hese
words indicate the turning point in the life of Peter,--a crisis. There
is often a question about the life of holiness. Do you grow into it? or
do you come into it be a crisis suddenly? Peter has been growing for
three years under the training of Christ, but he had grown terribly
downward, for the end of his growing was, he denied Jesus. And then
there came a crisis. After the crisis he was a changed man, and then he
began to grow aright. We must indeed grow in grace, but before we can
grow in grace we must be put right.
You know what the two halves of
the life of Peter were. In God's Word we read very often about the
difference between the carnal and the spiritual Christian. The word
"carnal" comes from the Latin word for flesh. In Romans viii, and in
Gal. v., we are taught that the flesh and the Spirit of God are the two
opposing powers by which we are dominated or ruled, and we are taught
that a true believer may allow himself to be ruled by the flesh. That is
what Paul writes to the Corinthians. In the 3rd chapter, the first four
verses, he says, four times to them, "You are carnal, and not
spiritual." And just so a believer can allow the flesh to have so much
power over him that becomes "carnal." Every object is named according to
its most prominent characteristic. If a man is a babe in Christ and has
a little of the Holy Spirit and a great deal of the flesh, he is called
carnal, for the flesh is his chief mark. If he gives way, as the
Corinthians did, to strife, temper, division, and envy, he is a carnal
Christian. He is a Christian, but a carnal one. But if he gives himself
over entirely to the Holy Spirit so that He (the Holy Spirit) can
deliver from the temper, the envy, and the strife, by breathing a
heavenly disposition; and can mortify the deeds of the body; then God's
Word calls him a "spiritual" man, a true spiritual Christian.
Now, these two styles are
remarkably illustrated in the life of Peter. The text is the crisis and
turning point at which he begins to pass over from the one side to the
other.
The message that I want to
bring to you is this: That the great majority of Christians, alas, are
not spiritual men, and that they may become spiritual men by the grace
of God. I want to come to all who are perhaps hungering and longing for
the better life, and asking what is wrong that you are without it, to
point out that what is wrong is just one thing,--allowing the flesh to
rule in you, and trusting in the power of the flesh to make you good.
There is a better life, a life
in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Then, I want to tell you a
third thing. The first thing is important, take care of the carnal life,
and confess if you are in it. The second truth is very blessed, there is
a spiritual life; believe that it is a possibility. But the third truth
is the most important,--You can be one step get out of the carnal into
the spiritual state. May God reveal it to you now through the story of
the Apostle Peter!
Look at him, first of all, in
the carnal state. What are the marks of the carnal state in him?
Self-will, self-pleasing, self-confidence. Just remember, when Christ
said to the disciples at Caesarea Philippi, "The Son of Man must be
crucified," Peter said to Him, "Lord, that can never be!" And Christ had
to say to him, "Get thee behind Me, Satan!" Dear reader, what an awful
thing for Peter! He could not understand what a suffering Christ was.
And Peter was so self-willed and self-confident that he dared to
contradict and to rebuke Christ! Just think of it! Then, you remember,
how Peter and the other disciples, were more than once quarreling as to
who was to be the chief--self-exaltation, self-pleasing;--every one
wanted the chief seat in the Kingdom of God. Then again, remember the
last night, when Christ warned Peter that Satan had desired to sift him
and that he would deny Him; and Peter said twice over, "Lord, if they
all deny Thee, I am ready to go to prison and to death." What
self-confidence! He was sure that his heart was right. He loved Jesus,
but he trusted himself. "I will never deny my Lord.! Don't you see the
whole of that life of Peter is carnal confidence in himself. In his
carnal pride, in his carnal unlovingness, in the carnal liberty he took
in contradicting Jesus, it was all just the life of the flesh. Peter
loved Jesus. God had by the Holy Spirit, taught him. Christ had said,
"Flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but My Father which
is in heaven." God had taught him that Christ was the Son of God; but
with all that, Peter was just under the power of the flesh; and that is
why Christ said at Gethsemane, "The spirit is willing but the flesh is
weak."--"You are under the power of the flesh, you cannot watch with
Me." Dear reader, what did it all lead to? The flesh led not only to the
sins I have mentioned, but last of all to the saddest of things, to
Peter's actual denial of Jesus. Three times over he told the lie; and
once with an oath, "I know not the man." He denied his blessed Lord.
That is what it comes to with the life of the flesh. That is Peter.
Now, look in the second place
at Peter after he became a spiritual man. Christ had taught Peter a
great deal. I think, if you count carefully, you will find some seven or
eight times, Christ had spoken to the disciples about humility; He had
taken a little child and set him in the midst of them; He had said, "He
that exalteth himself shall be abased, and he that humbleth himself
shall be exalted; He had said that three or four times; He had at the
last supper washed their feet; but all had not taught Peter humility.
All Christ's instructions were in vain. Remember that now. A man who is
not spiritual, though he may read his Bible, though he may study God's
Word, cannot conquer sin, because he is not living the life of the Holy
Spirit. God has so ordered it, that man cannot live a right Christian
life unless he is full of the Holy Ghost. Do you wonder at what I say?
Have you been accustomed to think,--"Full of the Holy Ghost, that is
what the Apostles had to be on the day of Pentecost; that is what the
martyrs and the ministers had to be; but for every man to be full of the
Holy Ghost, that is too high"? I tell you solemnly, unless you believe
that, you will never become thorough-going Christians. I must be full of
the Holy Spirit if I am to be a whole-hearted Christian.
Then, note what change took
place in Peter. The Lord Jesus led him up to Pentecost, the Holy Spirit
came from heaven upon him, and what took place? The old Peter was gone,
and he was a new Peter. Just read his epistle, and note the keynote of
the epistle. "Through suffering to glory." Peter, who had said, "Of
course, Lord, you never can suffer, or be crucified;" Peter, who, to
save himself suffering or shame, had denied Christ,--Peter becomes so
changed that when he writes his epistle the chief thought is the very
thought of Christ, "Suffering is the way to glory." Do you not see that
the Holy Spirit had changed Peter?
And look at other aspects. Look
at Peter. He was so weak that a woman could frighten him into denying
Christ; but when the Holy Spirit came he was bold, bold, bold to confess
his Lord at any cost, was ready to go to prison and to death, for
Christ's sake. The Holy Spirit had changed the man. Look at his views of
Divine truth. He could not understand what Christ taught him, he could
not take it in. It was impossible before the death of Christ; but on the
day of Pentecost how he is able to expound the word of God as a
spiritual man! I tell you, beloved, when the Holy Ghost comes upon a man
he becomes a spiritual man, and instead of denying his Lord he denies
himself, just remember that. In the sixteenth chapter of Matthew when
Peter had said, "Lord, be it far from Thee, this shall never happen that
Thou shalt be crucified," Christ said to Him: "Peter, not only will I be
crucified, but you will have to be crucified too. If any man is to be My
disciple, let him take up his cross to die upon it, let him deny
himself, and let him follow Me." How did Peter obey that command? He
went and denied Jesus! As long as a man, a Christian, is under the power
of the flesh, he is continually denying Jesus. You always must do one of
the two, you must deny self or you must deny Jesus, and, alas, Peter
denied his Lord rather than deny himself. On the other hand, when the
Holy Spirit came upon him, he could not deny his Lord, but he could deny
himself, and he praised God for the privilege of suffering for Christ.
Now, how did the change come
about? The words of my text tell us,--"And Peter went out and wept
bitterly." What does that mean? It means this, that the Lord led Peter
to come to the end of himself, to see what was in his heart, and with
his self-confidence to fall into the very deepest sin that a child of
God could be guilty of;--publicly, with an oath, to deny his Lord Jesus!
When Peter stood there in that great sin, the loving Jesus looked upon
him, and that look, full of loving reproach, loving pity, pierced like
an arrow through the heart of Peter, and he went out and wept bitterly.
Praise God, that was the end of self-confident Peter! Praise God, that
was the turning point of his life! He went out with a shame that no
tongue can express. He woke up as out of a dream to the terrible reality
"I have helped to crucify the blessed Son of God." No man can fathom
what Peter must have passed through that Friday, Saturday and Sunday
morning. But, blessed be God, on that Sunday Jesus revealed Himself to
Peter, we know not how, but "He was seen of Simon;" then in the evening
He came to him with the other disciples and breathed peace, and the Holy
Spirit upon him; and then, later on, you know how the Lord asked him,
"Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?"--three times, until Peter was
sorrowful, and said, "Lord, thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I
love thee." What was it that wrought the transition from the love of the
flesh to the love of the Spirit? I tell you, that was the
beginning,--"Peter went out and wept bitterly," with a broken heart,
with a heart that would give anything to show its love to Jesus. With a
heart that had learned to give up all self-confidence, Peter was
prepared for the blessing of the Holy Spirit.
And, now, you can easily see
the application of this story. Are there not many just living the life
of Peter, of the self-confident Peter as he was? Are there not many who
are mourning under the consciousness, "I am so unfaithful to my Lord, I
have no power against the flesh, I cannot conquer my temper, I give way
just like Peter to the fear of man, of company, for people can influence
me and make me do things I do not want to do, and I have no power to
resist them? Circumstances get the mastery over me, and I then say and
do things that I am ashamed of."? Is there not more than one, who, in
answer to the question, "Are you living as a man filled with the Spirit,
devoted to Jesus, following Him, fully giving up all for Him?"--must say
with sorrow, "God knows I am not. Alas, my heart knows it."? You say it,
and I come, and I press you with the question, Is not your position, and
your character, and your conduct, just like that of Peter? Like Peter,
you love Jesus, like Peter you know He is the Christ of God, like Peter
you are very zealous in working for Him. Peter had cast out devils in
His name, and had preached the gospel, and had healed the sick. Like
Peter you have tried to work for Jesus; but, oh! under it all, isn't
there something that comes up continually? Oh, Christian, what is it? I
pray, and I try, and I do long to live a holy life, but the flesh is too
strong, and sin gets the better of me, and continually I am pleasing
self instead of denying it, and denying Jesus instead of pleasing Him.
Come, all who are willing to make that confession, and let me ask you to
look quietly at the other life that is possible for you.
Just as the Lord Jesus gave the
Holy Spirit to Peter, He is willing to give the Holy Spirit to you. Are
you willing to receive Him? Are you willing to give up yourself entirely
as an empty, helpless vessel, to receive the power of the Holy Spirit,
to live, to dwell, and to work in you every day? Dear believer, God has
prepared such a beautiful and such a blessed life for every one of us,
and God as a Father is waiting to see why you will not come to Him and
let Him fill you with the Holy Ghost. Are you willing for it? I am sure
some are. There are some who have said often, "O God, why can't I live
that life?--Why can't I live every hour of unbroken fellowship with
God?--Why can't I enjoy what my Father has given me, all the riches of
His grace? It is for me He gave it, and why can't I enjoy it?" There are
those who say, "Why can't I abide in Christ every day, and every hour,
and every moment?--why can't I have the light of my Father's love
filling my heart all the day long? Tell me, servant of God, what can
help me?"
I can tell you one thing that
will help you. What helped Peter? "Peter went out and wept bitterly." It
must come with us to a conviction of sin; it must come with us to a real
downright earnest repentance, or we never can get into the better life.
We must stop complaining and confessing, "Yes, my life is not what it
should be, and I will try to do better." That won't help you. What will
help you? This,--that you go down in despair to lie at the feet of
Jesus, and that you begin with a very real and bitter shame to make
confession, "Lord Jesus, have compassion upon me! For these many years I
have been a Christian, but there are so many sins from which I have not
cleansed myself,--temper, pride, jealousy, envy, sharp words, unkind
judgments, unforgiving thoughts." One must say, "There is a friend whom
I never have forgiven for what he has said." Another must say, "There is
an enemy whom I dislike, I cannot say that I can love him." Another must
say, "There are things in my business that I would not like brought out
into the light of man." Another must say, "I am led captive by the law
of sin and death." Oh, Christians, come and make confession with shame
and say, "I have been bought with the Blood, I have been washed with the
Blood, but just think of what a life I have been living! I am ashamed of
it." Bow before God and ask Him by the Holy Spirit to make you more
deeply ashamed, and to work in you that Divine contrition. I pray you
take the step at once. "Peter went out and wept bitterly," and that was
his salvation; yes, that was the turning point of his life. And shall we
not fall upon our faces before God, and make confession, and get down on
our knees under the burden of the terrible load, and say, "I know I am a
believer, but I am not living as I should to the glory of my God. I am
under the power of the flesh and all the self-confidence, and self-will,
and self-pleasing that marks my life."
Dear Christians, do you not
long to be brought nigh unto God? Would you not give anything to walk in
close fellowship with Jesus every day? Would you not count it a pearl of
great price to have the light and love of God shining in you all the
day? Oh, come and fall down and make confession of sin; and, if you will
do it, Jesus will come and meet you and He will ask you, "Lovest thou
Me?" And, if you say, "Yes, Lord," very quickly He will ask again,
"Lovest thou Me?"--and if you say, "Yes, Lord," again, He will ask a
third time, "Lovest thou Me?"--and your heart will be filled with an
unutterable sadness, and your heart will get still more broken down and
bruised by the question, and you will say, "Lord, I have not lived as I
should, but still I love Thee and I give myself to Thee." Oh, beloved
may God give us grace now, that, with Peter, we may go out, and, if need
be, weep bitterly. If we do not weep bitterly,--we are not going to
force tears--shall we not sigh very deeply, and bow very humbly, and cry
very earnestly, "O God, reveal to me the carnal life in which I have
been living: reveal to me what has been hindering me from having my life
full of the Holy Ghost"? Shall we not cry, "Lord, break my heart into
utter self-despair, and, oh! bring me in helplessness to wait for the
Divine power, for the power of the Holy Ghost, to take possession and to
fill me with a new life given all to Jesus?"
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