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The Sufferings of Christ
The spotless Son of God hung upon the cross, His flesh lacerated with stripes;
those hands so often reached out in blessing, nailed to the wooden bars; those feet so
tireless on ministries of love, spiked to the tree; that royal head pierced by the crown
of thorns; those quivering lips shaped to the cry of woe. And all that He endured--the
blood drops that flowed from His head, His hands, His feet, the agony that racked His
frame, and the unutterable anguish that filled His soul at the hiding of His Father's
face--speaks to each child of humanity, declaring, It is for thee that the Son of God
consents to bear this burden of guilt; for thee He spoils the domain of death, and opens
the gates of Paradise. He who stilled the angry waves and walked the foam-capped billows,
who made devils tremble and disease flee, who opened blind eyes and called forth the dead
to life,--offers Himself upon the cross as a sacrifice, and this from love to thee. He,
the Sin Bearer, endures the wrath of divine justice, and for thy sake becomes sin itself.
In order to fully realize the value of salvation, it is necessary to understand what it
cost. In consequence of limited ideas of the sufferings of Christ, many place a low
estimate upon the great work of the atonement. The glorious plan of man's salvation was
brought about through the infinite love of God and Father. In this divine plan is seen the
most marvelous manifestation of the love of God to the fallen race. Such love as is
manifested in the gift of God's beloved Son amazed the holy angels. "God so loved the
world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life." This Saviour was the brightness of His Father's
glory and the express image of His person. He possessed divine majesty, perfection, and
excellence. He was equal with God. "It pleased the Father that in Him should all
fullness dwell." "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be
equal with God: but made Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a
servant, and was made in the likeness of men: and being found in fashion as a man, He
humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross."
Christ consented to die in the sinner's stead, that man, by a life of obedience, might
escape the penalty of the law of God. His death did not make the law of none effect; it
did not slay the law, lessen its holy claims, nor detract from its sacred dignity. The
death of Christ proclaimed the justice of His Father's law in punishing the transgressor,
in that He consented to suffer the penalty of the law Himself in order to save fallen man
from its curse. The death of God's beloved Son on the cross shows the immutability of the
law of God. His death magnifies the law and makes it honorable, and gives evidence to man
of its changeless character. From His own divine lips are heard the words: "Think not
that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to
fulfill." The death of Christ justified the claims of the law.
In Christ were united the human and the divine. His mission was to reconcile God and man,
to unite the finite with the infinite. This was the only way in which fallen men could be
exalted through the merits of the blood of Christ to be partakers of the divine nature.
Taking human nature fitted Christ to understand man's trials and sorrows, and all the
temptations wherewith he is beset. Angels who were unacquainted with sin could not
sympathize with man in his peculiar trials. Christ condescended to take man's nature and
was tempted in all points like as we, that He might know how to succor all who should be
tempted.
As the human was upon Him, He felt His need of strength from His Father. He had select
places of prayer. He loved to hold communion with His Father in the solitude of the
mountain. In this exercise His holy, human soul was strengthened for the duties and trials
of the day. Our Saviour identifies Himself with our needs and weaknesses, in that He
became a suppliant, a nightly petitioner, seeking from His Father fresh supplies of
strength, to come forth invigorated and refreshed, braced for duty and trial. He is our
example in all things. He is a brother in our infirmities, but not in possessing like
passions. As the sinless One, His nature recoiled from evil. He endured struggles and
torture of soul in a world of sin. His humanity made prayer a necessity and privilege. He
required all the stronger divine support and comfort which His Father was ready to impart
to Him, to Him who had, for the benefit of man, left the joys of heaven and chosen His
home in a cold and thankless world. Christ found comfort and joy in communion with His
Father. Here He could unburden His heart of the sorrows that were crushing Him. He was a
man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.
Through the day He labored earnestly to do good to others, to save men from destruction.
He healed the sick, comforted the mourning, and brought cheerfulness and hope to the
despairing. He brought the dead to life. After His work was finished for the day, He went
forth, evening after evening, away from the confusion of the city, and His form was bowed
in some retired grove in supplication to His Father. At times the bright beams of the moon
shone upon His bowed form. And then again the clouds and darkness shut away all light. The
dew and frost of night rested upon His head and beard while in the attitude of a
suppliant. He frequently continued His petitions through the entire night. He is our
example. If we could remember this, and imitate Him, we would be much stronger in God.
If the Saviour of men, with His divine strength, felt the need of prayer, how much more
should feeble, sinful mortals feel the necessity of prayer--fervent, constant prayer! When
Christ was the most fiercely beset by temptation, He ate nothing. He committed Himself to
God and, through earnest prayer and perfect submission to the will of His Father, came off
conqueror. Those who profess the truth for these last days, above every other class of
professed Christians, should imitate the great Exemplar in prayer.
"It is enough for the disciple that he be as his master, and the servant as his
lord." Our tables are frequently spread with luxuries neither healthful nor
necessary, because we love these things more than we love self-denial, freedom from
disease, and soundness of mind. Jesus sought earnestly for strength from His Father. This
the divine Son of God considered of more value, even for Himself, than to sit at the most
luxurious table. He has given us evidence that prayer is essential in order to receive
strength to contend with the powers of darkness, and to do the work allotted us. Our own
strength is weakness, but that which God gives is mighty and will make everyone who
obtains it more than conqueror.
As the Son of God bowed in the attitude of prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane, the agony
of His spirit forced from His pores sweat like great drops of blood. It was here that the
horror of great darkness surrounded Him. The sins of the world were upon Him. He was
suffering in man's stead as a transgressor of His Father's law. Here was the scene of
temptation. The divine light of God was receding from His vision, and He was passing into
the hands of the powers of darkness. In His soul anguish He lay prostrate on the cold
earth. He was realizing His Father's frown. He had taken the cup of suffering from the
lips of guilty man, and proposed to drink it Himself, and in its place give to man the cup
of blessing. The wrath that would have fallen upon man was now falling upon Christ. It was
here that the mysterious cup trembled in His hand.
Jesus had often resorted to Gethsemane with His disciples for meditation and prayer. They
were all well acquainted with this sacred retreat. Even Judas knew where to lead the
murderous throng, that he might betray Jesus into their hands. Never before had the
Saviour visited the spot with a heart so full of sorrow. It was not bodily suffering from
which the Son of God shrank, and which wrung from His lips, in the presence of His
disciples, these mournful words: "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto
death." "Tarry ye here," said He, "and watch with Me."
Leaving His disciples within hearing of His voice, He went a little distance from them and
fell on His face and prayed. His soul was agonized, and He pleaded: "O My Father, if
it be possible, let this cup pass from Me: nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou
wilt." The sins of a lost world were upon Him and overwhelming Him. It was a sense of
His Father's frown, in consequence of sin, which rent His heart with such piercing agony
and forced from His brow great drops of blood, which, rolling down His pale cheeks, fell
to the ground, moistening the earth.
Rising from His prostrate position, He came to His disciples and found them sleeping. He
said unto Peter: "What, could ye not watch with Me one hour? Watch and pray, that ye
enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak." At
the most important time--the time when Jesus had made a special request for them to watch
with Him--the disciples were found sleeping. He knew that severe conflicts and terrible
temptations were before them. He had taken them with Him that they might be a strength to
Him, and that the events they should witness that night, and the lessons of instruction
they should receive, might be indelibly printed upon their memories. This was necessary
that their faith might not fail, but be strengthened for the test just before them.
But instead of watching with Christ, they were burdened with sorrow, and fell asleep. Even
the ardent Peter, who, only a few hours before, had declared that he would suffer and, if
need be, die for his Lord, was asleep. At the most critical moment, when the Son of God
was in need of their sympathy and heartfelt prayers, they were found asleep. They lost
much by thus sleeping. Our Saviour designed to fortify them for the severe test of their
faith to which they would soon be subjected. If they had spent that mournful period in
watching with the dear Saviour, and in prayer to God, Peter would not have been left to
his own feeble strength to deny his Lord in the time of trial.
The Son of God went away the second time, and prayed, saying: "O My Father, if this
cup may not pass away from Me, except I drink it, Thy will be done." And again He
came to His disciples and found them sleeping. Their eyes were heavy. By these sleeping
disciples is represented a sleeping church, when the day of God's visitation is nigh. It
is a time of clouds and thick darkness, when to be found asleep is most perilous.
Jesus has left us this warning: "Watch ye therefore: for ye know not when the Master
of the house cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cockcrowing, or in the morning:
lest coming suddenly He find you sleeping." The church of God is required to fulfill
her night watch, however perilous, whether long or short. Sorrow is no excuse for her to
be less watchful. Tribulation should not lead to carelessness, but to double vigilance.
Christ has directed the church by His own example to the Source of their strength in times
of need, distress, and peril. The attitude of watching is to designate the church as God's
people indeed. By this sign the waiting ones are distinguished from the world and show
that they are pilgrims and strangers upon the earth.
Again the Saviour turned sadly from His sleeping disciples, and prayed the third time,
saying the same words. Then He came to them and said: "Sleep on now, and take your
rest: behold, the hour is at hand, and the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of
sinners." How cruel for the disciples to permit sleep to close their eyes, and
slumber to chain their senses, while their divine Lord was enduring such inexpressible
mental anguish! If they had remained watching they would not have lost their faith as they
beheld the Son of God dying upon the cross. This important night watch should have been
signalized by noble mental struggles and prayers, which would have brought them strength
to witness the unspeakable agony of the Son of God. It would have prepared them, as they
should behold His sufferings upon the cross, to understand something of the nature of the
overpowering anguish which He endured in the Garden of Gethsemane. And they would have
been better able to recall the words He had spoken to them in reference to His sufferings,
death, and resurrection; and, amid the gloom of that terrible, trying hour, some rays of
hope would have lighted up the darkness and sustained their faith.
Christ had told them before that these things would take place, but they did not
understand Him. The scene of His sufferings was to be a fiery ordeal to His disciples,
hence the necessity of watchfulness and prayer. Their faith needed to be sustained by an
unseen strength as they should experience the triumph of the powers of darkness. We can
have but faint conceptions of the inexpressible anguish of God's dear Son in Gethsemane,
as He realized His separation from His Father in consequence of bearing man's sin. He
became sin for the fallen race. The sense of the withdrawal of His Father's love pressed
from His anguished soul these mournful words: "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even
unto death." "If it be possible, let this cup pass from Me." Then with
entire submission to His Father's will, He adds: "Nevertheless not as I will, but as
Thou wilt."
The divine Son of God was fainting, dying. The Father sent a messenger from His presence
to strengthen the divine Sufferer and brace Him to tread His bloodstained path. Could
mortals have viewed the amazement and the sorrow of the angelic host as they watched in
silent grief the Father separating His beams of light, love, and glory from the beloved
Son of His bosom, they would better understand how offensive sin is in His sight. The
sword of justice was now to awake against His dear Son. He was betrayed by a kiss into the
hands of His enemies, and hurried to the judgment hall of an earthly court, there to be
derided and condemned to death by sinful mortals. There the glorious Son of God was
"wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities." He bore
insult, mockery, and shameful abuse, until "His visage was so marred more than any
man, and His form more than the sons of men."
Who can comprehend the love here displayed! The angelic host beheld with wonder and with
grief Him who had been the Majesty of heaven, and who had worn the crown of glory, now
wearing the crown of thorns, a bleeding victim to the rage of an infuriated mob, fired to
insane madness by the wrath of Satan. Behold the patient Sufferer! Upon His head is the
thorny crown. His lifeblood flows from every lacerated vein. All this in consequence of
sin! Nothing could have induced Christ to leave His honor and majesty in heaven, and come
to a sinful world, to be neglected, despised, and rejected by those He came to save, and
finally to suffer upon the cross, but eternal, redeeming love, which will ever remain a
mystery.
Wonder, O heavens, and be astonished, O earth! Behold the oppressor and the oppressed! A
vast multitude enclose the Saviour of the world. Mockings and jeerings are mingled with
the coarse oaths of blasphemy. His lowly birth and humble life are commented upon by
unfeeling wretches. His claim to be the Son of God is ridiculed by the chief priests and
elders, and vulgar jests and insulting derision are passed from lip to lip. Satan was
having full control of the minds of his servants. In order to do this effectually, he
commences with the chief priests and elders, and imbues them with religious frenzy. They
are actuated by the same satanic spirit which moves the most vile and hardened wretches.
There is a corrupt harmony in the feelings of all, from the hypocritical priests and
elders down to the most debased. Christ, the precious Son of God, was led forth, and the
cross was laid upon His shoulders. At every step was left blood which flowed from His
wounds. Thronged by an immense crowd of bitter enemies and unfeeling spectators, He is led
away to the crucifixion. "He was oppressed, and He was afflicted, yet He opened not
His mouth: He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is
dumb, so He openeth not His mouth."
His sorrowing disciples follow Him at a distance, behind the murderous throng. He is
nailed to the cross, and hangs suspended between the heavens and the earth. Their hearts
are bursting with anguish as their beloved Teacher is suffering as a criminal. Close to
the cross are the blind, bigoted, faithless priests and elders, taunting, mocking, and
jeering: "Thou that destroyest the temple, and buildest it in three days, save
Thyself. If Thou be the Son of God, come down from the cross. Likewise also the chief
priests mocking Him, with the scribes and elders, said, He saved others; Himself He cannot
save. If He be the King of Israel, let Him now come down from the cross, and we will
believe Him. He trusted in God; let Him deliver Him now, if He will have Him: for He said,
I am the Son of God."
Not one word did Jesus answer to all this. While the nails were being driven through His
hands, and the sweat drops of agony were forced from His pores, from the pale, quivering
lips of the innocent Sufferer a prayer of pardoning love was breathed for His murderers:
"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." All heaven was gazing
with profound interest upon the scene. The glorious Redeemer of a lost world was suffering
the penalty of man's transgression of the Father's law. He was about to ransom His people
with His own blood. He was paying the just claims of God's holy law. This was the means
through which an end was to be finally made of sin and Satan, and his host to be
vanquished.
Oh, was there ever suffering and sorrow like that endured by the dying Saviour! It was the
sense of His Father's displeasure which made His cup so bitter. It was not bodily
suffering which so quickly ended the life of Christ upon the cross. It was the crushing
weight of the sins of the world, and a sense of His Father's wrath. The Father's glory and
sustaining presence had left Him, and despair pressed its crushing weight of darkness upon
Him and forced from His pale and quivering lips the anguished cry: "My God, My God,
why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
Jesus had united with the Father in making the world. Amid the agonizing sufferings of the
Son of God, blind and deluded men alone remain unfeeling. The chief priests and elders
revile God's dear Son while in His expiring agonies. Yet inanimate nature groans in
sympathy with her bleeding, dying Author. The earth trembles. The sun refuses to behold
the scene. The heavens gather blackness. Angels have witnessed the scene of suffering
until they can look no longer, and hide their faces from the horrid sight. Christ is
dying! He is in despair! His Father's approving smile is removed, and angels are not
permitted to lighten the gloom of the terrible hour. They can only behold in amazement
their loved Commander, the Majesty of heaven, suffering the penalty of man's transgression
of the Father's law.
Even doubts assailed the dying Son of God. He could not see through the portals of the
tomb. Bright hope did not present to Him His coming forth from the tomb a conqueror and
His Father's acceptance of His sacrifice. The sin of the world, with all its terribleness,
was felt to the utmost by the Son of God. The displeasure of the Father for sin, and its
penalty, which is death, were all that He could realize through this amazing darkness. He
was tempted to fear that sin was so offensive in the sight of His Father that He could not
be reconciled to His Son. The fierce temptation that His own Father had forever left Him
caused that piercing cry from the cross: "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken
Me?"
Christ felt much as sinners will feel when the vials of God's wrath shall be poured out
upon them. Black despair, like the pall of death, will gather about their guilty souls,
and then they will realize to the fullest extent the sinfulness of sin. Salvation has been
purchased for them by the suffering and death of the Son of God. It might be theirs, if
they would accept of it willingly, gladly; but none are compelled to yield obedience to
the law of God. If they refuse the heavenly benefit and choose the pleasures and
deceitfulness of sin, they have their choice, and at the end receive their wages, which is
the wrath of God and eternal death. They will be forever separated from the presence of
Jesus, whose sacrifice they had despised. They will have lost a life of happiness and
sacrificed eternal glory for the pleasures of sin for a season.
Faith and hope trembled in the expiring agonies of Christ because God had removed the
assurance He had heretofore given His beloved Son of His approbation and acceptance. The
Redeemer of the world then relied upon the evidences which had hitherto strengthened Him,
that His Father accepted His labors and was pleased with His work. In His dying agony, as
He yields up His precious life, He has by faith alone to trust in Him whom it has ever
been His joy to obey. He is not cheered with clear, bright rays of hope on the right hand
nor on the left. All is enshrouded in oppressive gloom. Amid the awful darkness which is
felt by sympathizing nature, the Redeemer drains the mysterious cup even to its dregs.
Denied even bright hope and confidence in the triumph which will be His in the future, He
cries with a loud voice: "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit." He is
acquainted with the character of His Father, with His justice, His mercy, and His great
love, and in submission He drops into His hands. Amid the convulsions of nature are heard
by the amazed spectators the dying words of the Man of Calvary.
Nature sympathized with the suffering of its Author. The heaving earth, the rent rocks,
proclaimed that it was the Son of God who died. There was a mighty earthquake. The veil of
the temple was rent in twain. Terror seized the executioners and spectators as they beheld
the sun veiled in darkness, and felt the earth shake beneath them, and saw and heard the
rending of the rocks. The mocking and jeering of the chief priests and elders were hushed
as Christ commended His spirit into the hands of His Father. The astonished throng began
to withdraw and grope their way in the darkness to the city. They smote upon their breasts
as they went and in terror, speaking scarcely above a whisper, said among themselves:
"It is an innocent person that has been murdered. What if, indeed, He is, as He
asserted, the Son of God?"
Jesus did not yield up His life till He had accomplished the work which He came to do, and
exclaimed with His departing breath: "It is finished." Satan was then defeated.
He knew that his kingdom was lost. Angels rejoiced as the words were uttered: "It is
finished." The great plan of redemption, which was dependent on the death of Christ,
had been thus far carried out. And there was joy in heaven that the sons of Adam could,
through a life of obedience, be finally exalted to the throne of God. Oh, what love! What
amazing love! that brought the Son of God to earth to be made sin for us, that we might be
reconciled to God, and elevated to a life with Him in His mansions in glory. Oh, what is
man, that such a price should be paid for his redemption!
When men and women can more fully comprehend the magnitude of the great sacrifice which
was made by the Majesty of heaven in dying in man's stead, then will the plan of salvation
be magnified, and reflections of Calvary will awaken tender, sacred, and lively emotions
in the Christian's heart. Praises to God and the Lamb will be in their hearts and upon
their lips. Pride and self-esteem cannot flourish in the hearts that keep fresh in memory
the scenes of Calvary. This world will appear of but little value to those who appreciate
the great price of man's redemption, the precious blood of God's dear Son. All the riches
of the world are not of sufficient value to redeem one perishing soul. Who can measure the
love Christ felt for a lost world as He hung upon the cross, suffering for the sins of
guilty men? This love was immeasurable, infinite.
Christ has shown that His love was stronger than death. He was accomplishing man's
salvation; and although He had the most fearful conflict with the powers of darkness, yet,
amid it all, His love grew stronger and stronger. He endured the hiding of His Father's
countenance, until He was led to exclaim in the bitterness of His soul: "My God, My
God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" His arm brought salvation. The price was paid to
purchase the redemption of man, when, in the last soul struggle, the blessed words were
uttered which seemed to resound through creation: "It is finished."
Many who profess to be Christians become excited over worldly enterprises, and their
interest is awakened for new and exciting amusements, while they are coldhearted, and
appear as if frozen, in the cause of God. Here is a theme, poor formalist, which is of
sufficient importance to excite you. Eternal interests are here involved. Upon this theme
it is sin to be calm and unimpassioned. The scenes of Calvary call for the deepest
emotion. Upon this subject you will be excusable if you manifest enthusiasm. That Christ,
so excellent, so innocent, should suffer such a painful death, bearing the weight of the
sins of the world, our thoughts and imaginations can never fully comprehend. The length,
the breadth, the height, the depth, of such amazing love we cannot fathom. The
contemplation of the matchless depths of a Saviour's love should fill the mind, touch and
melt the soul, refine and elevate the affections, and completely transform the whole
character. The language of the apostle is: "I determined not to know anything among
you, save Jesus Christ, and Him crucified." We also may look toward Calvary and
exclaim: "God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world."
Considering at what an immense cost our salvation has been purchased, what will be the
fate of those who neglect so great salvation? What will be the punishment of those who
profess to be followers of Christ, yet fail to bow in humble obedience to the claims of
their Redeemer, and who do not take the cross as humble disciples of Christ and follow Him
from the manger to Calvary? "He that gathereth not with Me," says Christ,
"scattereth abroad."
Some have limited views of the atonement. They think that Christ suffered only a small
portion of the penalty of the law of God; they suppose that, while the wrath of God was
felt by His dear Son, he had, through all His painful sufferings, the evidence of His
Father's love and acceptance; that the portals of the tomb before Him were illuminated
with bright hope, and that He had the abiding evidence of His future glory. Here is a
great mistake. Christ's keenest anguish was a sense of His Father's displeasure. His
mental agony because of this was of such intensity that man can have but faint conception
of it.
With many the story of the condescension, humiliation, and sacrifice of our divine Lord
awakens no deeper interest, and stirs the soul and affects the life no more, than does the
history of the death of the martyrs of Jesus. Many have suffered death by slow tortures;
others have suffered death by crucifixion. In what does the death of God's dear Son differ
from these? It is true He died upon the cross a most cruel death; yet others, for His dear
sake, have suffered equally, so far as bodily torture is concerned. Why, then, was the
suffering of Christ more dreadful than that of other persons who have yielded their lives
for His sake? If the sufferings of Christ consisted in physical pain alone, then His death
was no more painful than that of some of the martyrs.
But bodily pain was but a small part of the agony of God's dear Son. The sins of the world
were upon Him, also the sense of His Father's wrath as He suffered the penalty of the law
transgressed. It was these that crushed His divine soul. It was the hiding of His Father's
face--a sense that His own dear Father had forsaken Him--which brought despair. The
separation that sin makes between God and man was fully realized and keenly felt by the
innocent, suffering Man of Calvary. He was oppressed by the powers of darkness. He had not
one ray of light to brighten the future. And He was struggling with the power of Satan,
who was declaring that he had Christ in his power, that he was superior in strength to the
Son of God, that the Father had disowned His Son, and that He was no longer in the favor
of God any more than himself. If He was indeed still in favor with God, why need He die?
God could save Him from death.
Christ yielded not in the least degree to the torturing foe, even in His bitterest
anguish. Legions of evil angels were all about the Son of God, yet the holy angels were
bidden not to break their ranks and engage in conflict with the taunting, reviling foe.
Heavenly angels were not permitted to minister unto the anguished spirit of the Son of
God. It was in this terrible hour of darkness, the face of His Father hidden, legions of
evil angels enshrouding Him, the sins of the world upon Him, that the words were wrenched
from His lips: "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
The death of the martyrs can bear no comparison with the agony endured by the Son of god.
We should take broader and deeper views of the life, sufferings, and death of God's dear
Son. When the atonement is viewed correctly, the salvation of souls will be felt to be of
infinite value. In comparison with the enterprise of everlasting life, every other sinks
into insignificance. But how have the counsels of this loving Saviour been despised! The
heart has been devoted to the world, and selfish interests have closed the door against
the Son of God. Hollow hypocrisy and pride, selfishness and gain, envy, malice, and
passion, have so filled the hearts of many that Christ can have no room.
He was eternally rich, yet for our sakes He became poor, that we through His poverty might
be made rich. He was clothed with light and glory, and was surrounded with hosts of
heavenly angels waiting to execute His commands. Yet He put on our nature and came to
sojourn among sinful mortals. Here is love that no language can express. It passes
knowledge. Great is the mystery of godliness. Our souls should be enlivened, elevated, and
enraptured with the theme of the love of the Father and the Son to man. The followers of
Christ should here learn to reflect in some degree that mysterious love preparatory to
joining all the redeemed in ascribing "blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, . .
. unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever."
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