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| The True Sense of the Passage I Cor. III. 11–15 About Those Who are Saved, Yet So as by Fire. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 68.—The True Sense of the Passage
(I Cor. III. 11–15) About Those
Who are Saved, Yet So as by Fire.
But as these most plain and
unmistakeable declarations of the apostles cannot be false, that
obscure saying about those who build upon the foundation, Christ,
not gold, silver, and precious stones, but wood, hay, and stubble
(for it is these who, it is said, shall be saved, yet so as by
fire, the merit of the foundation saving them1221 ), must be so interpreted as not to
conflict with the plain statements quoted above. Now wood, hay, and
stubble may, without incongruity, be understood to signify such an
attachment to worldly things, however lawful these may be in
themselves, that they cannot be lost without grief of mind. And
though this grief burns, yet if Christ hold the place of foundation
in the heart,—that is, if nothing be preferred to Him, and if the
man, though burning with grief, is yet more willing to lose the
things he loves so much than to lose Christ,—he is saved by fire.
If, however, in time of temptation, he prefer to hold by temporal
and earthly things rather than by Christ, he has not Christ as his
foundation; for he puts earthly things in the first place, and in a
building nothing comes before the foundation. Again, the fire of
which the apostle speaks in this place must be such a fire as both
men are made to pass through, that is, both the man who builds upon
the foundation, gold, silver, precious stones, and the man who
builds wood, hay, stubble. For he immediately adds: “The fire
shall try every man’s work, of what sort it is. If any man’s
work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a
reward. If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss;
but he himself shall be saved, yet so as by fire.”1222 The fire
then shall prove, not the work of one of them only, but of both.
Now the trial of adversity is a kind of fire which is plainly
spoken of in another place: “The furnace proveth the potter’s
vessels: and the furnace of adversity just men.”1223 And this
fire does in the course of this life act exactly in the way the
apostle says. If it come into contact with two believers, one
“caring for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please
the Lord,”1224 that is,
building upon Christ the foundation, gold, silver, precious stones;
the other “caring for the things that are of the world, how
he may please his wife,”1225 that is, building upon the same
foundation wood, hay, stubble,—the work of the former is not
burned, because he has not given his love to things whose loss can
cause him grief; but the work of the latter is burned, because
things that are enjoyed with desire cannot be lost without pain.
But since, by our supposition, even the latter prefers to lose
these things rather than to lose Christ, and since he does not
desert Christ out of fear of losing them, though he is grieved when
he does lose them, he is saved, but it is so as by fire; because
the grief for what he loved and has lost burns him. But it does not
subvert nor consume him; for he is protected by his immoveable and
incorruptible foundation.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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