christ crucified. There is none which the devil tries so hard to
destroy. There is none which it is so needful for our own peace to
understand.
By "Christ crucified," I mean the doctrine that Christ
suffered death on the cross to make atonement for our sins—that by His death
He made a full, perfect, and complete satisfaction to God for the
ungodly—and that through the merits of that death all who believe in Him are
forgiven all their sins, however many and great, entirely, and forever.
About this blessed doctrine let me say a few words.
The doctrine of Christ crucified is the grand peculiarity
of the Christian religion. Other religions have laws and moral precepts,
forms and ceremonies, rewards and punishments; but other religions cannot
tell us of a dying Savior: they cannot show us the cross. This is the crown
and glory of the Gospel; this is that special comfort which belongs to it
alone. Miserable indeed is that religious teaching which calls itself
Christian, and yet contains nothing of the cross. A man who teaches in this
way might as well profess to explain the solar system, and yet tell his
hearers nothing about the sun.
The doctrine of Christ crucified is the strength of a
minister. I for one would not be without it for all the world. I would feel
like a soldier without arms, like an artist without his pencil, like a pilot
without his compass, like a laborer without his tools. Let others, if they
will, preach the law and morality; let others hold forth the terrors of
hell, and the joys of heaven; let others dwell on the sacraments and the
Church: give me the cross of Christ. This is the only lever which has
ever turned the world upside down hitherto, and made men forsake their sins:
and if this will not, nothing will.
A man may begin preaching with a perfect knowledge of
Latin, Greek, and Hebrew; but he will do little or no good among his hearers
unless he knows something of the cross. Never was there a minister who did
much for the conversion of souls who did not dwell much on Christ crucified.
Luther, Rutherford, Whitfield, McCheyne, were all most eminently preachers
of the cross. This is the preaching that the Holy Spirit delights to bless:
He loves to honor those who honor the cross. The doctrine of Christ
crucified is the secret of all missionary success. Nothing but this has ever
moved the hearts of the heathen. Just according as this has been lifted up
missions have prospered. This is the weapon that has won victories over
hearts of every kind, in every quarter of the globe: Greenlanders, Africans,
South Sea Islanders, Hindoos, and Chinese, all have alike felt its power.
Just as that huge iron tube which crosses the Menai Straits is more affected
and bent by half an hour’s sunshine than by all the dead weight that can be
placed in it, so in like manner the hearts of savages have melted before the
cross, when every other argument seemed to move them no more than stones.
"Brethren," said a North American Indian after his
conversion, "I have been a heathen. I know how heathens think. Once a
preacher came and began to explain to us that there was a God; but we told
him to return to the place from where he came. Another preacher came and
told us not to lie, nor steal, nor drink; but we did not heed him. At last
another came into my hut one day, and said, ‘I am come to you in the name of
the Lord of heaven and earth. He sends to let you know that He will make you
happy, and deliver you from misery. For this end He became a man, gave His
life a ransom, and shed His blood for sinners. I could not forget his words.
I told them to the other Indians, and an awakening begun among us. I say,
therefore, preach the sufferings and death of Christ, our Savior, if you
wish your words to gain entrance among the heathen."
Never indeed did the devil triumph so thoroughly as when
he persuaded the Jesuit missionaries in China to keep back the story of the
cross! The doctrine of Christ crucified is the foundation of a Church’s
prosperity. No Church will ever be honored in which Christ crucified is not
continually lifted up. Nothing whatever can make up for the lack of the
cross. Without it all things may be done decently and in order; without it
there may be splendid ceremonies, beautiful music, gorgeous churches,
learned ministers, crowded communion tables, huge collections for the poor;
but without the cross no good will be done. Dark hearts will not be
enlightened, proud hearts will not be humbled, mourning hearts will not be
comforted, fainting hearts will not be cheered. Sermons about the catholic
church and an apostolic ministry, sermons about baptism and the Lord’s
supper, sermons about unity and schism, sermons about fasts and communion,
sermons about fathers and saints—such sermons will never make up for the
absence of sermons about the cross of Christ. They may amuse some, they will
feed none. A gorgeous banqueting room, and splendid gold plate on the table,
will never make up to a hungry man for the lack of food.
Christ crucified is God’s grand ordinance for doing good
to men. Whenever a Church keeps back Christ crucified, or puts anything
whatever in that foremost place which Christ crucified should always have,
from that moment a Church ceases to be useful. Without Christ crucified in
her pulpits, a Church is little better than a cumberer of the ground, a dead
carcass, a well without water, a barren fig-tree, a sleeping watchman, a
silent trumpet, a dumb witness, an ambassador without terms of peace, a
messenger without tidings, a lighthouse without fire, a stumbling-block to
weak believers, a comfort to infidels, a hot-bed for formalism, a joy to the
devil, and an offence to God.
The doctrine of Christ crucified is the grand center of
union among true Christians. Our outward differences are many without doubt:
one man is an Episcopalian, another is a Presbyterian; one is an
Independent, another a Baptist; one is a Calvinist, another an Arminian; one
is a Lutheran, another a Plymouth Brother; one is a friend to
Establishments, another a friend to the Voluntary system; one is a friend to
Liturgies, another a friend to extempore prayer: but after all, what shall
we hear about most of these differences in heaven? Nothing, most probably:
nothing at all. Does a man really and sincerely glory in the cross of
Christ? That is the grand question. If he does, he is my brother: we are
traveling in the same road; we are journeying towards a home where Christ is
all, and everything outward in religion will be forgotten. But if he does
not glory in the cross of Christ, I cannot feel comfort about him. Union on
outward points only is union only for time: union about the cross is union
for eternity. Error on outward points is only a skin-deep disease: error
about the cross is disease at the heart. Union about outward points is a
mere man-made union: union about the cross of Christ can only be produced by
the Holy Spirit.
Reader, I know not what you think of all this. I feel as
if the half of what I desire to tell you about Christ crucified were left
untold. But I do hope that I have given you something to think about. Listen
to me now for a few moments, while I say something to apply the whole
subject to your conscience.
Are you living in any kind of sin? Are you following the
course of this world, and neglecting your soul? Hear! I beseech you, what I
say to you this day: "Behold the cross of Christ." See there how Jesus loved
you! See there what Jesus suffered to prepare for you a way of salvation!
Yes: careless men and women, for you that blood was shed! for you those
hands and feet were pierced with nails! for you that body hung in agony on
the cross! You are those whom Jesus loved, and for whom He died! Surely that
love ought to melt you: surely the thought of the cross should draw you to
repentance. Oh, that it might be so this very day! Oh, that you would come
at once to that Savior who died for you and is willing to save! Come and cry
to Him with the prayer of faith, and I know that He will listen. Come and
lay hold upon the cross, and I know that He will not cast you out. Come and
believe on Him who died on the cross, and this very day you shall have
eternal life. Are you inquiring the way toward heaven? Are you seeking
salvation, but doubtful whether you can find it? Are you desiring to have an
interest in Christ, but doubting whether Christ will receive you? To you
also I say this day, "Behold the cross of Christ."
Here is encouragement if you really want it. Draw near to
the Lord Jesus with boldness, for nothing need keep you back: His arms are
open to receive you; His heart is full of love towards you. He has made a
way by which you may approach Him with confidence. Think of the cross. Draw
near, and fear not. Are you an unlearned man? Are you desirous to get to
heaven, and yet perplexed and brought to a stand-still by difficulties in
the Bible that you cannot explain? To you also I say this day, "Behold the
cross of Christ." Read there the Father’s love and the Son’s compassion.
Surely they are written in great plain letters, which none can well mistake.
What though you are now perplexed by the doctrine of election? What though
at present you cannot reconcile your own utter corruption and your own
responsibility? Look, I say, at the cross. Does not that cross tell you that
Jesus is a mighty, loving, ready Savior? Does it not make one thing
plain—and that is that if not saved it is all your own fault? Oh, get hold
of that truth, and hold it fast!
Are you a distressed believer? Is your heart
pressed down with sickness, tried with disappointments, overburdened with
cares? To you also I say this day, "Behold the cross of Christ." Think whose
hand it is that chastens you: think whose hand is measuring to you the cup
of bitterness which you are now drinking. It is the hand of Him that was
crucified: it is the same hand that in love to your soul was nailed to the
accursed tree. Surely that thought should comfort and hearten you. Surely
you should say to yourself, "A crucified Savior will never lay upon me
anything that is not good for me. There is a needs be. It must be well."
Are you a dying believer? Have you gone to that
bed from which something within tells you you will never come down alive?
Are you drawing near to that solemn hour when soul and body must part for a
season, and you must launch into a world unknown? Oh, look steadily at the
cross of Christ, and you shall be kept in peace! Fix the eyes of your mind
firmly on Jesus crucified, and He shall deliver you from all your fears.
Though you walk through dark places, He will be with you: He will never
leave you—never forsake you. Sit under the shadow of the cross to the very
last, and its fruits shall be sweet to your taste. There is but one thing
needful on a death-bed, and that is to feel one’s arms around the cross.
Reader, if you never heard of Christ crucified before this day, I can wish
you nothing better than that you may know Him by faith, and rest on Him for
salvation. If you do know Him may you know Him better every year you live,
until you see Him face to face.