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T H E 1 John 2:1 - "And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." Written By J O H N.B U N Y A N, Author of "THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS." L O N D O N, Printed for Dorman Newman, at the King's Arms, in the Poultry, 1689. Published one year after John Bunyan's death. |
[HOW CHRIST MANAGES THE OFFICE OF AN ADVOCATE.]
II. come now to show you how Jesus Christ doth manage this his office
of an Advocate for us. And that I may do this to your edification, I shall choose
this method for the opening of it-First. Show you how he manages this office with
his Father. Second. I shall show you how he manages it before him against our adversary.
First. How he manages this his office of Advocate with his Father.
1. He doth it by himself, by no other as deputy under him, no angel, no saint; no
work has place here but Jesus, and Jesus only. This the text implies: "We have
an Advocate"; speaking of one, but one, one alone; without an equal or an inferior.
We have but one, and he is Jesus Christ. Nor is it for Christ's honour, nor for the
honour of the law, or of the justice of God, that any but Jesus Christ should be
an Advocate for a sinning saint. Besides, to assert the contrary, what doth it but
lessen sin, and make the advocateship of Jesus Christ superfluous? It would lessen
sin should it be removed by a saint or angel; it would make the advocateship of Jesus
Christ superfluous, yea, needless, should it be possible that sin could be removed
from us by either saint or angel.
Again; if God should admit of more advocates than one, and yet make mention of never
an one but Jesus Christ; or if John should allow another, and yet speak nothing but
of Jesus only; yea, that an advocate under that title should be mentioned but once,
but once only in all the book of God, and yet that divers should be admitted, stands
neither with the wisdom or love of God, nor with the faithfulness of the apostle.
But saints have but one Advocate, if they will use him, or improve their faith in
that office for their help, so; if not, they must take what follows. This I thought
good to hint at, because the times are corrupt, and because ignorance and superstition
always wait for a countenance with us, and these things have a natural tendency to
darken all truth, so especially this, which bringeth to Jesus Christ so much glory,
and yieldeth to the godly so much help and relief.
2. As Jesus Christ alone is Advocate, so God's bar, and that alone, is that before
which he pleads, for God is judge himself (Deut 32:36. Heb 12:23). Nor can the cause
which now he is to plead be removed into any other court, either by appeals or otherwise.
Could Satan remove us from heaven, to another court, he would certainly be too hard
for us, because there we should want our Jesus, our Advocate, to plead our cause.
Indeed, sometimes he impleads us before men, and they are glad of the occasion, for
they and he are often one; but then we have leave to remove our cause, and to pray
for a trial in the highest court, saying, "Let my sentence come forth from thy
presence; let thine eyes behold the things that are equal" (Psa 17:2). This
wicked world doth sentence us for our good deeds, but how then would they sentence
us for our bad ones? But we will never appeal from heaven to earth for right, for
here we have no Advocate; "our Advocate is with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous."
3. As he pleadeth by himself alone, and nowhere else but in the court of heaven with
the Father, so as he pleadeth with the Father for us, he observeth this rule-
(1.) He granteth and confesseth whatever can rightly be charged upon us; yet so as
that he taketh the whole charge upon himself, acknowledging the crimes to be his
own. "O God," says he, "thou knowest my foolishness, and my sins";
my guiltiness "is not hid from thee" (Psa 69:5). And this he must do, or
else he can do nothing. If he hides the sin, or lesseneth it, he is faulty; if he
leaves it still upon us, we die. He must, then, take our iniquity to himself, make
it his own, and so deliver us; for having thus taken the sin upon himself, as lawfully
he may, and lovingly doth, "for we are members of his body" ('tis his hand,
'tis his foot, 'tis his ear hath sinned), it followeth that we live if he lives;
and who can desire more? [5]This, then, must be thoroughly considered, if ever we will have comfort
in a day of trouble and distress for sin.
And thus far there is, in some kind, a harmony betwixt his being a sacrifice, a priest,
and an Advocate. As a sacrifice, our sins were laid upon him (Isa 53). As a priest,
he beareth them (Exo 28:38). And as an Advocate, he acknowledges them to be his own
(Psa 69:5). Now, having acknowledged them to be his own, the quarrel is no more betwixt
us and Satan, for the Lord Jesus has espoused our quarrel, and made it his. All,
then, that we in this matter have to do, is to stand at the bar by faith among the
angels, and see how the business goes. O blessed God! what a lover of mankind art
thou! and how gracious is our Lord Jesus, in his thus managing matters for us.
(2.) The Lord Jesus having thus taken our sins upon himself, next pleads his own
goodness to God on our behalf, saying, "Let not them that wait on thee, O Lord
God of hosts, be ashamed for my sake: let not those that seek thee be confounded
for my sake, O God of Israel: because for thy sake I have borne reproach; shame hath
covered my face" (Psa 69:6,7). Mark, let them not be ashamed for my sake, let
them not be confounded for my sake. Shame and confusion are the fruits of guilt,
or of a charge for sin, (Jer 3:25), and are but an entrance into condemnation (Dan
12:2. John 5:29). But behold how Christ pleads, saying, Let not that be for my sake,
for the merit of my blood, for the perfection of my righteousness, for the prevalency
of my intercession. Let them not be ashamed for my sake, O Lord God of hosts. And
let no man object, because this text is in the Psalms, as if it were not spoken by
the prophet of Christ; for both John and Paul, yea, and Christ himself, do make this
psalm a prophecy of him. Compare verse 9 with John 2:17, and with Romans 15:3; and
verse 21 with Matthew 27:48, and Mark 15:25. But is not this a wonderful thing, that
Christ should first take our sins, and account them his own, and then plead the value
and worth of his whole self for our deliverance? For by these words, "for my
sake," he pleads his own self, his whole self, and all that he is and has; and
thus he put us in good estate again, though our cause was very bad.
To bring this down to weak capacities. Suppose a man should be indebted twenty thousand
pounds, but has not twenty thousand farthings wherewith to pay; and suppose also
that this man be arrested for this debt, and that the law also, by which he is sued,
will not admit of a penny bate; this man may yet come well enough off, if his advocate
or attorney will make the debt his own, and will, in the presence of the judges,
out with his bags, and pay down every farthing. Why, this is the way of our Advocate.
Our sins are called debts (Matt 6:12). We are sued for them at the law (Luke 12:59).
And the devil is our accuser; but behold the Lord Jesus comes out with his worthiness,
pleads it at the bar, making the debt his own (Mark 10:45. II Cor 3:5). And saith,
Now let them not be ashamed for my sake, O Lord God of hosts: let them not be confounded
for my sake, O God of Israel. And hence, as he is said to be an Advocate, so he is
said to be a propitiation, or amends-maker, or one that appeaseth the justice of
God for our sins-"If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous; and he is the propitiation for our sins."
And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God? God cannot; for
he, for Christ's sake, according as he pleaded, hath forgiven us all trespasses (Col
2:13, Eph 4:32). The devil cannot; his mouth is stopped, as is plain in the case
of Joshua (Zech 3). The law cannot; for that approveth of what Christ has done. This,
then, is the way of Christ's pleading. You must know, that when Christ pleads with
God, he pleads with a just and righteous God, and therefore he must plead law, and
nothing but law; and this he pleaded in both these pleas-First, in confessing of
the sin he justified the sentence of the law in pronouncing of it evil; and then
in his laying of himself, his whole self, before God for that sin, he vindicated
the sanction and perfection of the law. Thus, therefore, he magnifies the law, and
makes it honourable, and yet brings off his client safe and sound in the view of
all the angels of God.
(3). The Lord Jesus having thus taken our sins upon himself, and presented God with
all the worthiness that is in his whole self for them, in the next place he calleth
for justice, or a just verdict upon the satisfaction he hath made to God and to his
law. Then proclamation is made in open court, saying, "Take away the filthy
garments from him," from him that hath offended, and clothe him with change
of raiment (Zech 3).
Thus the soul is preserved that hath sinned; thus the God of heaven is content that
he should be saved; thus Satan is put to confusion, and Jesus applauded and cried
up by the angels of heaven, and by the saints on earth. Thus have I showed you how
Christ doth advocate it with God and his Father for us; and I have been the more
particular in this, because the glory of Christ, and the comfort of the dejected,
are greatly concerned and wrapped up in it. Look, then, to Jesus, if thou hast sinned;
to Jesus, as an Advocate pleading with the Father for thee. Look to nothing else;
for he can tell how, and that by himself, to deliver thee; yea, and will do it in
a way of justice, which is a wonder; and to the shame of Satan, which will be his
glory; and also to thy complete deliverance, which will be thy comfort and salvation.
Second, But to pass this and come to the second thing, which is, to show you how
the Lord Jesus manages this his office of an Advocate before his Father against the
adversary; for he pleadeth with the Father, but pleadeth against the devil; he pleadeth
with the Father law and justice, but against the adversary he letteth out himself.
I say, as he pleads against the adversary, so he enlargeth himself with arguments
over and besides those which he pleadeth with God his Father.
Nor is it meet or needful that our advocate, when he pleads against Satan, should
so limit himself to matter of law, as when he pleadeth with his Father. The saint,
by sinning, oweth Satan nothing; no law of his is broken thereby; why, then, should
he plead for the saving of his people, justifying righteousness to him?
Christ, when he died, died not to satisfy Satan, but his Father; not to appease the
devil, but to answer the demands of the justice of God; nor did he design, when he
hanged on the tree, to triumph over his Father, but over Satan; "He redeemed
us," therefore, "from the curse of the law," by his blood (Gal 3:13).
And from the power of Satan, by his resurrection (Heb 2:14). He delivered us from
righteous judgment by price and purchase; but from the rage of hell by fight and
conquest.
And as he acted thus diversely in the work of our redemption, even so he also doth
in the execution of his Advocate's office. When he pleadeth with God, he pleadeth
so; and when he pleadeth against Satan, he pleadeth so; and how he pleadeth with
God when he dealeth with law and justice I have showed you. And now I will show you
how he pleadeth before him against the "accuser of the brethren."
1. He pleads against him the well-pleasedness that his Father has in his merits,
saying, This shall please the Lord, or this doth or will please the Lord, better
than anything that can be propounded (Psa 69:31). Now this plea being true, as it
is, being established upon the liking of God Almighty; whatever Satan can say to
obtain our everlasting destruction is without ground, and so unreasonable. "I
am well pleased," saith God (Matt 3:17); and again, " The Lord is well
pleased for his (Christ's) righteousness' sake" (Isa 42:21). All that enter
actions against others, pretend that wrong is done, either against themselves or
against the king. Now Satan will never enter an action against us in the court above,
for that wrong by us has been done to himself; he must pretend, then, that he sues
us, for that wrong has, by us, been done to our king. But, behold, "We have
an Advocate with the Father," and he has made compensation for our offences.
He gave himself for our offences. But still Satan maintains his suit; and our God,
saith Christ, is well pleased with us for this compensation-sake, yet he will not
leave off his clamour. Come, then, says the Lord Jesus, the contention is not now
against my people, but myself, and about the sufficiency of the amends that I have
made for the transgressions of my people; but he is near that justifieth me, that
approveth and accepteth of my doings, therefore shall I not be confounded. Who is
mine adversary? Let him come near me! Behold, "the Lord God will help me"
(Isa 50:7-9). Who is he that condemneth me? Lo, they all shall, were there ten thousand
times as many more of them, wax old as a garment; the moth shall eat them up. Wherefore,
if the Father saith Amen to all this, as I have showed already that he hath and doth,
the which also further appeareth, because the Lord God has called him the Saviour,
the Deliverer, and the Amen; what follows, but that a rebuke should proceed from
the throne against him? And this, indeed, our Advocate calls for from the hand of
his Father, saying, O enemy, "the Lord rebuke thee"; yea, he doubles this
request to the judge, to intimate his earnestness for such a conclusion, or to show
that the enemy shall surely have it, both from our Advocate, and from him before
whom Satan has so grievously accused us (Zech 3).
For what can be expected to follow from such an issue in law as this is, but sound
and severe snibs from the judge upon him that hath thus troubled his neighbour, and
that hath, in the face of the country, cast contempt upon the highest act of mercy,
justice, and righteousness, that ever the heavens beheld? [6] And all this is true with
reference to the case in hand, wherefore, "The Lord rebuke thee," is that
which, in conclusion, Satan must have for the reward of his works of malice against
the children, and for his contemning of the works of the Son of God. Now, our Advocate
having thus established, by the law of heaven, his plea with God for us against our
accuser, there is way made for him to proceed upon a foundation that cannot be shaken;
wherefore, he proceedeth in his plea, and further urges against this accuser of the
brethren.
2. God's interest in this people; and prayeth that God would remember that: "The
Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee."
True, the church, the saints, are despicable in the world; wherefore men do think
to tread them down; the saints are, also, weak in grace, but have corruptions that
are strong, and, therefore, Satan, the god of this world, doth think to tread them
down; but the saints have a God, the living, the eternal God, and, therefore, they
shall not be trodden down; yea, they "shall be holden up, for God is able to
make them stand" (Rom 14:4).
It was Haman's mishap to be engaged against the queen, and the kindred of the queen;
it was that that made him he could not prosper; that brought him to contempt and
the gallows. Had he sought to ruin another people, probably he might have brought
his design to a desired conclusion; but his compassing the death of the queen spoiled
all. Satan, also, when he fighteth against the church, must be sure to come to the
worst, for God has a concern in that; therefore, it is said, "The gates of hell
shall not prevail against it"; but this hindereth not but that he is permitted
to make almost what spoils he will of those that belong not to God. Oh, how many
doth he accuse, and soon get out from God, against them, a license to destroy them!
as he served Ahab, and many more. But this, I say, is a very great block in his way
when he meddles with the children; God has an interest in them-"Hath God cast
away his people? God forbid!" (Rom 11:1,2). The text intimates that they for
sin had deserved it, and that Satan would fain have had it been so; but God's interest
in them preserved them-"God hath not cast away his people, which he foreknew."
Wherefore, when Satan accuseth them before God, Christ, as he pleadeth his own worth
and merit, pleadeth also against him, that interest that God has in them.
And though this, to some, may seem but an indifferent plea; for what engagement lieth,
may they say, upon God to be so much concerned with them, for they sin against him,
and often provoke him most bitterly? Besides, in their best state, they are altogether
vanity, and a very thing of nought-"What is man (sorry man), that thou art mindful
of him," or that thou shouldest be so?
I answer, Thought there lieth no engagement upon God for any worthiness that is in
man, yet there lieth a great deal upon God for the worthiness that is in himself.
God has engaged himself with his having chosen them to be a people to himself; and
by this means they are so secured from all that all can do against them, that the
apostle is bold, upon this very account, to challenge all despite to do it's worst
against them, saying, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?"
(Rom 8:33). Who? saith Satan; why, that will I. Ay, saith he, but who can do it,
and prevail? "It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth? (ver. 34).
By which words the apostle clearly declareth that charges against the elect, though
they may be brought against them, must needs prove ineffectual as to their condemnation;
because their Lord God still will justify, for that Christ has died for them. Besides,
a little to enlarge, the elect are bound to God by a sevenfold cord, and a threefold
one is not quickly broken.
(1.) Election is eternal as God himself, and so without variableness or shadow of
change, and hence it is called "an eternal purpose," and a "purpose
of God" that must stand (Eph 3:11; Rom 9:11). (2.) Election is absolute, not
conditional; and, therefore, cannot be overthrown by the sin of the man that is wrapped
up therein. No works foreseen to be in us was the cause of God's choosing us; no
sin in us shall frustrate or make election void-"Who shall lay anything to the
charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth" (Rom 8:33; 9:11). (3.) By
the act of election the children are involved, wrapped up, and covered in Christ;
he hath chosen us in him; not in ourselves, not in our virtues, no, not for or because
of anything, but of his own will (Eph 1:4-11). (4.) Election includeth in it a permanent
resolution of God to glorify his mercy on the vessels of mercy, thus foreordained
unto glory (Rom 9:15,18,23). (5.) By the act of electing love, it is concluded that
all things whatsoever shall work together for the good of them whose call to God
is the fruit of this purpose, this eternal purpose of God (Rom 8:28-30). (6.) The
eternal inheritance is by a covenant of free and unchangeable grace made over to
those thus chosen; and to secure them from the fruits of sin, and from the malice
of Satan, it is sealed by this our Advocate's blood, as he is Mediator of this covenant,
who also is become surety to God for them; to wit, to see them forthcoming at the
great day, and to set them then safe and sound before his Father's face after the
judgment is over (Rom 9:23; Heb 7:22; 9:15,17-24; 13:20; John 10:28,29). (7.) By
this choice, purpose, and decree, the elect, the concerned therein, have allotted
them by God, and laid up for them, in Christ, a sufficiency of grace to bring them
through all difficulties to glory; yea, and they, every one of them, after the first
act of faith-the which also they shall certainly attain, because wrapped up in the
promise for them-are to receive the earnest and first fruits thereof into their souls
(II Tim 1:9; Acts 14:22; Eph 1:4,5,13,14).
Now, put all these things together, and then feel if there be not weight in this
plea of Christ against the devil. He pleads God's choice and interest in his saints
against him-an interest that is secured by the wisdom of heaven, by the grace of
heaven, by the power, will, and mercy of God, in Christ-an interest in which all
the three Persons in the Godhead have engaged themselves, by mutual agreement and
operation, to make good when Satan has done his all. I know there are some that object
against this doctrine as false; but such, perhaps, are ignorant of some things else
as well as of this. However, they object against the wisdom of God, whose truth it
is, and against Christ our Advocate, whose argument, as he is such, it is; yea, they
labour, what in them lieth, to wrest that weapon out of his hand, with which he so
cudgelleth the enemy when, as Advocate, he pleadeth so effectually against him for
the rescuing of us from the danger of judgment, saying, "The Lord rebuke thee,
O Satan, even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee."
Third. As Christ, as Advocate, pleads against Satan the interest that his Father
hath in his chosen, so also he pleads against him by no less authority-his own interest
in them. "Holy Father," saith he, "keep through thine own name those
whom thou hast given me" (John 17:11). Keep them while in the world from the
evil, the soul-damning evil of it. These words are directed to the Father, but they
are leveled against the accusations of the enemy, and were spoken here to show what
Christ will do for his, against our foe, when he is above. How, I say, he will urge
before his Father his own interest in us against Satan, and against all his accusations,
when he brings them to the bar of God's tribunal, with design to work our utter ruin.
And is there not a great deal in it? As if Christ should say, Father, my people have
an adversary who will accuse them for their faults before thee; but I will be their
Advocate, and as I have bought them of thee, I will plead my right against him (John
10:28). Our English proverb is, Interest will not lie; interest will make a man do
that which otherwise he would not. How many thousands are there for whom Christ doth
not so much as once open his mouth, but leaves them to the accusations of Satan,
and to Ahab's judgment, nay, a worse, because there is none to plead their cause?
And why doth he not concern himself with them? but because he is not interested in
them-"I pray not for the world, but for them which thou hast given me, for they
are thine; and all mine are thine, and I am glorified in them" (John 17:9,10).
Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they are not, doth
he concern himself? No; he beholds them, and goes his way. But suppose that at his
return he should find his own cattle in that pound, would he now carry it toward
them as he did unto the other? No, no; he has interest here, they are his that are
in the pound; now he is concerned, now he must know who put them there, and for what
cause too they are served as they are; and if he finds them rightfully there, he
will fetch them by ransom; but if wrongfully, he will replevy[7] them, and stand a trial
at law with him that has thus illegally pounded his cattle. And thus it is betwixt
Jesus Christ and his. He is interested in them; the cattle are his own, "his
own sheep," (John 10:3,4), but pounded by some other, by the law, or by the
devil. If pounded by the law, he delivereth them by ransom; if pounded by the devil,
he will replevy them, stand a trial at law for them, and will be, against their accuser,
their Advocate himself. Nor can Satan withstand his plea, though he should against
them join argument with the law; forasmuch, as has been proved before, he can and
will, by what he has to produce and plead of his own, save his from all trespasses,
charges, and accusations. Besides, all men know that a man's proper goods are not
therefore forfeited, because they commit many, and them too great transgressions-"And
if any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
Now, the strength of this plea thus grounded upon Christ's interest in his people
is great, and hath many weighty reasons on it's side; as-
1. They are mine; therefore in reason at my dispose, not at the dispose of an adversary;
for while a thing can properly be called mine, no man has therewith to do but myself;
nor doth (a man, nor) Christ close his right to what he has by the weakness of that
thing which is his proper right. He, therefore, as an Advocate, pleadeth interest,
his own interest, in his people, and right must, with the Judge of all the earth,
take place-"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? (Gen 18:25).
2. They cost him dear; and that which is dear bought is not easily parted with (I
Cor. 6:20). They were bought with "his blood" (Eph 1:7; I Peter 1:18,19).
They were given him for his blood, and therefore are "dear children" (Eph
5:1); for they are his by the highest price; and this price he, as Advocate, pleadeth
against the enemy of our salvation; yea, I will add, they are his, because he gave
his all for them (II Cor 8:9). When a man shall give his all for this or that, then
that which he so hath purchased is become his all. Now Christ has given his all for
us; he made himself poor for us, wherefore we are become his all, his fullness; and
so the church is called (Eph 1:23). Nay, further, Christ likes well enough of his
purchase, though it hath cost him his all-"The lines," says he, "are
fallen to me in pleasant places; I have a goodly heritage" (Psa 16:6). Now,
put all these things together, and there is a strong plea in them. Interest, such
an interest, will not be easily parted with. But this is not all; for,
3. As they cost him dear, so he hath made them near to himself, near by way of relation.
Now that which did not only cost dear, but that by way of relation is made so, that
a man will plead heartily for. Said David to Abner, " Thou shalt not see my
face, except thou first bring Michal, Saul's daughter, when thou comest to see my
face" (II Sam 3:13,14). Saul's daughter cost me dear; I bought her with the
jeopardy of my life; Saul's daughter is near to me; she is my beloved wife. He pleaded
hard for her, because she was dear and near to him. Now, I say, the same is true
in Christ; his people cost him dear, and he hath made them near unto him; wherefore,
to plead interest in them, is to hold by an argument that is strong. (a.) They are
his spouse, and he hath made them so; they are his love, his dove, his darling, and
he accounts them so. Now, should a wretch attempt, in open court, to take a man's
wife away from him, how would this cause the man to plead! Yea, and what judge that
is just, and knows that the man has this interest in the woman pleaded for, would
yield to, or give a verdict for the wretch, against the man whose wife the woman
is? Thus Christ, in pleading interest-in pleading "thou gavest them me"-pleads
by a strong argument, an argument that the enemy cannot invalidate. True, were Christ
to plead this before a Saul (I Sam 25;44), or before Samson's wife's father, the
Philistine (Judg 14:20), perhaps such treacherous judges would give it against all
right. But, I have told you, the court in which Christ pleads is the highest and
the justest, and that from which there can be no appeal; wherefore Christ's cause,
and so the cause of the children of God, must be tried before their Father, from
whose face, to be sure, just judgment shall proceed. But,
(b.) As they are called his spouse, so they are called his flesh, and members of
his body. Now, said Paul to the church, "Ye are the body of Christ, and members
in particular" (I Cor 12:27; Eph 5:30). This relation also makes a man plead
hard. Were a man to plead for a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead?
What arguments would he use? And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments flow
from? I cannot lose a hand, I cannot lose a foot, cannot lose a finger; why, saints
are Christ's members, his members are of himself. With what strength of argument
would a man plead the necessariness of his members to him, and the unnaturalness
of his adversary in seeking the destruction of his members, and the deformity of
his body! Yea, a man would shuck and cringe, and weep, and entreat, and make demurs,
and halts, and delays, to a thousand years, if possible, before he would lose his
members, or any one of them.
But, I say, how would he plead and advocate it for his members, if judge, and law,
and reason, and equity, were all on his side, and if, by the adversary, there could
be nothing urged, but that against which the Advocate had long before made provision
for the effectual overthrow thereof? And all this is true as to the case that lies
before us. Thus we see what strength there lieth in this second argument, that our
Advocate bringeth for us against the enemy. They are his flesh and bones, his members;
he cannot spare them; he cannot spare this, because, nor that, because, nor any,
because, they are his members. As such, they are lovely to him; as such, they are
useful to him; as such, they are an ornament to him; yea, though in themselves they
are feeble, and through infirmity weak, much disabled from doing as they should.
Thus, "If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous." But,
4. As Christ, as Advocate, pleads for us, against Satan, his Father's interest in
us and his own; so he pleadeth against him that right and property that he hath in
heaven, to give it to whom he will. He has a right to heaven as Priest and King;
it is his also by inheritance; and since he will be so good a benefactor as to bestow
this house on somebody, but not for their deserts, but not for their goodness, and
since, again, he has to that end spilt his blood for, and taken a generation into
covenant relation to him, that it might be bestowed on them; it shall be bestowed
on them; and he will plead this, if there be need, if his people sin, and if their
accuser seeks, by their sin, their ruin and destruction: "Father," saith
he, "I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am;
that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me" (John 17:24). Christ's
will is the will of heaven, the will of God. Shall not Christ, then, prevail?
"I will," saith Christ; "I will," saith Satan; but whose will
shall stand? It is true, Christ in the text speaks more like an arbitrator than an
Advocate; more like a judge than one pleading at a bar. I will have it so; I judge
that so it ought to be, and must. But there is also something of plea in the words
both before his Father, and against our enemy; and therefore he speaketh like one
that can plead and determine also; yea, like one that has power so to do. But shall
the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? Or the will of Christ to the will of
Satan? Or the will of righteousness to the will of sin? Shall Satan, who is God's
enemy, and whose charge wherewith he chargeth us for sin, and which is grounded,
not upon love to righteousness, but upon malice against God's designs of mercy, against
the blood of Christ, and the salvation of his people-I say, shall this enemy and
this charge prevail with God against the well-grounded plea of Christ, and against
the salvation of God's elect, and so keep us out of heaven? No, no; Christ will have
it otherwise, he is the great donator, [8] and his eye is good. True, Satan was turned
out of heaven for that he sinned there, and we must be taken into heaven, though
we have sinned here; this is the will of Christ, and, as Advocate, he pleads it against
the face and accusation of our adversary. Thus, "If any man sin, we have an
Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." But,
5. As Christ, as Advocate, pleadeth for us, against Satan, his Father's interest
in us, and his own, and pleadeth also what right he has to dispose of the kingdom
of heaven; so he pleadeth against this enemy, that malice and enmity that is in him,
and upon which chiefly his charge against us is grounded, to the confusion of his
face. This is evident from the title that our Advocate bestows upon him, while he
pleads for us against him: "The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan, O enemy," saith
he; for Satan is an enemy, and this name given him signifies so much. And lawyers,
in their pleas, can make a great matter of such a circumstance as this; saying, My
lord, we can prove that what is now pleaded against the prisoner at the bar is of
mere malice and hatred, that has also a long time lain burning and raging in his
enemy's breast against him. This, I say, will greatly weaken the plea and accusation
of an enemy. But, says Jesus Christ, "Father, here is a plea brought in against
my Joshua, that clothes him with filthy garments, but it is brought in against him
by an enemy, by an enemy in the superlative or highest degree. One that hates goodness
worse than he, and that loveth wickedness more than the man against whom at this
time he has brought such a heinous charge." Then leaving with the Father the
value of his blood for the accused, he turneth him to the accuser, and pleads against
him as an enemy: "O Satan, thou that accusest my spouse, my love, my members,
art SATAN, an enemy." But it will be objected that the things charged are true.
Grant it; yet what law takes notice of the plea of one who doth professedly act as
an enemy? because it is not done of love to truth, and justice, and righteousness,
nor intended for the honour of the king, nor for the good of the prosecuted; but
to gratify malice and rage, and merely to kill and destroy. There is, therefore,
a great deal of force and strength in an Advocate's pleading of such a circumstance
against an accuser; especially when the crimes now charged are those, and only those
for which the law, in the due execution of it, has been satisfied before; wherefore
now a lawyer has double and treble ground or matter to plead for his client against
his enemy. And this advantage against him has Jesus Christ.
Besides, it is well known that Satan, as to us, is the original cause of those very
crimes for which he accuses us at the bar of God's tribunal. Not to say anything
of how he cometh to us, solicits us, tempts us, flatters us, and always, in a manner,
lies at us to do those wicked things for which he so hotly pursues us to the bar
of the judgment of God. For though it is not meet for us thus to plead,-to wit, laying
that fault upon Satan, but rather upon ourselves,-yet our advocate will do it, and
make work of it too before God. "Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to
have you, that he might sift you as wheat; but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith
fail not" (Luke 22:31,32). He maketh here mention of Satan's desires, by way
of advantage against him; and, doubtless, so he did in his prayer with God for Peter's
preservation. And what he did here, while on earth, as a Saviour in general, that
he doth now in heaven as a Priest and an Advocate in special.
I will further suppose that which may be supposed, and that which is suitable to
our purpose. Suppose, therefore, that a father that has a child whom he loveth, but
the child has not half that wit that some of the family hath, and I am sure that
we have less wit than angels; and suppose, also, that some bad-minded neighbour,
by tampering with, tempting of, and by unwearied solicitations, should prevail with
this child to steal something out of his father's house or grounds, and give it unto
him; and this he doth on purpose to set the father against the child; and suppose,
again, that it comes to the father's knowledge that the child, through the allurements
of such an one, has done so and so against his father; will he therefore disinherit
this child? Yea, suppose, again, that he that did tempt this child to steal, should
be the first that should come to accuse this child to it's father for so doing, would
the father take notice of the accusation of such an one?-No, verily, we that are
evil can do better than so; how then should we think that the God of heaven should
do such a thing, since also we have a brother that is wise, and that will and can
plead the very malice of our enemy that doth to us all these things against him for
our advantage?-I say, this is the sum of this fifth plea of Christ our Advocate,
against Satan. O Satan, says he, thou art an enemy to my people; thou pleadest not
out of love to righteousness, not to reform, but to destroy my beloved and inheritance.
The charge wherewith thou chargest my people is thine own (Job 8:4-6). Not only as
to a matter of charge, but the things that thou accusest them of are thine, thine
in the nature of them. Also, thou hast tempted, allured, flattered, and daily laboured
with them, to do that for which now thou so willingly would have them destroyed.
Yea, all this hast thou done of envy to my Father, and to godliness; of hatred to
me and my people; and that thou mightest destroy others besides (I Chron 21:1). And
now, what can this accuser say? Can he excuse himself? Can he contradict our Advocate?
He cannot; he knows that he is a Satan, an enemy, and as an adversary has he sown
his tares among the wheat, that it might be rooted up; but he shall not have his
end; his malice has prevented[9] him, and so has the care and grace of our
Advocate. The tares, therefore, he shall have returned unto him again; but the wheat,
for all this, shall be gathered into God's barn (Matt 13:25-30).
Thus, therefore, our Advocate makes use, in his plea against Satan, of the rage and
malice that is the occasion of the enemy's charge wherewith he accuseth the children
of God. Wherefore, when thou readest these words, "O Satan," say with thyself,
thus Christ our Advocate accuseth our adversary of malice and envy against God and
goodness, while he accuseth us of the sins which we commit, for which we are sorry,
and Christ has paid a price of redemption-"And (thus) if any man sin, we have
an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." But,
6. Christ, when he pleads as an Advocate for his people, in the presence of God against
Satan, he can plead those very weaknesses of his people for which Satan would have
them damned, for their relief and advantage. "Is not this a brand plucked out
of the fire?" This is part of the plea of our Advocate against Satan for his
servant Joshua, when he said, "The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan" (Zech3:2).
Now, to be a brand plucked out of the fire is to be a saint, impaired, weakened,
defiled, and made imperfect by sin; for so also the apostle means when he saith,
"And others save with fear, pulling them our of the fire; hating even the garment
spotted by the flesh" (Jude 23). By fire, in both these places, we are to understand
sin; for that it burns and consumes as fire (Rom 1:27). Wherefore a man is said to
burn when his lusts are strong upon him; and to burn in lusts to others, when his
wicked heart runs wickedly after them (I Cor 7:9).
Also, when Abraham said, "I am but dust and ashes," (Gen 18:27), he means
he was but what sin had left; yea, he had something of the smutch and besmearings
of sin yet upon him. Wherefore it was a custom with Israel, in days of old, when
they set days apart for confession of sin, and humiliation for the same, to sprinkle
themselves with, or to wallow in dust and ashes, as a token that they did confess
they were but what sin had left, and that they also were defiled, weakened, and polluted
by it (Esth 4:1,3; Jer 6:26; Job 30:19, 42:6).
This, then, is the next plea of our goodly Advocate for us: O Satan, this is "a
brand plucked out of the fire." As who should say, Thou objected against my
servant Joshua that he is black like a coal, or that the fire of sin at times is
still burning in him. And what then? The reason why he is not totally extinct, as
tow; is not thy pity, but my Father's mercy to him; I have plucked him out of the
fire, yet not so out but that the smell thereof is yet upon him; and my Father and
I, we consider his weakness, and pity him; for since he is as a brand pulled out,
can it be expected by my Father or me that he should appear before us as clear, and
do our biddings as well, as if he had never been there? This is "a brand plucked
out of the fire," and must be considered as such, and must be borne with as
such. Thus, as Mephibosheth pleaded for his excuse, his lameness,(II Sam 19:24-26),
so Christ pleads the infirm and indigent condition of his people, against Satan,
for their advantage. Wherefore Christ, by such pleas as these for his people, doth
yet further show the malice of Satan (for all this burning comes through him), yea,
and by it he moveth the heart of God to pity us, and yet to be gentle, and long-suffering,
and merciful to us; for pity and compassion are the fruits of the yearning of God's
bowels towards us, while he considereth us as infirm and weak, and subject to slips,
and stumbles, and falls, because of weakness.
And that Christ our Advocate, by thus pleading, doth turn things to our advantage,
consider, (1.) That God is careful, that through our weakness, our spirits do not
fail before him when he chides (Isa 57:16-18). (2.) "He stayeth his rough wind
in the day of the east wind," and debates about the measure of affliction, when,
for sin, we should be chastened, lest we should sink thereunder (Isa 27:7-9). (3.)
He will not strictly mark what is done amiss, because if he should, we cannot stand
(Psa 130:3). (4.) When he threateneth to strike, his bowels are troubled, and his
repentings are kindled together (Hosea 11:8,9). (5.) He will spin out his patience
to the utmost length, because he knows we are such bunglers at doing (Jer 9:24).
(6.) He will accept of the will for the deed, because he knows that sin will make
our best performances imperfect (II Cor 8:12). (7.) He will count our little a very
great deal, for that he knows we are so unable to do anything at all (Job 1:21).
(8.) He will excuse the souls of his people, and lay the fault upon their flesh,
which has greatest affinity with Satan, if through weakness and infirmity we do not
do as we should (Matt 26:41; Rom 7). Now, as I said, all these things happen unto
us, both infirmities and pity, because and for that we were once in the fire, and
for that the weakness of sin abides upon us to this day. But none of this favour
could come to us, nor could we, by any means, cause that our infirmities should work
for us thus advantageously; but that Christ our Advocate stands our friend, and pleads
for us as he doth.
But again, before I pass this over, I will, for the clearing of this, present you
with a few more considerations, which are of another rank-to wit, that Christ our
Advocate, as such, makes mention of our weaknesses so, against Satan, and before
his Father, as to turn all to our advantage.
(1.) We are therefore to be saved by grace, because by reason of sin we are disabled
from keeping of the law (Deut 9:5; Isa 64:6). (2.) We have given unto us the Spirit
of grace to help, because we can do nothing that is good without it (Eph 2:5; Rom
8:26). (3.) God has put Christ's righteousness upon us to cover our nakedness with,
because we have none of our own to do it withal (Phil 3:7,8; Eze 16:8). (4.) God
alloweth us to ride in the bosom of Christ to the grave, and from thence in the bosom
of angels to heaven, because our own legs are not able to carry us thither (Isa 40:11,
46:4; Psa 48:14; Luke 16:22). (5.) God has made his Son our Head, our Priest, our
Advocate, our Saviour, our Captain, that we may be delivered from all the infirmities
and all the fiends that attend us, and that plot to do us hurt (Eph 1:22; Col 1:18;
Heb 7:21). (6.) God has put the fallen angels into chains, (II Peter 2:4; Rev 20:1,2),
that they might not follow us too fast, and has enlarged us, (Psa 4:1), and directed
our feet in the way of his steps, that we may haste us to the strong tower and city
of refuge for succour and safety, and has given good angels a charge to look to us
(Heb 1:14; Psa 34:7). (7.) God has promised that we, at our counting days, shall
be spared, "as a man spareth his own son that serveth him" (Mal 3:17).
Now, from all these things, it appears that we have indulgence at God's hand, and
that our weaknesses, as our Christ manages the matter for us, are so far off from
laying a block or bar in the way to the enjoyment of favour, that they also work
for our good; yea, and God's foresight of them has so kindled his bowels and compassion
to us, as to put him upon devising of such things for our relief, which by no means
could have been, had not sin been with us in the world, and had not the best of saints
been "as a brand plucked out of the burning."
I have seen men (and yet they are worse than God) take most care of, and, also, best
provide for, those of their children that have been most infirm and helpless; [10]
and our Advocate "shall gather his lambs with his arms, and carry them in his
bosom"; yea, and I know that there is such an art in showing and making mention
of weaknesses as shall make the tears stand in a parent's eyes, and as shall make
him search to the bottom of his purse to find out what may do his weakling good.
Christ, also, has that excellent art, as he is an Advocate with the Father for us;
he can so make mention of us and of our infirmities, while he pleads before God,
against the devil, for us, that he can make the bowels of the Almighty yearn towards
us, and to wrap us up in their compassions. You read much of the pity, compassion,
and of the yearning of the bowels of the mighty God towards his people; all which,
I think, is kindled and made burn towards us, by the pleading of our Advocate. I
have seen fathers offended with their children; but when a brother had turned a skillful
advocate, the anger has been appeased, and the means have been concealed. We read
but little of this Advocate's office of Jesus Christ, yet much of the fruit of it
is extended to the churches; but as the cause of smiles, after offences committed,
is made manifest afterwards, so at the day when God will open all things, we shall
see how many times our Lord, as an Advocate, pleaded for us, and redeemed us by his
so pleading, unto the enjoyments of smiles and embraces, who, for sin, but a while
before, were under frowns and chastisements. And thus much for the making out how
Christ doth manage his office of being an Advocate for us with the Father-"If
any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
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