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The Sufferings and Death of Christ by Augustus Montague Toplady “My
God! My God! why hast Thou forsaken Me?” — MATTHEW xxvii, 46. LONG
before our blessed Saviour was manifested in the flesh, the particular
circumstances of His humiliation and death were revealed to the ancient
prophets, and by them made known to the people. Neither can there be a more
unanswerable proof given of the Messiahship of Christ than that all the
prophecies from the least to the greatest, that were descriptive of the
Messiah, were accomplished, to a tittle, in Him. Thus, for instance — Isaiah,
who flourished about eight hundred and thirty years before the coming of
Christ, foretold of Him that He should be despised and rejected of men; a man
of sorrows, and acquainted with grief; that He should be wounded for our
transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities; that He should be numbered
with transgressors, and make His soul an offering for sin. Zechariah
expressly foretold, that Christ should be delivered up for thirty pieces of
silver, and that a potter’s field should be bought with the money. And David,
who died upwards of a thousand years before the birth of Christ, prophesied
of His fast in the wilderness; of His arraignment and condemnation through
the instigation of false witnesses; of His being scourged, crucified, and
buried; and likewise of His resurrection from the dead, and ascension into
heaven. And, as the writings of the Evangelists and
Apostles are the best comment on the Old Testament; so, by consulting what
they relate concerning the sufferings of Christ, and comparing their account
with the ancient prophecies, we shall find that every event answered the
predictions as exactly as face answers face in a glass. And I am persuaded,
that one grand reason why we have so many Deists and infidels in the present
age, is, either because those men never trouble themselves to read the
Scriptures at all, or, supposing they may by chance look into them, it is in
a slight, careless manner; and their prejudice on one hand, and want of
attention on the other, render them proof against demonstration itself, and
blind to the evidence of truth, let it shine ever so clearly. But I only mention this; my chief design being
to improve the circumstances of our blessed Lord’s crucifixion, as we find
them recorded by this evangelist. The preceding chapter, among several other
affecting particulars, informs us of His agony and prayer in the garden of
Gethsemane. This garden, or field, was a solitary spot of ground at the foot
of Mount Olivet, and about half a mile to the east of Jerusalem. Hither, as
St. Luke acquaints us, our Lord used occasionally to retire; it being an
unfrequented place, and therefore convenient for prayer and meditation. And
now, as He foreknew that His death was at hand, after He had instituted the
Last Supper, and bid a solemn adieu to His disciples, He repaired once more
to the garden of Gethsemane, that He might spend a few minutes in
supplication to His heavenly Father, and the better prepare Himself to
undergo that weight of sufferings which He was shortly to sustain. Here then
it was, that the agonies of His soul, and the intense fervour of His prayers,
occasioned that bloody sweat, of which we read in St. Luke. Though it was late at night, and the season of
the year was uncommonly cold, yet this sweat was as it were great drops of
blood, falling down to the ground, a kind of prelude this to His approaching
crucifixion, when the crimson stream was not to fall in drops, but to flow in
torrents from His wounded body. The prayer which our Lord put up, while He
lay prostrate in the garden, was, “O My Father, if it be possible, let this
cup pass from Me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt.” As if He
had said, If sinful man can be saved without My suffering, let Me not
suffer; but if mankind must be lost, unless I die, Thy will be done. I
am content to endure the punishment due to them, if Thy justice cannot be
satisfied without it. Let all the weight of Thy resentment fall on Me, so My
people may be pardoned, and their souls saved. This prayer of Christ’s furnishes us with an
answer to a question which some have been so daring as to ask, namely,
Whether sinful mankind could not have been forgiven, and some other method
have been found out for our salvation, besides the death of Christ? To which,
with due deference to the divine wisdom, we may safely answer, No. If
any other way for our redemption could possibly have been contrived, the
prayer of Christ, who intreated that, in that case, the cup might pass from
Him, would have certainly been heard. Neither is it even rational to
think, that Christ would have assumed our nature, and lived a suffering life,
and died a tormenting death, if it had not been absolutely necessary, and if less
than that could have sufficed for our salvation. Our blessed Lord had scarce ended His prayer,
and risen from the ground, when a multitude of soldiers, made up partly of
Jews and partly of Romans, came to apprehend Him. Of this troop Judas was the
ring-leader. Possibly they had sought for Him in Jerusalem, and not finding
Him there, Judas, who knew that Gethsemane was a place to which He frequently
resorted, led the multitude thither. The traitor had before given them a
signal, saying, “Whomsoever I shall kiss, that same is He, hold Him fast.”
The Son of God being thus apprehended, was brought from Gethsemane to
Jerusalem, with His hands tied behind Him, carried before the Jewish
Sanhedrim, of which Caiaphas, the high priest, was president. Here, in the
face of the whole court, our Lord resolutely asserted the dignity of His
person, and the divinity of His mission. He had heard with silence the
testimony of those who bore false witness against Him; He would not clear
Himself of their malicious slanders, as thinking them beneath His notice; and
knowing that His death was necessary, both to fulfil the decree of God, and
to procure redemption for His people. He rather chose to suffer, than to
offer anything in His own defence. But since that which was alleged against Him
by the false witnesses, supposing what they said had been true, was not
capital, and could not reach His life; the members of the council, who
thirsted for His blood, were in hopes that if they could prevail with Christ
to speak, they might draw something or other from Him which might be
interpreted to His prejudice, and furnish them with a plausible reason for
condemning Him. The high priest, therefore, in the name of the rest, adjured
Him by the living God, to tell them whether He was the Messiah, and the Son
of God; on which, partly out of reverence to the name of His heavenly Father,
by whom He was adjured; and partly out of apprehension that His silence might
be construed as a denial of His Messiahship, our Lord answered, “Thou hast
said”; that is, thou hast said right; I am the Son of God; adding,
“Nevertheless, I say unto you, hereafter shall you see the Son of Man sitting
on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven.” As if He had
said, Though you now sit as judge, and I stand before you as a criminal, yet
the time is coming, when the case shall be totally reversed; you, who at
present look upon Me with abhorrence and contempt; even your eyes
shall see Me come in the last day to judge mankind, not as I now appear,
mean, poor, and forsaken; but clothed with uncreated glory, possessed of
infinite power, and attended with innumerable hosts of adoring angels; and,
so sure as I am now standing at your bar, shall you be arraigned and
condemned at Mine. Far from being affected with these awful
words, or the majestic solemnity with which, no doubt, our Lord uttered them,
the high priest was glad to hear this declaration, as he could now,
with some colour, condemn Him for supposed blasphemy. The high priest rent
his clothes; which, among the ancients, was the strongest sign they could
give of horror and indignation. Then, addressing himself to those present, he
cried, “He hath spoken blasphemy; what further need have we of witnesses?
Behold, now ye have heard His blasphemy; what think ye?” To which they
all replied, “He is guilty of death.” No sooner was sentence pronounced, than the
whole assembly, laying aside all decency and restraint, began to vent their
rage on the guiltless sufferer; for it follows, “Then did they spit in His
face, and buffeted Him”; that is, struck Him with their fists, and others
smote Him with the palms of their hands, or, as I think it may be more
exactly rendered, smote Him with staves; meaning, that those who, by reason
of the throng, could not come near enough to strike Him with their hands,
reached over, and struck Him with their walking staves. And some writers add,
that not content with this, they tore off His beard and the hair of His head
by the roots. Then was eminently fulfilled that prophecy in Isaiah, relating
to the Messiah, “I gave My back to the smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked
off the hair, and hid not My face from shame and spitting.” Thus they
continued to exercise their cruelty on the Lord of life, all the remainder of
the night. When morning came, we are told at the
beginning of the next chapter, the chief priests and elders took counsel
against Jesus to put Him to death; they concerted together what death they
should put Him to; and how they might prevail on Pilate, the Roman governor,
to ratify and put in execution the sentence of death which they had passed
upon Him the preceding night. They resolved to deliver Him over to the
secular magistrate, partly, because, as they were tributaries to the Roman
emperor, the power of life and death was, in great measure, taken out of
their hands: and partly because they were sensible that the common people who
had been witness to the miracles of Christ, and the holiness of His life,
would be exasperated at His being put to death. Therefore the high priests
and rulers chose to give Him up to Pontius Pilate, that so the odium of His death
might not devolve on them, but on the Romans. In order to cut off all
possibility of His escaping with life, they agreed to charge Him with high
treason; and to accuse Him to Pilate, as an enemy to the person and
government of Caesar. Accordingly, they led Him bound to the
tribunal: and having given in their charge. Pilate addressing himself to
Christ, asked Him, saying, “Art Thou the king of the Jews?” as much as to
say, You have heard what has been alleged against You; are You guilty of the
charge? Art Thou the King of the Jews? Is it possible that You should
give Yourself out for a king? — You, who appear in all the
circumstances of poverty, contempt, and shame? To which the divine sufferer
replied, as He did before to the Jewish synod, “Thou sayest,” that is, Thou
sayest true, in calling Me a king; even in a temporal sense I am so; being
lineally descended from David. St. John informs us, that our Lord added, My
kingdom is not of this world: meaning. Though I am, by descent, legal king of
the Jewish nation, yet I voluntarily forbear to assert My temporal rights. I
have never affected outward pomp and grandeur; My design, in coming
into the world, being to establish a spiritual kingdom, a kingdom of grace,
in the hearts of men; to rescue them from the slavery of sin and Satan: to
enlighten them into the knowledge of saving truths; to make them spiritually
happy here and eternally so hereafter. Pilate, fully convinced of our Saviour’s
innocence, and that the Jews had no other motive for prosecuting Him, than
envy and malice, would fain have set Him at liberty; but the high priests,
falsely urging, that Christ, if suffered to live, would usurp the throne of
Judah, and put an end to the Roman government; Pilate consented that He should
be crucified; lest, if he acquitted Him, he himself might be misrepresented
to the emperor, as encouraging a person who was accused of treason. But, as
Pilate acted herein contrary to the dictates of his conscience, and was more
fearful of the emperor than of God; so he got nothing by his fancied
prudence. For, we are told in history, that, within little more than five
years after our Saviour’s crucifixion, the very thing that Pilate feared,
came upon him. He fell under the displeasure of Tiberius, by whom he was sent
into banishment, where he put an end to his own life, by laying violent hands
on himself. And indeed, it commonly happens, that they who seek to please men
by sinful compliances, and sacrifice a good conscience to preserve the esteem
of the world, miss the end they have in view; and, while they barter the
favour of God for the favour of man, frequently lose both together. Pilate, though he was prevailed with, by the
importunity of the Jews, to condemn Jesus; yet went as far to save Him as he
could without offending them. He therefore proposed this expedient; that as
it was usual for some criminal to be released to them, at the annual
solemnity of the Passover; he desired that they would make choice of Christ.
But the high priests and the leaders of the people, unanimously cried out,
“Not this Man, but Barabbas.” In this particular the hypocrisy of the Jews
was very observable. They had just before pretended to accuse our Lord for
being an enemy to the state; wherein they had a two-fold view: — 1. That they
might make the death of Christ inevitable, treason being always reckoned an
unpardonable crime, in those countries which were subject to the Romans: and
2.Their design in charging Christ with disaffection to the government, and
insisting on His execution, was, that they themselves might appear to be friends
to the state, and well-affected to the Roman emperor. But that this was
mere dissimulation is evident from their desiring Barabbas to be released to
them. Barabbas actually had been guilty of treason; he had made a
party in Jerusalem, and excited a rebellion, which, being suppressed by the
vigilance of Pontius Pilate, Barabbas, the author of the insurrection, and
two of his accomplices, which were, probably the two thieves that were
crucified with Christ, were taken into custody, the rest escaping by flight. The Jews having demanded the release of
Barabbas, Pilate asked them, what he should do with Christ? to which they
answered, “Let Him be crucified.” Pilate then ordered Him to be scourged. Whether
he did this purely out of compliance to the Roman laws, which required that
everyone, who was condemned to crucifixion should first be scourged; or
whether by scourging our blessed Redeemer, he hoped to bring Him off with
life, as thinking that so dismal a sight might melt His persecutors to
compassion, and satisfy them without actually putting Him to death; which of
these two motives it was that induced Pilate to scourge Him, is uncertain.
However, scourged He was by the Roman soldiers, and that with most extreme
severity. Among them, when any person, ordered for
execution, was to be scourged, his arms were fastened to a pillar, to prevent
his struggling. If the sufferer was condemned for any very enormous crime,
four soldiers were to stand behind him, each with a whip in his hand,
composed of several wires, with nails and hooks fastened to the ends of them.
Each soldier was alternately to give a blow, and so to continue till the
criminal was almost dead, through loss of blood and the anguish of his
wounds; on which, the soldiers were to leave off scourging him, and lead him
away to the place of execution. All this was, no doubt, inflicted on Christ,
in its utmost rigour, and therefore David, prophesying of Christ, says, “the
ploughers ploughed upon my back” — and not satisfied with this, they took Him
from the pillar to the Praetor’s hall, where the mangled and almost expiring
Saviour was exposed to the insults and derision of the merciless guards. Here it was that they plaited a crown of
thorns, and put it on His head. Some think these were natural thorns that
grew, but, most probably, they were artificial ones, made of iron,
sharpened and pointed like thorns; and, that these thorns might
penetrate the deeper into His temples, the Evangelist adds, that they took a
reed and smote Him on the head. They had, before, given Him a reed, which
they had insultingly made Him hold, as a mock sceptre. This reed they
afterwards snatched out of His hand, and with it struck Him on the head, and
as it were, nailed down the thorns into His forehead, which occasioned
exquisite pain and a great effusion of blood. I would observe, that the word which we
translate a reed, may as well be rendered a cane, or wand;
and it is most probable, that it was a walking staff; since a blow
with a slight reed would scarce have been felt, or have deserved a mention in
a detail of such dreadful sufferings. The crowning of Christ with thorns was
prophesied of nearly a thousand years before His incarnation; namely, in the
second chapter of Canticles, where He is compared to a lily among thorns.
When the soldiers had satiated their cruelty, and offered the Son of God all
the indignities they could devise, the Evangelist tells us that they led Him
forth to crucify Him. They were fearful, perhaps, that He might die under
their hands, and then they would be deprived of the pleasure of making Him a
public spectacle, and tormenting Him on the cross. As it was customary for those who were to be
crucified, to carry their own cross on which they were to suffer, to the
place of execution; so, we are informed by St. John, they made our blessed
Lord carry His. He went forth, says the Evangelist, bearing His cross. Thus
He proceeded through the streets of Jerusalem till His shoulders, which had
so lately been torn with the scourge, and His body, emaciated with grief, and
weak with fasting; could no longer sustain the weight of the cross. We are
told, by some writers, and they give it as probable enough, that Christ,
unable to carry His cross any further, fainted under it, on His way to
Calvary. The guards who escorted Him, fearing, as before, that He might not
live to reach the place of execution, compelled one Simon, of Cyrene, to bear
the cross in His stead. Being at last arrived at Calvary, the soldiers,
before they crucified Him, gave Him vinegar to drink, mingled with gall.
Whether they did this out of mere derision, or out of compassion, to throw
Him into a kind of lethargy, and thereby render Him less sensible of pain, is
hard to determine; however, this we may be sure of, that the providence of
God purposely ordered it, that that prediction in the Psalms might be
accomplished; “They gave Me gall to eat, and when I was thirsty, they gave Me
vinegar to drink.” Our Lord after this, was stripped of His raiment and
fastened to the cross. The ancient manner of crucifixion was this:
the cross was laid on the ground, and the person to be crucified was laid
upon it at full length, and with his arms extended. If he was to be only tied
to the cross, the executioner stood by with cords; if the criminal was to
be nailed to it, they stood ready with nails and hammers. The nails
were never drove directly through the palms of the hands, but towards
the bottom of the hand, near the wrist, both because the sensation of
pain is more exquisite there, and that the hands might be the better able to
bear the weight of the body. The feet of the criminal were generally crossed
one over the other, so that one nail went through them both. When this was
done, the cross was raised from the ground with ropes, and the foot of it was
fixed in a deep hole dug in the earth. As this was the general method of crucifixion,
no doubt our Lord was crucified in this manner. Some assert, that after He
was fastened to the cross, while they were fixing it in the earth, it fell
with our Lord upon it; which, if true, serves to clear up that passage in the
twenty-second Psalm, where David, speaking in the person of Christ, says,
“All My bones are out of joint.” And certainly, if the cross fell down with
Him, it must needs shock and dislocate His whole frame, widen the wounds He
had received before, and add even to His immense sufferings. The cross
being erected again, while the Prince of life was bleeding to death, the
soldiers, who had assisted in His execution, amused themselves with casting
lots; that is, throwing dice who should have His raiment; whereby they
fulfilled the prophecy of David, “They parted My garments among them, and
upon My vesture did they cast lots.” But though the blessed Jesus suffered with the
most invincible meekness, yet He did not die before He had given the guilty
world some awful marks of His displeasure; for at the forty-fifth verse we
are told, that from the sixth hour, which is about noon, when Christ was first
nailed to the cross, there was darkness over all the earth till the ninth
hour; that is, till about three in the afternoon, or somewhat longer. The sun
miraculously withdrew his beams, and the skies were clad in mourning while
Jesus, the Creator, was expiring on the tree. That this darkness, accompanied
with an earthquake, was not confined to Judea only, but extended over the
whole earth, is evident, as well from the accounts of heathen historians, as
of all the evangelists. And one circumstance was very observable,
which is delivered by some ancient writers, namely, that at the time when our
Lord was crucified, there dwelt at Helioplis, in Egypt, which was upwards of
two hundred and twenty miles from Jerusalem, one Dionysius, who seeing this
preternatural darkness, said to one of his friends, “Either God Himself
suffers, or He sympathizes with one that does.” This Dionysius was then
only a heathen philosopher, but afterwards was a convert, as St. Paul
was, and died a martyr to the faith. That the darkness which involved the
whole earth at this time, and which among other places, was observable at
Nice, in Bythinia, seven hundred and twenty miles from Jerusalem, was
miraculous; not owing to a natural eclipse of the sun is evident; for it did
not happen at a new moon, but when the moon was at the full, at which time an
eclipse of the sun cannot happen. Besides, an eclipse only continues for a
few minutes, whereas this darkness lasted three hours. Add to this, that the
darkness was universal, whereas an eclipse, though it may be visible in some
countries, is never visible in all countries at once. Our blessed Lord when He had hung near three
hours on the cross, and suffered, not only in His body, but, which was more
dreadful still, endured in His immaculate soul that sense of the divine wrath
which was due to His people, broke out into that pathetic and bitter cry “My
God! My God! why hast Thou forsaken Me?” Or as I think it may better be
rendered, My God! My God! how hast Thou forsaken Me?” as much as to
say, to what depth of immense distress does the withdrawing of Thy presence
reduce Me! Christ suffered as our substitute, and in our stead;
the punishment, which must otherwise have fallen on us, was transferred on
Him. And one part of that punishment consisted in the inward manifestations
of the divine displeasure. These, therefore, the Redeemer felt, not for any
evil done by Him, but for the sins done by others, and which He graciously
took upon Himself to atone for. So that this was the time wherein it pleased the
Lord to bruise Him, and to make His soul an offering for sin, If the Most
High God bent His bow against Him as an enemy, and stood at His right hand as
an adversary, it is easy to account for the prodigious consternation of the
Redeemer. It is not to be wondered at, that His heart, though otherwise
indued with invincible fortitude, should, on this occasion, become like
melting wax. The vinegar and the gall, which they gave Him
to drink, were not half so bitter as the cup of His Father’s wrath; yet for the
sake of His people, He drank it to the very dregs. The nails that pierced His
hands, and the spear that cleft His heart, were not half so sharp as the
frowns of His eternal Father’s countenance; which, for our consolation, He
patiently submitted to bear. He was rent with wounds, and racked with pain;
yet this, all this, was gentle, was lenient, in comparison of those
inexpressible agonies which penetrated His very soul. The former fetched not
a single complaint from His mouth; the latter, wrung from His breaking heart
that passionate exclamation, “My God! My God! why hast Thou forsaken Me?”
—Astonishing words! surely a distress beyond all imagination grievous,
uttered them! Surely the vengeance, not of men, but of heaven itself,
exhorted them! Every syllable of which, speaks, what the prophet describes;
“Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? Behold and see, if there be any
sorrow like unto My sorrow, wherewith the Lord hath afflicted Me in the day
of His fierce anger.” The Evangelist adds, that Jesus cried again,
with a loud voice. But why with a loud voice? To show that He did not
die by compulsion but voluntarily. When a person is in his last moments, his
speech commonly fails him; but Christ, when He was expiring, spoke
with a clear, audible voice, which was a proof, that, though He had suffered
so much in His human nature, yet that human nature was, in a supernatural
manner supported by His Godhead, and that all the united cruelty of Jews and
Gentiles, could not put an end to His life, sooner than He pleased. Having,
therefore, with a loud and triumphant voice, commended His blessed soul into
His heavenly Father’s hands, He gave up the ghost; or, as it may be literally
rendered, “He dismissed or let go His spirit.” When He knew that He had fulfilled all the
prophecies that related to Him, and suffered enough to procure the salvation
of His people, He voluntarily retired from life. No sooner was the important
scene brought to a period; no sooner were the Redeemer’s eyelids closed, than
universal nature seemed to sympathize with her departing Lord, and in a
miraculous manner, to reproach the matchless guilt and the unexampled cruelty
of His murderers. The first prodigy that immediately followed on His death,
was the rending the veil of the temple. The priests, or at least, the major
part of them, were attending divine service in the temple, to offer up the
evening sacrifice, at the very moment when Christ expired; when the veil, or
magnificent curtain, which separated the holy of holies from the rest of the
temple, was suddenly rent in two. And as this veil was composed of the
richest and strongest tapestry, its rending of itself was the more
miraculous, and showed the immediate interposition of divine Providence. This
rending of the veil signified, that the Jewish dispensation was now at an
end, all the types belonging to it being fulfilled in Christ. It was also a
presage of the approaching destruction of the Jews as a nation; and showed
likewise, that by the death and sacrifice of Christ, a way was opened for
sinners into heaven, of which the holy of holies was an emblem; and that now,
there was no difference between Jew and Gentile; Christ having broken down
the partition wall, and procured eternal life for all that trust in Him, out
of every nation under heaven. Nor was the veil’s rending the only prodigy
that ensued. We are told, that the earth shook so violently, that the very
rocks rent, and the graves were opened, and many of the bodies of the saints
which had been dead, arose; both to show that Christ, by dying, conquered
death, and likewise as an earnest token of His own speedy resurrection. All
which amazing circumstances forced the very soldiers, who had so lately
derided Him, and had just been His executioners, to tremble and say, “Truly
this was the Son of God.” How greatly does the contemplation of this
great event call for our highest wonder, that the co-equal Son of God should
thus stoop, to humble Himself unto death for sinners. “Lord, what is man,
that Thou art mindful of him; or the son of man, that Thou shouldst vouchsafe
not only to visit him, but even to ransom his life, by laying down
Thine own?” If anything can awake astonishment, and
inflame our gratitude, it must be that mystery of love, God manifested in our
nature, and made man, to bleed and die for our salvation. That He should
condescend to be sold for thirty shekels of silver, that is, for three pounds
fifteen shillings of our money; to be apprehended and condemned as a
malefactor; to be crowned with piercing thorns; to be scourged at the bloody
pillar; to bear His cross; to be numbered with transgressors; to be reviled
by ruffian soldiers, and a merciless populace; to be torn with tormenting
nails; and pierced with a hostile spear; and suspended on the ignominious
tree, between heaven and earth, as unworthy of either, though He was the
maker and preserver of both. What thought can reach, what tongue
can tell, the infinite riches of His love to man, that induced Him freely to
undergo all this, only to make him happy! Nay, He not only freely underwent
it, but even longed for the time of His crucifixion to come — “I have
a baptism, says He, a baptism of sufferings to be baptized with; and how am I
straitened till it be accomplished?” How should these considerations engage us, who
are His purchased flock, to trust in His atonement, and to honour Him with
our lips and in our lives? “Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the
heavenly calling, consider the apostle and high priest of our profession,
Christ Jesus.” Keep your mind stedfastly fixed on Him, who is the Messenger
of the covenant of grace, and the executor of its conditions. He did not
appear in this lower world barely to reveal the gospel, for that could have
been done at an easier expense than His incarnation and death. Any angel
could have proclaimed it, or prophets declared the same, as indeed the
prophets did for “to Him give all the prophets witness.” But Christ came to procure
forgiveness, and to suffer, and obey, for the salvation of
the elect people of God. Nothing but this could warrant the extreme
depth of His humiliation, or comport with the essential dignity of His
person, who was to sanctify His people with His own blood, and offering up of
Himself, once for all, and by ever living to intercede for them. Openly then
profess, confess and acknowledge Him in the face of an opposing world.
Confess your guilt, as the priest under the law confessed the iniquities of
Israel over the head of the scapegoat. Render to Him the thanks of your heart
for His great humility, for His perfect righteousness, for His complete
propitiation, for His perpetual intercession, and for the whole of His
redeeming grace. Let us never forget, that through the covenant mercy of God,
the righteousness of Christ was admitted as our payment; that Christ’s
sufferings were our ransom; and the whole of His obedience unto death, is our
free, full, and final discharge from punishment. These considerations received by faith, will
cause us to rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory; they will put a
new song into our mouths, even thanksgiving unto God, and make us sing. “O
death, where is thy sting! O grave, where is thy victory!
Author Educated at Westminster School and Trinity
College, Dublin, he was converted through a Methodist lay preacher, took
Anglican orders in 1762, and later became vicar of Broadhembury, Devon. In
1775 he assumed the pastorate of the French Calvinist chapel in London. He
was a powerful preacher and a vigourous Calvinist, bitterly opposed to John
Wesley. He wrote the Historic Proof of the Doctrinal Calvinism of the
Church of England (2 vols., 1774) and The Church of England Vindicated
from the Charge of Arminianism (1769). His fame rests, however, on his
hymns, e.g., “A debtor to mercy alone”; “A sovereign Protector I have”; “From
whence this fear and unbelief?”; and especially “Rock of Ages” (appended to
an article calculating the “National Debt” in terms of sin). This article is
taken from Toplady’s own manuscripts. |
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Please direct your comments to Mike
Krall.