Delivered on Lord's Day Morning, November 5, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “But you are come unto mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in Heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaks better things than that of Abel.” Hebrews 12:22-24. THE whole passage will be considered, but our special central text will be verse twenty-three— “To the general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in Heaven.” Paul is displaying the superiority of the New Covenant to the old. He tells us what Israel, after the flesh, came to at their best in the morning hours of the Law and what the first-born after the Spirit have come to under the Gospel. He pictures the great assembly of the chosen people round about Mount Sinai and then His Inspired mind describes an infinitely larger and happier gathering, to which all Believers have come, around Mount Zion. Not only the Hebrews to whom he was writing, but all the people of God are gathered
together in one general assembly, of which the blessed God is the center. Paul shows us the joyful difference between
the two gatherings and the feelings and pursuits of those who compose them.
What we shall need, this morning, is a little careful attention to the deep meaning of the text and an intensely earnest
desire to actually enter into the enjoyment of the privileges which are herein set before us. Our text contains an incalculable
wealth of meaning—it is written according to God’s riches in Glory by Christ Jesus. Surely it was written as with a
pen of diamond upon plates of gold set with jewels! May God, by His Grace, lead us fully into it. We would not only
speak of privilege as possible, but would say with Paul, “We are come unto it.” As surely as we are not come to the terrors
of the Law, so surely we are come to the blessings of the Gospel!
Read in verse 18, “You are not come,” and then in verse 22, “But you are come.” We do not only hear of Zion and
her festivities, but we are come to them! We do not merely know the letter of the Gospel, but we have come into the inner
and spiritual meaning of it by personal enjoyment. “We are come.” I would ring out those words as a sort of musical accompaniment to the Truths of God uttered. All through the sermon let our hearts rejoicingly say, “We are come!” “We
are come!” We have obtained, by faith, all that which is set before us in the text!
I. First, I want to set out, as I may be able, A CONTRAST PRESENTED IN THE ENTIRE PASSAGE which we
have read—a contrast between the economy of Law and the economy of Grace. Every good thing is enhanced in value by
its opposite. Light is all the brighter to eyes which have wept in darkness. Food is all the sweeter after you have known
hunger. And Zion is all the fairer because of Sinai. The contrast between Free Grace and Law makes Grace appear the
more precious to minds that have known the rigor of the Commandments.
The contrast presented here is sevenfold. It may be that the idea of this sevenfold contrast first occurred to Bengel,
that prince of critics, but I have ventured to differ from his form of it and I hope that in so doing I have set forth the contrast as to the seven things more clearly than he has done, so that even the humblest here will catch each point and retain
each contrast in his memory. Notice the contrasts. First, as to place (v. 18), “You are not come unto the mount that
might be touched.” Verse 22—“but you are come unto mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly
Jerusalem.” Behold Sinai with its rugged crags—scarcely had a human foot ever trod it, perhaps, until that hour in
which Jehovah descended upon it in splendor—it had remained a virgin peak which the foot of man had never polluted.
There was no habitation of man upon it, neither did it yield pasture for flocks. The Mount of God stood out in terrible
sublimity against the sky, holding communion with the stars, but refusing to deal with men. It was sublime, but stern
and tempest-beaten. God came upon Sinai with His Law and the dread mountain became a type of what the Law would be to
us. It has given us a grand idea of holiness, but it has not offered us a pathway thereto, nor furnished a weary heart
with a resting place, nor supplied a hungry soul with spiritual food. It can never be the place where congregated multitudes
erect a city for themselves and a Temple for the living God—it is not the shrine of fellowship, but the throne of authority
and justice.
The Jews under the Law had that stern hill for their center and they compassed it about with pale countenances and
trembling knees. We gather to quite another center, even unto the palace-crowned steep of Zion. There David dwelt of
old and there David’s Lord revealed Himself. The hill of Zion rose above the city of Jerusalem and the two, together,
formed the favored spot where Jehovah deigned to dwell in solemn state in the midst of His chosen nation—“For the
Lord has chosen Zion; He has desired it for His habitation.” There the service of His sanctuary was carried on and
around it clustered all the palaces of Judah and the habitations of the chosen people. It was called “the City of Vision”
and the City of Peace. God dwelt in the midst of her and, therefore, she was not moved.
“Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion.” “God is known in her palaces for a refuge.”
“God shall help her, and that right early.” This is a type of the dispensation in which the Lord comes to man in a vision
of peace and manifests Himself in forgiving Grace. The Lord dwells with men in the Person of the Man, Christ Jesus, and
we come to Him and find our habitation in Him in all generations. Even as the sparrow has found a house and the swallow
a nest for herself, where she may lay her young, so do we come to dwell at the altars of God, in the city which His
Grace has founded and His power has garrisoned.
The places in their contrast are full of teaching. This mountain that might not be touched, we are told, in the next
place, “burned with fire.” God made the mountain melt and flow down. The Lord also thundered in the heavens and the
Highest gave His voice—hailstones and coals of fire.” Sinai was altogether on a smoke; innumerable lightning flashed
forth around the summit of the hill and Jehovah revealed Himself in flaming fire. What, then, have Believers come to,
instead of fire? Why, to another form of fire—to “an innumerable company of angels”—“He makes His angels spirits,
His ministers a flame of fire.” Some of those bright beings are called seraphim, or, burning ones, for they come and go
like flames of fire!
It must have been terrible to look up to Sinai and see it casting forth its flames, but it is with delight that we look
towards the angels who excel in strength and spend that strength in the service of the Lord and His people! These are a
wall of fire round about us. “Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of
salvation?” Has He not given them charge over us to keep us in all our ways? It is most glorious to think of the position
every Believer occupies today, for we are all come where the hosts of God encamp about us! David said, “The chariots of
God are twenty thousand, even thousands of angels.” Daniel said, “Ten thousand times ten thousand stood before Him.”
The Prophet flings his thousands about as if they were mere units!
Think of Jehovah’s legions! Jesus speaks of the Father sending Him 12 legions of angels in a moment. The Lord Jehovah
has more legions to send to one spot than the Roman Empire could have mustered in all its length and breadth.
And every single warrior of these legions is able to destroy a whole army in a single night, as one of them did when he
smote Sennacherib. What mighty spirits, what flaming spirits, what pure spirits, what glorious spirits they are! And we
have communion with them! We have come to an innumerable company of angels. We do not always realize it as we
should, but these loving spirits are about us as surely as they were around Jacob in his dream. If our eves were opened, we
would see horses of fire and chariots of fire round about the Lord’s servants!
“Millions of spiritual creatures walk this earth, both when we wake and when we sleep.” God comes to us by them—
“He rode upon a cherub and did fly.” Angels contend against evil spirits and are our defenders. This, then, is our position—
we are come to the countless hosts of our Father’s messengers and not to devouring flames. Pursue the contrast
and you find on Mount Sinai that there was blackness, doubtless made the more intensely black as the vivid lightning
flashed out from it. “You are not come unto blackness,” says Paul. What is the contrast to this? “But you are come to the
general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in Heaven.”
Perhaps you do not, for a moment, see any contrast, but I will soon show it to you. Blackness is the symbol of sorrow,
it is the garb of mourning. Everywhere we associate blackness with grief, but now Paul sets before us the grandest
embodiment of joy! The word for general assembly in the original suggests a far-reaching festivity. “You are come to the
panequris—to a solemn festive assembly, comparable to the National Convocation of the Greeks which was held around the foot of Mount Olympus every four or five years, when all the Greeks of different states came together to keep up the
national feeling by festivities and friendly competitions which I will explain further on.
Instead of the colors of grim death, we see the joyous congregating of all the clans, the glad union of all the children
of God who are scattered abroad! We, this day, in loving fellowship with the Church, are come to the great gathering of
God, the holy convocation of saints of every tongue, the central home of all the tribes of His great family! It is a gathering
for solemn purposes, for it is a “Church.” But still for joyous purposes, for it is a national holiday. A solemn joy, a
holy delight pervades the atmosphere which the one great Church of God is breathing! You say to me, “Do you mean the
Church in Heaven? “ Yes, I mean the Church in Heaven, but on earth, too! Why divide it? There is only one Church!
Here and there, earth and Heaven, make a little division to our senses, but there is no division in the mind of God—
He sees one general assembly of all His people, of all nations, kindreds, people and tongues. Cannot you realize the scene
and note the Glory of it? Cannot your mind come to the general assembly? Cannot you feel that you are standing in company
with all the chosen of God of every age, clime and place, keeping high holiday with them before the Most High,
singing continually with them His praises and doing Him service with delight? I am so glad not to be alone, but to be one
of the general assembly and Church of the first-born, which are written in Heaven, that I feel ready to shout for joy!
What a contrast this is between the blackness of coming sorrow by the Law and the joyous whiteness of the garments of
those who believe!
Follow the next point of contrast and you have darkness mentioned. “Nor unto blackness and darkness.” The cloud
on Sinai was so dark as to obscure the day, except that every now and then the lightning flash lit up the scene. What are
we come to in contrast to that darkness? “To God the Judge of all.” Possibly it does not strike you with joy when I mention
it, but this is, perhaps, the most joyous of all the clauses of the passage! “God is Light and in Him is no darkness at
all.” What a contrast to the darkness of the Law is a reconciled God! “Oh, but,” you say, “He is there as the Judge of all
and that makes us tremble,” Why? Why? It makes me leave off trembling when I think that I am come “to God the Judge
of all,” that Christ has brought me near, even to the Judge, so that 1 have nothing to dread from Him! What can the
Judge do but pronounce sentence of acquittal upon the man for whom Christ has made expiation? What can He do to
harm us?
Nothing! But much to help us for, rolling every slander away, He will make the righteous to shine forth as the sun in
the Kingdom of their Father! We are standing, today, in the Presence of that great God who looks upon His people with
delight and awards them their several crowns. In this great gathering of the first-born, they wrestle with sin, they run the
race of perseverance, they proclaim His honor and sing His praises. This is, in fact, the highest delight of all the saints—
to gather unto their God! And what follows next? Why, tempest—it is said, “You are not come unto the mount that
might be touched, and that burned with fire, nor unto blackness, and darkness, and tempest.” All over the top of Sinai
there swept fierce winds and terrible tornadoes, for the Lord was there!
All Heaven seemed convulsed when God did rend it and descended in majesty upon the sacred mountain! But what do
you and I see? The very reverse of tempest— “The spirits of just men made perfect,” serenely resting! What more is there
for them to do? They are perfect! They have fought the fight. They have run the race, they are crowned, they are full of
ecstatic bliss—the light of God is on their brows, the Glory of God is reflected from their faces—everything like a storm
is far gone from them! They have reached the fair haven and are tossed with tempest no more. Today you and I have come
where we hold fellowship with the immutably serene who are resting in the Glory which God has appointed them! This is
a part of the splendid pageantry of the Covenant of Grace, and we are come to it—
“Even now by faith we join our hands Faith has brought us into that one communion in which all saints live, whether they are on earth or in the Father’s
house above. Follow the contrast further and you come to the sound of a trumpet. This resounded from the top of Sinai.
Clarion notes most clear and shrill rang out, again and again—the high commands of the thrice-holy God. You are not
come to that. Instead of a trumpet, which signifies war and the stern summons of a king, you are come unto “Jesus the
Mediator of the New Covenant,” and the silver tones of, “Come unto Me, all you that labor and are heavy laden, and I
will give you rest.” Here is nothing to disturb the ears, for, “He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause His voice to be
heard in the streets. A bruised reed shall He not break, and the smoking flax shall He not quench.” No message thunders out,
“Stand off!” but holy affection cries, “Come, and welcome!” God has come to you in the Person of the Mediator, the
Man, Christ Jesus.” In the Person of Jesus we see nothing to alarm, but everything to encourage. Oh, for faith to see,
with joy, the Mediator of that New Covenant which does not so much command as work in us to will and to do! Is not
this one of the choicest blessings of the position we now occupy, that instead of the trumpet, we hear the sweet and saving
voice of Jesus bidding us repose in His salvation and be eternally blessed?
The seventh contrast lies in this—together with the trumpet, there sounded out a Voice—a Voice which was so terrible
that they asked that they might not hear it again. They cowered down under it like poor, frightened children, terrified
by the penetrating sound! They could not endure another word! They begged that the voice would be silent. We have
come to another voice—the voice of “the blood of sprinkling—that speaks better things than that of Abel.” There is a
voice from Zion, there is a voice that rolls over the heads of the innumerable company of angels, a voice of the Lord that
is full of majesty and exceedingly comfortable to the “general assembly and Church of the first-born” who know the joyful
sound! The blessed Word speaks life, pardon, reconciliation, acceptance, joy, eternal bliss! Happy people, whose ears
have discerned this heavenly voice! “They shall walk, O Lord, in the light of Your Countenance.” The more of this voice
the better—it never wearies the ear, nor distresses the heart—
“Blood has a voice to pierce the skies, We are come to it, for we have been washed in it and its sweet, prevailing note is filling our heart with music even now!
Now, dear Friends, I have set forth the contrast and I want you to think it out by the help of the ever-blessed Spirit.
To all that was transacted at Sinai the people could not come, nor did they wish to come—they kept at a distance, for
they were afraid—but to all that is displayed on Zion we may come! No, what is better, I hope we can say with the Apostle,
“We are come.” We now enter into it and delight in it—it has become our life and our joy! All that the people saw at
Sinai distressed them. All that we see at Zion electrifies us with delight—we scarcely know how to bear ourselves as we
think of the wondrous Glory of love!
We are not warned off; we are not driven into fear and bondage, but we come unto the Mountain of God and there
we feast, rejoicing in Him, even in all that He is and does! The veil is torn from the top to the bottom and we have access
to God through Jesus Christ our Lord. There I leave the instructive contrast. May the Holy Spirit bless it.
II. I beg you, in the second place, to follow me in what may not, perhaps, so much strike you, but it is certainly worthy
of your attention, namely, A COMPARISON IN OUR MORE CENTRAL TEXT. Our position is that, “We are
come to the general assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven.” It is a comparison, not with
anything Jewish, for that would not have been suitable, but with a Gentile festival, which more readily lent itself to the
Apostle’s great thought.
Let me give you, first of all, a rough sketch. In Greece, in her happier times, in order to preserve a national unity, the
various states, kingdoms, or republics which constituted Greece proper, held, at the foot of Olympus, a great gathering
to which none came as participators except citizens of the various Greek nationalities. The object of the gathering was
that every part of the Greek nature might be educated and displayed and the unity of the Greek race be remembered. Poets
came and sang verses which they had composed with care; orators stood and discoursed to gain the crown for eloquence;
men of all kinds of mental attainments were there emulating each other. At the same time, all sorts of athletic
exercises for the development of the body were going on.
The territory in which this was held was considered to be sacred. Though the states were often at war with one another,
they never carried the war into that particular region. It was a quiet, peaceful, neutral spot. Do you not glimpse a
parallel? No man was allowed to compete in any of the exercises and contests except he had been at least 10 months or
more in preparation for them. Those who were conquerors had no gold given them as reward—a simple crown of olive
leaves was all—but it was thought a most sufficient reward for the most exhausting feats and for the greatest selfdenial—
such as resistance unto blood and dislocation of bones.
When the conquerors went home, we are told that they were drawn into their own cities with horses in great state,
and the gates were not opened to them, but a breach was made in the city wall that they might be admitted with unusual pomp. The whole business of the festival was held in high esteem by the Greek people and religion lent its rites and ceremonies
to make the gathering the more imposing. The Apostle, I do not doubt, had seen it. At any rate, the words which
he uses properly and naturally suggest it. Think for a moment! Before us stands the city which is the center of this unrivalled
congregation of the first-born! Jerusalem stands in her place and the Acropolis, Mount Zion, looks down upon the
scene. To the city of the living God, the living children of God have come!
Look how the Presence of the Lord brings together an innumerable company! Far as imagination can fly, the space is
filled with shining ones who compose the court of the Most High! Observe the free-born burgesses of the holy city, enrolled
by God that they may participate in the exercises which make illustrious this noblest of all assemblies! Look, yonder
are the runners and the wrestlers! Perhaps you do not think there can be much festivity about engagements which
involve so much of endurance as running and striving for the mastery, but your Greeks were of another mind and these
contests were a part of the pleasures of the festival.
How much I wish that we could look upon all the conflicts, sufferings and troubles of this mortal life as occupations
of the great festive gathering which is now being held in Heaven and in earth around the city of our God. Look! Yonder
is the Judge, the great Umpire of His people’s efforts, ready to award the crowns! And who are those sitting in their seats
and looking on? These are they who have taken their turn in these grand displays and, having won their crowns, there
they sit, “the spirits of the just made perfect,” “the cloud of witnesses.” Today, my Brothers and Sisters, you are participating in that great international gathering of all the people of God! Are you not glad to be here? When I was visiting
one of our sick friends, he uttered a sentence which stuck to me and, indeed, suggested my subject.
He said, “I have had some education for Heaven in attending the Tabernacle.” “How is that?” “Because I have become
used to worshipping with a great company of godly people—used to joining in the songs of great multitudes—and
I shall feel at home among the number that no man can number.” Yes, it is sweet to go up with your multitude who keep
holy day! The number adds a charm to your worship and gives to our hearts a tone of exhilaration which otherwise they
might have lacked. Behold, then, the countless bands of the redeemed assembled around the chosen mountain! Brethren,
you are not around a blazing mountain, nor do you compose a trembling assembly of persons who, like slaves, are afraid
of their great and terrible master! You are come, today, to the great festival in which earth and Heaven unite!
That assembly is one and indivisible. Around the Throne of the Most High your Apostle represents all the saints as
gathered to hold one glorious feast. “Has it begun?” you ask. Yes, it is going on, now, and you are come to it—if you
are living by faith as you ought to live—you are now engaged in it. “Oh, but,” you say, “I am wrestling.” That is a part
of the festival! “I never thought of that,” cries one. But it is even so. When the national meeting was held at Olympus,
there were contests of all kinds and these were not regarded with sorrow, but with exultation. “What? Would you have
me look at my suffering and wrestling as part of a festival?” Yes! I would have you glory in them and view them in the
same high and heroic light in which the Apostle sets them forth in the figure before us!
The exercises are now proceeding. The sacred orators are now doing their part—you heard the singers just now. I
count it a high honor to hold your attention while I tell you of the Glory of my Lord and Master who, Himself, contended
here on earth and endured the Cross, despising the shame! Thousands of others are discoursing as I do, for the
assembly abounds in the rich gifts of utterance. And everywhere, chosen spokesmen are telling out the wonderful wisdom
and love of God! Many at this meeting have hymns to sing, or books to write, and all are doing their best to make the
assembly a notable one! Look at another class of chosen men and mark how they are struggling with temptation, warring
against error, running in the course, or bearing heavy weights! Yes, that is all a part of the grand display which the Lord
is making before all intelligent beings, wherein the power of love, the energy of faith, the splendor of Grace and the triumph
of good are being made manifest to the Glory of God by us!
“Oh,” you say, “I cannot look at my sorrows in such a light.” No doubt the men who were wrestling or racing found
that, for the present, it was not joyous. Yet they did not shun it, for they had earnestly desired the day when they might
be allowed to share in the national display. They counted it a high honor to be permitted to take part, even, in the
roughest contests. None but a Greek could do so. You, also, have put your name down for a place in the Church of
God—this is a high honor, to which none but the twice-born, whose names are written in Heaven, can be admitted—
accept the hardship with the honor!
“Oh, but,” you say, “I have run a long time, I have run for 50 years!” Splendid running, this! I do not believe that
even at Olympus they ever saw a man run for 50 years at a stretch. Keep on! Do not suffer the glory of the day to fail! You
say this sheds a strange light upon Christian life. Say, rather, a blessed light which will delight the eyes and hearts of enthusiastic Believers. The Father of all takes delight in this assembly—it is the joy of Christ to look down upon His
champions, whose faith He sustains, whose faith He accepts! He is saying to devils, “Look on and see what lovers of right
can do!” Look on, you innumerable company of angels, and see what Grace can do in the hearts of poor, feeble men and
women, making them strong to do exploits!
My Brothers and Sisters, see what feats were performed of old! Read the 11th chapter of this Epistle. Remember how
the Lord’s own elect stood at the stake and burned to the death without yielding? Think how they were stretched on
racks, but would not deny their Lord! They were dragged at the heels of wild horses. They were roasted over slow fires,
or were stung to death by wasps! Their endurance is more glorious than all that can be told of the heroes of Greece! What
wonders men have done through Grace! God has glorified His name by what He has enabled men to bear and do! This
our Lord would have us look at and unite in! Now, what can we do? God help us to do our best. Oh for Grace to suffer
more, to give more, to work more, to be more firm in resisting temptation, more pure in all godly conversation! Champions,
shall the day of Glory decline? Your feast has scarcely reached its greatest day—let not courage, or patience, or
faith begin to flag. May we be jealous for the honor of the chosen race to which we belong.
Our text adds to the term, “general assembly,” that of the “Church of the first-born.” “Oh,” say the commentators,
“this is tautology!” Not so. The Apostle felt bound, after having used such a remarkable comparison, to call us back to
the solemnity of the matter and remind us that it is “a Church” which is gathered. You and I have come to a great Church
meeting where all the saints of God are met at this moment. What makes a Church? An ecclesia? These words may help
you—they are, first, a people chosen. Next, a people called. Then a people culled. Then a people consecrated. And then a
people congregated. So do they become the Church of the living God—separated unto God by His electing love; called
out from the world by His effectual calling; culled out by being separated through a work of Grace; congregated and
gathered together into one in Christ—and forevermore consecrated to Divine service!
This is what you and I have come to. Oh for words with which to speak our joy for admission into such a company!
Brothers and Sisters, notice that Paul was writing to Hebrews, and the Hebrews, no doubt, gloried in their great feasts,
when all the tribes came up to Jerusalem. Yes, Paul knew all about those feasts and all that they meant—but this is an
assembly to which the Jewish ritual offers us no parallel. Hebrews come to that festival, but it is by no means peculiarly
theirs. “They shall come from the east, and from the west, from the north, and from the south.” Just as at Olympus,
Spartans, Thebans, Athenians and Corinthians all came and melted into Greeks, so will they come—Jews, Gentiles, men
of this Church, and of that—and they will all melt into one general assembly! It is not a peculiar assembly of Hebrews,
but a general assembly of all the first-born.
Note, dear Friends, the individuals who compose the company. They are all high born, for they are all first-born.
There is but one emphatically first-born, namely, Jesus Christ, Himself. But being one with Him, we become the firstborn
of God through the new birth! By our union to Christ and by the blessed processes of Grace, we are made and
known to be the first-born of God. Now the first-born among men had the ascendancy and sway in the household, even
as, “the meek shall inherit the earth.” The day comes when righteousness shall be to the fore. The first-born had the excellency.
“Reuben, you are My first-born, My might, and the beginning of My strength, the excellency of dignity, and the
excellency of power.”
The saints are the excellent of the earth, in whom is all our delight. The first-born were consecrated to God and we,
too, are dedicated persons, set apart unto God, “for you are not your own; you are bought with a price.” The first-born
were redeemed—so have we been purchased with the precious blood of Christ. The first-born had the estate, the throne
and the priesthood. Vast is the inheritance of the first-born of God—all things are theirs—they are heirs of God, joint-
heirs with Jesus Christ. To the first-born belonged honor—“Such honor have all the saints.” There are younger brothers
in every family who receive comparatively little if they happen to be descended from great lords. But there are no
younger Brothers in the family of God. They are all first-born, all heirs! And what is wonderful to tell—each one of
them has all the estate, for it is so infinite that, though if I have all, you can have all, too—an innumerable company of
this blessed first-born race can have the whole of God to be their portion forever and ever!
But then it is added that they are enrolled. As I have already told you, they enrolled the competitors in the Greek
festivals and a man took care, months before, to get his name set down for a place. Thus God has enrolled the names of
His people. They are written—where? In the earth? No—the wicked are written in the earth! But the names of the Lord’s
people are written in Heaven! In the Divine decree that never changes, in the Divine heart that never alters, in the Divine
memory that never fails, in the Divine thought that never forgets—all the names of the godly are written! I do not know
how to set this out, but I want you to feel as if you were standing, this morning, in that great assembly with spiritual
exercises going on around you—such as struggling against sin, striving for the mastery over error, patiently enduring
pain and working holy work.
The Judge is looking on, with the crowns in His hands, ready to place them upon each conqueror’s head. The air
breathes perfume and is full of music, for all around is joy. When a man suffers, if he looks upon it as punishment, he feels
like a criminal tied up to be lashed. But if he knows that his path is a necessary part of the road to victory, he bears it
without complaint. If we all understand that this period is not comparable to a battle, of which the result hangs in the
balance, but comparable to those deeds of prowess with which of old men celebrated a victory, then the face of things is
altered and our toils are transfigured! Angels come down and poor men and women are lifted up, triumphing in patience
and giving pleasure to their Lord. They are bringing honor to that favored city which God has prepared for them. We
are here amid the throng, not as spectators, only, but sharing in the overflowing joy! Oh, the bliss of feeling that even
now, Heaven is begun below and the sufferings of this present life are but a part of the Glory of the Lord manifested in
His people!
III. We will conclude by noticing the third point, which is—A COMING TO BE ENJOYED. This is the essence of it
all—“We are come” unto this general assembly and Church of the first-born. How, then, do we come? A difficulty meets
us at the outset. You that have never thought of this great assembly which my imagination and heart have tried to picture
this morning—you cannot come. The porter stands at the barrier and keeps you back. You cry, “Let me come!” No,
you may not come. This festival is only for the first-born and you are not that by nature. You must first be born again
and become one of the first-born. The Spirit of God must make you a new creature in Christ Jesus—and then the porter
will open the wicket and say—“Come in, and welcome.” Which part are you going to take in this great gathering? Will
you fight against sin? Will you wrestle against error? Will you run for the crown? Will you sing, or speak? What will you
do in this great congress of all the saints?
But these questions do not apply until, first, you are born from above!
Next, you must be enrolled, Your name must be written down, not in our Church Book, but in the Church Book of
the Lord above. I would to God that some of you would be moved to say, “Oh, that my name were written there!” The
name of every Believer is upon Christ’s heart, hands and shoulders. If you believe that Jesus is the Christ. If you are trusting
in Him, your name is among the enrolled! If you believe in Him that rose, again, from the dead, and He is the Author
and Finisher of your faith, then come and welcome—you are one of those whose names are written in Heaven! The general
assembly would miss you if you were absent—yes, Heaven, itself, cannot be perfect if you do not enter its ranks—for
all the saints must be there, or else it will not be a perfect gathering! Would you have them mourning in Heaven and saying,
“Such an one is not here!” Why, Heaven’s songs would be suspended if one child of the family were left in the outer
darkness! There must be a believing in Jesus and then there will be a reception into the chosen assembly!
But you say, again, “How am I to get into that assembly? I hope I have been born again and that my name is written
among the Lord’s redeemed people, but I still do not feel as if I were in the festive gathering—I feel more like one in the
arena contending for very life.” So did many at Olympus. They were fighting and wrestling and, while so engaged, they
endured great hardships, yet their valiant strife was a part of the grand scene and they would not have been absent for
any reason. So, dear Friends, what we must do is this—first, God helping us, let us partake in the joy of the one Church!
Why should I not be as happy as yon angels are? They have not so much reason to be happy as I have, for Jesus never took
their nature, or died for them—
“Never did angels taste above And you, spirits of the just, why should not I participate in all your joy? What blessing belongs to you which does
not, also, belong to me, except the one delight of absolute perfection? Am I not saved? Am I not washed? Am I not
clothed? Am I not a child of God—in all things, just what you are, except that one finishing stroke—which I am sure to have in due time when I have concluded my wrestling and my running? Let us joy in God today and, surely, even in
Heaven they know no greater bliss than this! To joy in God through Jesus Christ our Lord is happiness at its highest!
May the Spirit of God help us!
If we wish to feel we are among the Lord’s host, let us participate in their service. There is something for you and for
me to do—and to enjoy this holiday we must all take a share in its engagements. Come, Brother, quicken your pace! You
are not making enough progress in the Divine life—hasten your steps, throw away every weight—and cast off the garment
which entangles your feet. You, too, dear Brother, over there in the workshop, where you hear bad language and
see bad practices—go in for the wrestling—see what you can do! In the name of the Lord grasp the evil which opposes
you! Fling an evil custom on its back and win a victory for purity and truth! Thus shall we each, by vying with the rest,
contribute to the grand result and share in the general triumph!
And when we are participating in the service, let us, next, feel that we can possess the inheritance! It is “the assembly
of the first-born”—let no man miss his birthright! See how the Apostle introduces Esau as a warning and how he bids us
regard our afflictions as chastisements which prove our sonship? Come, then, act as sons and rejoice in your Father’s
riches which are all your own! Let us not remain half-starved through the penury of our unbelief, but let us be filled to
the brim through the richness of the faith which the Spirit of God has worked in us! Let us look on all things round
about us with quite a different eye—not walking like slaves who dread their taskmaster and scarcely dare to call their
breath their own—but like free men who have the Judge of all upon their side and can have nothing to fear in life or
death! Deep be our reverence, but high our joy as we stand in His gracious Presence and, with all the blood-bought, rejoice
with joy unspeakable and full of glory!
At this moment our question is, “Lord, what will You have me to do?” Our cry is—“Here am I! Send me.” Use me,
my Lord, glorify Yourself in me! And while the innumerable company of angels look on, help me to do, dare, wrestle and
win till You shall give to me, also, the crown of life that fades not away! This will not be a payment of debt, but a gift of
Grace. The metaphor of a Greek assembly excludes all notion of wages for work. No mercenary thought entered the mind
of a single Greek who strove for the mastery at the assembly. He had nothing to win but a crown of olive leaves! No
money was ever given—it would have degraded the festival to a common show!
Therefore you are not invited to contend that you may win a reward by your own merit. Ours is holiday work which
it is joy to perform. Moved by a spiritual chivalry, saints do and dare for Jesus out of love for Him. His service is its own
reward! To die for Him is life! To live for Him is Heaven! Let others boast their pedigree and nationality—we have
reached the august convocation of the ransomed of the Lord who have come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon
their heads! |