Page images
PDF
EPUB

vision of the heavenly world. Faith will be swallowed up in sight. "Now ye see through a glass darkly, but then face to face: now ye know in part, but then shall ye know even as also ye are known." Then will be the termination of the race, that is now set before you. Then, if you continue stedfast unto the end, you will receive from Christ himself that crown of glory which fadeth not away.

Look, therefore, my brethren, unto Jesus, as the Author and Finisher of your faith. Look unto him with a spirit of confidential trust: for His omnipotent arm manages, in its vast extent, the sublime work of redemption, and will bring it to a most glorious and successful result-a result which will reflect the brightest lustre on the character of God, and redound to the eternal and unspeakable happiness of all who put their trust in him. Look unto him with a spirit of humble docility for in him "are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge:" from him must you hope to derive that light of Divine Truth, which is to shine in the dark places of your understanding; . thence to dispel all error, and doubt, and perplexity, and to guide you in the way everlasting. Finally, look unto him with a spirit of cordial dependence for the Comforter, which he sends, first shed abroad the love of God in your hearts.

And to this same Spirit of holiness must you constantly be indebted for the increase of your faith. He alone can preserve it from shipwreck. He alone can make it as an anchor of the soul, both sure and stedfast. He alone can so confirm, and invigorate, and ripen it, that it shall be prepared at last to be finished and swallowed up in the unclouded vision of the heavenly world,

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith.

WHILE discoursing from these words, the last Sabbath, I attempted, my brethren, to place before you the several respects in which Jesus Christ may be considered as the Author and Finisher of our faith. From what was said, it would seem that he is entitled to this appellation for the following reasons: because he accomplished those events in the economy of God's government, which were necessary to open the way for the promulgation of the doctrines of the Cross; because he promulgated, by himself and by his Apostles, these doctrines, so glorious to God, and so interesting to man; because he alone produces faith within us, through the influences of the Holy Spirit; because he is now accomplishing, and will continue to accomplish, those

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

events which are necessary to prepare the way for the consummation of his mediatorial work; because he continues to instruct us more fully in the doctrines of the Cross; because he confirms and invigorates our faith, by the influences of the Holy Spirit, and will finally perfect it in the unclouded vision of the heavenly world. Such are the various attitudes in which Jesus Christ presents himself. to our view, as the Author and Finisher of our faith. Thus, wielding the sceptre of universal empire, and managing in its vast extent the great work of redemption; thus carrying it on to a most successful and glorious result, which will reflect the brightest lustre on the character of God, and redound to the eternal happiness of all who put their trust in him; thus opening the treasures of his infinite wisdom and knowledge, and distributing most liberally the riches of Divine Truth, to all who will receive and use them for the relief of their spiritual wants; thus shedding down, as the choicest of his blessings, the Holy Comforter, to renew the hearts and invigorate the graces of all whom his Father hath given him; thus supporting and guiding his disciples, through this pilgrimage of tears, in the straight and narrow path which leads to the mansions of eternal rest;-sustaining this character so sublime and so interesting, most justly is he

proposed to us by the Apostle as the great Object of our faith.-Wherefore, while running with patience the race that is set before us, while struggling for that crown of glory which fadeth not away, Christians are called upon by every principle of reason, by every motive of esteem, by every tie of gratitude, continually to look unto Jesus with a spirit of confidential trust, of humble docility, and of cordial dependence. These are the affections which should glow in the breast of every believer who hopes to "hold the beginning of his confidence stedfast unto the end;"-and to urge upon you, my brethren, the duty of cultivating these affections is the object of this discourse,

- I. First, then, it is the duty of Christians to look unto Jesus, as the Author and Finisher of their faith, with a spirit of confidential trust.—If he manages the work of redemption in all its vast and momentous extent; if from that remote moment in eternity, when he pledged himself to leave the bosom of the Father, and pour out his blood on Calvary for the remission of sin, to that glorious consummation of his mediatorial character, when, all things having been subdued unto him, he shall deliver up the kingdom to God, that God may be all in all; if during the lapse of these long and eventful ages, his hand has wielded, and

« PreviousContinue »