Sermon 22. Witnesses of the
Resurrection
"Him God raised up the third day, and showed
Him openly; not to all the people, but unto witnesses
chosen before of God, even to us who did eat and
drink with Him after He rose from the dead."
Acts x. 40, 41.
{282} IT might have been expected, that, on our Saviour's
rising again from the dead, He would have shown Himself
to very great numbers of people, and especially to those
who crucified Him; whereas we know from the history,
that, far from this being the case, He showed Himself
only to chosen witnesses, chiefly His immediate
followers; and St. Peter avows this in the text. This
seems at first sight strange. We are apt to fancy the
resurrection of Christ as some striking visible display
of His glory, such as God vouchsafed from time to time to
the Israelites in Moses' day; and considering it in the
light of a public triumph, we are led to imagine the
confusion and terror which would have overwhelmed His
murderers, had He presented Himself alive before them.
Now, thus to reason, is to conceive Christ's kingdom of this
world, which it is not; and to suppose that then Christ
came to judge the world, {283} whereas that judgment will not
be till the last day, when in very deed those wicked men shall
"look on Him whom they have pierced."
But even without insisting upon the spiritual nature
of Christ's kingdom, which seems to be the direct reason
why Christ did not show Himself to all the Jews after His
resurrection, other distinct reasons may be given,
instructive too. And one of these I will now set before
you.
This is the question, "Why did not our Saviour
show Himself after His resurrection to all the people?
why only to witnesses chosen before of God?" and
this is my answer: "Because this was the most
effectual means of propagating His religion through the
world."
After His resurrection, He said to His disciples,
"Go, convert all nations:" [Matt. xxviii. 19.]
this was His especial charge. If, then, there are grounds
for thinking that, by showing Himself to a few rather
than to many, He was more surely advancing this great
object, the propagation of the Gospel, this is a
sufficient reason for our Lord's having so ordained; and
let us thankfully receive His dispensation, as He has
given it.
1. Now consider what would have been the probable
effect of a public exhibition of His resurrection. Let us
suppose that our Saviour had shown Himself as openly as
before He suffered; preaching in the Temple and in the
streets of the city; traversing the land with His
Apostles, and with multitudes following to see
the miracles which He did. What would have been the {284} effect of this? Of course, what it had already been. His
former miracles had not effectually moved the body of the
people; and, doubtless, this miracle too would have left
them as it found them, or worse than before. They might
have been more startled at the time; but why should this
amazement last? When the man taken with a palsy was
suddenly restored at His word, the multitude were all
amazed, and glorified God, and were filled with fear,
saying, "We have seen strange things today."
[Luke v. 26.] What could they have said and felt
more than this, when "one rose from the dead"?
In truth, this is the way of the mass of mankind in all
ages, to be influenced by sudden fears, sudden
contrition, sudden earnestness, sudden resolves, which
disappear as suddenly. Nothing is done effectually
through untrained human nature; and such is ever the
condition of the multitude. Unstable as water, it cannot
excel. One day it cried Hosanna; the next, Crucify Him.
And, had our Lord appeared to them after they had
crucified Him, of course they would have shouted Hosanna
once more; and when He had ascended out of sight, then
again they would have persecuted His followers. Besides,
the miracle of the Resurrection was much more exposed to
the cavils of unbelief than others which our Lord had
displayed; than that, for instance, of feeding the
multitudes in the wilderness. Had our Lord appeared in
public, yet few could have touched Him, and certified
themselves it was He Himself. Few, comparatively, in a
great multitude could so have seen Him {285} both before and
after His death, as to be adequate witnesses of the
reality of the miracle. It would have been open to the
greater number of them still to deny that He was
risen. This is the very feeling St. Matthew records. When
He appeared on a mountain in Galilee to His apostles and
others, as it would seem (perhaps the five hundred
brethren mentioned by St. Paul), "some doubted"
whether it were He. How could it be otherwise? these had
no means of ascertaining that they really saw Him
who had been crucified, dead, and buried. Others,
admitting it was Jesus, would have denied that He ever
died. Not having seen Him dead on the cross, they might
have pretended He was taken down thence before life was
extinct, and so restored. This supposition would be a
sufficient excuse to those who wished not to
believe. And the more ignorant part would fancy they had
seen a spirit without flesh and bones as man has.
They would have resolved the miracle into a magical
illusion, as the Pharisees had done before, when they
ascribed His works to Beelzebub; and would have been
rendered no better or more religious by the sight of Him,
than the common people are now-a-days by tales of
apparitions and witches.
Surely so it would have been; the chief priests would
not have been moved at all; and the populace, however
they had been moved at the time, would not have been
lastingly moved, not practically moved, not so moved as
to proclaim to the world what they had heard and seen, as
to preach the Gospel. This is the point to be kept in
view: and consider that the very reason why Christ
showed Himself at all was in order to raise up witnesses
{286} to His resurrection, ministers of His word, founders of
His Church; and how in the nature of things could a
populace ever become such?
2. Now, on the other hand, let us contemplate the
means which His Divine Wisdom actually adopted with a
view of making His resurrection subservient to the
propagation of His Gospel.He showed Himself openly,
not to all the people, but unto witnesses chosen before
of God. It is, indeed, a general characteristic of
the course of His providence to make the few the channels
of His blessings to the many; but in the instance we are
contemplating, a few were selected, because only a few could
(humanly speaking) be made instruments. As I have already
said, to be witnesses of His resurrection it was
requisite to have known our Lord intimately before His
death. This was the case with the Apostles; but this was
not enough. It was necessary they should be certain it
was He Himself, the very same whom they before knew. You
recollect how He urged them to handle Him, and be sure
that they could testify to His rising again. This is
intimated in the text also; ''witnesses chosen before of
God, even to us who did eat and drink with Him after He
rose from the dead." Nor were they required merely
to know Him, but the thought of Him was to be stamped
upon their minds as the one master-spring of their whole
course of life for the future. But men are not easily
wrought upon to be faithful advocates of any cause. Not
only is the multitude fickle: but the best men, unless
urged, tutored, disciplined to their work, give way;
untrained nature has no principles. {287}
It would seem, then, that our Lord gave His attention
to a few, because, if the few be gained, the many will
follow. To these few He showed Himself again and again.
These He restored, comforted, warned, inspired. He formed
them unto Himself, that they might show forth His praise.
This His gracious procedure is opened to us in the first
words of the Book of the Acts. "To the Apostles whom
He had chosen He showed Himself alive after His passion
by many infallible proofs; being seen of them forty days,
and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of
God." Consider, then, if we may state the
alternative reverently, which of the two seems the
more likely way, even according to a human wisdom, of
forming preachers of the Gospel to all nations,the
exhibition of the Resurrection to the Jewish people
generally, or this intimate private certifying of it to a
few? And remember that, as far as we can understand, the
two procedures were inconsistent with each other; for
that period of preparatory prayer, meditation, and
instruction, which the Apostles passed under our Lord's
visible presence for forty days, was to them what it
could not have been, had they been following Him from
place to place in public, supposing there had been an
object in this, and mixing in the busy crowds of the
world.
3. I have already suggested, what is too obvious
almost to insist upon, that in making a select few the
ministers of His mercy to mankind at large, our Lord was
but acting according to the general course of His
providence. It is plain every great change is effected by
the few, not by the many; by the resolute, undaunted, {288} zealous few. True it is that societies sometimes fall to
pieces by their own corruption, which is in one sense a
change without special instruments chosen or allowed by
God; but this is a dissolution, not a work. Doubtless,
much may be undone by the many, but nothing is done
except by those who are specially trained for action. In
the midst of the famine Jacob's sons stood looking one
upon another, but did nothing. One or two men, of small
outward pretensions, but with their hearts in their work,
these do great things. These are prepared, not by sudden
excitement, or by vague general belief in the truth of
their cause, but by deeply impressed, often repeated
instruction; and since it stands to reason that it is
easier to teach a few than a great number, it is plain
such men always will be few. Such as these spread the
knowledge of Christ's resurrection over the idolatrous
world. Well they answered the teaching of their Lord and
Master. Their success sufficiently approves to us His
wisdom in showing Himself to them, not to all the people.
4. Remember, too, this further reason why the
witnesses of the Resurrection were few in number; viz.
because they were on the side of Truth. If the
witnesses were to be such as really loved and obeyed the
Truth, there could not be many chosen. Christ's
cause was the cause of light and religion, therefore His
advocates and ministers were necessarily few. It is an
old proverb (which even the heathen admitted), that
"the many are bad." Christ did not confide His
Gospel to the many; had He done so, we may even say, that
it would have been at first sight a presumption against
its coming {289} from God. What was the chief work of His whole
ministry, but that of choosing and separating from
the multitude those who should be fit recipients of His
Truth? As He went the round of the country again and
again, through Galilee and Judea, He tried the spirits of
men the while; and rejecting the baser sort who
"honoured Him with their lips while their hearts
were far from Him," He specially chose twelve. The
many He put aside for a while as an adulterous and sinful
generation, intending to make one last experiment on the
mass when the Spirit should come. But His twelve He
brought near to Himself at once, and taught them. Then He
sifted them, and one fell away; the eleven escaped as
though by fire. For these eleven especially He
rose again; He visited them and taught them
for forty days; for in them He saw the fruit of
the "travail of His soul and was satisfied;" in
them "He saw His seed, He prolonged His days, and
the pleasure of the Lord prospered in His hand."
These were His witnesses, for they had the love of the
Truth in their hearts. "I have chosen you," He
says to them, "and ordained you that ye should go
and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should
remain." [John xv. 16.]
So much then in answer to the question, Why did not
Christ show Himself to the whole Jewish people after His
resurrection. I ask in reply, what would have been the
use of it? a mere passing triumph over sinners whose
judgment is reserved for the next world. On the other
hand, such a procedure would have interfered with, {290} nay,
defeated, the real object of His rising again, the
propagation of His Gospel through the world by means
of His own intimate friends and followers. And
further, this preference of the few to the many seems to
have been necessary from the nature of man, since all
great works are effected, not by a multitude, but by the deep-seated resolution of a few;nay, necessary too
from man's depravity, for, alas! popular favour is hardly
to be expected for the cause of Truth. And our Lord's
instruments were few, if for no other reason, yet at
least for this, because more were not to be found,
because there were but few faithful Israelites without
guile in Israel according to the flesh.
Now, let us observe how much matter, both for warning
and comfort, is supplied by this view. We learn from the
picture of the infant Church what that Church has
been ever since, that is, as far as man can understand
it. Many are called, few are chosen. We learn to reflect
on the great danger there is, lest we be not in the number
of the chosen, and are warned to "watch and pray
that we enter not into temptation," to "work
out our salvation with fear and trembling," to seek
God's mercy in His Holy Church, and to pray to Him ever
that He would "fulfil in us the good pleasure of His
will," and complete what He once began.
But, besides this, we are comforted too; we are
comforted, as many of us as are living humbly in the fear
of God. Who those secret ones are, who in the bosom of
the visible Church live as saints fulfilling their
calling, God only knows. We are in the dark about it. We
may indeed know much about {291} ourselves, and we may form
somewhat of a judgment about those with whom we are well
acquainted. But of the general body of Christians we know
little or nothing. It is our duty to consider them as
Christians, to take them as we find them, and to love
them; and it is no concern of ours to debate about their
state in God's sight. Without, however, entering into
this question concerning God's secret counsels, let us
receive this truth before us for a practical purpose;
that is, I speak to all who are conscious to
themselves that they wish and try to serve God, whatever
their progress in religion be, and whether or not they
dare apply to themselves, or in whatever degree, the
title of Christian in its most sacred sense. All who obey
the Truth are on the side of the Truth, and the Truth
will prevail. Few in number but strong in the Spirit,
despised by the world, yet making way while they
suffered, the twelve Apostles overturned the power of
darkness, and established the Christian Church. And let
all "who love the Lord Jesus Christ in
sincerity" be quite sure, that weak though they
seem, and solitary, yet the "foolishness of God is
wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than
men." The many are "deceitful," and the
worldly-wise are "vain;" but he "that
feareth the Lord, the same shall be praised." The
most excellent gifts of the intellect last but for a
season. Eloquence and wit, shrewdness and dexterity,
these plead a cause well and propagate it quickly, but it
dies with them. It has no root in the hearts of men, and
lives not out a generation. It is the consolation of the
despised Truth, that its works endure. Its words {292} are few,
but they live. Abel's faith to this day, "yet
speaketh." [Heb. xi. 4.] The blood of the Martyrs is
the seed of the Church. "Fret not thyself" then
"because of evil doers, neither be thou envious
against the workers of iniquity. For they shall soon be
cut down like the grass, and wither as the green herb.
Trust in the Lord and do good
delight thyself also
in Him, and He shall give thee the desires of thy heart;
commit thy way unto the Lord, trust also in Him, and He
shall bring it to pass
He shall bring forth thy
righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the
noon-day
A little that a righteous man hath is
better than the riches of many wicked. For the
arms of the wicked shall be broken, but the Lord
upholdeth the righteous
I have seen the wicked in
great power, and spreading himself like a green bay-tree,
yet he passed away, and, lo! he was not; yea, I sought
him, and he could not be found." [Ps. xxxvii. 1-6,
16, 17, 35, 36.] The heathen world made much ado when the
Apostles preached the Resurrection. They and their
associates were sent out as lambs among wolves; but they
prevailed.
We, too, though we are not witnesses of Christ's
actual resurrection, are so spiritually. By a heart awake
from the dead, and by affections set on heaven, we can as
truly and without figure witness that Christ liveth, as
they did. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the
witness in himself. Truth bears witness by itself to its
Divine Author. He who obeys God conscientiously, and
lives holily, forces all about him to {293} believe and tremble
before the unseen power of Christ. To the world indeed at
large he witnesses not; for few can see him near enough
to be moved by his manner of living. But to his
neighbours he manifests the Truth in proportion to their
knowledge of him; and some of them, through God's
blessing, catch the holy flame, cherish it, and in their
turn transmit it. And thus in a dark world Truth still
makes way in spite of the darkness, passing from hand to
hand. And thus it keeps its station in high places,
acknowledged as the creed of nations, the multitude of
which are ignorant, the while, on what it rests, how it
came there, how it keeps its ground; and despising it,
think it easy to dislodge it. But "the Lord
reigneth." He is risen from the dead, "His
throne is established of old; He is from everlasting. The
floods have lifted up their voice, the floods lift up
their waves. The Lord on high is mightier than the noise
of many waters, yea, than the mighty waves of the sea.
His testimonies are very sure; holiness becometh His
house forever." [Ps. xciii. 2-5.]
Let these be our thoughts whenever the prevalence of
error leads us to despond. When St. Peter's disciple,
Ignatius, was brought before the Roman emperor, he called
himself Theophorus; and when the emperor asked the feeble
old man why he so called himself, Ignatius said it was
because he carried Christ in his breast. He witnessed
there was but One God, who made heaven, earth, and sea,
and all that is in them, and One Lord Jesus Christ, His
Only-begotten Son, "whose kingdom {294} (he added) be my
portion!" The emperor asked, "His kingdom, say
you, who was crucified under Pilate?" "His
(answered the Saint) who crucified my sin in me, and who
has put all the fraud and malice of Satan under the feet
of those who carry Him in their hearts: as it is written,
'I dwell in them and walk in them.'"
Ignatius was one against many, as St. Peter had been
before him; and was put to death as the Apostle had
been;but he handed on the Truth, in his day. At
length we have received it. Weak though we be, and
solitary, God forbid we should not in our turn hand it
on; glorifying Him by our lives, and in all our words and
works witnessing Christ's passion, death, and
resurrection!
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