Bible Student
Ministries Proclaiming the Herald of Christ,
as Bridegroom, Reaper and King
PASTOR RUSSELL'S SERMONS
A choice collection of his most important discourses
on all phases of Christian doctrine and practice, given between 1906-1916
THE CHURCH "CRUCIFIED WITH CHRIST"
"I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me."--Gal. 2:20
In an age when human ingenuity taxed itself to the
utmost limit to invent cruelties to torture the victims of public revenge or hate,
crucifixion certainly had a bad preeminence. Amongst the Romans it was reserved, with few
exceptions, for slaves and foreigners, being considered too horrible and disgraceful for a
Roman citizen, no matter what might have been his crime. This mode of death was the
greatest possible indignity that could be heaped upon any offender, whether considered in
the light of a public disgrace or of physical anguish.
Crucifixion was a slow, lingering process of dying, lasting always for hours and often for
several days. Usually the victim was bound to the cross as it lay upon the ground. The
hands and the feet were then nailed to the wood; and the cross was elevated and planted in
the socket to receive it. This gave the body a terrible wrench; and great was the agony
that followed. The hot sun beat upon the naked body and uncovered head-- which in our
Lord's case was pierced with the additional cruelty of the crown of thorns. The ragged,
undressed wounds festered and became inflamed; shooting pains darted from them through the
quivering flesh. Added to this the agony of an increasing fever, a throbbing head and a
raging thirst; and even the slightest movement intensified the anguish. As death drew
near, swarms of flies gathered about to increase the torment, from which there could not
be any relief. As no vital organ was directly assailed, life lingered on until the power
of endurance was completely exhausted. [SM642]
The ultimate physical cause of our Lord's death, however, is believed to have been
literally a broken heart. Otherwise He would probably have lingered much longer; for
crucifixion seldom produced death within twenty-four hours, and victims have lingered as
long as five days. Pilate and the guard were surprised to learn that Jesus had died so
soon. Instead of lingering long, He died suddenly, and before He was fully exhausted; for
He had conversed with the thief and had commended His mother to St. John's care. He had
declared His great work finished; and then with a strong voice, which indicated
considerable remaining strength of both body and mind, He had cried, "Father, into
Thy hands I commend My spirit," and died instantly. In the agony of Gethsemane the
heart and the blood vessels had been affected. The palpitation of the heart had been so
intense as to cause a bloody sweat--a phenomenon rare but not unknown, produced by intense
mental excitement. Already weakened by such an experience, a repetition of the anguish
probably ruptured the heart, causing instant death.--Luke 22:44; 23:46.
"CRUCIFIED WITH CHRIST" FIGURATIVELY
Since actual, literal crucifixion signifies a torturing, slow but sure death, the
figurative crucifixion must closely resemble it; otherwise the figure would have no value.
When we say that any one is taking up his cross to follow Christ, we mean that the person
is consecrated and is taking the first step of self-denial in espousing the cause of
Christ. Even though it be with fear and trembling, he is submitting willingly to painful
humbling and contempt in the sight of the world and of the chief priests and their blind
followers, in order that he may share with the Master and all the members of the Anointed
Body the coldness and scorn of the world and of many whom they seek to bless. Yet in so
doing we are not alone, as was our Lord and Head; for we have comfort and sympathy from
Him as our High Priest and from our fellow members [SM643] in His Body, the Church. With
our Lord, however, none could sympathize. He was the Fore-runner on this race course; and
of the people there was none with Him.
But, some one may ask, where does our cross-bearing begin, and where our crucifixion?
Where does it end? How much does it involve? We answer, Circumstances alter cases to some
extent; and each must apply the matter in his own case. To enable us to do this, let us
examine three notable examples of such cross-bearing-- our Lord, St. Paul and St. Peter.
"CONSIDER HIM WHO ENDURED"
Born under the conditions of the Jewish Law, our Lord could not begin His
service--ministry--until He was thirty years old, although His earlier years were
evidently spent in studying prophetic utterances concerning God's Plan and His own share
therein. This is made evident in the only record of His boyhood. When but twelve years old
He was seeking information concerning the Heavenly Father's business, and was found
amongst the eminent teachers asking questions relating to the prophecies.--Luke 2:42-52.
At thirty years of age He had His first opportunity to begin the work which He had come
into the world to do. Using the figure in our text, we might say that then He took up His
cross when He came to John to be baptized of him in the Jordan. This was a cross--a
humiliation; for the masses of the people were, like John the Baptist, ignorant of the
deep meaning which our Lord attached to immersion as a symbol of death. John and the
people used it only as a symbol of washing, cleansing or reformation from sin. Nor was it
proper for our Lord then to explain to them a symbol which belonged to an age and a work
not to be made known until the Pentecost following His death. Nor would they have
understood if He had explained.
But it became our Lord to set the example which, as their Leader, He would afterward
expect all His disciples [SM644] to follow. Hence, as in His actual death He who knew no
sin was counted amongst the transgressors, so in its symbol--the water immersion--He was
"numbered with transgressors" (Isa. 53:12), who were there figuratively washing
away a sinful past to make a new start in life.
For the sinless Lamb of God thus to be misunderstood was doubtless a heavy cross; but it
opened the way to a still clearer appreciation of the Father's will, which He had come to
perform. Obedience in taking up the figurative cross proved Him worthy of continuing in
the Father's service--even unto death. The Holy Power of God which came upon Him there
enabled Him to see more clearly His future pathway down to Calvary; but it also brought
clearer and clearer apprehensions of the exceeding riches of Divine favor and of the high
exaltation in reservation for Him at the end of the narrow way.
THE VICTORY IN THE WILDERNESS
Under the increased illumination of mind which followed His spirit-begetting at Jordan,
our Lord was led by His spirit of consecration into the wilderness, there to consider more
fully in private the Father's Plan and His own future course in obedience thereto. There
the cross grew heavy as He more fully realized the shame, ignominy and self-abasement to
which His consecration would lead. Moreover, the Tempter threw all his weight upon the
already heavy cross by suggesting other ways of doing good which were more agreeable to
the flesh than was the way of sacrifice. But after counting the cost, our Lord refused any
other method, whether Satan's or His own, and chose to have God's will done in God's own
way, saying again, "Lo, I come to do Thy will, O My God!"--Psa. 40:5-8.
With this victory our Lord grew stronger; and the cross seemed lighter as He came out of
the wilderness figuratively crucified, willingly delivered up to die-- hands, feet, each
and every talent and power restrained from self-service--all offered up as a sacrifice to
God in [SM645] the carrying out of the Divine Plan, whatever that might involve, whether
the dying process might prove to be of longer or shorter duration or of more or less pain.
Now He more fully understood the meaning of His consecration vow made at Jordan.
As a man, then, when He began His ministry our Lord's will was already dead to every human
hope and ambition--dead to His own human plans and control. Yet He was not dead in the
sense of being insensible to the scoffs, pains and piercing words which He would
encounter, but crucified--delivered up to death. The pinioned, bleeding members--human
talents, rights, etc.-- quivered and twitched; but they always remained pinioned
--crucified, delivered up to death--to the last, as when He prayed in Gethsemane that the
cup of ignominy might be omitted. During all these three and one-half years of our Lord's
ministry He was crucified in this figurative sense. That is to say, He was delivered up to
death--His will, His talents, His all, bound and pinioned --in harmony with the Father's
Plan. And every deed of His by which "virtue [vitality, life] went out of Him"
to bless and heal in mind and body the sinners about Him was part of His dying, and
finally ended in death--even the literal death of the cross.
ST. PAUL'S EXPERIENCE
St. Paul was not literally crucified, but ended his course by being beheaded--as became a
Roman citizen. Yet figuratively he tells us long before his literal death, "I am
crucified with Christ." That is to say, "I am delivered up to death. My will, my
self-control, my talents and powers, my rights, my lawful ambitions as a man--all these
are pinioned and bound by my consecration vow, so that having no will or plan or way of my
own, I may be fully able to let the Holy Spirit--or mind or will--of the Master dwell in
me and rule my every act to His service. But I am not so dead that I do not occasionally
feel a twinging of the flesh and have [SM646] a suggestion as to another way and as to
what would or would not be necessary. I keep my body under, however, subject to the will
of God, saying, as did the Master under similar circumstances, 'Not my will but Thine
[Heavenly Father] be done.'"
Many get the idea that our Lord and the Apostle referred only to sinful desires when they
spoke of figurative crucifixion. They read the Apostle's words as if he meant, "My
sinful ambitions and desires I keep under and crucify." They interpret our Lord to
mean, "Not My sinful will be done, O Father, but Thy holy will." This is a
mistake. Our Lord was holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners (Heb. 7:26); and as
such He could not have a sinful will or desire. He had no wish to kill, steal, blaspheme,
covet the possessions of others, nor to bear false witness, nor to backbite, nor slander,
nor do any other sinful thing toward God or toward man. On the contrary, His will was to
do good only, to honor God and to bless men.
But as a man, our Lord had a mind, a strong mind or judgment as to HOW good could best be
accomplished, as to HOW God could be most highly honored and men most effectually blessed.
Had He followed His own judgment and will as to the best methods of honoring God and
blessing men, it would probably have been along the line which naturally suggests itself
to other GOOD judgments and wills--along the line of political and social reforms, in
securing pure government for the people, in meting out justice to the oppressed, in
establishing hospitals, asylums and colleges, and in cleansing the religious system of His
day. But although such a good will would have doubtless accomplished much temporary good,
it would never have worked out the grand deliverance for the race which we now see that
God's comprehensive Plan of the Ages is designed to work out. Such a plan did not occur to
the mind of even the perfect Man Christ Jesus; for it is beyond the scope of human [SM647]
thought and reasoning. But knowing that His Father was greater than He, our Lord rightly
reasoned that implicit submission to Jehovah's will was the proper course, whatever it
might involve.
WHY CRUCIFIXION OF WILL IS PROPER
The nearer a person is to perfection, the stronger is his will and the more difficult to
crucify. The more confident any one is that his will is good and for good and blessing to
others, the more difficult it is to see good reasons for surrendering it. Thus our dear
Lord knew that it was needful for Him to die in order to provide the Ransom-price for the
world and shrank not from it; but knowing also that pain, public scorn and contempt as a
criminal were not part of the penalty, He questioned their necessity--whether the Father
was not asking of Him as the Redeemer more than the penalty of Adam's sin. Therefore He
prayed, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me"--nevertheless I
claim no rights; I attempt neither to follow My own ideas nor to exercise My own will; I
leave all to Thy wisdom; "Thy will be done."
Evidently our Lord did not see then what for our own advantage and strengthening He has
since showed us who are following in His steps, crucifying our own wills, etc.--that
extreme trial of obedience, even unto the death of the cross, was both expedient and
proper, because of the very high exaltation to the Divine nature, for which His implicit
obedience to the Father's will in giving our Ransom-price was to be the test of
worthiness.
As followers in our Lord's footsteps we have neither such strong wills to overcome and
crucify nor the proportionate strength of character whereby to overcome them. But we have
the advantage of knowing clearly why so extreme and exact obedience is necessary in all
who would be accounted worthy of a place in that select Body of Christ, the Church, which
is to be so highly honored with our Lord Jesus, our Redeemer and Head. [SM648]
HOW WE FOLLOW IN HIS STEPS
The Apostle Paul did not mean the crucifying of a sinful will or sinful desires, plans,
etc., when he said, "I am crucified with Christ." Elsewhere he refers to the
same thing, saying that he desired to be "dead with Him," and to have
"fellowship in His sufferings." So, then, if Christ's crucifixion was not the
crucifixion of a sinful will and sinful desires, neither was St. Paul's, nor are ours as
followers of the spotless Lamb of God.
True, St. Paul and other followers of Christ were by nature sinners and children of wrath
even as others, and hence were very much less than perfect, compared with the Undefiled
One. But their first step of faith in Christ showed them that they had no right nor
privilege to will or to do wrong; and in accepting of justification through the death of
Christ, they confessed not only sorrow for sins past, but repentance and change from sin
for the future to the extent of their ability, realizing that the imputed merit of the
Ransom covered not only past sins, but also all unwillful weaknesses and errors future.
This change of will from sin to righteousness preceded their call to follow Christ, to
suffer with Him and to share with Him the high exaltation to the Divine nature. Thus we
see that with us, as with our Lord, it is our good human wills, our good intentions and
our good plans--not actually perfect as our Lord's, but reckonedly so through His imputed
merit--that are to be crucified, delivered up to death with Christ and to share in His
sacrifice.
As our Lord set aside and crucified His own will, accepting of the Father's will instead,
so we as His footstep followers set aside or crucify our wills or desires--no matter how
good and wise they appear to us--to accept instead the guidance and direction of our Lord
Jesus Christ, who still delights to carry out the Father's Plan, the perfection of which
He can now fully appreciate.