Read & Study the Bible Online - Bible Portal

Verse 8

Revelation 4:8

(with 1 John 5:20 )

Preached on Trinity Sunday.

To-day we are called upon to keep the festival of revelation. Every other great festival of our Church commemorates a fact through which God has been pleased to teach men something of His purpose of love; Trinity Sunday encourages us to reflect for a brief space on that final truth, most absolute, most elementary, most practical, which gives unity and stability to all knowledge. The view of the Divine nature which it offers for our devout contemplation is the charter of human faith.

I. The conception of the Triune God is not given to us first in an abstract form. The abstract statement is an interpretation of facts, a human interpretation of vital facts, an interpretation wrought out gradually in the first years of the Church, and still mastered gradually in our individual growth. We are required each, in some sense, to win for ourselves the inheritance which is given to us, if the inheritance is to be a blessing. We learn through the experience of history and life how God acts, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and by the very necessity of thought we are constrained to gather up these lessons into the simplest possible formula. So we come to recognise a Divine Trinity, which is not sterile, monotonous simplicity. We come to recognise One in whom is the fulness of all conceivable existence in the richest energy, One absolutely self-sufficient and perfect, One in whom love finds absolute consummation, One who is in Himself a living God, the fountain and the end of all life.

II. The conception of the Triune God illuminates the idea of creation. It enables us to gain firm hold of the truth that the learning which we observe under the condition of time answers to a Being beyond time; that history is the writing out at length of that which we may speak of as a Divine thought. The same conception illuminates the idea of the Incarnation. It enables us to see that the Incarnation in its essence is the crown of the Creation, and that man, being made capable of fellowship with God, has in his very constitution a promise of the fulfilment of his highest destiny.

III. This truth is not speculative, but practical. The Chris tian conception of God is the translation into the language of thought of the first Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide. By our faith in these facts we confess that the Divine life has been united with human life. We confess, even if we do not distinctly realise the force of the confession, that the Divine life is the foundation and the end of human life. And we live, so far as life deserves the name, by this faith by which consciously or unconsciously we are stirred to toil and sustained in sacrifice.

Bishop Westcott, Oxford Review and Journal ; May 24th, 1883.

References: Revelation 4:8 . F. W. Farrar, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xxxiii., p. 357. Revelation 4:10 . Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xix., No. 1002; Homilist, 1st series, vol. vi., p. 425.Revelation 4:10 , Revelation 4:11 . M. Dix, Sermons Doctrinal and Practical, p. 145; Preacher's Monthly, vol. v., p. 286. Revelation 4:11 . Homiletic Quarterly, vol. ii., p. 12.Revelation 5:1-10 . Ibid., vol. i., p. 417. Revelation 5:4 , Revelation 5:5 . A. James, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xxix., p. 21.Revelation 5:5 , Revelation 5:6 . Homiletic Quarterly, vol. ii., p. 414.

Be the first to react on this!

Scroll to Top

Group of Brands