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Preachers
of the Truth
Charles Fuller
Additional comments by Bob Gessner
January 2000
Preachers of the truth! God has always had
them down through the centuries. Did you ever wish you could hear some of these
great servants preaching from the Word of God? We cannot hear them, but some of
their messages have been preserved. Lets go way back to the early
centuries of Christianity and look at three brief messages concerning the Lord
Jesus Christ.
- Heres a brief message from
Athanasius concerning Christs incarnation. He lived from 293 to 373 A.D.,
over 1600 years ago. And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and we
beheld His glory
.(Jn.1:14). "For He did not simply will to become
embodied, or will merely to appear. For if He willed merely to appear, He was
able to affect His divine appearance by some other and higher means as well. But
He takes a body of our kind, and not merely so, but from a spotless and
stainless virgin, knowing not a man, a body clean and pure from intercourse of
men. For being Himself mighty, and Artificer of everything, He prepares the body
in the virgin as a temple unto Himself, and makes it His very own as an
instrument, in it manifested, and in it dwelling. He took pity on our race, and
had mercy on our infirmity, and unable to bear that death should have the
mastery, lest the creature should perish, and His Fathers handiwork in men
be spent for nought. He takes unto Himself a body, and that of no different sort
from ours. " Because he preached Christ, in his old age, Athanasius was
forced to flee to a cemetery and take refuge for nearly half a year in a
sepulcher.
- Now lets again go back 1600 years
and listen to the words of Ambrose, who lived from 340 397 A.D. He holds
forth on the subject of Christs deity. In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God (Jn.1: 1). "Seeing then
that Christ is God, He is, by the consequence, good and almighty and eternal and
perfect and true; for these attributes belong to the essential nature of the
Godhead. Further, that none may fall into error, let a man attend to those signs
vouchsafed us by Holy Scripture, whereby we may know the Son. He is called the
Word, the Son, the Power of God, and the Wisdom of God. Now these are not mere
names, but signs of power manifesting itself in works, for while there is
fulness of Godhead in the Father, there is also fulness of Godhead in the Son,
not diverse, but one. The Godhead is nothing confused, for it is an unity;
nothing manifold, for in it there is no difference." Faustina, the mother
of the Roman emperor, sent a troop of solders to arrest Ambrose because of his
stand on the Person of Christ. His bold spirit caused the soldiers to refuse to
obey the orders of Faustina and they gave up on their mission. Aurelius
Augustine (354 430), a great preacher in these early times, came to
understand the Gospel of grace through the preaching of Ambrose.
- Moving into the eleventh century of
Christianity, still over eight hundred years ago, we hear the words of Anselm
(1033 1109) regarding the death of Christ. Except a corn of wheat
fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth
much fruit (JN.12: 24). "No man besides Him ever gave to God, by dying,
what he was not necessarily going to lose at some time, or paid what he did not
owe. But this Man freely offered to the Father what he would never have lost by
any necessity, and paid for sinners what He did not owe for Himself. Therefore
He gave us a more striking example, to the effect that each man should not
hesitate to surrender to God for himself, when reason demands it, what he is
going to lose very soon. For although He did not need to do it for Himself, and
was not compelled to do it for others, since He owed them nothing but
punishment, He gave up such a precious life yes, nothing less than
Himself surrendering so great a person with such willingness." This
message was preached four centuries before the Protestant revolution.
Compromise, political changes, ecclesiastical double-dealing put Anselm in
difficult positions, but he stuck to his principles.
Of these great preachers of centuries ago,
Charles O. Fuller, in his book, Valiant for the Truth, says of them, "Each
man possessed the same fierce conviction, that all truth is absolute, never
relative. For these men, truth was never a nose of wax to be twisted to suit
their system of dialectics or deceptive casuistry. Two times two made four. In
mathematics, their supreme authority was the multiplication table; in theology,
their absolute authority was the Bible. They held verbal inspiration essential.
To them it was as much a test of Christian fellowship as any other fundamental
of their faith: the virgin birth, the sinless life of Christ; His
substitutionary death; His bodily resurrection. These truths, absolute in their
nature, formed a golden chain forged by the Holy Spirit. If one link was
missing, the whole would be in jeopardy."
What about those of us who, in the will of
God, may enter the twenty-first and probably the last century of Christianity,
will we be as valiant for the truth as these men were? They were vessels used
mightily of God when Christianity had its beginning. God wants us to be vessels
standing valiantly for him when Christianity has its ending.
Wherefore seeing we also are compassed
about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the
sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is
set before us" (Heb.12: 1).
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