Christ's Love for us
by Thomas Brooks
Let us stand still, and admire and wonder at
the love of Jesus Christ to poor
sinners;
that Christ should rather die for us, than for the angels. They were
creatures of a more noble extract, and in
all probability might have brought
greater
revenues of glory to God: yet that Christ should pass by those golden
vessels, and make us vessels of glory, Oh,
what amazing and astonishing love is
this!
This is the envy of devils. and the admiration of angels and saints.
The apostle, being in a holy admiration of
Christ's love, affirms it to pass
knowledge,
Eph. iii. 18, 19; that God, who is the eternal Being, should love man
when he had scarce a being, Prov. viii. 30,
31, that he should be enamored with
deformity, that he should love us when in our blood, Ezek. xvi., that
he should
pity us when no eye pitied us, no,
not our own. Oh, such was Christ's
transcendent love, that man's extreme misery could not abate it. The
deploredness of man's condition did but
heighten the holy flame of Christ's love.
It
is as high as heaven, who can reach it? It is as low as hell, who can
understand
it? Heaven, through its glory,
could not contain him, man being miserable, nor
hell's torments make him refrain, such was his perfect matchless love
to fallen
man. That Christ's love should
extend to the ungodly, to sinners, to enemies that
were in arms of rebellion against him, Rom. v. 6, 8, 10; yes, not
only so, but that
he should hug them in his
arms, lodge them in his bosom, dandle them upon his
knees, and lay them to his breasts, that they may suck and be
satisfied, is the
highest improvement of
love, Isa lxvi. 11-13.
That Christ should come from the eternal bosom
of his Father, to a region of
sorrow and
death, John i. 18; that God should be manifested in the flesh, the
Creator made a creature, Isa. liii. 4; that
he that was clothed with glory, should
be
wrapped with rags of flesh, 1 Tim. iii. 16; that he that filled
heaven, should be
cradled in a manger, John
xvii. 5; that the God of Israel should fly into Egypt,
Mat. ii. 14; that the God of strength should be weary; that the judge
of all flesh
should be condemned; that the
God of life should be put to death, John xix. 41;
that he that is one with his Father, should cry out of misery, 'O my
Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass
from me!' Mat. xxvi. 39: that he that had the keys of
hell and death, Rev. i. 18, should lie imprisoned in the sepulcher of
another,
having, in his lifetime, nowhere to
lay his head; nor after death, to lay his body,
John xix. 41, 42; and all this for man, for fallen man, for miserable
man, for
worthless man, is beyond the
thoughts of created natures. The sharp, the
universal and continual sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ, from the
cradle to the
cross, does above all other
things speak out the transcendent love of Jesus Christ
to poor sinners. That wrath, that great wrath, that fierce wrath,
that pure wrath,
that infinite wrath, that
matchless wrath of an angry God, that was so terribly
impressed upon the soul of Christ, quickly spent his natural
strength, and turned
his moisture into the
drought of summer, Ps. xxxii. 4; and yet all this wrath he
patiently underwent, that sinners might be saved, and that 'he might
bring many
sons unto glory,' Heb. ii. 10.
Oh, wonder of love! Love enables Jesus to
suffer. It was love that made our
dear Lord
Jesus lay down his life, to save us from hell and to bring us to
heaven.
As the pelican, out of her love to
her young ones, when they are bitten with
serpents, feeds them with her own blood to recover them again; so
when we were
bitten by the old serpent, and
our wound incurable, and we in danger of eternal
death, then did our dear Lord Jesus, that he might recover us and
heal us, feed us
with his own blood, Gen.
iii. 15; John vi. 53-56. Oh love unspeakable! This made
[Bernard] cry out, 'Lord, you have loved me more than yourself; for
you have laid
down your life for me.'
It was only the golden link of love that
fastened Christ to the cross, John x. 17,
and that made him die freely for us, and that made him willing 'to be
numbered
among transgressors,' Isa. liii.
12, that we might be numbered among [the]
'general assembly and church of the firstborn, which are written in
heaven,' Heb.
xii. 23.
Christ's love is like his name, and that is
Wonderful, Isa. ix. 6; yes, it is so
wonderful, that it is above all creatures, beyond all measure,
contrary to all nature.
It is above all
creatures, for it is above the angels, and therefore above all
others. It is beyond all measure, for time did not begin it, and time
shall never
end it; place does not bound it,
sin does not exceed it, no estate, no age, no sex
is denied it, tongues cannot express it, understandings cannot
conceive it: and it
is contrary to all
nature; for what nature can love where it is hated? What nature
can forgive where it is provoked? What nature can offer
reconciliation where it
receives wrong? What
nature can heap up kindness upon contempt, favor upon
ingratitude, mercy upon sin? And yet Christ's love has led him to all
this; so that
well may we spend all our days
in admiring and adoring of this wonderful love,
and be always ravished with the thoughts of it.
Love the Lord Jesus Christ! Thomas Brooks
See that you love the Lord Jesus Christ with a superlative love, with
an
overtopping love. There are none have
suffered so much for you as Christ; there
are none that can suffer so much for you as Christ. The least measure
of that
wrath that Christ has sustained for
you, would have broke the hearts, necks, and
backs of all created beings.
O my friends! There is no love but a
superlative love that is any ways suitable to
the transcendent sufferings of dear Jesus. Oh, love him above your
lusts, love him
above your relations, love
him above the world, love him above all your outward
contentments and enjoyments; yes, love him above your very lives; for
thus the
patriarchs, prophets, apostles,
saints, primitive Christians, and the martyrs of old,
have loved our Lord Jesus Christ with an overtopping love: Rev. xii.
11, 'They
loved not their lives unto the
death;' that is, they slighted, contemned, yes,
despised their lives, exposing them to hazard and loss, out of love
to the Lamb,
'who had washed them in his
blood.' I have read of one Kilian, a Dutch
schoolmaster, who being asked whether he did not love his wife and
children,
answered, Were all the world a
lump of gold, and in my hands to dispose of, I
would leave it at my enemies feet to live with them in a prison; but
my soul and
my Savior are dearer to me than
all. If my father, says Jerome, should stand
before me, and my mother hang upon, and my brethren should press
about me, I
would break through my brethren,
throw down my father, and tread underfoot my
mother, to cleave to Jesus Christ.
Had I ten heads, said Henry Voes, they should
all be cut off for Christ. If every hair of
my head, said John Ardley, martyr, were a man, they should all suffer
for the faith
of Christ. Let fire, racks,
pulleys, said Ignatius, and all the torments of hell come
upon me, so I may win Christ. Love made Jerome to say, O my Savior,
did you
die for love of me?-a love sadder
than death; but to me a death more lovely than
love itself. I cannot live, love you, and be longer from you. George
Carpenter,
being asked whether he did not
love his wife and children, which stood weeping
before him, answered, My wife and children!- my wife and children!
are dearer to
me than all Bavaria; yet, for
the love of Christ, I know them not. That blessed
virgin in Basil being condemned for Christianity to the fire, and
having her estate
and life offered her if
she would worship idols, cried out, 'Let money perish, and
life vanish, Christ is better than all.' Sufferings for Christ are
the saints' greatest
glory; they are those
things wherein they have most gloried
Your
cruelty is our glory, says Tertullian. It is reported of Babylas,
that when he was to die for Christ, he
desired this favor, that his chains might
be
buried with him, as the ensigns of his honor. Thus you see with what
a
superlative love, with what an overtopping
love, former saints have loved our Lord
Jesus; and can you, Christians, who are cold and low in your love to
Christ, read
over these instances, and not
blush?
Certainly the more Christ has suffered for us,
the more dear Christ should be
unto us; the
more bitter his sufferings have been for us, the more sweet his love
should be to us, and the more eminent should
be our love to him. Oh, let a
suffering
Christ lie nearest your hearts; let him be your manna, your tree of
life,
your morning star. It is better to
part with all than with this pearl of price. Christ
is that golden pipe through which the golden oil of salvation runs;
and oh. how
should this inflame our love to
Christ! Oh that our hearts were more affected with
the sufferings of Christ! Who can tread upon these hot coals, and his
heart not
burn in love to Christ, and cry
out with Ignatius, Christ my love is crucified? Cant.
viii. 7,8. If a friend should die for us, how would our hearts be
affected with his
kindness! and shall the
God of glory lay down his life for us, and shall we not be
affected with his goodness i John x. 17, 18. Shall Saul be affected
with David's
kindness in sparing his life, 1
Sam. xxiv. 16, and shall not we be affected with
Christ's kindness, who, to save our life, lost his own? Oh, the
infinite love of
Christ, that he should
leave his Father's bosom, John i. 18, and come down from
heaven, that he might carry you up to heaven, John xiv. 1-4; that he
that was a
Son should take upon him the form
of a servant, Phil. ii. 5-8; that you of slaves
should be made sons, of enemies should be made friends, of heirs of
wrath
should be made heirs of God and
joint-heirs with Christ, Rom. viii. 17; that to
save us from everlasting ruin, Christ should stick at nothing, but be
willing to be
made flesh, to lie in a
manger, to be tempted, deserted, persecuted, and to die
upon a cross!
Oh, what flames of love should these things
kindle in all our hearts to Christ!
Love is
compared to fire; in heaping love upon our enemy, we heap coals of
fire
upon his head, Rom. xii. 19, 20; Prov.
xxvi. 21. Now the property of fire is to turn
all it meets with into its own nature: fire makes all things fire;
the coal makes
burning coals; and is it not
a wonder then that Christ, having heaped abundance
of the fiery coals of his love upon our heads, we should yet be as
cold as corpses
in our love to him. Ah! what
sad metal are we made of, that Christ's fiery love
cannot inflame our love to Christ! Moses wondered why the bush
consumed not,
when he sees it all on fire,
Exod. iii. 3; but if you please but to look into your own
hearts, you shall see a greater wonder; for you shall see that,
though you walk
like those three children in
the fiery furnace, Dan. iii., even in the midst of
Christ's fiery love flaming round about you; yet there is but little,
very little, true
smell of that sweet fire
of love to be felt or found upon you or in you. Oh, when
shall the sufferings of a dear and tender-hearted Savior kindle such
a flame of
love in all our hearts, as shall
still be a-breaking forth in our lips and lives, in our
words and ways, to the praise and glory of free grace? Oh that the
sufferings of a
loving Jesus might at last
make us all sick of love! Cant. ii. v. Oh let him forever
lie between our breasts, Cant. i. 13, who has left his Father's bosom
for a time,
that he might be embosomed by us
forever.