Bunyan Characters (3rd Series) eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Bunyan Characters (3rd Series).

Bunyan Characters (3rd Series) eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Bunyan Characters (3rd Series).

’And to her it was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white; for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints.’  We need no exegesis of that beautiful Scripture beyond that exegesis which our own hearts supply.  And if we did need that shining text to be explained to us, to whom could we better go for its explanation than just to John Bunyan?  Well, then, in our author’s No Way to Heaven but by Jesus Christ, he says:  ’This fine linen, in my judgment, is the works of godly men; their works that spring from faith.  But how came they clean?  How came they white?  Not simply because they were the works of faith.  But, mark, they washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.  And therefore they are before the throne of God.  Yea, therefore it is that their good works stand in such a place.’  ’Nor must we think it strange,’ says John Howe, in his Blessedness of the Righteous, ’that all the requisites to our salvation are not found together in one text of Scripture.  I conceive that imputed righteousness is not here meant, but that righteousness which is truly subjected in a child of God and descriptive of him.  The righteousness of Him whom we adore as made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him, that righteousness has a much higher sphere peculiar and appropriate to itself.  Though this of which we now speak is necessary also to be both had and understood.’  Emmanuel’s livery, then, is the righteousness of the saints.  Emmanuel puts that righteousness upon all His saints; while, at the same time, they put it on themselves; they work it out for themselves, and for themselves they keep it clean.  They work it out, put it on, and keep it clean, and yet, all the time, it is not they that do it, but it is Emmanuel that doeth it all in them.  The truth is, you must all become mystics before you will admit all the strange truth that is told about Emmanuel’s livery.  For both heaven and earth unite in this wonderful livery.  Nature and grace unite in it.  It is woven by the gospel on the loom of the law—­till, to tell you all that is true about it, I neither can nor will I. Albert Bengel tells us that the court of heaven has its own jealous and scrupulous etiquette; and our court journalist and historian, John Bunyan, has supplied his favoured readers with the very card of etiquette that was issued along with Mansoul’s coat of livery, and it is more than time that we had attended to that card.

1.  The first item then in that etiquette-card ran in these set terms:  ’First, wear these white robes daily, day by day, lest you should at some time appear to others as if you were none of Mine.—­Signed, EMMANUEL.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bunyan Characters (3rd Series) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.