CONVERSION
Zech. 3:1-2

Robert Murray M'Cheyne
(1813-1843)


THE conversion of a soul is by far the most remarkable event in the history of the world, although many of you do not care about it. It is the object that attracts the eyes of the holy angels to the spot where it takes place. It is the object which the Father's eye rests upon with tenderness and delight. This work in the soul is what brings greater glory to the Father, Son, and Spirit, than all the other works of God. It is far more wonderful than all the works of art. There is nothing that can equal it. Ah! brethren, if you think little of it, or laugh at it, how little have you of the mind of God?

Conversion may be looked at from different points. The world can notice conversion. They see a young man, perhaps, who was careless like themselves, taking to his closet. They observe a change in his speech. They see a change in his company, and they say it is a whim. There is another view of it which God's children take. They see a soul cast out into the open field to the loathing of its person, and they see Jesus, the glorious Redeemer, stooping down and binding up its wounds. They see a sister, a brother born for eternity. A third view of conversion is as a victory of Christ over the devil - "Is not this is a brand plucked out of the fire?" The world is a great battle-field. "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed, it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel." Satan has the world bound in strong fetters. The whole world lies in the wicked one - lies in his arms, sung to sleep with his lullaby. But there is a great One gone forth, sitting on a white horse, and having on his head many crowns, and ever and anon he is cutting the strong chains with which sinners are bound, and saying, as he does so, to Satan, "Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?

I desire, dear friends, by the help of the Holy Spirit, to show you two things from these words.

I. Verse 1, "And he showed me Joshua the high priest standing before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him." There is no doubt but that this passage describes a vision which Zechariah saw, and that Joshua represents Jerusalem. Accordingly, Zechariah saw Joshua as a sinner awakened, and coming and standing before the Lord'; but he saw another standing at his right hand to resist him, not an angel of light, but an angel of darkness. Now, brethren, this describes the case of every awakened and converted soul. When God convinces a soul of sin, he brings him to stand before him - then Satan comes to resist him. Before conversion, the devil tries to keep you secure, he cries out peace, peace. He fills you with high notions about yourself. He fills you with pride, and with high notions about your knowledge - that you know your catechism - that you are acquainted with the doctrines of the Bible. Or he binds you with silken fetters to some unlawful attachment - to some one who is going down the broad way, and he makes you to hate the gospel. Or he brings you under the faithful preaching of the gospel and makes you content to sit and hear it, and even delight in hearing it, thereby making you imagine you are Christ's, when you know him not. But the moment Christ comes and awakens you, then comes Satan to resist you. This resistance of Satan is twofold.

II. Verse 2, "And the Lord said unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee: is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?" If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." Christ is the advocate of every one he saves, and not only is he an advocate after conversion, but before, and throughout conversion. He answers Satan's objections. There are two arguments here by which he answers Satan. The first is the free election of God. Jerusalem was the chief city in the world for wickedness. They had sinned against light, against love, against long-suffering mercy. Yet Christ chose it. He might say, grant that it is the chief for wickedness, yet God hath chosen it. Grant that soul is the chief of sinners, yet the Lord is sovereign. "I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion." This is the argument of Christ. Is it not strange that the very argument which troubles souls is the one which Christ uses as the reason why you should be saved? Let Satan say, you have sinned against light, against conviction, against love; still, "the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee: is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?" This shuts Satan's mouth, - this is an argument which he cannot answer. The second argument Christ employs is, The brand is already plucked out of the fire. Christ here says, whatever that sinner may have been, he is now plucked out of the fire. And thus all Satan's arguments are urged in vain. All unconverted souls are in the fire. You are in the fire for two reasons,

In conclusion, I would just say that this congregation may be divided into two parts: those who are brands over the fire, and those who have been plucked out of the rite. O brands in the fire, will you not cry to be plucked out of the fire? When he is plucking brands out of the fire beside you, will you not say, Lord, pluck me out of the fire.

Sabbath, May 8, 1842


Robert Murray M'Cheyne

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