Only One Way—Christ!
by J. C. Ryle
"Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other
name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12
These words are striking in themselves. But they are much
more striking if you consider when and by whom they were spoken. They were
spoken by a poor and unpopular Christian, in the midst of a persecuting
Jewish Council and it was a wonderful confession about Christ. These words
were spoken by the lips of the Apostle Peter. This is the man who, a few
weeks before, abandoned Jesus and fled: this is the very man who three times
denied his Lord. There is another spirit in him now. He now stands up boldly
before priests and Sadducees, and tells them the truth to their face,
saying: "[Jesus] is the stone you builders rejected, which has become the
capstone. Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name in
heaven given to men by which we must be saved" [Acts 4:11-12].
In considering this serious subject there are three
things I wish to do:
I. First, to show you the doctrine being declared here by
the Apostle.
II. Secondly, to show you some reasons why this doctrine
must be true.
III. Thirdly, to show you some consequences that
naturally flow from the doctrine.
I. First let me show you THE DOCTRINE OF THE TEXT. Let us
make sure that we correctly understand what the Apostle Peter means. He says
of Christ, "Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name in
heaven given to men by which we must be saved." Now what is this? This is a
very critical statement that we need to clearly understand. He means that no
one can be saved from sin—from its guilt, power, and consequences—except by
Jesus Christ. He means that no one can have peace with God the Father—obtain
forgiveness of sin in this world, and escape the wrath of God that is coming
after death—except through the atoning death and mediation of Jesus Christ.
Only in Christ will we find God’s rich provision of salvation for sinners.
Only in Christ will we find God’s abundant mercies coming down from Heaven
to earth.
Only the blood of Christ can cleanse us; only the
righteousness of Christ’s can clothe us; Only the sacrifice of Christ can
give us a title to heaven. Jews and Gentiles, educated and uneducated, rich
and poor—everyone, no matter what their position or standing in life must
either be saved by Jesus Christ or lost forever. And the Apostle
emphatically adds, "There is no other name under heaven given to men by
which we must be saved." There is no other person commissioned, sealed, and
appointed by God the Father to be the Savior of sinners, except Christ. The
keys of life and death are only found in His hand, and all who want to be
saved must go to Him.
There was only one place of safety in the day when the
flood came upon the earth, and that was Noah’s ark. All other places and
things—mountains, towers, trees, rafts, boats—all were completely useless.
Likewise, there is only one hiding place for sinners who want to escape the
storm of God’s anger—they must hide their souls in Christ. There was only
one man to whom the Egyptians could go to in the time of famine, when they
needed food—they could only go to Joseph: it was a waste of time to go to
anyone else. Likewise, there is only One to whom hungering souls must go, if
they don’t want to perish forever—they must go to Christ. There was only one
word that could save the lives of the men of Ephraim in the day when the men
of Gilead fought with them, and took control of the fords of the Jordan
[Judges 12]—they must say the word "Shibboleth," or die. Well, in the same
way, there is only one name that will save us when we stand at the gate of
heaven—we must name the name of Jesus as our only hope, or be thrown into
the Lake of Fire forever.
Such is the doctrine of the text. "Salvation is found in
no one else but Jesus Christ: in Him is complete salvation—salvation to the
uttermost, salvation for the very chief of sinners—without Jesus there is no
salvation at all." This doctrine is in perfect harmony with our Lord's own
words in the Book of John: "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one
comes to the Father except through me" [John 14:6]. It is the same thing
that Paul told the Corinthians: "No one can lay any foundation other than
the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ" [1 Corinthians 3:11]. And it is
the same truth that John tells us in his first Epistle: "God has given us
eternal life, and this life is in his Son. He who has the Son has life; he
who does not have the Son of God does not have life" [1 John 5:11-12]. All
these texts state the same undeniable truth, that there is no salvation
except through the person of Jesus Christ.
Dear friends, make sure that you understand this before
you pass from this world. Perhaps you think this is old news. Perhaps you
feel, "These are ancient things: who doesn’t know this simple truth? Of
course we believe there is no salvation except by Christ." But listen
carefully to what I say: make sure that you understand this doctrine, or
else in time you will stumble, and be offended at what I am about to say.
Remember that you are to base your entire salvation on the person of Christ
and on Christ only. You are to totally reject and dismiss all other hopes
and trusts. You are not to rest partially on Christ—partially on doing all
you can—partially on going to church—partially on receiving the Lord’s
Supper. In the matter of your justification Christ is to be everything. This
is the doctrine of the text before us this morning. Remember that heaven is
standing before you, and Christ is the only door into it; hell is beneath
you, and only Christ is able to deliver you from it; the devil is behind you
and accusing you of sin, and Christ is the only place of safety from the
devil’s wrath and accusations; the law is against you, and only Christ is
able to redeem you; sin is weighing you down, and only Christ is able to
take it away. This is the doctrine of the text before us this morning. Now
do you see it? I hope you do. But I fear many who think so, may find, before
this sermon is over, that they really don’t.
II. Let me show you, in the second place, some reasons
why the doctrine of the text, that Jesus is the only way of salvation, must
be true. I could cut short this part of the subject with one simple
argument: "God says so." "One plain text," said an old preacher, "is as good
as a thousand reasons." But I will not do this. I intend to answer the many
objections that are ready to rise in many hearts against this doctrine, by
pointing out the strong foundations on which it stands.
(1) Let me then say, for one thing, the doctrine, that
Jesus is the only way of salvation, must be true, because man is what man
is. Now, what is man? There is one broad, sweeping answer, which takes
in the whole human race: man is a sinful creature. All children of Adam born
into the world, whatever their name or nation is, are corrupt, wicked, and
defiled in the sight of God. Their thoughts, words, ways, and actions are
all, more or less, defective and imperfect. Is there no country on the face
of the earth where sin doesn’t reign? Is there no happy valley, no secluded
island, where innocence can be found? Is there no tribe on earth, far away
from civilization, and commerce, and money, and weapons, and luxury, and
books, where morality and purity flourish? No, dear friends: there is none.
Look over all the voyages and travels you can lay your hand on, from
Columbus down to Captain Cook, and you will see the truth of what I am
asserting. The most isolated islands of the Pacific Ocean—islands cut off
from all the rest of the world, islands where every person there are all
ignorant of Rome and Paris, London and Jerusalem—these islands have been
found to be full of impurity, cruelty, and idolatry. The footprints of the
devil have been traced to every shore. The truthfulness of the third chapter
of Genesis has been established everywhere. Whatever else savages have been
found ignorant of, they have never been found ignorant of sin.
But are there no men or women in the world who are free
from this corruption of nature? Have there not been high and exalted souls
who have every now and then lived faultless lives? Have there not been some,
if it is only a few, who have done everything that God required, and thus
proved that sinless perfection is a possibility? No, dear friends: there
have been none. Look over all the biographies and lives of the holiest
Christians; note how the brightest and best of Christ’s people have always
had the deepest sense of their own failures and corruption. They groan, they
mourn, they sigh, they weep over their own shortcomings: it is one of the
common grounds on which they meet. Patriarchs and Apostles, Early Church
Fathers and Reformers, Luther and Calvin, Knox and Bradford, Rutherford and
Bishop Hall, Wesley and Whitefield, Martyn and M’Cheyne—all are in total
agreement in being totally aware of their own sinfulness. The more light
they have, the more humble they seem to be; the more holy they are, the more
they seem to feel their own unworthiness, and to glory, not in themselves,
but in Christ.
Now what does all this seem to prove? In my mind it seems
to prove that human nature is so tainted and corrupt that, left to himself,
no man could be saved. Man’s case appears to be a hopeless one without a
mighty Savior. There must be a Mediator, an Atonement, an Advocate, to make
such poor sinful creatures acceptable with God: and I find this nowhere,
except in the person of Jesus Christ. Heaven for man without a mighty
Redeemer, peace with God for man without a mighty Intercessor, eternal life
for man without an eternal Savior—in one word, salvation without Christ—all
appear to me to be utter impossibilities.
I lay these things before you, and ask you to consider
them. I know it is one of the hardest things in the world to realize the
sinfulness of sin. To say we are all sinners is one thing; to have an idea
what sin must be in the sight of God is something else. Sin is too much a
part of us to allow us to see it as it is: we don’t feel our own moral
deformity. We are like those animals in creation which are vile and
loathsome to our senses, but are not so to themselves, nor yet to one
another: their loathsomeness is their nature, and they don’t perceive it.
Our corruption is part and parcel of ourselves, and at our best we have only
a feeble comprehension of its intensity. But this you can be sure of—if you
could see your own lives with the eyes of the angels who never fell, you
would never doubt this point for a moment. Depend on it, no one can really
know what man is, and not see that the doctrine of our text must be true.
There can be no salvation except though Christ.
(2) Let me say another thing. The doctrine of our text,
that Jesus is the only way of salvation, must be true, because God is
what God is. Now what is God? That is indeed a deep question. We know
something of His attributes: He has not left Himself without witness in
creation; He has mercifully revealed to us many things about Himself in His
Word. We know that God is a Spirit—eternal, invisible, almighty—the Maker of
all things, the Preserver of all things—holy, just, all-seeing, all-knowing,
all-remembering— infinite in mercy, in wisdom, and in purity. But, what is
sad, is how base and demeaning our greatest ideas are when we come to put
down on paper what we believe God to be! How many words and expressions we
use whose complete meaning we cannot understand! How many things our tongues
say about God which our minds are utterly unable to conceive! How small a
part of Him do we really see! How little of Him can we possibly know! How
poor and worthless are any words of ours to convey any idea of Him who made
this mighty world out of nothing, and with whom "one day is like a thousand
years, and a thousand years are like one day!" How weak and inadequate are
our poor feeble intellects to conceive of Him who is perfect in all of His
works—perfect in the greatest as well as perfect in the smallest, perfect in
appointing the days and hours in which Jupiter, with all its satellites,
will travel around the sun—perfect in forming the smallest insect that
creeps over a few feet of our little globe! How little can our busy
helplessness comprehend a Being who is always commanding and directing all
things, in heaven and earth, by universal providence: controlling and
directing the rise and fall of nations and dynasties, like Nineveh and
Carthage; directing the exact length to which men like Alexander and
Napoleon will extend their conquests; directing the smallest step in the
life of the humblest believer among His people: all at the same time, all
continuously, all perfectly—all for His own glory.
The blind man is no judge of the paintings of Rubens or
Titian; the deaf man is insensible to the beauty of Handel’s music; the
person who lives in Greenland can have but a faint notion of the climate of
the tropics; the Australian savage can only form in his mind a remote
conception of a locomotive engine, however well you may describe it: there
is no place in their minds to take in these things; they have no set of
thoughts which can comprehend them; they have no mental fingers to grab hold
of them. And, in just the same way, the best and brightest ideas that man
can form of God, compared to the reality which we will one day see, are
indeed weak and faint.
But, my friend, the one thing that I think is very clear
is this: The more any one considers calmly who God really is, the more they
must feel the immeasurable distance between God and themselves: the more
they meditate, the more they must see that there is a great gulf between
them and God. Their conscience, I think, will tell them, if they will let it
speak, that God is perfect, and they are imperfect; that God is very high,
and they are very low; that God is glorious majesty and they are nothing but
a poor worm: and that if they are ever to stand before Him in judgment with
any comfort, then they must have a mighty helper, or they will not be saved.
And what is all this but the very doctrine of our text?
What is all this but coming around to the conclusion I am urging you to
make? With such a person as God to give account to, we must have a mighty
Savior. We must have an Almighty Friend and Advocate on our side—who can
answer every charge that can be laid against us, and plead our cause with
God on equal terms. We need this, and nothing less than this. Vague notions
of mercy will never give true peace. And such a Savior, such a Friend, such
an Advocate is nowhere to be found except in the person of Jesus Christ. I
lay this reason before you. I well know that people may have false notions
of God as well as everything else, and shut their eyes against the truth;
but I say boldly and confidently, no man or woman can really have high and
honorable views of who God is, and escape the conclusion that the doctrine
of our text must be true. There can be no possible salvation except by Jesus
Christ.
(3) Let me say, in the third place, this doctrine must be
true, because the Bible is what the Bible is. All through the Bible,
from Genesis down to Revelation, there is only one simple account of the way
in which a man or woman must be saved. It is always the same: only by our
Lord Jesus Christ—through faith; never by our own works and righteousness.
You see it dimly revealed at first: it looms through the
mist of a few promises, but there it is. You see it more clearly later: it
is taught by the pictures and symbols of the law of Moses. You have it still
more clearly as time goes by: the Prophets saw in visions many particulars
about the Redeemer that was to come.
Finally, you have the complete revelation, in the
sunshine of New Testament history: Christ incarnate—Christ crucified —Christ
rising again, Christ preached to the world. But one golden thread runs
through the whole Bible; no salvation except by Jesus Christ. The
bruising of the serpent’s head predicted in the day of the fall; the
clothing of our first parents with animal skins, the sacrifices of Noah,
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; the Passover, and all the particulars of the
Jewish law—the high priest, the altar, the daily offering of the lamb, the
holy of holies entered only by blood, the scapegoat, the cities of
refuge—all are many witnesses to the truth set forth in the text: all preach
with one voice, salvation only by Jesus Christ.
In fact, this truth appears to me to be the great focus
of the Bible, and all the different parts and portions of the book are meant
to pour light on it. I can gather from it no ideas of pardon and peace with
God except in connection with this truth. If I could read of one soul in
it who was saved without faith in the Savior, I might perhaps not speak
so confidently. But when I see that faith in Christ—whether in a coming
Christ or a crucified Christ—was the prominent feature in the religion of
all who went to heaven; when I see Abel owning Christ in his better
sacrifice, at one end of the Bible, and the saints in glory in John’s vision
rejoicing in Christ, at the other end of the Bible; when I see a man like
Cornelius, who was devout, and feared God, and gave to the poor and prayed,
told, in effect that in order to be saved, he was to send for Peter, and
hear of Christ; when I see all these things I say, I feel bound to believe
that the doctrine of the text is the doctrine of the whole Bible. No
salvation, no way to heaven, except through Jesus Christ.
I don’t know what use you make of your Bible—whether you
read it or whether you don’t—whether you read it all, or whether you only
read the parts that you like; but this I tell you plainly, if you read and
believe the whole Bible, you will find it hard to escape the doctrine that
there is no salvation except through the person and blood of Jesus Christ. I
don’t see how you can consistently reject what I have been endeavoring to
prove. Christ is the way, and the only way; Christ is the truth, and the
only truth; Christ is the life, and the only life.
Such are the reasons which seem to me to confirm the
truth laid down in our text. What man is—what God is—what the Bible is—all
appear to me to lead us on to the same great conclusion: no possible
salvation without Christ. I leave them with you, and move on.
III. And now, in the third and last place, let me show
you some CONSEQUENCES which flow naturally out of our text. This is a
critical part of our subject. The truth I have been trying to set before you
is absolutely critical for mankind and I must speak of it with urgency. If
Christ is the only way of salvation, what are we to feel about the many
people in the world? This is the point I am now going to take up.
I believe that many persons would go with me as far as I
have gone, and would go no further. They will allow my premises, but they
will have nothing to do with my conclusions. They think it unloving to say
anything which appears to condemn others. For my part I cannot understand
such love: it seems to me the kind of love which would see a neighbor slowly
drinking poison, but never intervene to stop him; a love which would allow
migrants to embark in a leaky, un-seaworthy vessel, and not intervene to
prevent them; a love which would see a blind man walking near a precipice,
and think it wrong to cry out, and tell him there was danger.
I believe the greatest love is to tell the greatest
quantity of truth. I believe it is a lack of love to hide the legitimate
consequences of such a text as we are now considering, or to close our eyes
to them. And I solemnly call on every one who really believes there is no
salvation in anyone but Christ and no other name, given under heaven whereby
we must be saved—I solemnly call on those persons to listen to me, while I
set before them some of the tremendous consequences of our text.
One mighty consequence then, which seems to be learned
from this text, is the utter uselessness of any religion without Christ.
There are many to be found today who have this kind of religion. They would
not like to be called Deists, but they are Deists. They believe that there
is a God, that there is what they are pleased to call Providence, that God
is merciful, that there will be a life after death—this is about the sum and
substance of their creed; and as to the distinguishing tenets of
Christianity, they don’t seem to recognize them at all. Now I denounce such
a system as a baseless fabric—its foundation is nothing but man’s ideas—its
hopes an utter delusion.
The god of such people is an idol of their own invention,
and not the glorious God of the Scriptures—their god is a miserably
imperfect creature: without holiness, without justice, without any attribute
but that of vague indiscriminate mercy. Such a religion is nothing but a toy
to play with: it is far too unreal to die with. It utterly fails to meet the
needs of man’s conscience: it offers no remedy; it affords no rest for the
souls of men and women; it cannot comfort, for it cannot save. Beware of it
if you love life. Beware of a religion without Christ.
Another consequence to be learned from the text is, the
folly of any religion in which Christ is not given the first place. I need
not remind you how many hold to a system of this kind. The Socinian tells us
that Christ was a mere man; that His blood had no more efficacy or value
than that of another; that His death on the cross was not a real atonement
and propitiation of man’s sins; and that, after all, one must work their way
to heaven, and not just have faith. I solemnly declare that I believe such a
system is disastrous to the souls of men and women. It seems to me to strike
at the very root of the whole plan of salvation which God has revealed in
the Bible, and practically to nullify the greater part of the Scriptures. It
overthrows the priesthood of the Lord Jesus, and strips Him of His office;
it converts the whole system of the law of Moses touching sacrifices and
ordinances, into a meaningless form; it seems to say that the sacrifice of
Cain was just as good as the sacrifice of Abel; it puts a man adrift on the
sea of uncertainty, by taking from him the finished work of a divine
Mediator.
Beware of Deism. If you love life, beware of the least
attempt to depreciate and undervalue the person of Christ, and His offices
and works. The only name by which you can be saved, is the name that is
above every other name, and the slightest contempt poured on it is an insult
to the King of Kings. The salvation of your soul has been established by God
the Father on Christ, and no other; and if Christ were not God Himself, He
never could accomplish it: there could be no salvation at all.
Another consequence to be learned from our text is the
great error, committed by those who add anything to Christ, as being
necessary to salvation. It is an easy thing to profess belief in the
Trinity, and reverence for our Lord Jesus Christ, and yet to make some
addition to Christ as the ground of hope, and so to overthrow the doctrine
of the text as really and completely as by denying it altogether. The Roman
Catholic Church does this systematically. She adds things over and above the
requirements of the Gospel, by her own invention. She speaks as if Christ’s
finished work was not a sufficient foundation for a sinner's soul, and as if
it were not enough to say, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will
be saved." She sends men and women to penances and absolution, to masses and
extreme unction, to fasting and bodily mortification, to the Virgin and the
saints—as if these things could add to the safety there is in Christ Jesus.
And in doing this she greatly sins against our text. Let us beware of any
Roman Catholic additions to the simple way of the Gospel.
But I fear the Roman Catholic Church does not stand alone
in this matter: I fear there are thousands of professing Protestants who are
often erring in the same direction, although, of course, in a very different
degree; they begin adding, perhaps without thinking, other names to the name
of Christ, or attaching importance to them which they ought never receive.
The ultra Churchman in England who thinks God’s covenanted mercies are tied
to a system of church government in which bishops are the chief clerics—the
ultra Evangelical, who traces every evil in the Church to its connection
with the State and denominations, and can talk of nothing but the
independent system—the ultra Baptist, who shuts out from the Lord’s table
every one who has not received his views of baptism—the ultra Plymouth
Brethren, who believes all knowledge resides within his own church, and
condemns every one outside as a poor weak babe in Christ—all these, I say,
however unwittingly, appear to me to have a most uncomfortable tendency to
add to the doctrine of our text. All seem to me to be practically declaring
that salvation is not to be found simply and solely in Christ; all seem to
me to be practically adding another name to the name of Jesus whereby men
and women must be saved—even the name of their own denomination and sect;
all seem to me to be practically replying to the question, "What must I do
to be saved?" not merely, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ," but also "Come
and join us."
Now I call upon every true Christian to beware of such
extremism. In saying this I don’t want to be misunderstood. I like everyone
to be decided in his views of church matters, and to be fully persuaded of
their correctness; all I ask is that you will not put these things in the
place of Christ, or place them anywhere near Him, or speak of them as if
you thought them needful to salvation. However dear to us our own particular
views may be, let us beware of thrusting them in between the sinner and the
Savior, let us beware, in short, of adding to the doctrine of the text. In
the things of God’s Word, let us remember that addition, as well as
subtraction, is a great sin.
The last consequence which seems to me to be learned from
our text is, the utter absurdity of supposing that we ought to be satisfied
with a man’s state of soul if he is simply sincere. This is a very
common heresy indeed, and one against which we all need to be on our guard.
There are thousands who say today, "We have nothing to do with the opinions
of others. They may perhaps be mistaken, though it is possible they are
right and we are wrong: but if they are sincere, we hope they will be saved,
even as we are." And all this sounds tolerant and loving, and people like to
believe their own views are also considered as such.
Now I believe such notions are entirely contradictory to
the Bible, whatever else they may be. I cannot find in Scripture that any
one ever got to heaven merely by sincerity, or was accepted with God if he
was only earnest in maintaining his own views. The priests of Baal were
sincere when they cut themselves with knives till the blood gushed out; but
still that did not prevent Elijah from commanding them to be treated as
wicked idolaters. Manasseh, King of Judah, was doubtless sincere when he
burned his children in the fire to Moloch; but who doesn’t know that he
brought on himself great guilt by doing so. The apostle Paul, as a Pharisee,
was sincere while he persecuted the Church, but when his eyes were opened he
mourned over this as a special wickedness.
Let us beware of allowing for a moment that sincerity is
everything, and that we have no right to speak against a man’s spiritual
state because of the sincere opinions he holds. On such principles, many
atrocities committed in the name of religion might each and all be defended.
However, they will not stand: they will not bear the test of Scripture. Once
we allow such notions to be true, then you might as well throw your Bible
away. Sincerity is not Christ, and therefore sincerity cannot atone for
sin.
I am sure that these consequences sound very unpleasant
to the minds of some. But I tell you of them advisedly and deliberately. I
say calmly that a religion without Christ, a religion that takes away
from Christ, a religion that adds anything to Christ, a religion that puts
sincerity in the place of Christ—all are dangerous: all are to be
avoided, and all are alike contrary to the doctrine of our text. You may not
like this. You may think that I am unloving, narrow-minded, bigoted, and so
forth: so be it. But you will not tell me my doctrine is not that of the
Word of God. That doctrine is, salvation in Christ to the very uttermost—but
without Christ there is no salvation at all.
I feel it a duty to bear my solemn testimony against the
spirit of the day in which we live; to warn you against its infection. It is
not Atheism I fear so much, in the present times, as Pantheism. It is not
the system which says nothing is true, so much as the system which says
everything is true; it is not the system which says there is no Savior, so
much as the system which says there are many saviors and many ways to peace.
It is the system which is so liberal that it dares not say anything is
false; it is the system which is so loving that it will allow everything to
be true; it is the system which seems ready to honor others as well as our
Lord Jesus Christ and to class them all together. The system tells us not to
condemn or to treat with disrespect the writings of Confucius and Zoroaster,
Socrates and Mohammad, the Hindus of India and the African
devil-worshippers, Arius and Pelagius, Ignatius Loyola and Socinus. It is
the system which commands us to smile complacently on all creeds and systems
of religion: the Bible and the Koran, the Hindu Veda and the old wives’
tales of Rabbinical writers and the rubbish of the Early Church Fathers’
traditions, and the book of Mormon by Joseph Smith—we are told to listen to
them all: none are to be denounced as lies. It is the system which is so
scrupulous about the feelings of others, that we are never to say that they
are wrong; it is the system which is so liberal that it calls a man a bigot
if he dares to say, "I know my views are right."
This is the world system, this is the tone of feeling
which I fear this very day. This is the world system of today which I desire
emphatically to testify against and denounce. What is it but a bowing down
before a great idol specifically called liberality? What is it all but a
sacrificing of truth upon the altar of a caricature of love? Beware of it,
beware that the rushing stream of public opinion does not carry you away.
Beware of it, if you believe the Bible. Has the Lord God spoken to us in the
Bible, or has He not? Has He shown us the way of salvation plainly in that
Bible, or has He not? Has He declared to us the dangerous state of all those
who do not agree with the Holy Scriptures, or has He not? Focus your mind,
and look these questions fairly in the face, and give them an honest answer.
Tell us that there is some other inspired book beside the Bible, and then we
will know what you mean; tell us that the whole Bible is not inspired, and
then we will know where to meet you: but grant for a moment that the Bible,
the whole Bible, and nothing but the Bible, is God’s truth, and then I don’t
know in what way you can escape the doctrine of the text. From the
liberality which says everybody is right, from the love which forbids you to
say anyone is wrong, from the peace which is bought at the expense of
truth—may the good Lord deliver you!
I speak for myself: I find no resting-place between
downright Evangelical Christianity and downright infidelity, whatever others
may find. I see no half-way house between them. I can see consistency in an
infidel, however much I may pity him; I can see consistency in the full
maintenance of Evangelical truth: but as to a middle course between the
two—I cannot see it; and I say so plainly. Let it be called intolerant and
unloving. I can hear God's voice nowhere except in the Bible, and I can see
no salvation for sinners in the Bible except through Jesus Christ. In Him I
see abundance: without Him I see none.
And as for those who hold to religions in which Christ is
not everything, whoever they may be, I have a most uncomfortable feeling
about their safety. I do not for a moment say that none of them are saved,
but I say that those who are saved are saved by their disagreement with
their own principles, and in spite of their own system. The man who wrote
the famous line, "He can’t be wrong whose life is in the right," was a great
poet undoubtedly, but he was a wretched divine.
Let me conclude with a few words by way of APPLICATION.
First of all, if there is no salvation except in Christ, make sure that you
have an interest in that salvation yourself. Do not be content with hearing,
and approving, and assenting to the truth, and going no further. Seek to
have a personal interest in this salvation: lay hold by faith for your own
soul; do not rest till you know and feel that you have gotten actual
possession of that peace with God which Jesus offers, and that Christ is
yours, and you are Christ’s. If there were two, or three, or more ways of
getting to heaven, there would be no necessity for pressing this matter upon
you. But if there is only one way, you will hardly wonder that I say, "Make
sure that you are in it."
Secondly, if there is no salvation except in Christ, then
try to do good to the souls of all who do not know Him as a Savior. There
are millions and millions in this miserable condition—millions in foreign
lands, millions in your own country, millions who are not trusting in
Christ. You ought to feel for them if you are a true Christian; you ought to
pray for them; you ought to work for them, while there is yet time. Do you
really believe that Christ is the only way to heaven? Then live as if you
believed it. Look around the circle of your own relatives and friends: count
them up one by one, and think how many of them are not yet in Christ. Try to
do good to them in some way or other: act as a man or woman should act who
believes his friends to be in danger. Do not be content with their being
kind and sociable, gentle and good-tempered, moral, and courteous; be
unhappy about them till they come to Christ, and trust in Him: for you ought
to be distressed over their condition. Leave no one alone who is without
Christ—take every opportunity to reaching them. I know all this may sound
like enthusiasm and fanaticism. I wish there was more of it in the world:
anything, I am sure, is better than a quiet indifference about the souls of
others, as if everybody was on their way to heaven. Nothing, to my mind, so
proves our little faith, as our lack of feelings about the spiritual
condition of those around us.
Thirdly, if there is no salvation except in Christ, let
us love all who love the Lord Jesus with sincerity, and exalt Him as their
Savior, whoever they may be. Let us not draw back, because they do not see
eye to eye with us in everything. Whether a person is an Independent, a
Wesleyan or a Baptist, let us love them if they truly love Christ, and gives
Christ His rightful place. We are all traveling fast towards a place where
names and forms and Church government will be nothing, and Christ will be
everything: let us get ready for that place now, by loving all who are in
the way that leads to it. This is true love: to believe all things and hope
all things, so long as we see Bible doctrines maintained and Christ exalted.
Christ must be the single standard by which all opinions must be measured.
Let us honor all who honor Him: but let us never forget that the same
apostle Paul who wrote about love, also says, "If any man does not love the
Lord Jesus Christ, let him be cursed." If our love and tolerance are wider
than that of the Bible, they are worth nothing at all: indiscriminate love
is no love at all, and indiscriminate approval of all religious opinions, is
only a new name for infidelity. Let us hold out our right hand to all who
love the Lord Jesus, but let us beware how we go beyond this.
Lastly, if there is no salvation except by Christ, then
you must not be surprised if ministers of the Gospel preach a lot about Him.
We cannot tell you too much about the name which is above every name: you
cannot hear of Him too often. You may hear too much about controversy in our
sermons—you may hear too much of men and books, of works and duties, of
forms and ceremonies, of sacraments and ordinances—but there is one subject
which you never hear too much of: you can never hear too much of Christ.
When we become tired of preaching Christ, then we are
false ministers: when you are wearied of hearing of Him, your souls are in
an unhealthy state. When we have preached Him all our lives, the half of His
excellence will remain untold. When you see Him face to face in the day of
His appearing, you will find there was more in Him than your heart ever
conceived.
Let me leave you with the words of an old writer, to
which I desire humbly to subscribe. "I know no true religion but
Christianity; no true Christianity but the doctrine of Christ: the doctrine
of His divine person, of His divine office, of His divine righteousness, and
of His divine Spirit, which all that are His must believe. I know no true
ministers of Christ but such as make it their business, in their calling, to
commend Jesus Christ, in His saving fullness of grace and glory, to the
faith and love of men and women; no true Christian but one united to Christ
by faith and love, unto the glorifying of the name of Jesus Christ, in the
beauty of Gospel holiness. Ministers and Christians of this spirit have been
for many years my brothers, sisters, and friends, and I hope shall ever be,
wherever the hand of God shall lead me." Amen.