Grace Has Worked It All Out
"That
at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth
of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope,
and without God in the world." -Ephesians 2:12 [KJV]
The apostle here tells the Ephesians that in their natural state, before
divinely quickened and made alive unto God, they were "without Christ,"
that is, without manifest union and communion with Him. Though in the
purposes of God, and by their eternal election in Christ, they were
members of His mystical body, they had not been baptized into Christ by
the Spirit so as to be made living members of His spiritual body, the
Church (I Corinthians 12:13), and therefore had not "put on Christ" (Galatians 3:27).
And as they were, such were we. We were "without Christ" in our
Gentile days. He had no place in our thoughts. We knew nothing of His
Person and work, blood and righteousness, beauty and blessedness, grace
and glory. He was to us a root out of a dry ground, and in our eyes He
had no form nor comeliness. His name might have been on our lips, but His Spirit and grace were not in our hearts. And if matters be in any
way different now with us, if there be any faith on Him, hope in Him, or
love to Him, grace has wrought it all. Let us never forget what we were
before we were called by grace.
Let the remembrance of our sins and of
the whole bent and current of our lives be bitter to us, that we may all
the more prize and admire the riches of that sovereign grace which
stooped to us in our low and lost estate. The paschal lamb was to be
eaten with bitter herbs. The remembrance of Egyptian bondage should ever
accompany the enjoyment of gospel liberty, and godly sorrow for sin the
feeding on the flesh of Christ.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
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