A Message to Younger Christians
"I bear branded on
my body the marks of Jesus". (Galatians 6:17.)
The marks of Jesus;
whether these were actually marks on his body, scars of
his sufferings, or whether he was using a figure, a
well-known figure of speech, we may not be quite sure. It
is possible that Paul meant both; that is that there were
marks on his body, marks of the rod with which he had
been beaten, marks of stones with which he had been
stoned, marks of the hardships through which he had
passed, and then, looking at them, he thought of them in
the light of the brand. You know what the brand is.
Animals are branded, branded with hot irons. And he
looked at those scars and thought of them as brands. But
it does not matter very much which it was. It was quite
true that Paul bore branded in his very being the marks
of Jesus. It is that that matters - that there shall
be the marks of Jesus.
I want to suggest to
you that these marks, these scars to which the Apostle
referred as branded on his body, were marks which
represent three things. In the first place, they were
1.
The Marks of Ownership
They declared that he
belonged to the Lord Jesus, and everybody could see it. I
think that that was very much in the mind of the apostle
because of the figure of speech, or the well-known custom
to which he referred.
The brand - "I
bear branded on my body the marks of Jesus". Every
owner has his own branding mark, branding iron, and all
who see that mark can know to whom that one so branded
belongs. I think further that the Apostle had in his mind
not the branding of animals, but, what in the Greek world
in his day was a well-known custom, the branding of
slaves. Now you know, in those days and in that world
slaves were purchased at a price, became the property of
the master, and there was no getting their liberty unless
in some way they could pay the price which had been paid
for them, and this was very doubtful. If they earned any
wages at all, it would be a whole lifetime before they
could save enough to buy themselves free. But there was a
way out, there was a custom. They could go to the temple
of their god and see the priest and they could sell
themselves to the god to become the property of the god
or the gods - heathen gods, of course, which were no
gods. If they did that, the priest took a branding iron
which had the mark of the god, the particular god or
deity, and he pulled up the sleeve of the slave and
branded on his arm the mark of the god, and from that
time he was regarded as the slave of the gods, which
meant that he was free from all other slavery. He could
go out. Now, should his old master, or the successor of
his old master, or any of his relatives, try to bring him
back again into bondage - as they might; they might
pursue him, overtake him, seek to bring him back again
into slavery - when they sought so to do, all that he had
to do was to draw up his sleeve and show the brand mark
of the god, and they dare not touch him. If they did,
they became the enemy of the god - the god was against
them, and no one would dare that. Because he was a slave
of the god, he was a free man in the world.
Paul knew all about
that, and I think it was to that he referred when he said
"Let no man trouble me". Let no one try to
bring me into bondage! Let no one lay any hand upon me to
make me their property! I belong to the Lord Jesus, and
"I bear branded on my body the marks of Jesus".
A little way before he had said - "God forbid that I
should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the
world". He was saying, in effect, "O world, to
whom I was once a slave, to whom I was once in bondage,
who once claimed me and held me and used me; O world, I
am freed from you because I have been made the captive
slave of Jesus Christ by His Cross. He has set me free
from your bondage and captivity. My bondage to Him spells
my liberty from the world. O world, do not seek to get me
back again. Lay no hands of yours upon me. Old life,
which I once had, do not seek to capture me again. I
belong to the Lord Jesus. I bear branded in my body His
marks". I think the message there is a perfectly
clear one. The marks of Jesus, for all to see, to be
shown to all, speak of our belonging to Him, of His being
our Master, and this means faithfulness and loyalty in
our allegiance to Him as our Master. Faithfulness and
loyalty to HIM.
We all know the test of
loyalty to the Lord in this world. The world is reaching
out a hand, as it were, to come and interfere with our
loyalty to the Lord Jesus; - just not to let it be known
that we belong to Him. Such are the standards today, the
mental standards of life, that it is so widely thought to
be an unmanly, unwomanly thing to be a Christian. It is
not robust, it is not strong, you must be of an inferior
kind if you are a Christian. That is how it is, we know
it quite well. This world despises Christians, and the
temptation to all Christians is in some way to be
Christians without "giving it away", without
letting it be too obvious, and so we hide behind quite a
lot of things. "We do not want to make a show of
religion"; "we do not want to thrust religion
down people's throats"; "we do not want to
offend people and upset our chances of influencing them
by giving it away too soon". All sorts of things
like that, hiding round corners, thinking we are going to
get a better advantage, we are really going to serve the
Lord's interests much better by going carefully, going
slowly, and all the time taking cover and camouflaging.
Well, "henceforth
let no man trouble me; for I bear branded on my body the
marks of Jesus" and all can see it. I am quite sure
that is what is here, that is what is meant; the manifest
marks and signs of His ownership, that we belong to Him.
And I really believe, after all, that the world far more
highly respects and esteems the Christian who lets it be
known "straight from the shoulder" than the one
who covers it up.
I remember one day many
years ago, when I was only a lad, a deep impression that
was made upon me. I was in a shop; it was commercial
travellers' day in that shop and two commercial
travellers came in. One came in, looked all round to see
who was in the shop, saw some people there, so stepped
over into the corner and waited. Then he proceeded to his
business in a sort of way that suggested to my youthful
mind that he was ashamed to be doing business; that he
did not want people to know what he was. It was all so
under cover. Perhaps I should not have noticed it so much
had it not been for the next episode. The door opened,
and in came a fine, big fellow, a strapping young man. He
saw the manager - "Good-morning, Mr. So-and-so. I
have a splendid line for you today", and started
right away. Everybody in the shop heard all about it. He
went straight at it and captured the business, he got it
forthwith. He was bent on business. It made a tremendous
impression on me. As we came out of the shop, someone who
was with me said, "That is the way to do
business". Forgive me if that seems to be coming on
to a very low level. I do feel that there is a great deal
in being open and letting it be known where you stand. No
hiding the brand.
We belong to the Lord;
we are glad that we belong to the Lord; we are very glad
to call Him "Master"; we have no compromise
over that. We belong to the Lord and we tell Him that,
and we will tell every other Christian that, but is it
only in the realm where we are accepted, where we know we
are accepted, where we know it is quite safe and quite
comfortable to let it be known? What about this world?
The marks of His ownership. Remember Paul and that
shipwreck. How outstanding he was! He warned them, and
then the time came when they were at their wit's end, and
he came up to the Master of the ship and he said,
"Be of good cheer. The Lord, Whose I am, and Whom I
serve..." That's it - no covering there. He let it
be known. I do not think I need try to drive that home.
That lies here, right at the beginning - the marks of
faithfulness and loyalty in our allegiance to Him, Whom
we are glad to call Master and Lord; to Whom we really do
owe everything. Is it not just a little unfair, to say
the least of it, when we are prepared in secret with Him
to acknowledge that we owe Him everything, to be ashamed
to let it be known out in the world Whose we are?
"Ashamed of Jesus,
that dear Friend
On Whom my hopes of heaven depend?"
These were also
2.
The Marks of Devotion in Service
Marks, not only of
ownership, but of devotion in service. Paul had gained
many a scar in his devoted service to the Lord. The
service of the Lord for him meant suffering, and the
marks were the marks of faithfulness unto sacrifice. It
may not be that all of us will be called into that form
of service known as "missionary service" to
which Paul was called, and many others. But that does not
matter in this connection.
We are not going to get
very far in our devotion to the interests of the Lord
Jesus in this world without discovering that it is going
to mean sacrifice, suffering unto sacrifice. It is going
to cost. It may cost something in the matter of position,
recognition; the best things may not be allowed to come
our way. We may not be given an open door into certain
circles, those circles may be closed to us. There may be
many whose friendship we would like to have, but which
friendship will be withheld from us. In many ways we may
have to suffer loss, suffer unto sacrifice if the
interests of the Lord Jesus are going to be pursued and
furthered through us. I doubt whether it is possible for
the real interests of the Lord Jesus to be served without
sacrifice on our part. I do not think it is possible, and
it may be that you and I at the close of our course here
will look back and see many things that might have been
ours, positions, and acceptances, and rewards, but which
we have never come into, never possessed. We have to let
them go for Jesus' sake, and we may at that time bear the
brand of the Lord Jesus in this connection. Why? Why
this? Why that? Why has it meant this? Why has it cost
that? Why have I never got where some have got? That is
the brand of the Lord Jesus, the mark of Jesus.
There are gains hidden
from view which will more than compensate for that. This
man, who wrote these words, wrote in another place,
"Our light affliction, which is but for a moment,
worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of
glory; while we look not at the things which are seen,
but at the things which are not seen: for the things
which are seen are temporal: but the things which are not
seen are eternal". But the things seen do hold us so
much, don't they? It is so difficult to get our eyes away
from things seen; that is, the things that are manifest,
things that can be taken account of, they are so present
to view. The losses, the sufferings, the trials, the
difficulties, the adversities, these are things seen.
Things not seen - what are they, after all? Well, so far
as we are concerned, the things that are not seen are
promises. That is what it amounts to. They are real in
God, but to us they are nothing more than promises. We
have not got them, they are not seen. For present
practical purposes they are only promises, yet far more
exceeding and eternal, far more excellent, a weight of
glory exceeding and eternal - a weight of glory.
That is there unseen, while we bear the marks of loss
here, loss of what we might have had, could have had. It
was there for us, but, because of the interests of the
Lord Jesus, it had to be let go. The marks of the Lord
Jesus - faithfulness unto sacrifice, the unpopular way
with all that it costs.
Then lastly, these
marks on the Apostle were
3.
The Marks of the Likeness of Jesus
The brand, if it has
any object at all, is something for others to see, to
take note of, something which makes clear to all who are
in any way interested that that particular one is defined
and designated the property of another. It is something
to show. And the marks of the Lord Jesus are not only
marks of ownership and marks of devotion in service, but
they are marks of likeness. I have always thought that
exhortations to Christlikeness are not enjoyable things.
I must confess that, whenever I hear people exhorting us
to be Christlike, I have not found very much response. It
is no use me telling you to be Christlike, so I am not
going to do it, and yet I am saying that for you and for
me there has got to be Christlikeness as the mark of His
ownership of our lives. How does Christlikeness come
about? Well, the marks of devotion in service come about
by the measure in which we are prepared to suffer for
Him, make sacrifices for Him. The marks of Christlikeness
come about by the measure in which we have communion with
Him, so that the marks of Christlikeness are the result
of faithfulness in communion.
You see, the marks of
ownership are the results of faithfulness in loyalty; the
marks of devotion in service are the marks of
faithfulness in suffering and sacrifice; the marks of
Christlikeness come out of faithfulness in communion with
the Lord. How shall I be like Christ? How will you be
like Christ? How will others see the marks of Jesus in
us? Just in so far as we are faithful in our communion.
You know that in everyday life. Start the day without
your quiet time, without your prayer, and it will not be
long before there are other marks in your life than the
marks of Jesus. Neglect prayer, neglect communion with
your Lord, and the traces of the Lord will soon disappear
from view. On the other hand, look after the matter of
communion, preserve that quiet time, those quiet times,
look after your times of prayer, see to it that He has a
place in your heart, a large place in your heart everyday
and you need not worry about being like the Lord Jesus.
All the worry to be like the Lord Jesus will not make any
difference. People who walk closely with Him, keep in
touch with Him, look after the prayer life, do carry
those marks of His restfulness, His peacefulness, His
patience, His gentleness, His kindness, His love; - the
marks of Jesus. That is how it comes about. I do not tell
you to strive and I do not tell you to strive and
struggle to be like Jesus. I say, keep in touch with
Jesus. Do believe me, for I have gone this way. I know,
oh! I know, on the one hand the blessedness, and on the
other hand the bitterness of suffering bound up with this
very thing. The blessedness of looking after the quiet
times, the prayer times, the communion life with the
Lord! Oh yes! In business, in the world, what a
difference it makes! On the other hand, things breaking
in, adverse things that interfere with the life of
communion with the Lord, and the result-! Oh, the
miserable, wretched result! May I urge upon you to see to
faithfulness in communion with your Lord, and, perhaps
without knowing it (and it will be better so), you will
be bearing the marks of the Lord Jesus, His likeness. I
do not want you to be able to go about showing people how
like Christ you are. We want it to be there and yet not
to know it. It will be there if you look after the life
of communion. So be faithful in this. And then? Well,
what matters? "Henceforth let no man trouble
me". It would all be in vain. They will come and try
to draw away, to entice; the world will seek to allure.
They will try to upset and annoy, but I belong to Jesus.
I am satisfied with Jesus. I have all that I want in Him.
"Let no man trouble me; I bear branded on my body
the marks of Jesus". May it be like that with all of
us!
"His forever, only
His, Who the Lord and me shall part?"
His, for His interests
above my own and all others, His servant - Whose I am and
Whom I serve. His, in blessed and unbroken communion,
that through me His likeness may be seen. The marks of
the Lord Jesus.
First published as a booklet by Witness and Testimony Publishers in 1940.