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CHAPTER
IX.
THE THREE DISPENSATIONS
In John
Fletcher's portrait of St. Paul as a model evangelical
preacher, he very emphatically insists upon a thorough
knowledge of the three great eras of spiritual life. These
he denominates the dispensation of the Father, of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost. He who is unacquainted with the
peculiarities of experience under these different
dispensations cannot successfully apply Gospel truth, and
give full proof of his ministry. For these dispensations,
though in the order of development they were successive, are
now coexistent. Of those accepted of God, now dwelling on
the earth, some are in the dispensation of the Father, some
in that of the Son, and others in the dispensation of the
Holy Spirit. The first are characterized by the fear of God,
servile fear, with little love. This fear influences conduct
and shapes character. They fear God and work righteousness.
They are kept from sinning, and are incited to purity and
welldoing. They have no joy of the Holy Ghost, but only that
which flows in the channels of nature, the approval of
conscience for their right actions. Not having God's love
shed abroad in their hearts by the Holy Spirit, they are in
doubt of their acceptance with God, and are often distressed
when the written or unwritten law thunders its threatenings
in their ears, "though visited at times with a few scattered
rays of hope." They exist in all lands, but chiefly in
non-evangelical countries, papal, pagan, and Mohammedan. Now
and then an honest Deist, a devout Unitarian, with the head
warped by early implanted error, but a sincere heart, may be
found amid the full blaze of Gospel truth, still serving God
in the same dispensation with uncircumcised Abram in
Mesopotamia. In this view we find ground for charity toward
the less enlightened subjects of God's kingdom, and strong
motives for the abatement of bigotry. We learn to deal
tenderly with those Cornelian souls whose prayers and alms
go up for a memorial before God. We approach them, not with
denunciations, but with invitations, while we magnify
Christ, and from our own experience assure them of the
exceeding greatness of his power to usward who believe. By
indiscriminately lumping them together with avowed Atheists
and willful sinners, the incautious preacher gives them
needless offence, and hedges up the path of advanced truth
into their minds. In Christian lands these worshippers of
the Father must be distinguished from those who reject the
Son because of the strictness of his requirements, the
inflexible terms of discipleship, and the spiritual
interpretation of the moral law planting a thornhedge across
the path of even the sinful thought, and kindling a fire in
the house of their idols. Such are wickedly rejecting Jesus
Christ, and are to be addressed as sinners, whether they
assume the name of Evangelicals, Universalists, Socinians,
or Free Religionists. "These go on without any symptom of
fear toward the gulf of perdition; whether it be by the high
road of vice, with the notoriously abandoned, or through the
bypath of hypocrisy, with pharisaical professors."
Under the
dispensation of the Son the doubts of believers are
dissipated, like those of the two disciples who journeyed to
Emmaus, while they discover more clearly, and experience
more powerfully, the truths of the Gospel." Still they know
Christ after the flesh. They are not fully impressed with
his divinity. The robe of humanity has not been made
transparent for the dazzling radiance of the Godhead to
shine through. Jesus is not yet glorified to their hearts,
because the Spirit, the Glorifier, has not taken up his
abode in them. Hence they are but children; their strength
is small; they are weak and unsteady; they have not full
assurance. After brief periods of joyful trust, doubts
return to shake their confidence. Yet they testify of their
love to God gaining ascendancy over fear. They no longer
utter the sad exclamation at the end of the seventh chapter
of Romans, "O wretched man that I am!" With grateful hearts
and streaming eyes in view of their deliverance, they
exultingly say, "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
Joyful as is their state of freedom when contrasted with the
bondage to fear under which they once groaned, they are
conscious of an inward vacuity and longing for some object
not at first clearly defined. The study of the words of
Jesus discloses to them the living water promised by him in
the last great day of the feast. "But this he spake of the
Spirit, which they that believe on him should receive; for
the Holy Ghost was not yet given." "And I will pray the
Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may
abide with you forever." After the object of their desire
has been pointed out to them, they begin to hunger and
thirst after righteousness, after the Holy Spirit, who is
the author of all inward purity. Then they emerge into the
"kingdom of the Holy Ghost," as Fletcher styles it. They are
filled with the Spirit. They now walk in the light
constantly, are consciously cleansed from all sin, and have
joy unspeakable. The Spirit of adoption, formerly indirect
and intermittent, has now become the abiding Comforter; and
to his direct assurance of sonship he adds that of entire
sanctification and the fullness of Christ's love, "that we
may know the things freely given to us of God." I Cor. 2:12.
Fear, which had a painful predominance in the dispensation
of the Father, and shadowed the brightness of that of Jesus
Christ, is now completely banished. No tormenting emotion
can abide the presence of the Comforter.
The
scriptural proofs of these dispensations are abundant.
Listen to Peter, preaching to Cornelius and his staff of
officers. "God is no respecter of persons; but in every
nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is
accepted of him."
From the
summit of Mars Hill, the Athenian, passing through the
Agora, hears an earnest voice proclaiming to the high caste
Autochthones, who boasted of their birth from the soil of
Attica, a truth humiliating to the pride of race -- "God . .
. hath made of one blood all nations of men, and hath
determined the bounds of their habitation; that they should
seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after him, and find
him, though he be not far from every one of us." The
publicans (Roman officials) asked of John, "What shall we
do?" He, seeing that they had no preparation for the
dispensation of the Son, and that all that they could then
appreciate was the obligation of the moral law, answered,
"Exact no more than that which is appointed you." A band of
Roman soldiers, utterly ignorant of the prophecies relating
to Christ, approach the same great preacher, and demand,
"What shall we do?" John, aiming to make them perfect in the
dispensation of Gentilism, which consists in doing right so
far as known, immediately replies, "Do violence to no man,
neither accuse falsely, and be content with your wages." But
when John's audience is made up of Jews, he preaches always
from one text of Isaiah's prophetic evangel, "Prepare ye the
way of the Lord." Here is the dispensation of the Son --"One
cometh after me whose shoes' latchet I am not worthy to
unloose." Glorious foregleams of the ministration of the
Spirit also burst upon John's vision, and he exclaims, "He
shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire."
The
official presence and manifest work of the Holy Spirit in
the hearts of believers after Jesus was glorified, as
totally distinct from his essential presence and secret work
in the hearts of just pagans and Jews under the drawings of
the Father or the teachings of the Son, is most conclusively
announced by Peter on the day of Pentecost. "Jesus, being by
the right hand of God exalted, and having received of the
Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, hath shed forth this
(plenitude of grace, the effects of) which ye now see and
hear." Since these Jerusalem' sinners had insulted the
person of Jesus, the genuineness of their repentance must
now be tested by public baptism in his hated name, before
they could be assured of pardon, a test never required of
penitent sinners afterward. "Be baptized every one of you in
the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." Thus these souls
were led rapidly through the dispensation of the Son to that
of the Spirit. The ministry of Jesus was very brief,
possibly typifying the short interval in the scheme of
salvation between the drawings of the Father unto Christ,
and the outpouring of the Holy Ghost upon the young believer
in Jesus. Thus the compassionate Father draws the willing
soul to the redeeming Son, who passes it over to the
quickening and purifying energies of the blessed Sanctifier.
The second dispensation was evidently designed to be a
transition point only, and not a stage in the spiritual
development. But contrary to the Divine purpose, multitudes
linger all their lives at this point, instead of passing on
to the higher and richer experience of the fullness of the
Spirit: while other multitudes are so "slow of heart to
believe," that they linger for years and decades in that
inferior dispensation of the law, the childleader, before
their tardy feet tread the threshold of the Great Teacher.
To quote all the Scriptures descriptive of the distinct
office and work of the third person of the Trinity would be
impossible in this essay. Let these suffice: "Your body is
the temple of the Holy Ghost." "Grieve not the Holy Spirit
of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption."
"Be filled with the Spirit; speaking to yourselves in
psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, making melody in
your hearts unto the Lord." "Rejoice evermore. Pray without
ceasing. In every thing give thanks."
Says Mr. Fletcher,
Without
an experimental knowledge of these several states, a
minister can no more lead sinners to evangelical
perfection than an illiterate peasant can communicate
sufficient intelligence to his rustic companions to pass
an examination for the highest degree in a university.
As the
prudent physician proportions his medicines to the
different ages and habits of his patients, so the
enlightened pastor, who feels himself concerned for the
spiritual health of his flock, sees it necessary to act
with equal care and discretion. He preaches the
dispensation of the Son to those who, like Socrates and
Plato, are longing for a Divine instructor. He leads
them either from the law of Moses or from the law of
nature to the Gospel of Christ. Lastly, to such as have
devoutly embraced this part of the Gospel, he publishes
the glorious economy of the Holy Spirit, which was not
fully opened till after the bodily appearance of the
Redeemer was withdrawn from the world.
It must be
borne in mind that the Son and Spirit have always been
occupied in secretly influencing the hearts of men. But
there was a time when the Son became manifest, making a
visible exhibition of his wonderful works. Also, at a
certain point in the world's history, the Holy Ghost began
to work in a more sensible manner in the consciousness of
believers. The mysterious triune personality of God was
disclosed to our faith because the advanced stages of
spiritual development under the Son and the Spirit could not
be realized except through faith in the distinct offices of
these persons. To keep these in the faith of the Church in
all ages, the names of the three stand in the formula of
baptism, and distinct blessings are ascribed to each in the
apostolic benediction.
It may be
objected that this view of the successive gradations of
privilege under the three persons of the Godhead has a
tendency to degrade the Father before the brighter glories
of the Son's kingdom, and to belittle the Son in the
presence of the full splendors of the ministrations of the
Spirit. But a little examination of experience, Church
history, and the Scriptures, will obviate this objection.
They who are brought to the cross of Christ testify to a new
and profound appreciation of the work of the Father; while
all who enter into the dispensation of the Spirit bear
witness that Christ is in an astonishing manner exalted in
their estimation. In all ages of the Church we look for the
highest spirituality and purity, and the most devout
reverence toward the Father, where Jesus has been exalted;
and the most ardent love to Christ where this item of the
creed has been emphasized and explained. "I believe in the
Holy Ghost." Turning to the Scriptures, we find that the
highest honor accruing to the Father is when men honor his
Son. To him shall every knee bow, to the glory of God the
Father. But Jesus is not fully known till the Spirit
shows him to our hearts and glorifies him. No man can
call Jesus Lord, but by the Holy Ghost. Thus each
brightening dispensation reflects honor upon the Divine
person of the preceding, demonstrating that the Divine
Persons are not independent and rival deities, but one in
nature and essence, whose different perfections are more
clearly manifested to a world of sinners by this threefold
development.
The
superiority of the ministrations of the Spirit, and its
immeasurable wealth of privilege when contrasted with the
dispensation of the Son of God in his bodily presence, is
expressed by Jesus when he asserts that among them that are
born of women there hath not arisen a greater than John the
Baptist. Here the wilderness preacher is lifted to a
pedestal higher than that of David the king, Moses the
lawgiver, or Abraham the founder of the Hebrew nation. Yet
he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than
he. We are to understand the kingdom of heaven as St. Paul
expounds it, consisting of righteousness, peace, and joy
in the Holy Ghost. It did not consist in seeing the
incarnate Lord, for John saw him; nor in gazing on his
miraculous works and listening to his Divine utterances, as
did many unbelieving Jews; nor in being numbered among his
disciples, as were many who went away and walked no more
with him; nor in being enrolled among the twelve apostles,
as was Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him. Jesus must have
referred to that fullness of spiritual grace and power
brought in on the day of Pentecost, to be the permanent
inheritance of all who fully believe the promise of the
Father.
Every
soul, however ignorant and uncultured, which is a habitation
of God through the Spirit -- every human body which is made
a temple of the Holy Ghost, however weak and deformed, is
greater than he whom the infallible Messiah pronounced
superior to all his predecessors. Such a person may the
reader be if he will by faith enter into the dispensation of
the blessed Comforter, far more glorious than the days when
the visible form of Jesus shed its radiance on the earth.
"It is expedient -- better -- for you that I go away; for if
I go not away, the Comforter will not come." "Of which
salvation the prophets have inquired, testifying beforehand
of the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should
follow." Reader, is that glory enrobing your spirit with
a vesture of light, so that you are walking in the light
toward the inheritance of the saints in light? A
dispensation laden with such wealth of privilege carries
with it a corresponding burden of responsibility. Light is
the measure of accountability. Who of the modern Church,
illumined by the sevenfold splendors of the Spirit of truth,
will be able to abide the fires of the judgment? Would that
these solemn words of Fletcher were sounded from every
pulpit in Christendom: "To reject the Son of God, manifested
in the Spirit, as worldly Christians are universally
observed to do, it a crime of equal magnitude with that of
the Jews, who rejected Christ manifested in the flesh."
There are
multitudes of nominal Christians who confidently assert that
it is the highest presumption and folly to expect, in modern
times, that full dispensation of the Spirit concerning which
so many excellent things are spoken in the Scriptures. They
brand as a fanatic the man who proclaims to a slumbering
Church the presence of the Holy Ghost, ready to raise the
spiritually dead, and to transfigure the spiritually living.
It is asserted that the era of miracles and the
extraordinary gifts of the Spirit are past; not
understanding that the Spirit himself is entirely distinct
from his supernatural gifts. The Spirit descended upon Mary,
the mother of our Lord, and upon several other believing
women in the upper chamber; but there is no proof that they
were endowed with the gift of tongues, or any other
charisma. St. Paul himself was not always replenished
with miraculous power. A man may be full of the Holy Spirit,
and be a temple for his abode, and have no supernatural
gift. Love supreme, love made perfect, is superior to all
the miraculous endowments. Though I have all faith, so that
I could remove mountains, and have not love, I am nothing.
Witness Balaam's supernatural prophecy, followed by his
violent death among the enemies of God, and the miracles of
Judas, quickly succeeded by treason to his Master and
wretched suicide.
Another
objection which men at ease in Zion raise against the
universal outpouring of the Spirit in these days is the
fanaticism which it is supposed to breed. This would exclude
all spiritual life from the world; for life is liberty, and
all liberty has its perils. The prisoners handcuffed in
grated cells, and the dead in silent tombs, are the only two
classes of people who are not in peril of the abuse of their
physical powers and appetites. That more fanatics and
eccentrics start up in a church filled and thrilled with
spiritual life than in a Church in a Laodicean stupor, is no
more wonderful than that a free country should give birth to
more who abuse their freedom, than an autocratic iron
despotism, where none dare to stir. Look at the Roman
Catholic Church, where not a breath of spiritual life can be
drawn unless it is according to the decrees of the
hierarchy, and every pulsation is under the jealous
surveillance of the priesthood. The fanaticism of
ecclesiasticism, of ritualism, of papacy, of Mariolatry, of
indulgences, of penances and pilgrimages, may flourish
there, but not the fanaticism of unscriptural notions
concerning the Holy Spirit. For the Holy Ghost as the
witness of pardon, the author of purity, and the guide of
life, comes into collision with the claims of the
priesthood. So the Holy Ghost must be imprisoned in the
apostolic age, and the Bible must be chained in the cloister
or burned up, because it promotes independent thought and
spiritual freedom. Give us a spiritual Protestantism, with
all its perils of rationalism and fanaticism, in preference
to the intellectual stupor and spiritual death of such a
system. We must make our election between these two. Though
there may be occasionally a weak or unbalanced mind carried
away into fantastic extravagances under the copious effusion
of the Holy Spirit, as a mighty rushing wind, the average
mind has skill to adjust its sails to the heavenly gale, and
speed its way, with stable ballast, toward the port of
eternal life. Come, O wind! O breath of God! upon myriads of
becalmed souls, and sweep them joyfully onward to the haven
of rest.
Let us
now set up a safeguard against an abuse of the doctrine of
this chapter respecting the three dispensations. If men can
be saved by attaining perfection in any one of them, it may
be inferred that we may take our choice. Not so. God
controls this matter. He allots our place of birth, our
education, and surroundings. If it be a pagan country, under
the starlight of natural religion, the dispensation of the
Father, with no distinctive knowledge of Jesus Christ, we
shall be required to be perfect according to the low
standard of Gentilism. The ground on which the heathen man
will be condemned will not be the imperfectness of his life
alone, but the fact that his life falls below his creed,
poor as that may be. To judge him the Judge will say, "Ye
knew your duty, but ye did it not. You had little light, but
you shut your eyes, and refused to use what you had." The
moralist, living in Christendom, cannot plead the perfection
of paganism. This is a standard far below his degree of
light. The sunrise of Christ's incarnation is upon him,
showing the path of Christian duty-love supreme to God in
his Son in addition to a perfect morality. Alas! how many
will fail at this point. As Capernaum, blessed with the
presence, sermons, and miracles of Christ, all misimproved,
sinks down in the judgment day below Sodom and Gomorrah, so
will the impenitent of Christian lands, with the Bible in
his hands -- that lamp from off God's throne cast down to
earth, lighting up their habitations, making the way of
Christian rectitude luminous as a path of light before their
feet -- sink down under a weight of guilt when the pagan
nations shall rise up to condemn them.
Thus the
nominal Christian who reads in the Acts of the Apostles of
the dispensation of the Spirit more glorious than that of
the Son of God, and hears from God's ambassador that it is
his privilege and duty to be filled with the Spirit, and
hears the attestations of unimpeached witnesses that the
blessed Spirit of adoption has certified to their pardon,
renewed and purified their natures, cannot innocently reject
the ministration of the Holy Spirit, because it will cost
him a painful effort of repentance, surrender, consecration
and faith to reach this high spiritual altitude. Formalism,
ceremonialism, and mere orthodoxy, cannot save him.
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