"And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit
of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead." - Romans 1:4
Do not, my soul, hastily pass away from this most precious subject of
thy Lord's resurrection. It is an inexhaustible theme, and will be
among thy felicities in eternity. Yesterday, thou didst but barely
consider the fact. Let this day occupy thy thoughts on another sweet
portion of it, in beholding how Jesus effected it by his own power and
Godhead. He had said before that he had power to lay down his life, and
power to take it again. And he had told the Jews to destroy the temple,
by which he meant the temple of his body, and be would raise it again
in three days. He had proclaimed himself to be the resurrection and the
life: and here he proved it, when he was declared to be the Son of God
with power, according to the Spirit of holiness, by his resurrection
frown the dead. Now, then, pause over this glorious view of Him who was
thus proved to be one with the Father, and who, at the same time, was
one ill thy nature, bone of thy bone, and flesh of thy flesh. Beautiful
and comprehensive is the expression - "declared to be the Son of God!"
for who but God could accomplish such an event? And by the Spirit of
holiness he was equally declared to be not liable to corruption; for,
as God's Holy One, it was impossible that his flesh should see
corruption. Psalm xvi. 10. And the Holy Ghost again, by Peter the
apostle, explains it when he saith," Christ was put to death in the
flesh, but quickened by the Spirit. "I Pet. iii. ‘18. The flesh here
means his human nature; and the quickening by the Spirit (being what is
called the antithesis, that is,. the opposite to flesh) means his own
Spirit, his own power and Godhead; similar to what is said in' the
Hebrews concerning the offering of Jesus, that through the Eternal
Spirit he offered himself, Heb. ix. 14 - meaning, that his Godhead gave
dignity and value to the offering of his body for the sins of his
people. Ponder this blessed truth, my soul; for it is most blessed, and
of much greater importance than, at the first view of the words, it may
strike you. Behold in it, that it was the Godhead of Jesus by which thy
Jesus triumphed over death and the grave. The Father's hand was in it
most certain, as it was in all the other acts of redemption; for the
Holy Ghost taught the church, by Paul, that God. had raised up the
Lord. 1 Cor. vi. 14. And manifested by this, saith the Holy Ghost, that
he was the God of peace, in bringing again from the dead the Lord Jesus
Christ. Heb. xiii. 20. And the Holy Ghost had his almighty hand in the
same; for it is the Spirit that quickeneth; and hence Christ is said to
have been justified in the Spirit. I Tim. iii. 16. But while we are
taught by these scriptures, and others to the same purport, to behold
both the Father and the Holy Ghost acting in the resurrection of
Jesus - by this, and others of the same kind, we are taught to view the
Godhead in Christ as the cause of his resurrection. For if Jesus had
been raised by the power of the Father and the Holy Ghost only, how
would he have been declared to be the Son of God by his resurrection?
For, in this case, nothing more would have been manifested in his
resurrection than in the resurrection of others; for it is by the power
of God that the dead are to be raised. Hence, my soul, behold the vast
importance of this great point in the resurrection of thy Lord: and
never lose sight of this blessed truth, that thy Jesus, who is thy
resurrection and thy life, arose himself by this self- quickening
principle. Behold, in this point of view, what a glorious truth is the
resurrection of Jesus. And what a lovely promise did the Lord, by the
prophet, give to all the people of God concerning this, ages before
this glorious event took place - "Thy dead men shall live; together with
my dead body shall they arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the
dust; for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out
her dead." Isaiah xxvi. 19.
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