From J. C. Philpot's Daily Portions
September 8 "In bringing many sons to glory, it was fitting that God,
for whom and through whom everything exists, should make the author of their
salvation perfect through suffering." Hebrews 2:10 When, with believing eyes, we can view God the Son as the
eternal salvation of all whom the Father gave unto him; when we can see him,
by the eye of faith, coming down into this lower world, taking our nature
into union with his own Divine Person; when, by faith, we can accompany the
Man of Sorrows into the gloomy garden of Gethsemane, or behold him groaning,
bleeding, and dying on the cross, an object of ignominy and shame, and
believe that in this way, and this alone, salvation could be wrought out, O,
what a view it gives us of the demerit and dreadful nature of SIN, that
nothing short of the incarnation of God's only begotten Son, nothing short
of such a tremendous sacrifice could put away sin, and bring the elect back
unto God! On the one hand, as we take a glance at the suffering and
dying Lamb of God, how it shows us the dreadful and abominable nature of
sin; and, on the other hand, when we can see by the eye of faith what that
work is, by whom that work was wrought out, and how glorious and efficacious
that work must be which the Son of God, equal with the Father in glory and
majesty, undertook and went through to the uttermost--how it exalts
SALVATION in our eyes! Thus a believing sight of the Lord Jesus hanging upon
Calvary's tree, not only, on the one hand, shows us the dreadful nature of
sin, but, on the other, how full, how complete, how glorious, and how
effectual must that salvation be, of which the expiring Son of God could
say, "It is finished!"