Sermon 8: Romans 5:6-9

  One motive only should actuate the minds of those who study the word of God and that is that they may by this study be drawn nearer to God.  God is no respecter of persons.  He will give His Holy Spirit to any and to all who ask for it.  He is just as willing to make the truths of the Bible plain to one as to another.  Peace and light may come into your hearts from what is spoken from the desk; but if you do not know the word for yourselves, that peace and light will not stay with you.  The Holy Spirit spoke the words of the Bible, and it is only by the aid of the Holy Spirit that it can be understood.  Any one who will submit themselves to the Holy Spirit may understand the Bible for himself.

  There is only one true help to the Bible--the Spirit of God.  If you get your ideas about Christ and His work from the writings of other men, you get it second hand at best.  Draw your light straight from the Bible.  Learn the Bible from the Bible itself.  When the Holy Spirit illuminates our minds, although the word will appear simple, at the same time there will be heights and depths to it that will fill us with amazement.  All eternity will be spent in studying the plan of salvation and the longer we study the more we will find to study.

  Last evening our study brought us to the close of the fifth verse of the fifth chapter.  We will commence this evening at the sixth.

  "For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly."  Mark the words "without strength."  There was a fixed time in the history of the world when Christ was offered on the cross of Calvary.  But that was not the only time when Christ availed for the ungodly.  Who are the ungodly?  They are those who are "without strength."  The human family has been without strength from the fall, and they are without strength today.  When men find themselves without strength, Christ is to be lifted up, and He says that He will draw all men unto Him.  So we can look to Jesus as a crucified and risen Saviour today, just as much as could the disciples.

  We sometimes think that we look back to Christ and that the patriarchs and prophets looked forward to Him.  Is it so?  We look up to Christ and so did they.  We look to Christ a loving Redeemer by our side, and so did they.  Said Moses to the children of Israel:  "It is not in heaven, that thou shouldest say, who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it, and do it?  . . . But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou mayest do it."  The Word, which was Christ the Redeemer, was nigh unto them, and He is nigh unto us.