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Chapter 45
The Foreshadowing of the Cross
THE work of Christ on earth was hastening to a close. Before Him, in vivid outline, lay
the scenes whither His feet were tending. Even before He took humanity upon Him, He saw
the whole length of the path He must travel in order to save that which was lost. Every
pang that rent His heart, every insult that was heaped upon His head, every privation that
He was called to endure, was open to His view before He laid aside His crown and royal
robe, and stepped down from the throne, to clothe His divinity with humanity. The path
from the manger to Calvary was all before His eyes. He knew the anguish that would come
upon Him. He knew it all, and yet He said, "Lo, I come: in the volume of the Book it
is written of Me, I delight to do Thy will, O My God: yea, Thy law is within My
heart." Ps. 40:7, 8.
Ever before Him He saw the result of His mission. His earthly life, so full of toil and
self-sacrifice, was cheered by the prospect that He would not have all this travail for
nought. By giving His life for the life of men, He would win back the world to its loyalty
to God. Although the baptism of blood must first be received; although the sins of the
world were to weigh upon His innocent soul; although the shadow of an unspeakable woe was
upon Him; yet for the joy that was set before Him, He chose to endure the cross, and
despised the shame.
From the chosen companions of His ministry the scenes that lay before Him were as yet
hidden; but the time was near when they must
behold His agony. They must see Him whom they had loved and trusted, delivered into the
hands of His enemies, and hung upon the cross of Calvary. Soon He must leave them to face
the world without the comfort of His visible presence. He knew how bitter hate and
unbelief would persecute them, and He desired to prepare them for their trials.
Jesus and His disciples had now come into one of the towns about Caesarea Philippi. They
were beyond the limits of Galilee, in a region where idolatry prevailed. Here the
disciples were withdrawn from the controlling influence of Judaism, and brought into
closer contact with the heathen worship. Around them were represented forms of
superstition that existed in all parts of the world. Jesus desired that a view of these
things might lead them to feel their responsibility to the heathen. During His stay in
this region, He endeavored to withdraw from teaching the people, and to devote Himself
more fully to His disciples.
He was about to tell them of the suffering that awaited Him. But first He went away alone,
and prayed that their hearts might be prepared to receive His words. Upon joining them, He
did not at once communicate that which He desired to impart. Before doing this, He gave
them an opportunity of confessing their faith in Him that they might be strengthened for
the coming trial. He asked, "Whom do men say that I the Son of man am?"
Sadly the disciples were forced to acknowledge that Israel had failed to recognize their
Messiah. Some indeed, when they saw His miracles, had declared Him to be the Son of David.
The multitudes that had been fed at Bethsaida had desired to proclaim Him king of Israel.
Many were ready to accept Him as a prophet; but they did not believe Him to be the
Messiah.
Jesus now put a second question, relating to the disciples themselves: "But whom say
ye that I am?" Peter answered, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
God."
From the first, Peter had believed Jesus to be the Messiah. Many others who had been
convicted by the preaching of John the Baptist, and had accepted Christ, began to doubt as
to John's mission when he was imprisoned and put to death; and they now doubted that Jesus
was the Messiah, for whom they had looked so long. Many of the disciples who had ardently
expected Jesus to take His place on David's throne left Him when they perceived that He
had no such intention. But Peter and his
companions turned not from their allegiance. The vacillating course of those who praised
yesterday and condemned today did not destroy the faith of the true follower of the
Saviour. Peter declared, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." He
waited not for kingly honors to crown his Lord, but accepted Him in His humiliation.
Peter had expressed the faith of the twelve. Yet the disciples were still far from
understanding Christ's mission. The opposition and misrepresentation of the priests and
rulers, while it could not turn them away from Christ, still caused them great perplexity.
They did not see their way clearly. The influence of their early training, the teaching of
the rabbis, the power of tradition, still intercepted their view of truth. From time to
time precious rays of light from Jesus shone upon them, yet often they were like men
groping among shadows. But on this day, before they were brought face to face with the
great trial of their faith, the Holy Spirit rested upon them in power. For a little time
their eyes were turned away from "the things which are seen," to behold
"the things which are not seen." 2 Cor. 4:18. Beneath the guise of humanity they
discerned the glory of the Son of God.
Jesus answered Peter, saying, "Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood
hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in heaven."
The truth which Peter had confessed is the foundation of the believer's faith. It is that
which Christ Himself has declared to be eternal life. But the possession of this knowledge
was no ground for self-glorification. Through no wisdom or goodness of his own had it been
revealed to Peter. Never can humanity, of itself, attain to a knowledge of the divine.
"It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? deeper than hell; what canst thou
know?" Job 11:8. Only the spirit of adoption can reveal to us the deep things of God,
which "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of
man." "God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth
all things, yea, the deep things of God." 1 Cor. 2:9, 10. "The secret of the
Lord is with them that fear Him;" and the fact that Peter discerned the glory of
Christ was an evidence that he had been "taught of God." Ps. 25:14; John 6:45.
Ah, indeed, "blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed
it unto thee."
Jesus continued: "I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I
will build My church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it." The word Peter signifies a stone,--a rolling stone. Peter was not the
rock upon which the church was founded. The gates of hell did prevail against him when he
denied his Lord with cursing and swearing. The church was built upon One against whom the
gates of hell could not prevail.
Centuries before the Saviour's advent Moses had pointed to the Rock of Israel's salvation.
The psalmist had sung of "the Rock of my strength." Isaiah had written,
"Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried
stone, a precious cornerstone, a sure foundation." Deut. 32:4; Ps. 62:7; Isa. 28:16.
Peter himself, writing by inspiration, applies this prophecy to Jesus. He says, "If
ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious: unto whom coming, a living stone, rejected
indeed of men, but with God elect, precious, ye also, as living stones, are built up a
spiritual house." 1 Peter 2:3-5, R. V.
"Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ." 1
Cor. 3:11. "Upon this rock," said Jesus, "I will build My church." In
the presence of God, and all the heavenly intelligences, in the presence of the unseen
army of hell, Christ founded His church upon the living Rock. That Rock is Himself,--His
own body, for us broken and bruised. Against the church built upon this foundation, the
gates of hell shall not prevail.
How feeble the church appeared when Christ spoke these words! There was only a handful of
believers, against whom all the power of demons and evil men would be directed; yet the
followers of Christ were not to fear. Built upon the Rock of their strength, they could
not be overthrown.
For six thousand years, faith has builded upon Christ. For six thousand years the floods
and tempests of satanic wrath have beaten upon the Rock of our salvation; but it stands
unmoved.
Peter had expressed the truth which is the foundation of the church's faith, and Jesus now
honored him as the representative of the whole body of believers. He said, "I will
give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth
shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in
heaven."
"The keys of the kingdom of heaven" are the words of Christ. All the words of
Holy Scripture are His, and are here included. These words have power to open and to shut
heaven. They declare the conditions
upon which men are received or rejected. Thus the work of those who preach God's word is a
savor of life unto life or of death unto death. Theirs is a mission weighted with eternal
results.
The Saviour did not commit the work of the gospel to Peter individually. At a later time,
repeating the words that were spoken to Peter, He applied them directly to the church. And
the same in substance was spoken also to the twelve as representatives of the body of
believers. If Jesus had delegated any special authority to one of the disciples above the
others, we should not find them so often contending as to who should be the greatest. They
would have submitted to the wish of their Master, and honored the one whom He had chosen.
Instead of appointing one to be their head, Christ said to the disciples, "Be not ye
called Rabbi;" "neither be ye called masters: for one is your Master, even
Christ." Matt. 23:8, 10.
"The head of every man is Christ." God, who put all things under the Saviour's
feet, "gave Him to be the head over all things to the church, which is His body, the
fullness of Him that filleth all in all." 1 Cor. 11:3; Eph. 1:22, 23. The church is
built upon Christ as its foundation; it is to obey Christ as its head. It is not to depend
upon man, or be controlled by man. Many claim that a position of trust in the church gives
them authority to dictate what other men shall believe and what they shall do. This claim
God does not sanction. The Saviour declares, "All ye are brethren." All are
exposed to temptation, and are liable to error. Upon no finite being can we depend for
guidance. The Rock of faith is the living presence of Christ in the church. Upon this the
weakest may depend, and those who think themselves the strongest will prove to be the
weakest, unless they make Christ their efficiency. "Cursed be the man that trusteth
in man, and maketh flesh his arm." The Lord "is the Rock, His work is
perfect." "Blessed are all they that put their trust in Him." Jer. 17:5;
Deut. 32:4; Ps. 2:12.
After Peter's confession, Jesus charged the disciples to tell no man that He was the
Christ. This charge was given because of the determined opposition of the scribes and
Pharisees. More than this, the people, and even the disciples, had so false a conception
of the Messiah that a public announcement of Him would give them no true idea of His
character or His work. But day by day He was revealing Himself to them as the Saviour, and
thus He desired to give them a true conception of Him as the Messiah.
The disciples still expected Christ to reign as a temporal prince. Although He had so long
concealed His design, they believed that He would not always remain in poverty and
obscurity; the time was near when He would establish His kingdom. That the hatred of the
priests and rabbis would never be overcome, that Christ would be rejected by His own
nation, condemned as a deceiver, and crucified as a malefactor,--such a thought the
disciples had never entertained. But the hour of the power of darkness was drawing on, and
Jesus must open to His disciples the conflict before them. He was sad as He anticipated
the trial.
Hitherto He had refrained from making known to them anything relative to His sufferings
and death. In His conversation with Nicodemus He had said, "As Moses lifted up the
serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life." John 3:14, 15. But the
disciples did not hear this, and had they heard, would not have understood. But now they
have been with Jesus, listening to His words, beholding His works, until, notwithstanding
the humility of His surroundings, and the opposition of priests and people, they can join
in the testimony of Peter, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." Now
the time has come for the veil that hides the future to be withdrawn. "From that time
forth began Jesus to show unto His disciples, how that He must go unto Jerusalem, and
suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be
raised again the third day."
Speechless with grief and amazement, the disciples listened. Christ had accepted Peter's
acknowledgment of Him as the Son of God; and now His words pointing to His suffering and
death seemed incomprehensible. Peter could not keep silent. He laid hold upon his Master,
as if to draw Him back from His impending doom, exclaiming, "Be it far from Thee,
Lord: this shall not be unto Thee."
Peter loved his Lord; but Jesus did not commend him for thus manifesting the desire to
shield Him from suffering. Peter's words were not such as would be a help and solace to
Jesus in the great trial before Him. They were not in harmony with God's purpose of grace
toward a lost world, nor with the lesson of self-sacrifice that Jesus had come to teach by
His own example. Peter did not desire to see the cross in the work of Christ. The
impression which his words would make was directly opposed to that which Christ desired to
make on the minds of His followers, and the Saviour was moved to utter one of the sternest
rebukes that ever fell from His lips: "Get thee behind Me, Satan: thou art an offense unto
Me: for thou savorest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men."
Satan was trying to discourage Jesus, and turn Him from His mission; and Peter, in his
blind love, was giving voice to the temptation. The prince of evil was the author of the
thought. His instigation was behind that impulsive appeal. In the wilderness, Satan had
offered Christ the dominion of the world on condition of forsaking the path of humiliation
and sacrifice. Now he was presenting the same temptation to the disciple of Christ. He was
seeking to fix Peter's gaze upon the earthly glory, that he might not behold the cross to
which Jesus desired to turn his eyes. And through Peter, Satan was again pressing the
temptation upon Jesus. But the Saviour heeded it not; His thought was for His disciple.
Satan had interposed between Peter and his Master, that the heart of the disciple might
not be touched at the vision of Christ's humiliation for him. The words of Christ were
spoken, not to Peter, but to the one who was trying to separate him from his Redeemer.
"Get thee behind Me, Satan." No longer interpose between Me and My erring
servant. Let Me come face to face with Peter, that I may reveal to him the mystery of My
love.
It was to Peter a bitter lesson, and one which he learned but slowly, that the path of
Christ on earth lay through agony and humiliation. The disciple shrank from fellowship
with his Lord in suffering. But in the heat of the furnace fire he was to learn its
blessing. Long afterward, when his active form was bowed with the burden of years and
labors, he wrote, "Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is
to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you: but rejoice, inasmuch as ye
are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be
glad also with exceeding joy." 1 Peter 4:12, 13.
Jesus now explained to His disciples that His own life of self-abnegation was an example
of what theirs should be. Calling about Him, with the disciples, the people who had been
lingering near, He said, "If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and
take up his cross daily, and follow Me." The cross was associated with the power of
Rome. It was the instrument of the most cruel and humiliating form of death. The lowest
criminals were required to bear the cross to the place of execution; and often as it was
about to be laid upon their shoulders, they resisted with desperate violence, until they
were overpowered, and the instrument of torture was bound upon them. But Jesus bade His followers take up the
cross and bear it after Him. To the disciples His words, though dimly comprehended,
pointed to their submission to the most bitter humiliation,--submission even unto death
for the sake of Christ. No more complete self-surrender could the Saviour's words have
pictured. But all this He had accepted for them. Jesus did not count heaven a place to be
desired while we were lost. He left the heavenly courts for a life of reproach and insult,
and a death of shame. He who was rich in heaven's priceless treasure, became poor, that
through His poverty we might be rich. We are to follow in the path He trod.
Love for souls for whom Christ died means crucifixion of self. He who is a child of God
should henceforth look upon himself as a link in the chain let down to save the world, one
with Christ in His plan of mercy, going forth with Him to seek and save the lost. The
Christian is ever to realize that he has consecrated himself to God, and that in character
he is to reveal Christ to the world. The self-sacrifice, the sympathy, the love,
manifested in the life of Christ are to reappear in the life of the worker for God.
"Whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for My
sake and the gospel's, the same shall save it." Selfishness is death. No organ of the
body could live should it confine its service to itself. The heart, failing to send its
lifeblood to the hand and the head, would quickly lose its power. As our lifeblood, so is
the love of Christ diffused through every part of His mystical body. We are members one of
another, and the soul that refuses to impart will perish. And "what is a man
profited," said Jesus, "if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?
or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
Beyond the poverty and humiliation of the present, He pointed the disciples to His coming
in glory, not in the splendor of an earthly throne, but with the glory of God and the
hosts of heaven. And then, He said, "He shall reward every man according to his
works." Then for their encouragement He gave the promise, "Verily I say unto
you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of
man coming in His kingdom." But the disciples did not comprehend His words. The glory
seemed far away. Their eyes were fixed upon the nearer view, the earthly life of poverty,
humiliation, and suffering. Must their glowing expectations of the Messiah's kingdom be
relinquished? Were they not to see their Lord exalted to the throne of
David? Could it be that Christ was to live a humble, homeless wanderer, to be despised,
rejected, and put to death? Sadness oppressed their hearts, for they loved their Master.
Doubt also harassed their minds, for it seemed incomprehensible that the Son of God should
be subjected to such cruel humiliation. They questioned why He should voluntarily go to
Jerusalem to meet the treatment which He had told them He was there to receive. How could
He resign Himself to such a fate, and leave them in greater darkness than that in which
they were groping before He revealed Himself to them?
In the region of Caesarea Philippi, Christ was out of the reach of Herod and Caiaphas, the
disciples reasoned. He had nothing to fear from the hatred of the Jews or from the power
of the Romans. Why not work there, at a distance from the Pharisees? Why need He give
Himself up to death? If He was to die, how was it that His kingdom was to be established
so firmly that the gates of hell should not prevail against it? To the disciples this was
indeed a mystery.
They were even now journeying along the shores of the Sea of Galilee toward the city where
all their hopes were to be crushed. They dared not remonstrate with Christ, but they
talked together in low, sorrowful tones in regard to what the future would be. Even amid
their questionings they clung to the thought that some unforeseen circumstance might avert
the doom which seemed to await their Lord. Thus they sorrowed and doubted, hoped and
feared, for six long, gloomy days.
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