| WHOSE YOKE IS IT?
Come unto me, all ye that
labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my
yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in
heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is
easy, and my burden is light. -- Matthew 11:29-29
A few Sunday afternoons ago our
after-dinner conversation brought us to grace versus law.
Trying to make a point, I asked the table, "What statement in
the Gospels most clearly and completely distils
Christianity?"
"`This is the first and great
commandment, etc.?" ventured Johnny Bain.
"No," I answered, "I think it is
those words you hear every Sunday in the Communion Service,
right after the confession of sin and the announcement of
pardon, the first of the "comfortable words": "Hear what
comfortable words our Saviour Christ saith unto all who truly
turn to him. `Come unto me all ye that travail and are heavy
laden, and I will refresh you.’"
GRACE & REST COME
FIRST
Why do these words distil the
gospel so completely for me? First, they define our condition.
We are sinners groaning and labouring under a heavy burden –
so heavy that the remembrance of our sins is "grievous" unto
us, the burden of them is "intolerable," as the Prayer Book
says. We are sinners. Weary Sinners. Sinners without rest in
sight.
But more, these comfortable
words offer us rest and grace. What does that say about
the nature of God and Jesus Christ? Sinners (and too often
saints as well) view him as law, demanding a perfection of us
we cannot deliver. Indeed, he is perfect, but above his
perfect justice his grace crowns all his
righteousness.
The whole point of the Gospel –
the good news – is not "Be perfect as I am
perfect," although that, too, is there. Rather, God says to us
first, "Rest in me because I am perfect, and
since you cannot make yourself perfect, I will make you
perfect in Christ."
What amazes me is that God meets
us where meeting is possible, not impossible. He
does not wait for us to come to him, but comes to us in our
helplessness. "While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us."
He comes to us as we are, not as the frightening, sovereign
God on whom we cannot even rest our eyes, but as a little
child, as a baby, as a friend, in the workplace and in the
marketplace.
The good news is, Jesus’ name
translates Jehovah saves! God intends to save
sinners. He is our friend, and our father. ("Like as a father
pitieth his children, so the LORD pitieth them that fear him.
For he knoweth our frame; he remembereth that we are dust."
Psalm 103:113-14) The gospel is an island of Grace in an ocean
of grace on a globe of grace. Grace comes to us first,
God forgiving and enabling us to love and obey
him.
LAW & GRACE
Freely I admit that two things
seem to be happening here all at once, grace and law.
What we can’t lose sight of, however, is that God’s grace
comes first and conditions all our relation with him.
Grace and law never contradict each other, but, as the
Westminster Confession quaintly states it, they do "sweetly
comply." Certainly the Law convicts sinners and alarms their
consciences and fears, but it also guides the saved
into the way of obedience. Law becomes grace to the
saved. On the one it is a curse, on the other a blessing. To
the sinner, righteousness is both hopeless and hateful. No
amount of work can reach it, so why try? To the saved,
righteousness and rest are vouchsafed – promised
and guaranteed.
HE OFFERS REST
What did the Pharisees so
misunderstand in Christ’s preaching? They refused to believe
that the crown over all God’s perfections is warm
mercy, not cold righteousness. They refused to understand that
grace comes first, then obedience, not vice versa. "We
love him because he first loved us." The blood of
Christ purges us from self-righteousness to serve God with a
whole and willing heart. (Hebrews 9:13, 14). [God] "retaineth
not his anger for ever, because he delighteth in
mercy." (Micah 7:18b)
Starting out from the wrong
place, the Pharisees’ "righteousness" inevitably perverted the
law into unrighteousness. (Matt 15:1-3 ff.) Over
and over, Christ keeps on telling them, "You’ve missed the
whole point!" Take this example from Matthew
9:11-13.
"And when the Pharisees saw
it, they said unto his disciples, `Why eateth your
Master with publicans and sinners?’
"But when Jesus heard
that, he said unto them, `They that be whole need not a
physician, but they that are sick. But go ye and learn what
that meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice: for
I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance.’"
Jesus was not announcing some
new law, or something new in God’s character. He
was quoting Hosea 6:6 and Micah 8:6-8, with Exodus 20:6, 34:6,
and Deuteronomy 33:27 in mind ("The eternal God is thy refuge,
and underneath [you] are the everlasting arms" What a
picture!). The Pharisees refused to understand that God’s law
and righteousness never exist without his mercy and his
grace. He does not mean to kill, but to save us.
"There is forgiveness with thee, that thou mayest be feared."
(Ps. 130:4)
IT HAPPENS AT THE SAME
TIME
Once God graciously and
unilaterally brings us into his family, law-and-grace and
rest-and-work are so closely intertwined that they seem to
happen at the same time. Hebrews 3:4-4:11 discusses the rest
(grace) into which the people of God enter. However,
that is set forth in the context of obedience to God
(work).
"Take heed, brethren, lest there
be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from
the living God. But exhort one another daily while it is
called Today; lest any of you be hardened through the
deceitfulness of sin."
Work? Yes, but the balance of
this passage more than any other argues for a continuing
weekly observance of a day of rest (the Fourth
Commandment). It points to another rest as well, the
entry into which rest (grace) is the defining hallmark
of the people of God.
"For he that is entered into his
rest, he also hath ceased from his own works, as God did from
his [on the seventh day of creation.]"
The seeming simultaneity of law
and grace, work and rest, is most sharply expressed by Paul in
Philippians 2:12b-13, "[W]ork out your salvation with fear and
trembling, for it is God which worketh in you both to will and
to do of his good pleasure."
Well, which is it? Is God
working, or am I? Both. Because God works in me, I can work in
confidence that he will "perfect what concerns me." (Ps. 138).
His gracious work in us calls forth a grateful response
from us in work. Because he has first worked in us and
we have therefore entered into his rest, we rest from our own
works. That is, we abandon any thought that our works can earn
us favour with God. His unqualified love qualifies us for his
grace, which qualifies us to do his work.
God is holy and terrible and
perfectly righteous, so it is fitting for us to approach him
with fear and trembling. But still, we always remember
that he both tenderly desires that we approach him, and
gently enables our approach. "Come unto me all
ye that travail and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest."
ELIJAH
Elijah offers us a perfect
example of God’s gracious will towards us. Elijah performed
great works for God. He stages the Fire Calling Down
Contest with the priests of Ba’al on Mount Carmel, derides
them all day, then calls down fire on his sacrifice. Not
content with proving who was God, he orders all 400 priests of
Ba’al executed. Then he predicts rain and ties up his robe up
around his waist and runs back to Samaria faster than
Ahab can drive his chariot.
Not bad for a country boy from
Tishbe.
That triumph doesn’t last long.
Jezebel finds out what he’d done and sends him a note
prophesying that she will kill him. Elijah, of
course, responds calmly and logically to the situation.
Nope, he lays tracks for
the border. Once he gets there he pauses only long enough to
leave his servant (who I reckon was slowing him down) and then
he starts kicking up dust for the wilderness. He runs another
whole day before he stops and lays his weary bones down under
a juniper tree.
Now what does God do? Does he
send an angel to punch Elijah in the side and lecture him
about running away from trouble? No. Does he send an
angel to cuss him for a cowardly dog and kick him in the ribs
or other kickable parts of his anatomy?
No, praise his holy Name,
he lets Elijah rest. And when he has slept, an angel
comes and wakes him up with something to eat and drink. Elijah
falls asleep a second time. Again the angel wakes him up and
tells him to eat, "Because the journey is too great for thee."
It isn’t just Elijah’s present journey into the wilderness he
means, either, but the journey of his whole life.
So Elijah walks another forty
days into the Wilderness until he comes to Mount Horeb -- the
special mountain of God, the mountain where God had given
Moses the law (no accident, that). Elijah settles into a cave,
and only then is God ready to talk to him.
What does he say to Elijah? Does
he say, "What in the world are you doing here in the desert
when Jezebel is back there persecuting my people and dancing
in front of the temple of Ba’al, you slouch?" No. Gently,
gently he asks Elijah a question, "What are you doing
here?"
With a show of earthquake and
storm and fire God reminds Elijah of his power. Then, and only
then, comes "a still, small voice" -- after Elijah had
rested from his labours.
SPOTTING THE CYCLE
Personally I experience a cycle
which I imagine a lot of Christians share. I start out holding
firmly to God’s grace, then I remember this thing he requires
me to do, and then that thing, then another, until I am
weighed down to the ground with the load. Finally I collapse
in rebellion. "I can’t do it!"
Years ago, caught deep in the
forgetful, legalistic phase of my cycle, I was complaining to
a friend about all my burdens. "You know," he said, "you ought
to ask yourself whether that burden belongs to you or
to Jesus. If it’s too heavy to bear, then it’s your
burden, and not his, because he says, "My yoke is easy,
and my burden is light."
Friends, if your burden
is too heavy to bear, is it yours or Christ’s? His can
never be too heavy to carry.
For the best news is, first of
all, he gives us rest. -- F. Sanders
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