The Exaltation of God's Only Begotten Son, Christ JESUS
"My counsel shall stand, and I will do all My pleasure." -Isaiah 46:10 [KJV]
There
is one grand idea running through the whole of Scripture from Genesis
to Revelation; and this one grand idea runs through every part of the
sacred page, and, like a golden band, unites the whole together. What is
this one grand thought? God has many thoughts as well as we, for He
tells us that "the thoughts of His heart stand to all generations." But
we read also in the same verse of "the counsel of the LORD, which
standeth for ever;" and elsewhere of His "working all things after the
counsel of His own will" (Psalm 33:11; Ephesians 1:11). Thus in the mind of
God, as well as in the mode of His subsistence, there is unity and
variety. There is His one thought, and His many thoughts; for though His
thoughts are many, His counsel is but one; and this counsel is the
exaltation and glorification of His dear Son. It may be as well briefly
to trace this unity of thought and the variety of its expression.
We
see it, then, first expressed in the creation of the first man, when
God made him "in His own image, after His own likeness." There was the
expression of God's one thought; for Adam the first was a type of Adam
the second, and as Christ was by lineal descent "the son of Adam," there
was a foreview in the creation of the first man of the incarnation of
God's dear Son, who is the brightness of His glory and the express image
of His Person.
Now next observe how all things were put under Adam's
feet, and he thus made the visible head of creation. Read this
exaltation of Adam in the light of Psalm 8, and you will see how the
inspired Psalmist, as interpreted by the Apostle (Hebrews 2:7-9), viewed
Adam, in having all things put under his feet, as a type of Jesus, whom
God has crowned with glory and honour, set Him over the works of His
hands, and put all things in subjection under His feet.
The word of God is a perfect mystery to us, and we see no beauty or harmony in the various books of either the Old Testament or the New until we see the mind of God in it, gather up God's thoughts, and especially that grand thought which I have spoken of as binding the whole together, viz. the exaltation of His dear Son to His own right hand as the promised reward of His sufferings and death, and the glorious result of His resurrection and ascension up to the courts of bliss.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
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