Thundering Words
"Thou hatest wickedness."
Psalm 45:7
Charles H. Spurgeon
"Be
ye angry, and sin not." There can hardly be goodness in a man if he be
not angry at sin; he who loves truth must hate every false way. How our
Lord Jesus hated it when the temptation came! Thrice it assailed him in
different forms, but ever he met it with, "Get thee behind me, Satan."
He hated it in others; none the less fervently because he showed his
hate oftener in tears of pity than in words of rebuke; yet what language
could be more stern, more Elijah-like, than the words, "Woe unto you,
scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widows' houses, and for
a pretence make long prayer." He hated wickedness, so much that he bled
to wound it to the heart; he died that it might die; he was buried that
he might bury it in his tomb; and he rose that he might forever trample
it beneath his feet.
Christ is in the Gospel, and that Gospel is
opposed to wickedness in every shape. Wickedness arrays itself in fair
garments, and imitates the language of holiness; but the precepts of
Jesus, like his famous scourge of small cords, chase it out of the
temple, and will not tolerate it in the Church. So, too, in the heart
where Jesus reigns, what war there is between Christ and Belial! And
when our Redeemer shall come to be our Judge, those thundering words,
"Depart, ye cursed" which are, indeed, but a prolongation of his
life-teaching concerning sin, shall manifest his abhorrence of iniquity.
As warm as is his love to sinners, so hot is his hatred of sin; as
perfect as is his righteousness, so complete shall be the destruction of
every form of wickedness. O thou glorious champion of right, and
destroyer of wrong, for this cause hath God, even thy God, anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
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