Thomas Brooks (1608-1680) with sweetness and conviction writes of our love to Christ. Oh, how we need, not only to read, but to embody such a life! Much Christianity (too much!) tends to be plastic and objective, failing to move our heart of hearts. Such is not what true faith was meant to engender. One must wonder what kind of faith most Christians espouse, for it seems to contain far too little passion for Christ himself.
The following is a somewhat abbreviated form of what I handed out to the Wednesday evening Bible Study. Though some of the language is archaic, its meaning comes through powerfully. I found it was especially impacting when read aloud. Try it! Meditate upon it.
Look that ye love the Lord Jesus Christ with a superlative love, with an overtopping [superior] 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 hath 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; yea, 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. 12:11, 'They loved not their lives unto the death;' that is, they slighted, contemned, yea, 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 Saviour are dearer to me than all.”
“If my father,” saith 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 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 Saviour, didst thou die for love of me, a love sadder than death, but to me a death more lovely than love itself? I cannot live, love thee, and be longer from thee.”
It is reported of Babylas, that when he was to die for Christ, he desired this favour, that his chains might be buried with him, as the ensigns of his honour.
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? [emphasis mine]
Certainly the more Christ hath 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! . . .
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 (John 10: 17, 18)? Shall Saul be affected with David's kindness in sparing his life (1 Sam. 24: 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 1: 18), and come down from heaven, that he might carry you up to heaven (John 14: 1-4); that he that was a Son should take upon him the form of a servant (Phil. 2: 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. 8: 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. 12: 19, 20; Prov. 26: 21). Now the property of fire is to turn all it meets with into its own nature: fire maketh all things fire; the coal maketh 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. 3: 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. 3), 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 Saviour 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?
Amen!
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