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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, John the Baptist, by F. B. Meyer
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: John the Baptist
+
+
+Author: F. B. Meyer
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 26, 2008 [eBook #25904]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN THE BAPTIST***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ In the original book, each right-hand page had its own header.
+ In this e-book, each chapter's headers have been collected into
+ an introductory paragraph immediately following that chapter's
+ introductory poem. (The left-hand pages' header was the
+ chapter's title.)
+
+
+
+
+
+JOHN THE BAPTIST
+
+by
+
+F. B. MEYER, B.A.
+
+Author of
+Paul: A Servant of Jesus Christ
+The Prophet of Hope
+Saved and Kept
+etc., etc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+London: Morgan and Scott
+Office of The Christian
+12, Paternoster Buildings, E.C.
+And may be Ordered of any Bookseller
+1911
+
+
+
+
+By Rev. F. B. MEYER, B.A.
+
+
+ THE "BIOGRAPHICAL" SERIES.
+
+ ABRAHAM: Or, The Obedience of Faith.
+ ISRAEL: A Prince with God.
+ JOSEPH: Beloved--Hated--Exalted.
+ MOSES: The Servant of God.
+ JOSHUA: And the Land of Promise.
+ DAVID: Shepherd, Psalmist, King.
+ ELIJAH: And the Secret of his Power.
+ JEREMIAH: Priest and Prophet.
+ JOHN THE BAPTIST.
+ PAUL: A Servant of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+The life and character of John the Baptist have always had a great
+fascination for me; and I am thankful to have been permitted to write
+this book. But I am more thankful for the hours of absorbing interest
+spent in the study of his portraiture as given in the Gospels. I know
+of nothing that makes so pleasant a respite from the pressure of life's
+fret and strain, as to bathe mind and spirit in the translucent waters
+of Scripture biography.
+
+As the clasp between the Old Testament and the New--the close of the
+one and the beginning of the other; as among the greatest of those born
+of women; as the porter who opened the door to the True Shepherd; as
+the fearless rebuker of royal and shameless sin--the Baptist must ever
+compel the homage and admiration of mankind.
+
+In many respects, such a life cannot be repeated. But the spirit of
+humility and courage; of devotion to God, and uncompromising loyalty to
+truth, which was so conspicuous in him, may animate us. We, also, may
+be filled with the spirit and power of Elijah, as he was; and may
+point, with lip and life, to the Saviour of the world, crying, "Behold
+the Lamb of God."
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ I. THE INTEREST OF HIS BIOGRAPHY
+ II. THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS
+ III. HIS SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLMASTERS
+ IV. THE PROPHET OF THE HIGHEST
+ V. THE FIRST MINISTRY OF THE BAPTIST
+ VI. BAPTISM UNTO REPENTANCE
+ VII. THE MANIFESTATION OF THE MESSIAH
+ VIII. NOT THAT LIGHT, BUT A WITNESS
+ IX. "HE MUST INCREASE, BUT I MUST DECREASE"
+ X. THE KING'S COURTS
+ XI. "ART THOU HE?"
+ XII. "NONE GREATER THAN JOHN THE BAPTIST, YET..."
+ XIII. A BURNING AND SHINING LIGHT
+ XIV. SET AT LIBERTY
+ XV. THE GRAVE OF JOHN, AND ANOTHER GRAVE
+ XVI. YET SPEAKING
+ XVII. THE SPIRIT AND POWER OF ELIAS
+
+
+
+
+JOHN THE BAPTIST.
+
+
+I.
+
+The Interest of his Biography.
+
+ "John, than which man a sadder or a greater
+ Not till this day has been of woman born;
+ John, like some iron peak by the Creator
+ Fired with the red glow of the rushing morn.
+
+ "This, when the sun shall rise and overcome it,
+ Stands in his shining, desolate and bare;
+ Yet not the less the inexorable summit
+ Flamed him his signal to the happier air."
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+John and Jesus--Contemporary History--Anticipation of the Advent.
+
+
+The morning star, shining amid the brightening glow of dawn, is the
+fittest emblem that Nature can supply of the herald who proclaimed the
+rising of the Sun of Righteousness--answering across the gulf of three
+hundred years to his brother prophet, Malachi, who had foretold that
+Sunrise and the healing in His wings.
+
+Every sign attests the unique and singular glory of the Baptist. Not
+that his career was signalized by the blaze of prodigy and wonder, like
+the multiplication of the widow's meal or the descent of the fire of
+heaven to consume the altar and the wood; for it is expressly said that
+"John did no miracle." Not that he owed anything to the adventitious
+circumstances of wealth and rank; for he was not a place-loving
+courtier, "clothed in soft raiment or found in kings' courts." Not
+that he was a master of a superb eloquence like that of Isaiah or
+Ezekiel; for he was content to be only "a cry"--short, thrilling,
+piercing through the darkness, ringing over the desert plains. Yet,
+his Master said of him that "among them that are born of women there
+hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist"; and in six brief
+months, as one has noticed, the young prophet of the wilderness had
+become the centre to which all the land went forth. We see Pharisees
+and Sadducees, soldiers and publicans, enthralled by his ministry; the
+Sanhedrim forced to investigate his claims; the petty potentates of
+Palestine caused to tremble on their thrones; while he has left a name
+and an influence that will never cease out of the world.
+
+But there is a further feature which arrests us in the life and
+ministry of the Baptist. He was ordained to be "the clasp" of two
+covenants. In him Judaism reached its highest embodiment, and the Old
+Testament found its noblest exponent. It is significant, therefore,
+that through his lips the law and the prophets should announce their
+transitional purpose, and that he who caught up the torch of Hebrew
+prophecy with a grasp and spirit unrivalled by any before him, should
+have it in his power and in his heart to say: "The object of all
+prophecy, the purpose of the Mosaic law, the end of all sacrifices, the
+desire of all nations, is at hand." And forthwith turning to the True
+Shepherd, who stood at the door waiting to be admitted, to Him the
+porter opened, bowing low as He passed, and crying: "This is He of whom
+Moses in the law and the prophets did write, Jesus of Nazareth, who was
+for to come."
+
+Few studies can bring out to clearer demonstration the superlative
+glory of Christ than a thoughtful consideration of the story of the
+forerunner. They were born at the same time; were surrounded from
+their birth by similar circumstances; drank in from their earliest days
+the same patriotic aspirations, the same sacred traditions, the same
+glowing hopes. But the parallel soon stops. John the Baptist is
+certainly a grand embodiment of the noblest characteristics of the
+Jewish people. We see in him a conspicuous example of what could be
+developed out of eight hundred years of Divine revelation and
+discipline. But Jesus is the Son of Man: there is a width, a breadth,
+a universality about Him which cannot be accounted for save on the
+hypothesis which John himself declared, that "He who cometh from above
+is above all."
+
+In each case, life was strenuous and short--an epoch being inaugurated,
+in the one case in about six months, in the other some three years. In
+each case, at first, there was abounding enthusiasm, bursting forth
+around their persons as they announced the Kingdom of God, like the
+flowers which carpet their own fair land after the rains; but side by
+side the unconcealed hatred of the religious world of their time. In
+each case, the brief sunny hours of service were soon succeeded by the
+rolling up of the thunderous clouds, and these by the murderous tempest
+of deadly hatred, even unto death: "Their dead bodies lay in the street
+of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt." In
+each case, there was a little handful of detached disciples, who
+bitterly mourned their master's death, and took up the desecrated
+corpse to lay it in the tomb; whilst they that dwelt in the earth
+rejoiced and made merry, and sent gifts to one another, because they
+had been tormented by their words (Rev. xi. 10).
+
+But there the parallel ends. The life purpose of the one culminated in
+his death; with the other, it only began. In the case of John, death
+was a martyrdom, which shines brilliantly amid the murky darkness of
+his time; in the case of Jesus, death was a sacrifice which put away
+the sin of the world. For John there was no immediate resurrection,
+save that which all good men have of their words and influence; but his
+Master saw no corruption--it was not possible for Him to be holden by
+it--and in his resurrection He commenced to wield his wide and mighty
+supremacy over human hearts and wills. When the axe of Herod's
+executioner had done its deadly work in the dungeons of Machaerus, the
+bond which knit the disciples of John was severed also, and they were
+absorbed in the followers of Christ; but when the Roman soldiers
+thought their work was done, and the cry "It is finished!" had escaped
+the parched lips of the dying Lord, his disciples held together in the
+upper room, and continued there for more than forty days, until the
+descent of the Holy Spirit formed them into the strongest organization
+that this world has ever beheld.
+
+John's influence on the world has diminished as men have receded
+further from his age; but Jesus is King of the ages. He creates, He
+fashions, He leads them forth; He is with us always, to the end of the
+age. We have not to go back through the centuries to find Him in the
+cradle or in Mary's arms, in the fishing-boat or on the mountain, on
+the cross or in the grave; He is _here_ beside us, with us, in us, "all
+the days." John, then, was "a burning and shining torch," lifted for a
+moment aloft in the murky air; but Jesus was THAT LIGHT. As the
+star-light, which fails to illumine the page of your book or the
+dial-plate of your watch, is to the sunlight, as the courier is to the
+sovereign, as the streamlet is to the ocean--such was John as compared
+with Him whose shoe-latchet he felt himself unworthy to stoop down and
+unloose. Greatest born of women he might be; "sent from God" he was:
+but One came after him who bore upon his front the designation of his
+Divine origin and mission, behind whom the gates of the past closed as
+when a king has passed through, and at whose girdle hang the keys of
+the doors and gates of the Ages.
+
+To read the calm idyllic pages of the Gospels, apart from some
+knowledge of contemporary history, is to miss one of their deepest
+lessons--that such piety and beneficence were set in the midst of a
+most tumultuous and perilous age. Those times were by no means
+favourable to the cultivation of the deepest life. The flock of God
+had long left the green pastures and still waters of outward peace, and
+were passing through the valley of death-shadow, every step of the path
+being infested by the enemies of their peace. The wolf, indeed, was
+coming. The national life was already being rent by those throes of
+agony which betokened the passing away of an age, and reached their
+climax in the Fall of Jerusalem, of which Jesus said there had been
+nothing, and would be nothing, like it in the history of the world.
+
+Herod was on the throne--crafty, cruel, sensual, imperious, and
+magnificent. The gorgeous Temple which bore his name was the scene of
+priestly service and sacramental rites. The great national feasts of
+the Passover, of Tabernacles, and of Pentecost, were celebrated with
+solemn pomp, and attracted vast crowds from all the world. In every
+part of the land synagogues were maintained with punctilious care, and
+crowds of scribes were perpetually engaged in a microscopic study of
+the law, and in the instruction of the people. In revenue, and popular
+attention, and apparent devoutness, that period had not been excelled
+in the most palmy days of Solomon or Hezekiah. But beneath this
+decorous surface the rankest, foulest, most desperate corruption throve.
+
+To the aged couple in the hill-country of Judaea, as to Mary and Joseph
+at Nazareth, must have come tidings of the murder of Aristobulus, of
+the cruel death of Mariamne and her sons, and of the aged Hyrcanus.
+They must have groaned beneath the grinding oppression by which Herod
+extorted from the poorer classes the immense revenues which he
+squandered on his palaces and fortresses and on the creation of new
+cities. That he was introducing everywhere Gentile customs and games;
+that he had dared to place the Roman eagle on the main entrance of the
+Temple; that he had pillaged David's tomb; that he had set aside the
+great council of their nation, and blinded the saintly Jochanan; that
+the religious leaders, men like Caiaphas and Annas, were quite willing
+to wink at the crimes of the secular power, so long as their prestige
+and emoluments were secured; that the national independence for which
+Judas and his brothers had striven, during the Maccabean wars, was fast
+being laid at the feet of Rome, which was only too willing to take
+advantage of the chaos which followed immediately upon Herod's hideous
+death--such tidings must have come, in successive shocks of anguish, to
+those true hearts who were waiting for the redemption of Israel, with
+all the more eagerness as it seemed so long delayed, so urgently
+needed. Still, they made their yearly journeys to Jerusalem, and
+participated in the great convocations, which, in outward splendour,
+eclipsed memories of the past; but they realized that the glory had
+departed, and that the mere husk of externalism could not long resist
+the incoming tides of militarism, of the love of display, and the
+corrupting taint of the worst aspects of Roman civilization. When the
+feasts were over, these pious hearts turned back to their homes among
+the hills, tearing themselves from the last glimpse of the beautiful
+city, with the cry, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!"
+
+The darkest hour precedes the dawn, and it was just at this point that
+Old Testament predictions must have been so eagerly scanned by those
+that watched and waited. That the Messiah was nigh, they could not
+doubt. The term of years foretold by Daniel had nearly expired. The
+sceptre had departed from Judah, and the lawgiver from between his
+feet. Even the Gentile world was penetrated with the expectation of a
+King. Sybils in their ancient writings, hermits in their secret cells,
+Magi studying the dazzling glories of the eastern heavens, had come to
+the conclusion that He was at hand who would bring again the Golden Age.
+
+And so those loyal and loving souls that often spake together, while
+the Lord hearkened and heard, must have felt that as the advent of the
+Lord whom they sought was nigh, that of his messenger must be nearer
+still. They started at every footfall. They listened for every voice.
+They scanned the expression of every face. "Behold, he shall come,"
+rang in their hearts like a peal of silver bells. At any moment might
+a voice be heard crying, "Cast up, cast up the highway; gather out the
+stones; lift up an ensign for the peoples. Say ye to the daughter of
+Sion, Behold, thy salvation cometh." Those anticipations were realized
+in the birth of John the Baptist.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+The House of Zacharias.
+
+(LUKE I.)
+
+ "There are in this loud stunning tide
+ Of human care and crime,
+ With whom the melodies abide
+ Of the everlasting chime;
+ Who carry music in their heart
+ Through dusky lane and wrangling mart
+ Plying their daily task with busier feet,
+ Because their secret souls a holy strain repeat."
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+Early History of the Baptist--God's Hidden Ones--The Hill Country of
+Judea--A Childless Home--The Forerunner Announced.
+
+
+To the evangelist Luke we are indebted for details of those antecedent
+circumstances that ushered John the Baptist into the world. He tells
+us that he had "traced the course of all things accurately from the
+first." And in those final words, "from the first," he suggests that
+he had deliberately sought to examine into those striking events from
+which, as from a wide-spreading root, the great growth of Christianity
+had originated. Who of us has not sometimes followed the roots of some
+newly-discovered plant deep into the black mould, intent on pursuing
+them to their furthest extremity, and extricating them from the
+clinging earth without injuring one delicate radicle? So this good
+physician, accustomed by his training to accurate research and
+experiment, went back to scenes and events anterior to any which his
+brother Evangelists recorded. He compensated for the authority of an
+eye-witness by the thoroughness and care of his investigation.
+
+What were the sources from which the third Evangelist drew his
+information? We cannot be sure, but may hazard a suggestion, which is
+supported by the archaic simplicity, the indescribable grace, the
+almost idyllic beauty of his two opening chapters. Critics have
+repeatedly drawn attention to their unique character, and insisted that
+they are due to some other hand than that which has given us the rest
+of the story of "the Son of Man." And why should we not attribute them
+to "the Mother" herself? It has been truly said that mothers are the
+natural historians of their children's early days--never tired of
+observing them, they never tire of recounting their prodigies; and, in
+an especial manner, Mary had kept all things, pondering in her heart
+those wonderful circumstances which had left so indelible an impression
+on her life. She who, in her over-welling joy, uttered "the
+Magnificat," was surely capable, even judging from a literary and human
+standpoint, of the language in which the story is told; and the facts
+themselves would only stand out the clearer in her closing years, as
+many another memory faded from her mind. The granite remains when the
+floods have swept away the light soil that filled the interstices of
+the rocks.
+
+It were a theme worthy of a great artist to depict! Mary's face,
+furrowed by deep lines of anguish, yet glowing with sacred fire and
+holy memory. Luke, sitting at his manuscript, now letting her tell her
+story without interruption, and again interpolating an inquiry, the
+words growing on the page; while, nearer than each to either, making no
+tremor in the hot summer air as He comes, casting no shadow in the
+brilliant eastern light--He of whom they speak and write steals in to
+stand beside them, bringing all things to their remembrance by the Holy
+Spirit's agency, even as He had told them.
+
+The story of John the Baptist was so clearly part of that of Jesus,
+that Mary could hardly recall the one without the other. And, besides,
+Elisabeth, as the angel said, was her kinswoman--perhaps her cousin--to
+whom she naturally turned in the hour of her maidenly astonishment and
+rapture. Though much younger, Mary was united to her relative by a
+close and tender tie, and it was only natural that what had happened to
+Elisabeth should have impressed her almost as deeply as her own
+memorable experiences. So it is possible that from the lips of the
+mother of our Lord we obtain these details of the House of Zacharias.
+
+
+I. THE QUIET IN THE LAND.--God has always had his hidden ones; and,
+while the world has been rent by faction and war, ravaged by fire and
+sword, and drenched with the blood of her sons, these have heard his
+call to enter their chamber, and shut themselves in until the storm had
+spent its fury. It was so during the days of Ahab, when the eye of
+omniscience beheld at least seven thousand who had not bowed the knee
+to Baal. It was so in the awful days of the Civil War, when Puritan
+and Royalist faced each other at Naseby and Marston Moor, and the land
+seemed swept in a blinding storm. Groups of ardent souls gathered to
+spend their time in worship and acts of mercy--like those at Little
+Gidding, in Huntingdonshire, under the direction of Mr. Nicholas
+Ferrar. It was so when the thirty years' war desolated Germany, and
+"the quiet in the land" withdrew themselves from the agitated scene of
+human affairs to wait on God, embalming their hearts in hymns and poems
+which exhale a perfume as from crushed flowers.
+
+It was eminently so in the days of which we write. Darkness covered
+the earth, and gross darkness the peoples. Herod's infamous cruelties,
+craft, and bloodshed were at their height. The country questioned with
+fear what new direction his crimes might take. The priesthood was
+obsequious to his whim; the bonds of society seemed dissolved. Theudas
+and Judas of Galilee, mentioned by Gamaliel, were but specimens of the
+bandit leaders who broke into revolt and harried the country districts
+for the maintenance of their followers. Greed, peculation, and lawless
+violence, had ample and undisputed opportunity to despoil the national
+glory and corrupt the heart of the national life.
+
+Is it to be wondered that the godly remnant would meet in little groups
+and secluded hiding-places to comfort themselves in God? We are told,
+for instance, that Anna spake of the Babe, whom she had probably
+embraced in her aged trembling arms, "to all them that were looking for
+the redemption of Jerusalem" (Luke ii. 38, R.V.). What would we not
+give to know something more of the members of this sacred society,
+which preserved the loftiest traditions, and embodied in their lives
+some of the finest traits of the religion of their forefathers! The
+gloom of their times only led them more eagerly to con the predictions
+of their Hebrew prophets, and desire their accomplishment. Full often
+they would climb the heights and look out over the desert wastes to
+descry the advent of the Mighty One, coming from Edom, with his
+garments stained with the blood of Israel's foes. When they met, the
+burden of conversation, which flowed under vine or fig-tree, by the
+wayside or in humble homes, would be of their cherished hope. And as
+they beheld the hapless condition of their fatherland, the land of
+Abraham, the city of David, the cry must often have been extorted; "How
+long, O Lord, holy and true, will it be ere He shall come whose right
+it is who shall sit on the throne of his father David, and of whose
+kingdom there shall be no end? Come forth out of thy royal chambers, O
+Prince of all the kings of the earth! Put on the visible robes of thy
+imperial majesty; take up that unlimited sceptre which thy Almighty
+Father hath bequeathed Thee; for now the voice of thy bride calls Thee,
+and all creatures sigh to be renewed." So our great Milton prayed in
+more recent days.
+
+We are not drawing on our imagination in describing these true-hearted
+watchers for the rising of the Day-star. They are fully indicated in
+the Gospel story. There was Simeon, righteous and devout, unto whom it
+had been revealed by the Holy Spirit that he should not see death
+before he had seen the Lord's Christ; and Anna, the prophetess, who
+departed not from the temple, worshipping with fastings and
+supplications night and day; and the guileless Nathanael, an Israelite
+indeed, who had perhaps already commenced to sit at the foot of the
+ladder which bound his fig-tree to the highest heaven; and the peasant
+maiden Mary, the descendant of a noble house, though with fallen
+fortunes, who, like some vestal virgin, clad in snowy white, watched
+through the dark hours beside the flickering flame; and last, but not
+least, Zacharias and his wife Elisabeth, "who were both righteous
+before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord
+blameless."
+
+For us, too, the times are dark. It is as though the shadows were
+being thrown far across the fields, and the light were becoming dim.
+Let the children of God draw together, to encourage each other in their
+holy faith, and to speak of their great hopes; for He who appeared once
+to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself shall appear a second time
+without sin unto salvation. We are, as the French version puts it,
+_burgesses of the skies_, "whence we wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus
+Christ, who shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation, that it may
+be conformed to the body of his glory, according to the working whereby
+He is able even to subject all things unto Himself."
+
+But this attitude of spirit, which dwells in the unseen and eternal,
+which counts on the indwelling of the Son of God by faith, and which
+ponders deeply over the sins and sorrows of the world around, is the
+temper of mind out of which the greatest deeds are wrought for the
+cause of God on the earth. The Marys who sit at Christ's feet arise to
+anoint Him for his burying. Take, for instance, the Moravian Church,
+born and cradled amid the pietism of which Spener of Berlin and Franke
+of Halle were the acknowledged leaders; and it has given to the world a
+far larger number of missionaries in proportion to its membership than
+any church of the age. Or take the followers of George Fox, who have
+maintained through unparalleled suffering their testimony for
+spirituality of worship; and it is undeniable that some of the greatest
+reforms which have characterised the century recently closed have found
+their foremost advocates and apologists from their somewhat meagre
+ranks. Those who wait on God renew their strength. The world ignores
+them, scorning to reckon their tears and toils amid its renovating
+energies; but they refuse to abate their endeavours and sacrifices on
+its behalf. They repay its neglect by more assiduous exertions, its
+ingratitude by more exhausting sacrifices; content if, from out their
+ranks, there presently steps one who, like John the Baptist, opens a
+new chapter in the history of the race, and accelerates the advent of
+the Christ.
+
+
+II. THE PARENTAGE OF THE FORERUNNER.--As the traveller emerges from
+the dreary wilderness that lies between Sinai and the southern frontier
+of Palestine--a scorching desert, in which Elijah was glad to find
+shelter from the sword-like rays in the shade of the retem shrub--he
+sees before him a long line of hills, which is the beginning of "the
+hill country of Judaea" (Luke i. 39). In contrast with the sand wastes
+which he has traversed, the valleys seem to laugh and sing. Greener
+and yet greener grow the pasture lands, till he can understand how
+Nabal and other sheep-masters were able to find maintenance for vast
+flocks of sheep. Here and there are the crumbled ruins which mark the
+site of ancient towns and villages tenanted now by the jackal or the
+wandering Arab. Amongst these, a modern traveller has identified the
+site of Juttah, the village home of the priest Zacharias and his wife
+Elisabeth.
+
+To judge by their names, we may infer that their parents years before
+had been godly people. _Zacharias_ meant _God's remembrance_; as
+though he were to be a perpetual reminder to his fellows of what God
+had promised, and to God of what they were expecting from his hand.
+_Elisabeth_ meant _God's oath_; as though her people were perpetually
+appealing to those covenant promises in which, since He could swear by
+no greater, God had sworn by Himself, that He would never leave nor
+forsake, and that when the sceptre departed from Judah and the
+law-giver from between his feet, Shiloh should come.
+
+Zacharias was a priest, "of the course of Abijah," and twice a year he
+journeyed to Jerusalem to fulfil his office, for a week of six days and
+two Sabbaths. There were, Josephus tells us, somewhat more than 20,000
+priests settled in Judaea at this time; and very many of them were like
+those whom Malachi denounced as degrading and depreciating the Temple
+services. The general character of the priesthood was deeply tainted
+by the corruption of the times, and as a class they were blind leaders
+of the blind. Not a few, however, were evidently deeply religious men,
+for we find that "a great number of the priests," after the
+crucifixion, believed on Christ and joined his followers. In this
+class we must therefore place Zacharias, who, with his wife, herself of
+the daughters of Aaron, is described as being "righteous before God."
+
+The phrases are evidently selected with care. Many are righteous
+before men; but they were righteous _before God_. Their daily life and
+walk were regulated by a careful observance of the ordinances of the
+ceremonial and the commandments of the moral law. It is evident, from
+the apt and plentiful quotations from Scripture with which the song of
+Zacharias is replete, that the Scriptures were deeply pondered and
+reverenced in that highland home; and we have the angel's testimony to
+the prayers that ascended day and night. In all these things they were
+blameless--not faultless, as judged by God's infinite standard of
+rectitude, but blameless--because they lived up to the fullest limit of
+their knowledge of the will of God. They were blameless and harmless,
+the children of God, without blemish, in the midst of a crooked and
+perverse generation, among whom they were seen as lights in the world,
+holding forth amid neighbours and friends the Word of Truth.
+
+But they lived under the shadow of a great sorrow. "They had no child,
+because Elisabeth was barren, and they both were now well stricken in
+years." When the good priest put off his official dress of white
+linen, and returned to his mountain home, there was no childish voice
+to welcome him. It seemed almost certain that their family would soon
+die out and be forgotten; that no child would close their eyes in
+death; and that by no link whatsoever could they be connected with the
+Messiah, to be the progenitor of whom was the cherished longing of each
+Hebrew parent.
+
+"They had no child!" They would, therefore, count themselves under the
+frown of God; and the mother especially felt that a reproach lay on
+her. What a clue to the anguish of the soul is furnished by her own
+reflection, when she recognised the glad divine interposition on her
+behalf, and cried, "Thus hath the Lord done unto me in the days wherein
+He looked upon me, to take away _my reproach among men_" (Luke i. 25).
+
+But had it not been for this sorrow they might never have been
+qualified to receive the first tidings of the near approach of the
+Messiah. _Sorrow_ opens our eyes, and bids us see visions within the
+vail, which cannot be described by those who have not wept. _Sorrow_
+leads us up the steep mountain of vision, and opens the panorama which
+lies beyond the view of those who dare not attempt the craggy steep.
+_Sorrow_ prepares us to see angels standing beside the altar of incense
+at the hour of prayer, and to hear words that mortal lips may not utter
+until they are fulfilled. _Sorrow_ leads us to open our house to those
+who carry a great anguish in their hearts, who come to us needing
+shelter and comfort; to discover finally that we have entertained an
+angel unawares, and that in some trembling maiden, threatened by
+divorce from her espoused, we have welcomed the mother of the Lord
+(ver. 43). Shrink not from sorrow. It endures but for the brief
+eastern night; joy cometh in the morning, to remain. It may be caused
+by long waiting and apparently fruitless prayer. Beneath its pressure
+heart and flesh may faint. All natural hope may have become dead, and
+the soul be plunged in hopeless despair. "Yet the Lord will command
+his loving-kindness in the morning;" and it will be seen that the dull
+autumn sowings of tears and loneliness and pain were the necessary
+preliminary for that heavenly messenger who, standing "on the right
+side of the altar of incense," shall assure us that our prayer is heard.
+
+
+III. THE ANGEL'S ANNOUNCEMENT.--One memorable autumn, when the land
+was full of the grape-harvest, Zacharias left his home, in the cradle
+of the hills, some three thousand feet above the Mediterranean, for his
+priestly service. Reaching the temple he would lodge in the cloisters,
+and spend his days in the innermost court, which none might enter save
+priests in their sacred garments. Among the various priestly duties,
+none was held in such high esteem as the offering of incense, which was
+presented morning and evening, on a special golden altar, in the Holy
+Place at the time of prayer. "The whole multitude of the people were
+praying without at the time of incense." So honourable was this office
+that it was fixed by lot, and none was allowed to perform it twice.
+Only once in a priest's life was he permitted to sprinkle the incense
+on the burning coals, which an assistant had already brought from the
+altar of burnt-sacrifice, and spread on the altar of incense before the
+vail.
+
+The silver trumpets had sounded. The smoke of the evening sacrifice
+was ascending. The worshippers that thronged the different courts,
+rising tier on tier, were engaged in silent prayer. The assistant
+priest had retired; and Zacharias, for the first and only time in his
+life, stood alone in the holy shrine, while the incense which he had
+strewn on the glowing embers arose in fragrant clouds, enveloping and
+veiling the objects around, whilst it symbolized the ascent of prayers
+and intercessions not only from his own heart, but from the hearts of
+his people, into the presence of God. "And their prayer came up to his
+holy habitation, even unto heaven."
+
+What a litany of prayer poured from his heart! For Israel, that the
+chosen people should be delivered from their low estate; for the cause
+of religion, that it might be revived; for the crowds without, that God
+would hear the prayers they were offering toward his holy sanctuary,
+and, perhaps, for Elisabeth and himself, that, if possible, God would
+hear their prayer, and, if not, that He would grant them to bear
+patiently their heavy sorrow.
+
+"And there appeared unto him an angel of the Lord standing on the right
+side of the altar of incense." Mark how circumstantial the narrative
+is. There could be no mistake. He stood--and he stood on the right
+side. It was Gabriel who stands in the presence of God, who had been
+sent to speak to him, and declare the good tidings that his prayer was
+heard; that his wife should bear a son, who should be called John, that
+the child should be welcomed with joy, should be a Nazarite from his
+birth, should be filled with the Holy Spirit from his birth, should
+inherit the spirit and power of Elias, and should go before the face of
+Christ to prepare his way, by turning the hearts of the fathers to the
+children, and the disobedient to walk in the wisdom of the just.
+
+He tarried long in the temple, and what wonder! The people would have
+ceased to marvel at the long suspense, could they have known the cause
+of the delay. Presently he came out; but when he essayed to pronounce
+the customary blessing his lips were dumb. He made signs as he reached
+forth his hands in the attitude of benediction; but that day no
+blessing fell on their upturned faces. He continued making signs unto
+them and remained dumb. Dumb, because he questioned the likelihood of
+so good and gracious an answer. Dumb, because he believed not the
+archangel's words. Dumb, that he might learn in silence and solitude
+the full purposes of God, to set them presently to song. Dumb, that
+the tidings might not spread as yet. Dumb, as the representative of
+that wonderful system, which for so long had spoken to mankind with
+comparatively little result, but was now to be superseded by the Word
+of God.
+
+With the light of that glory on his face, and those sweet notes of
+"Fear not" ringing in his heart, Zacharias continued to fulfil the
+duties of his ministration, and, when his work was fulfilled, departed
+unto his house. But that day was long remembered by the people,
+prelude as it was to the time when their blessings would no longer come
+from Ebal or Gerizim, but from Calvary; and when the great High Priest
+would utter from heaven the ancient words:
+
+ The Lord bless thee and keep thee.
+ The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee.
+ The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+His Schools and Schoolmasters.
+
+(LUKE 1.)
+
+ "Oh to have watched thee through the vineyards wander,
+ Pluck the ripe ears, and into evening roam!--
+ Followed, and known that in the twilight yonder
+ Legions of angels shone about thy home!"
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+Home-Life--Preparing for his Life-Work--The Vow of Separation--A Child of
+the Desert
+
+
+Zacharias and Elisabeth had probably almost ceased to pray for a child,
+or to urge the matter. It seemed useless to pray further. There had
+been no heaven-sent sign to assure them that there was any likelihood of
+their prayer being answered, and nature seemed to utter a final No; when
+suddenly the angel of God broke into the commonplace of their life, like
+a meteorite into the unrippled water of a mountain-sheltered lake,
+bringing the assurance that there was no need for fear, and the
+announcement that their prayer was heard. It must have been like hearing
+news that a ship, long overdue and almost despaired of, has suddenly made
+harbour.
+
+It is not impossible that prayers that we have ceased to pray, and are in
+despair about, will yet return to us with the words, _Thy supplication is
+heard_, endorsed on them in our Father's handwriting. Not infrequently
+dividends are paid on investments which we have given up as valueless.
+Fruit that mellows longest in the sun is ripest. Such things may
+transcend altogether our philosophy of prayer; but we are prepared for
+this, since God is accustomed to do exceeding abundantly above all that
+we ask or think.
+
+On his arrival in his home, the aged priest, by means of the
+writing-table afterwards referred to, informed his wife, who apparently
+had not accompanied him, of all that had happened, even to the name which
+the child was to bear, She, at least, seems to have found no difficulty
+in accepting the divine assurance, and during her five months of
+seclusion she nursed great and mighty thoughts in her heart, in the
+belief and prayer that her child would become all that his name is
+supposed to signify, _the gift of Jehovah_. It was Elisabeth also who
+recognised in Mary the mother of her Lord, greeted her as blessed among
+women, and assured her that there would be for her a fulfilment of the
+things which had been promised her.
+
+Month succeeded month, but Zacharias neither heard nor spoke. His
+friends had to make signs to him, for unbelief has the effect of shutting
+man out of the enjoyment of life, and hindering his usefulness. How
+different this time of waiting from the blessedness it brought to his
+wife's young relative, who believed the heavenly messenger. He was
+evidently a good man, and well versed in the history of his people. His
+soul, as we learn from his song, was full of noble pride in the great and
+glorious past. He could believe that when Abraham and Sarah were past
+age, a child was born to _them_, who filled their tent with his merry
+prattle and laughter; but he could not believe that such a blessing could
+fall to his lot. And is not that the point where our faith staggers
+still? We can believe in the wonder-working power of God on the distant
+horizon of the past, or on the equally distant horizon of the future; but
+that He should have a definite and particular care for _our_ life, that
+_our_ prayers should touch Him, that He should give us the desire of our
+heart--this staggers us, and we feel it is too good to be true.
+
+During the whole period that the stricken but expectant priest spent in
+his living tomb, shut off from communication with the outer world, his
+spirit was becoming charged with holy emotion, that waited for the first
+opportunity of expression. Such an opportunity came at length. His
+lowly dwelling was one day crowded with an eager and enthusiastic throng
+of relatives and friends. They had gathered to congratulate the aged
+pair, to perform the initial rite of Judaism, and to name the infant boy
+that lay in his mother's arms. Ah, what joy was hers when they came to
+"magnify the Lord's mercy towards her, and to rejoice with her"! As the
+people passed in and out, there was a new glow in the brilliant eastern
+sunlight, a new glory on the familiar hills.
+
+In their perplexity at the mother's insistence that the babe's name
+should be John--none of his kindred being known by that name--they
+appealed to his father, who with trembling hand inscribed on the wax of
+the writing tablet the verdict, "His name is John." So soon as he had
+broken the iron fetter of unbelief in thus acknowledging the fulfilment
+of the angel's words, "his mouth was opened immediately, and his tongue
+loosed, and he spake, blessing God. And fear came on all that dwelt
+round about them." All these sayings quickly became the staple theme of
+conversation throughout all the hill-country of Judaea; and wherever they
+came, they excited the profoundest expectation. People laid them up in
+their hearts, saying, "What, then, shall this child be?"
+
+"And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit." "And the hand of the
+Lord was with him."
+
+There were several remarkable formative influences operating on this
+young life.
+
+
+I. THE SCHOOL OF HOME.--_His father was a priest_. John's earliest
+memories would register the frequent absence of his father in the
+fulfilment of his course; and, on his return, with what eagerness would
+the boy drink in a recital of all that had transpired in the Holy City!
+We can imagine how the three would sit together beneath their trellised
+vine, in the soft light of the fading sunset, and talk of Zion, their
+chief joy. No wonder that in after days, as he looked on Jesus as He
+walked, he pointed to Him and said, "Behold the Lamb of God"; for, from
+the earliest, his young mind had been saturated with thoughts of
+sacrifice.
+
+When old enough his parents would take him with them to one of the great
+festivals, where, amid the thronging crowds, his boyish eyes opened for
+the first time upon the stately Temple, the order and vestments of the
+priests, the solemn pomp of the Levitical ceremonial. The young heart
+dilated and expanded with wonder and pride; but how little he realized
+that his ministry would be the first step to its entire subversal.
+
+He would be also taught carefully in the _Holy Scriptures_. Like the
+young Timothy, he would know them from early childhood. The song of
+Zacharias reveals a vivid and realistic familiarity with the prophecies
+and phraseology of the Scriptures; and as the happy parents recited them
+to his infant mind, they would stay to emphasize them with impressive
+personal references. What would we not have given to hear Zacharias
+quote Isaiah xl. or Malachi iii., and turn to the lad at his knee,
+saying--"These words refer to thee".--
+
+"Yea, and thou, child, shalt be called the Prophet of the Most High; for
+thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways."
+
+Would not the aged priest speak to his son in thoughts and words like
+those with which his song is so replete; might he not speak to him in
+some such way as this: "My boy, God has fulfilled his holy covenant, the
+oath which He sware unto Abraham, our father; because of the tender mercy
+of our God, the Dayspring from on high has visited us, to shine upon them
+that sit in darkness, and to guide our feet into the way of peace." Then
+he would proceed to tell him the marvellous story of his Kinsman's birth
+in Bethlehem, and of his growing grace in Nazareth. "Blessed be the
+Lord, the God of Israel," the old man said; "for He hath visited and
+redeemed his people, and hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in the
+house of his servant David, as He spake by the mouth of his holy
+prophets, which have been since the world began." Next the father would
+tell as much of the story of Herod's crimes, and of his oppressive rule,
+as the lad could understand; and explain how there would soon be
+"salvation from their enemies, and from the hand of all that hated them."
+And his young soul would be thrilled by the hopes which were bursting in
+the bud, and so near breaking into flower.
+
+Sometimes when they were abroad together in the early dawn, and saw the
+first peep of day, the father would say: "John, do you see that light
+breaking over the hills? What that day-spring is to the world, Jesus,
+thy cousin at Nazareth, will be to the darkness of sin." Then, turning
+to the morning star, shining in the path of the dawn, and paling as they
+gazed, he would say: "See thy destiny, my son: I am an old man, and shall
+not live to see thee in thy meridian strength; but thou shalt shine for
+only a brief space, and then decrease, whilst He shall increase from the
+faint flush of day-spring to the perfect day." And might not the child
+reply, with a flash of intelligent appreciation?--"Yes, father, I
+understand; but I shall be satisfied if only I have prepared the way of
+the Lord."
+
+_There were also the associations of the surrounding country_. The story
+of Abraham would often be recited in the proximity of Machpelah's sacred
+cave. The career of David could not be unfamiliar to a youth who was
+within easy reach of the haunts of the shepherd-psalmist. And the story
+of the Maccabees would stir his soul, as his parents recounted the
+exploits of Judas and his brethren, in which the ancient Hebrew faith and
+prowess had revived in one last glorious outburst.
+
+How ineffaceable are the impressions of the Home! What the father is
+when he comes back at night from his toils, and what the mother is all
+day; what may be the staple of conversation in the home: whether the
+father is willing to be the companion of his child, answering his
+questions, and superintending the gradual unfolding of his mind; how
+often the Bible is opened and explained; how the weekly rest-day is
+spent; the attitude of the home towards strong drink in every shape and
+form, and all else that might injure the young life, as gas does
+plants--all these are vital to the right nurture and direction of boys
+and girls who can only wax strong in spirit when all early influences
+combine in the same direction.
+
+
+II. THERE WAS THE SCHOOL OF HIS NAZARITE-VOW.--The angel, who announced
+his birth, foretold that he should drink neither wine nor strong drink
+from his birth, but that he should be filled with the Holy Spirit.
+"John," said our Lord, "came neither eating nor drinking." This
+abstinence from all stimulants was a distinct sign of the Nazarite,
+together with the unshorn locks, and the care with which he abstained
+from contact with death. In some cases, the vow of the Nazarite might be
+taken for a time, or, as in the case of Samson, Samuel, and John, it
+might be for life. But, whether for shorter or longer, the Nazarite held
+himself as peculiarly given up to the service of God, pliant to the least
+indication of his will, quick to catch the smallest whisper of his voice,
+and mighty in his strength.
+
+"Mother, why do I wear my hair so long? You never cut it, as the mothers
+of other boys do."
+
+"No, my son," was the proud and glad reply; "you must never cut it as
+long as you live: _you are a Nazarite_."
+
+"Mother, why may I not taste the grapes? The boys say they are so nice
+and sweet. May I not, next vintage?"
+
+"No, never," his mother would reply; "you must never touch the fruit of
+the vine: _you are a Nazarite_."
+
+If, as they walked along the public way, they saw a bone left by some
+hungry dog, or a little bird fallen to the earth to die, and the boy
+would approach to touch either, the mother would call him back to her
+side, saying, "Thou must never touch a dead thing. If thy father were to
+die, or I, beside thee, thou must not move us from the spot, but call for
+help. Remember always that thou art separated unto God; his vows are
+upon thee, and thou must let nothing, either in symbol or reality, steal
+away his power from thy young heart and life."
+
+The effect of this would be excellent. It would give a direction and
+purpose to the lad's thoughts and anticipations. He realized that he was
+set apart for a great mission in life. The brook heard the call of the
+sea. Besides which, he would acquire self-restraint, self-mastery.
+
+What is it to be "strong in spirit"? The man who carries everything
+before him with the impetuous rush of his nature, before whose outbursts
+men tremble, and who insists in all things on asserting his wild,
+masterful will--is he the strong man? Nay! most evidently he must be
+classed among the weaklings. The strength of a man is in proportion to
+the feelings which he curbs and subdues, and not which subdue him. The
+man who receives a flagrant insult, and answers quietly; the man who
+bears a hopeless daily trial, and remains silent; the man who with strong
+passions remains chaste, or with a quick sense of injustice can refrain
+himself and remain calm--these are strong men; and John waxed strong,
+because, from the earliest dawn of thought, he was taught the necessity
+of refusing things which in themselves might have been permissible, but
+for him were impossible.
+
+On each of us rests the vow of separation by right of our union with the
+Son of God, who was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners.
+Remember how He went without the camp, bearing our reproach; how they
+cast Him forth to the death of the cross; and how He awaits us on the
+Easter side of death--and surely we can find no pleasure in the world
+where He found no place. His death has made a lasting break between his
+followers and the rest of men. They are crucified to the world, and the
+world to them. Let us not taste of the intoxicating joys in which the
+children of the present age indulge; let us allow no Delilah passion to
+pass her scissors over our locks; and let us be very careful not to
+receive contamination; to have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of
+darkness, but to come out and be separate, not touching the unclean thing.
+
+But while we put away all that injures our own life or the lives of
+others, let us be very careful to discriminate, to draw the line where
+God would have it drawn, exaggerating and extenuating nothing. It is
+important to remember that while the motto of the old covenant was
+Exclusion, even of innocent and natural things, that of the new is
+Inclusion. Moses, under the old, forbade the Jews having horses; but
+Zechariah said that in the new they might own horses, only "Holiness to
+the Lord" must be engraven on the bells of their harness. Christ has
+come to sanctify all life. Whether we eat, or drink, or whatever we do,
+we are to do all to his glory. Disciples are not to be taken out of the
+world, but kept from its evil. "Every creature of God is good, and
+nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving; for it is
+sanctified by the Word of God, and prayer." Natural instincts are not to
+be crushed, but transfigured.
+
+This is the great contrast between the Baptist and the Son of Man. The
+Nazarite would have felt it a sin against the law of his vocation and
+office to touch anything pertaining to the vine. Christ began his signs
+by changing water into wine, though of an innocuous kind, for the
+peasants' wedding at Cana of Galilee. John would have lost all sanctity
+had he touched the bodies of the dead, or the flesh of a leper. Christ
+would touch a bier, pass his hands over the seared flesh of the leper,
+and stand sympathetically beside the grave of his friend. Thus we catch
+a glimpse of our Lord's meaning when He affirms that, though John was the
+greatest of women born, yet the least in the Kingdom of heaven is greater
+than he.
+
+
+III. THERE WAS THE SCHOOL OF THE DESERT.--"The child was in the deserts
+till the day of his showing unto Israel." Probably Zacharias, and
+Elisabeth also, died when John was quite young. But the boy had grown
+into adolescence, was able to care for himself, and "the hand of the Lord
+was with him."
+
+Beneath the guidance and impulse of that hand he tore himself from the
+little home where he had first seen the tender light of day, and spent
+happy years, to go forth from the ordinary haunts of men, perhaps hardly
+knowing whither. There was a wild restlessness in his soul. A young
+man, pleading the other day with his father to be allowed to emigrate to
+the West, urged that whereas there are _inches_ here there are _acres_
+there; and something of this kind may have been in the heart of John. He
+desired to free himself from the conventionalities and restraints of the
+society amid which he had been brought up, that he might develop after
+his own fashion, with no laws but those he received from heaven.
+
+Fatherless, motherless, brotherless, sisterless--a lone man, he passed
+forth into the great and terrible wilderness of Judaea, which is so
+desolate that the Jews called it the abomination of desolation.
+Travellers who have passed over and through it say that it is destitute
+of all animal life, save a chance vulture or fox. For the most part, it
+is a waste of sand, swept by wild winds. When Jesus was there some two
+or three years after, He found nothing to eat; the stones around mocked
+his hunger; and there was no company save that of the wild beasts.
+
+In this great and terrible wilderness, John supported himself by eating
+locusts--the literal insect, which is still greatly esteemed by the
+natives--and wild honey, which abounded in the crevices of the rocks;
+while for clothing he was content with a coat of coarse camel's hair,
+such as the Arab women make still; and a girdle of skin about his loins.
+A cave, like that in which David and his men often found refuge, sufficed
+him for a home, and the water of the streams that hurried to the Dead
+Sea, for his beverage.
+
+Can we wonder that under such a regimen he grew strong? We become weak
+by continual contact with our fellows. We sink to their level, we
+accommodate ourselves to their fashions and whims; we limit the natural
+developments of character on God's plan; we take on the colour of the
+bottom on which we lie. But in loneliness and solitude, wherein we meet
+God, we become strong. God's strong men are rarely clothed in soft
+raiment, or found in kings' courts. Obadiah, who stood in awe of Ahab,
+was a very different man from Elijah, who was of the inhabitants of
+Gilead, and stood before the Lord.
+
+Yes, and there is a source of strength beside. He who is filled and
+taught, as John was, by the Spirit, is strengthened by might in the inner
+man. All things are possible to him that believes. Simon Bar-Jona
+becomes Peter when he touches the Christ. The youths faint and are
+weary, and the young men utterly fall; but they that wait on the Lord
+renew their strength: they who know God are strong and do exploits.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+The Prophet of the Highest.
+
+(LUKE I.)
+
+ "Ye hermits blest, ye holy maids,
+ The nearest heaven on earth,
+ Who talk with God in shadowy glades,
+ Free from rude care and mirth;
+ To whom some viewless Teacher brings
+ The secret love of rural things,
+ The moral of each fleeting cloud and gale,
+ The whispers from above, that haunt the twilight vale."
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+Formative Influences--A Historical Parallel--The Burning of the
+Vanities--"Sent from God"
+
+
+"Thou, child, shalt be called the Prophet of the Most High"--thus
+Zacharias addressed his infant son, as he lay in the midst of that
+group of wondering neighbours and friends. What a thrill of ecstasy
+quivered in the words! A long period, computed at four hundred years,
+had passed since the last great Hebrew prophet had uttered the words of
+the Highest. Reaching back from him to the days of Moses had been a
+long line of prophets, who had passed down the lighted torch from hand
+to hand. And the fourteen generations, during which the prophetic
+office had been discontinued, had gone wearily. But now hope revived,
+as the angel-voice proclaimed the advent of a prophet. Our Lord
+corroborated his words when, in after days, He said that John had been
+a prophet, and something more. "But what went ye out to see?" He
+asked. "A prophet? Yea, I say unto you, and much more than a prophet."
+
+The Hebrew word that stands for _prophet_ is said to be derived from a
+root signifying "to boil or bubble over," and suggests a fountain
+bursting from the heart of the man into which God had poured it. It is
+a mistake to confine the word to the prediction of coming events; for
+so employed it would hardly be applicable to men like Moses, Samuel,
+and Elijah, in the Old Testament, or John the Baptist and the apostle
+Paul, in the New, who were certainly prophets in the deepest
+significance of that term. Prophecy means the forth-telling of the
+Divine message. The prophet is borne along by the stream of Divine
+indwelling and inflowing, whether he utters the truth for the moment or
+anticipates the future. "God spake _in_ the prophets" (Hebrews i. 1,
+R.V.). And when they were conscious of his mighty moving and stirring
+within, woe to them if they did not utter it in burning words, fresh
+minted from the heart.
+
+With Malachi, the succession that had continued unbroken from the very
+foundation of the Jewish commonwealth had terminated. Pious Israelites
+might have found befitting expression for that lament in the words, "We
+see not our signs: there is no more any prophet" (Psa. lxxiv. 9).
+
+But as the voice of Old Testament prophecy ceased, with its last breath
+it foretold that it would be followed, in the after time, by a new and
+glorious revival of the noblest traditions of the prophetic office.
+"Behold," so God spake by Malachi, "I will send you Elijah the prophet
+before the great and terrible day of the Lord come. And he shall turn
+the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children
+to their fathers; lest I come and smite the earth with a curse" (Mal.
+iv. 5, 6).
+
+
+I. THE FORMATIVE INFLUENCES BY WHICH THE BAPTIST'S PROPHETIC NATURE
+WAS MOULDED.--Amongst these we must place in the foremost rank _the
+Prophecies_, which had given a forecast of his career. From his
+childhood and upwards they had been reiterated in his ear by his
+parents, who would never weary of reciting them.
+
+How often he would ponder the reference to himself in the great
+Messianic prediction--"Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your
+God.... The voice of one that crieth, Prepare ye the way of the Lord;
+make straight in the desert a highway for our God...." There was no
+doubt as to the relevance of those words to himself (Luke i. 76; Matt.
+iii. 3). And it must have unconsciously wrought mightily in the
+influence it wielded over his character and ministry.
+
+There was, also, that striking anticipation by Malachi which we have
+already quoted, and which directly suggested Elijah as his model. Had
+not Gabriel himself alluded to it, when he foretold that the predicted
+child would go before the Messiah, in the spirit and power of Elijah
+(Luke i. 17)? And again his statement was confirmed by our Lord in
+after days (Matt. xi. 14).
+
+Thus the great figure of Elijah was ever before the mind of the growing
+youth, as his model and inspiration. He found himself perpetually
+asking, How did Elijah act, and what would he do here and now? And
+there is little doubt that his choice of the lonely wilderness, of the
+rough mantle of camel's hair, of the abrupt and arousing form of
+address, was suggested by that village of Thisbe in the land of Gilead,
+and those personal characteristics which were so familiar in the
+Prophet of Fire.
+
+But the mind of the Forerunner must also have been greatly exercised by
+_the lawlessness and crime_ which involved all classes of his
+countrymen in a common condemnation. The death of Herod, occurring
+when John was yet a child, dependent on the care of the good Elisabeth,
+had led to disturbances which afforded an excuse for the Roman
+occupation of Jerusalem. The sceptre had departed from Judah, and the
+lawgiver from between his feet. The high priesthood was a mere forfeit
+in the deals of Idumaean tetrarchs and Roman governors. The publicans
+were notorious for their exactions, their covetousness, their cheating
+and oppression of the people. Soldiers filled the country with
+violence, extortion, and discontent. The priests were hirelings; the
+Pharisees were hypocrites; the ruling classes had set aside their
+primitive simplicity and purity, and were given up to the
+voluptuousness and licence of the Empire. "Brood of vipers" was
+apparently not too strong a phrase to use of the foremost religious
+leaders of the day--at least, when used, its relevance passed without
+challenge.
+
+Tidings of the evil that was overflowing the land like a deluge of ink
+were constantly coming to the ears of this eager soul, filling it with
+horror and dismay; and to this must be traced much of the austerity
+which arrested the attention of his contemporaries. The idea which
+lies beneath the fasting and privation of so many of God's servants,
+has been that of an overwhelming sorrow, which has taken away all taste
+for the pleasures and comforts of life. And this was the thought by
+which John was penetrated. On the one hand, there was his deep and
+agonizing conviction of the sin of Israel; and on the other, the belief
+that the Messiah must be nigh, even at the doors. Thus the pressure of
+the burden increased on him till he was forced to give utterance to the
+cry it extorted from his soul: "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at
+hand."
+
+But in addition to these we must add _the vision of God_, which must
+have been specially vouchsafed to him whilst he sojourned in those
+lonely wilds. He spoke once of Him "who sent him to baptize."
+Evidently he had become accustomed to detect his presence and hear his
+voice. Those still small accents which had fallen on the ear of his
+great prototype had thrilled his soul. He, too, had seen the Lord high
+and lifted up, had heard the chant of the seraphim, and had felt the
+live coal touch his lips, as it had been caught from the altar by the
+seraph's tongs.
+
+This has ever been characteristic of the true prophet. He has been a
+seer. He has spoken, because he has beheld with his eyes, looked upon,
+and handled, the very Word of God. The Divine Prophet, speaking for
+all that had preceded Him, said: "We speak that which we know, and
+testify that we have seen."
+
+In this we may have some share. It is permitted to us also to see; to
+climb the Mount of Vision, and look on the glory of God in the face of
+Jesus Christ; to have revealed to us things that eye hath not seen, nor
+ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived. Let us remember that we are
+to be God's _witnesses_ in the Jerusalem of the home, the Judaea of our
+immediate neighbours, and to the uttermost parts of the earth of our
+profession or daily calling. God demands not advocates, but witnesses;
+and we must see for ourselves, before we can bear witness to others,
+the glory of that light still flushing our faces, and the accent of
+conviction minted in our speech.
+
+These are the three signs of a prophet: vision, a deep conviction of
+sin and impending judgment, and the gushing forth of moving and
+eloquent speech; and each of these was apparent, in an exalted and
+extreme degree, in John the son of Zacharias.
+
+
+II. AN ILLUSTRATIVE AND REMARKABLE PARALLEL.--As John came in the
+spirit and power of Elijah, so, four hundred years ago, in the lovely
+city of Florence, a man was sent from God to testify against the sins
+of his age, who in many particulars so exactly corresponds with our
+Lord's forerunner that the one strongly recalls the other, and it may
+help us to bring the circumstances of the Baptist's ministry within a
+measurable distance of ourselves if we briefly compare them with the
+career of Girolamo Savonarola. It must, of course, be always borne in
+mind that the great Florentine could lay no claim to the peculiar and
+unique position and power of the Baptist. But, in many respects, there
+is a remarkable parallel and similarity between them, which will help
+us to translate the old Hebrew conceptions into our modern life.
+
+The physician's household at Ferrara, into which Savonarola was born on
+September 21, 1452, was probably no more distinguished amid other
+families of the town than that of Zacharias and Elisabeth in the hill
+country of Judaea.
+
+And as we read of the invincible love of truth which characterized the
+keen and intelligent lad, we are forcibly reminded of the Baptist,
+whose whole life was an eloquent protest on behalf of reality. In one
+of his greatest sermons Savonarola declared that he had always striven
+after truth with all his might, and maintained a constant war against
+falsehood. "The more trouble"--they are his own words--"I bestowed
+upon my quest, the greater became my longing, so that for it I was
+prepared to abandon life itself. When I was but a boy, I had such
+thoughts; and from that time, the desire and longing after this good
+has gone on increasing to the present day."
+
+We cannot read of Savonarola's saintly life, over which even the breath
+of calumny has never cast a stain--of his depriving himself of every
+indulgence, content with the hardest couch and roughest clothing, and
+just enough of the plainest food to support life--without remembering
+the camel's cloth, the locusts and wild honey of the Baptist.
+
+If John's lot was cast on evil days, when religion suffered most in the
+house of her friends, so was it with Savonarola. The fourteenth and
+fifteenth centuries witnessed the increasing corruption and
+licentiousness of popes and clergy. The offices of cardinal and bishop
+were put up to auction, and sold to the highest bidder. The bishop
+extorted money from the priests, and these robbed the people. The
+grossest immorality was prevalent in all ranks of the Church, and
+without concealment. Even the monasteries and convents were often dens
+of vice. "Italy," said Machiavelli, "has lost all piety and all
+religion. We have to thank the Church and the priests for our
+abandoned wickedness."
+
+As John beheld the fire and fan of impending judgment, so the burden of
+Savonarola's preaching was that the Church was about to be chastised,
+and afterwards renewed. So powerful was this impression on the
+preacher's mind that it can best be described in his own words as a
+vision. He tells us that on one occasion the heavens seemed to open
+before him, and there appeared a representation of the calamities that
+were coming on the Church; on another, he saw, in the middle of the
+sky, a hand bearing a sword, on which words of doom were written. He
+described himself as one who looked into the invisible world.
+
+The herald of Jesus possessed a marvellous eloquence, beneath which the
+whole land was moved; and so it was with Savonarola. During the eight
+years that he preached in the cathedral, it was thronged with vast
+crowds; and as he pleaded for purity of life and simplicity of manners,
+"women threw aside jewels and finery, libertines were transformed into
+sober citizens, bankers and tradesmen restored their ill-gotten gains."
+In Lent, 1497, took place what is known as the Burning of the Vanities.
+Bands of children were sent forth to collect from all parts of the
+city, indecent books and pictures, carnival masks and costumes, cards,
+dice, and all such things. A pile was erected, sixty feet in height,
+and fired amid the sound of trumpets and pealing bells.
+
+What Herod was to John the Baptist, the Pope and the magnificent
+Lorenzo di Medici were to Savonarola. The latter seems to have felt a
+strange fascination towards the eloquent preacher, tried to attach him
+to his court, was frequent in his attendance at San Marco, and gave
+largely to his offertories. To use the words of the New Testament, he
+feared him, "knowing that he was a righteous man, and a holy" (Mark vi.
+20). But Savonarola took care to avoid any sign of compliance or
+compromise; declined to pay homage to Lorenzo for promotion to high
+ecclesiastical functions; returned his gold from the offertories; and
+when they ran to tell him that Lorenzo was walking in the convent
+garden, answered, "If he has not asked for me, do not disturb his
+meditations or mine."
+
+Like John, Savonarola was unceasing in his denunciation of the
+hypocritical religion which satisfied itself with outward observances.
+"I tell you," he said, "that the Lord willeth not that ye fast on such
+a day or at such an hour; but willeth that ye avoid sin all the days of
+your life. Observe how they go about--seeking indulgences and pardons,
+ringing bells, decking altars, dressing churches. God heedeth not your
+ceremonies."
+
+John's exhortation to "Behold the Lamb of God" finds an echo in the
+noble utterance of this illumined soul, who, be it remembered,
+anticipated Luther's Reformation by a hundred years. "If all the
+ecclesiastical hierarchy be corrupt, the believer must turn to Christ,
+who is the primary cause, and say: 'Thou art my Priest and my
+Confessor.'"
+
+The fate of martyrdom that befell John was awarded also to Savonarola.
+Through the impetuosity of his followers, he was involved in a
+challenge to ordeal by fire. But by the manoeuvres of his foes, the
+expectations of the populace in this direction were disappointed, and
+their anger aroused. "To San Marco!" shouted their leaders. To San
+Marco they went, fired the buildings, burst open the doors, fought
+their way into the cloisters and church, dragged Savonarola from his
+devotions, and thrust him into a loathsome dungeon. After languishing
+there, amid every indignity and torture, for some weeks, on May 23,
+1498, he was led forth to die. The bishop, whose duty it was to
+pronounce his degradation, stumbled at the formula declaring--"I
+separate thee from the Church, militant and triumphant." "From the
+militant thou mayest, but from the triumphant thou canst not," was the
+martyr's calm reply. He met his end with unflinching fortitude. He
+was strangled, his remains hung in chains, burned, and the ashes flung
+into the river. When the commissioners of the Pope arrived at his
+trial, they brought with them express orders that he was to die, "even
+though he were a _second John the Baptist_." It is thus that the
+apostate Church has always dealt with her noblest sons. But Truth,
+struck to the ground, revives. Hers are the eternal years. Within a
+few years, Luther was nailing his theses at the door of the church at
+Wittenberg, and the Reformation was on its way.
+
+There is a legend, which at least contains a true suggestion, that when
+Savonarola was on his way to Florence from Genoa, as a young man, his
+strength failed him as he was crossing the Apennines, but that a
+mysterious stranger appeared to him, restored his courage, led him to a
+hospice, compelled him to take food, and afterwards accompanied him to
+his destination; but on reaching the San Gallo gate he vanished, with
+the words, _Remember to do that for which God hath sent thee!_
+
+The story recalls forcibly the words with which the evangelist John
+introduces his notice of the Forerunner--"There was a man sent from
+God, whose name was John." Men are always coming, sent from God,
+specially adapted to their age, and entrusted with the message which
+the times demand. See to it that thou too realize thy divine mission;
+for Jesus said, "As the Father hath sent Me, even so send I you."
+Every true life is a mission from God.
+
+And when we read the words of the apostle Paul about John "fulfilling
+his course," we may well ask for grace that we may fill up to the brim
+the measure of our opportunities, that we may realize to the full God's
+meaning and intention in creating us: and so our lives shall mate with
+the Divine Ideal, like sublime words with some heavenly strain, each
+completing the other.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+The First Ministry of the Baptist.
+
+(LUKE III.)
+
+ "Hark, what a sound, and too divine for hearing,
+ Stirs on the earth and trembles in the air!
+ Is it the thunder of the Lord's appearing?
+ Is it the music of his people's prayer?
+
+ "Surely He cometh, and a thousand voices
+ Shout to the saints, and to the deaf and dumb;
+ Surely He cometh, and the earth rejoices,
+ Glad in his coming who hath sworn, I come."
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+The Preaching of Repentance--His Power as a Preacher--His
+Message--Warning of Impending Judgment--The Wages of Sin
+
+
+Thirty years had left their mark on the Forerunner. The aged priest
+and his wife Elisabeth had been carried to their grave by other hands
+than those of the young Nazarite. The story of his miraculous birth,
+and the expectations it had aroused, had almost died out of the memory
+of the countryside. For many years John had been living in the caves
+that indent the limestone rocks of the desolate wilderness which
+extends from Hebron to the western shores of the Dead Sea. By the use
+of the scantiest fare, and roughest garb, he had brought his body under
+complete mastery. From nature, from the inspired page, and from direct
+fellowship with God, he had received revelations which are only
+vouchsafed to those who can stand the strain of discipline in the
+school of solitude and privation. He had carefully pondered also the
+signs of the times, of which he received information from the Bedouin
+and others with whom he came in contact. Blended with all other
+thoughts, John's heart was filled with the advent of Him, so near akin
+to himself, who, to his certain knowledge, was growing up, a few months
+his junior, in an obscure highland home, but who was speedily to be
+manifested to Israel.
+
+At last the moment arrived for him to utter the mighty burden that
+pressed upon him; and "in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar,
+Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea, Herod the tetrarch of Galilee,
+Annas and Caiaphas the high priests, the word of God came unto John,
+the son of Zacharias, in the wilderness." It may have befallen thus.
+One day, as a caravan of pilgrims was slowly climbing the mountain
+gorges threaded by the road between Jerusalem and Jericho, or halted
+for a moment in the noontide heat, they were startled by the appearance
+of a gaunt and sinewy man, with flowing raven locks, and a voice which
+must have been as sonorous and penetrating as a clarion, who cried,
+"Repent! the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand."
+
+It was as though a spark had fallen on dry tinder. The tidings spread
+with wonderful rapidity that in the wilderness of Judaea one was to be
+met who recalled the memory of the great prophets, and whose burning
+eloquence was of the same order as of Isaiah or Ezekiel. Instantly
+people began to flock to him from all sides. "There went out to him
+Jerusalem, and all Judaea, and all the region round about Jordan." The
+neighbourhood suddenly became black with hurrying crowds--as Klondike,
+when the news of the discovery of gold began to spread. From lip to
+lip the tidings sped of a great leader and preacher, who had suddenly
+appeared.
+
+He seems finally to have taken his stand not far from the rose-clad
+oasis of Jericho, on the banks of the Jordan; and men of every tribe,
+class, and profession, gathered thither, listening eagerly, or
+interrupting him with loud cries for help. The population of the
+metropolis, familiar with the Temple services, and accustomed to the
+splendour of the palace; fishermen from the Lake of Gennesaret, dusky
+sons of Ishmael from the desert of Gilead; the proud Pharisee; the
+detested publican, who had fattened on the sorrows and burdens of the
+people--were there, together with crowds of ordinary people that could
+find no resting-place in the schools or systems of religious thought of
+which Jerusalem was the centre.
+
+
+1. MANY CAUSES ACCOUNTED FOR JOHN'S IMMENSE POPULARITY.--_The office
+of the prophet was almost obsolete_. Several centuries, as we have
+seen, had passed since the last great prophet had finished his
+testimony. The oldest man living at that time could not remember
+having seen a man who had ever spoken to a prophet. It seemed as
+unlikely, to adopt the phrase of another, that another prophet should
+arise in that formal, materialistic age, as that another cathedral
+should be added to the splendid remains of Gothic glory which tell us
+of those bygone days when there were giants in the land.
+
+Moreover, _John gave such abundant evidence of sincerity--of reality_.
+His independence of anything that this world could give made men feel
+that whatever he said was inspired by his direct contact with things as
+they literally are. It was certain that his severe and lonely life had
+rent the vail, and given him the knowledge of facts and realities,
+which were as yet hidden from ordinary men, though waiting, soon to be
+revealed; and it was equally certain that his words were a faithful and
+adequate presentation of what he saw. He spoke what he knew, and
+testified what he had seen. His accent of conviction was unmistakable.
+When men see the professed prophet of the Unseen and Eternal as keen
+after his own interests as any worldling, shrewd at a bargain,
+captivated by show, obsequious to the titled and wealthy; when they
+discover the man who predicts the dissolution of all things carefully
+investing the proceeds of the books in which he publishes his
+predictions--they are apt to reduce to a minimum their faith in his
+words. But there was no trace of this in the Baptist, and therefore
+the people went forth to him.
+
+_Above all, he appealed to their moral convictions, and, indeed,
+expressed them_. The people knew that they were not as they should be.
+For a long time this consciousness had been gaining ground; and now
+they flocked around the man who revealed themselves to themselves, and
+indicated with unfaltering decision the course of action they should
+adopt. How marvellous is the fascination which he exerts over men who
+will speak to their inner-most souls! This has always been the source
+of power to the great orators of the Romish Church--men like Massillon,
+for instance--and to refuse to use this method of approach is to forego
+one of the mightiest weapons in the repertory of Christian appeal. If
+we deal only with the intellect or imagination, the novelist or
+essayist may successfully compete with us. It is in his direct appeal
+to the heart and conscience, that the servant of God exerts his supreme
+and unrivalled power. Though a man may shrink from the preaching of
+repentance, yet, if it tell the truth about himself, he will be
+irresistibly attracted to hear the voice that harrows his soul. John
+rebuked Herod for many things; but still the royal offender sent for
+him again and again, and heard him gladly.
+
+It is expressly said that John saw many Pharisees and Sadducees coming
+to his baptism (Matt. iii. 7). Their advent appears to have caused him
+some surprise. "Ye offspring of vipers, who warned you to flee from
+the wrath to come?" The strong epithet he used of them suggests that
+they came as critics, because they were unwilling to surrender the
+leadership of the religious life of Israel, and were anxious to keep in
+touch with the new movement, until they could sap its vitality, or
+divert its force into the channels of their own influence.
+
+But it is quite likely that in many cases there were deeper reasons.
+_The Pharisees_ were the ritualists and formalists of their day, who
+would wrangle about the breadth of a phylactery, and decide to an inch
+how far a man might walk on the Sabbath day; but the mere externals of
+religion will never permanently satisfy the soul made in the likeness
+of God. Ultimately it will turn from them with a great nausea and an
+insatiable desire for the living God. As for _the Sadducees_, they
+were the materialists of their time. The reaction of superstition, it
+has been said, is to infidelity; and the reaction from Pharisaism was
+to Sadduceeism. Disgusted and outraged by the trifling of the
+literalists of Scripture interpretation, the Sadducee denied that there
+was an eternal world and a spiritual state, and asserted that "there is
+no resurrection, neither angel, nor spirit." But mere negation can
+never satisfy. The heart still moans out its sorrow under the darkness
+of agnosticism, as the ocean sighing under a starless midnight.
+Nature's instincts are more cogent than reason. It was hardly to be
+wondered at, then, that these two great classes were largely
+represented in the crowds that gathered on the banks of the Jordan.
+
+
+II. LET US BRIEFLY ENUMERATE THE MAIN BURDEN OF THE BAPTIST'S
+PREACHING.--(1) "_The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand_." To a Jew that
+phrase meant the re-establishment of the Theocracy, and a return to
+those great days in the history of his people when God Himself was
+Lawgiver and King. Had not Daniel predicted that in the days of the
+last of the great empires, prefigured in Nebuchadnezzar's dream, the
+God of heaven would set up a kingdom which should never be
+destroyed--which should break in pieces all other kingdoms and stand
+for ever? Had he not foreseen a time when One like unto a son of man
+should come to the Ancient of Days to receive a dominion which should
+not pass away, and a kingdom which should not be destroyed? Had he not
+foretold that the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven
+should be given to the saints of the Most High? Surely, then, all
+these anticipations were on the eve of fulfilment. The long-expected
+Messiah was at hand; and here was the forerunner described by Isaiah,
+the prophet, saying:--
+
+ "The voice of one crying in the wilderness,
+ Make ye ready the way of the Lord,
+ Make his paths straight."
+
+
+But some misgiving must have passed over the minds of his hearers when
+they heard the young prophet's description of the conditions and
+accompaniments of that long-looked-for reign. Instead of dilating on
+the material glory of the Messianic period, far surpassing the
+magnificent splendour of Solomon, he insisted on the fulfilment of
+certain necessary preliminary requirements, which lifted the whole
+conception of the anticipated reign to a new level, in which the inward
+and spiritual took precedence of the outward and material. It was the
+old lesson, which in every age requires repetition, that unless a man
+is born again, and from above, he cannot see the kingdom of God.
+
+Be sure of this, that no outward circumstances, however propitious and
+favourable, can bring about true blessedness. We might be put into the
+midst of heaven itself, and be poor, and miserable, and blind, and
+naked, unless the heart were in loving union with the Lamb, who is in
+the midst of the throne. He is the light of that city, his countenance
+doth lighten it--from his throne the river of its pleasure flows, his
+service is its delightful business; and to be out of fellowship with
+Him would make us out of harmony with its joy. Life must be centred in
+Christ if it is to be concentric with all the circles of heaven's
+bliss. We can never be at rest or happy whilst we expect to find our
+fresh springs in outward circumstances. It is only when we are right
+with God that we are blest and at rest. Righteousness is blessedness.
+Where the King is enthroned within the heart, the soul is in the
+kingdom, which is righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost;
+nay, perhaps more accurately, that kingdom is in the soul. And when
+all hearts are yielded to the King; when all gates lift up their heads,
+and all everlasting doors are unfolded for his entrance--then the curse
+which has so long brooded over the world shall be done away. The whole
+creation groaneth and travaileth for the manifestation of the sons of
+God: but when they are revealed in all their beauty, then judgment
+shall dwell in the wilderness, and righteousness shall abide in the
+fruitful field, and the work of righteousness shall be peace, and the
+effect of righteousness quietness and confidence for ever; and the
+mirage shall become a pool, and the thirsty ground springs of water
+(Isa. xxxii. 15, 16; xxxv. 7, R.V.).
+
+(2) Alongside the proclamation of the kingdom was the uncompromising
+insistence on "_the wrath to come_." John saw that the Advent of the
+King would bring inevitable suffering to those who were living in
+self-indulgence and sin.
+
+There would be careful discrimination. He who was coming would
+carefully discern between the righteous and the wicked; between those
+who served God and those who served Him not: and the preacher enforced
+his words by an image familiar to orientals. When the wheat is reaped,
+it is bound in sheaves and carted to the threshing-floor, which is
+generally a circular spot of hard ground from fifty to one hundred feet
+in diameter. On this the wheat is threshed from the chaff by manual
+labour, but the two lie intermingled till the evening, when the grain
+is caught up in broad shovels or fans, and thrown against the evening
+breeze, as it passes swiftly over the fevered land; thus the light
+chaff is borne away, while the wheat falls heavily to the earth.
+Likewise, cried the Baptist, there shall be a very careful process of
+discrimination, before the unquenchable fires are lighted; so that none
+but chaff shall be consigned to the flames--a prediction which was
+faithfully fulfilled. At first Christ drew all men to Himself; but, as
+his ministry proceeded, He revealed their quality. A few were
+permanently attracted to Him; the majority were as definitely repelled.
+There was no middle class. Men were either for or against Him. The
+sheep on this side; the goats on that. The five wise virgins, and the
+five foolish. Those who entered the strait gate, and those who flocked
+down the broad way that leadeth to destruction. So it has been in
+every age. Jesus Christ is the touchstone of trial. Our attitude
+towards Him reveals the true quality of the soul.
+
+There would also be a period of probation. "The axe laid to the root
+of the trees" is familiar enough to those who know anything of
+forestry. The woodman barks some tree which seems to him to be
+occupying space capable of being put to better use. There is no undue
+haste. It is only after severe and searching scrutiny that the word
+goes forth: "Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?" But when once
+that word is spoken, there is no appeal. The Jewish people had become
+sadly unfruitful; but a definite period was to intervene--three years
+of Christ's ministry and thirty years beside--before the threatened
+judgment befell. All this while the axe lay ready for its final
+stroke; but only when all hope of reformation was abandoned was it
+driven home, and the nation crashed to its doom.
+
+Perhaps this may be the case with one of my readers. You have been
+planted on a favourable site, and have drunk in the dews and rain and
+sunshine of God's providence; but what fruit have you yielded in
+return? How have you repaid the heavenly Husbandman? May He not be
+considering whether any result will accrue from prolonging your
+opportunities for bearing fruit? He has looked for grapes, and lo, you
+have brought forth only wild grapes; He may well consider the
+advisability of removing you from the stewardship, which you have used
+for your own emolument, and not for his glory.
+
+For all such there must be "wrath to come." After there has been
+searching scrutiny and investigation, and every reasonable chance has
+been given for amendment, and still the soul is impenitent and
+disobedient, there must be "a certain fearful looking for of judgment
+and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries."
+
+The fire of John's preaching had its primary fulfilment, probably, in
+the awful disasters which befell the Jewish people, culminating in the
+siege and fall of Jerusalem. We know how marvellously the little
+handful of believers which had been gathered out by the preaching of
+Christ and his disciples were accounted worthy to escape all those
+things that came to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man. But the
+unbelieving mass of the Jewish people were discovered to be worthless
+chaff and unfruitful trees, and assigned to those terrible fires which
+have left a scar on Palestine to this day.
+
+But there was a deeper meaning. The wrath of God avenges itself, not
+on nations but on individual sinners. "He that believeth not the Son
+shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." The penalty
+of sin is inevitable. The wages of sin is death. The land which
+beareth thorns and thistles, after having drunk of the rain which
+cometh often upon it, is rejected and nigh unto a curse, its end is to
+be burned; under the first covenant, every transgression and
+disobedience received a just recompense of reward; the man that set at
+nought Moses' law died without compassion, on the word of two or three
+witnesses--of how much sorer punishment shall he be judged worthy who
+hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of
+the covenant a common thing, and hath done despite to the Spirit of
+grace!
+
+Even if we grant, as of course we must, that many of the expressions
+referring to the ultimate fate of the ungodly are symbolical, yet it
+must be granted also, that they have counterparts in the realm of soul
+and spirit, which are as terrible to endure, as the nature of the soul
+is more highly organized than that of the body. Fire to the body is
+easy to bear in comparison with certain forms of suffering to which the
+heart and soul are sometimes exposed even in this life. Have we not
+sometimes said, "If physical suffering were concerned, we could bear
+it; but oh, this pain which is gnawing at the heart--this awful inward
+agony, which burns like fire!" And if we are capable of suffering so
+acutely from remorse and shame, from ingratitude and misrepresentation,
+in this life where there are so many distractions and temporary
+alleviations, what may not be the possibility of pain in that other
+life, where there is no screen, no covering, no alleviation, no cup of
+water to slake the thirst! Believe me, when Jesus said, "These shall
+go away into eternal punishment," He contemplated a retribution so
+terrible, that it were good for the sufferers if they had never been
+born.
+
+All the great preachers have seen and faithfully borne witness to the
+fearful results of sin, as they take effect in this life and the next.
+These threw Brainerd into a dripping sweat, whilst praying on a cool
+day for his Indians in the woods; these drew John Welsh from his bed,
+at all hours of the night, to plead for his people; these inspired
+Baxter to write his _Call to the Unconverted_; these drew Henry Martyn
+from his fellowship at Cambridge to the burning plains of India; these
+forced tears from Whitefield as he preached to the crowding thousands;
+these burn in the memorable sermon by Jonathan Edwards on "Sinners in
+the hands of an angry God." The notable revival which broke out at
+Kirk o' Shotts was due, under God, to Livingston congratulating the
+people that drops of rain alone were falling, and not the fire of
+Divine wrath. The sermons of Ralph Erskine, of McCheyne and W. C.
+Burns, of Brownlow Northland Reginald Radcliffe, in the last
+generation, were characterized by the same appeals. Though, on the
+other hand, because God is not confined to any one method, the
+preaching of the late D. L. Moody was specially steeped in the love of
+God. It is for want of a vision of the inevitable fate of the godless
+and disobedient, that much of our present-day preaching is so powerless
+and ephemeral. You cannot get crops out of the land merely by summer
+showers and sunshine; there must be the subsoil ploughing, the
+pulverizing frost, the wild March wind. And only when we modern
+preachers have seen sin as God sees it, and begin to apply the divine
+standard to the human conscience; only when our eagerness and yearning
+well over into our eyes and broken tones, only when we know the terror
+of the Lord, and begin to persuade men as though we would pluck them
+out of the fire, by our strenuous expostulation and entreaties--shall
+we see the effects that followed the preaching of the Baptist when
+soldiers, publicans, Pharisees, and scribes, crowded around him,
+saying, "What shall we do?"
+
+All John's preaching, therefore, led up to the demand for repentance.
+The word which was oftenest on his lips was "Repent ye!" It was not
+enough to plead direct descent from Abraham, or outward conformity with
+the Levitical and Temple rites. God could raise up children to Abraham
+from the stones of the river bank. There must be the renunciation of
+sin, the definite turning to God, the bringing forth of fruit meet for
+an amended life. In no other way could the people be prepared for the
+coming of the Lord.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+Baptism unto Repentance
+
+(MARK I. 4.)
+
+ "The last and greatest herald of heaven's King,
+ Girt with rough skins, hies to the desert wild;
+ Among that savage brood the woods doth bring,
+ Which he more harmless found than man, and mild.
+
+ "His food was locusts and what there doth spring,
+ With honey that from virgin hives distill'd,
+ Parch'd body, hollow eyes, some uncouth thing
+ Made him appear, long since from earth exiled."
+ W. DRUMMOND, of Hawthornden.
+
+
+Repentance: its Nature--Repentance: how Produced--Repentance: its
+Evidences--Repentance: its Results--John's Baptism: from Heaven
+
+
+At the time of which we are speaking, an extraordinary sect, known as
+the Essenes, was scattered throughout Palestine, but had its special
+home in the oasis of Engedi; and with the adherents of this community
+John must have been in frequent association. They were the recluses or
+hermits of their age.
+
+The aim of the Essenes was moral and ceremonial purity. They sought
+after an ideal of holiness, which they thought could not be realized in
+this world; and therefore, leaving villages and towns, they betook
+themselves to the dens and caves of the earth, and gave themselves to
+continence, abstinence, fastings, and prayers, supporting themselves by
+some slight labours on the land. Those who have investigated their
+interesting history tell us that the cardinal point with them was faith
+in the inspired Word of God. By meditation, prayer, and mortification,
+frequent ablutions, and strict attention to the laws of ceremonial
+purity, they hoped to reach the highest stage of communion with God.
+They agreed with the Pharisees in their extraordinary regard for the
+Sabbath. Their daily meal was of the simplest kind, and partaken of in
+their house of religious assembly. After bathing, with prayer and
+exhortation they went, with veiled faces, to their dining-room, as to a
+holy temple. They abstained from oaths, despised riches, manifested
+the greatest abhorrence of war and slavery, faced torture and death
+with the utmost bravery, refused the indulgence of pleasure.
+
+It is clear that John was not a member of this holy community, which
+differed widely from the Pharisaism and Sadduceeism of the time. The
+Essenes wore white robes, emblematic of the purity they sought; whilst
+he was content with his coat of camel's hair and leathern girdle. They
+seasoned their bread with hyssop, and he with honey. They dwelt in
+brotherhoods and societies; while he stood alone from the earliest days
+of his career. But it cannot be doubted that he was in deep accord
+with much of the doctrine and practice of this sect.
+
+John the Baptist, however, cannot be accounted for by any of the
+pre-existing conditions of his time. He stood alone in his God-given
+might. That he was conscious of this appears from his own declaration
+when he said, "He that sent me to baptize in water, He said unto me."
+And that Christ wished to convey the same impression is clear from his
+question to the Pharisees: "The baptism of John, was it from heaven or
+from men?" Moreover, the distinct assertion of the Spirit of God,
+through the fourth Evangelist, informs us: "There came a man, sent from
+God, whose name was John, the same came for witness, that all might
+believe through him." "The Word of God came unto John, the son of
+Zacharias, in the wilderness. And he came."
+
+
+I. THE SUMMONS TO REPENT.--John has a ministry with all men. In other
+words, he represents a phase of teaching and influence through which we
+must needs pass if we are properly to discover and appreciate the grace
+of Christ. With us, too, a preparatory work has to be done. There are
+mountains and hills of pride and self-will that have to be levelled;
+crooked and devious ways that have to be straightened; ruggednesses
+that have to be smoothed--before we can fully behold the glory of God
+in the face of Jesus Christ. In proportion to the thoroughness and
+permanence of our repentance will be our glad realization of the
+fulness and glory of the Lamb of God.
+
+But we must guard ourselves here, lest it be supposed that repentance
+is a species of good work which must be performed in order that we may
+merit the grace of Christ. It must be made equally clear, that
+repentance must not be viewed apart from faith in the Saviour, which is
+an integral part of it. It is also certain that, though "God
+commandeth all men everywhere to repent," yet Jesus is exalted "to give
+repentance and the remission of sins."
+
+Repentance, according to the literal rendering of the Greek word, is "a
+change of mind." Perhaps we should rather say, it is a change in the
+attitude of the will. The unrepentant soul chooses its own way and
+will, regardless of the law of God. "The mind of the flesh is enmity
+against God, for it is not subject to the law of God, neither, indeed,
+can it be; and they that are in the flesh cannot please God." But in
+repentance the soul changes its attitude. It no longer refuses the
+yoke of God's will, like a restive heifer, but yields to it, or is
+willing to yield. There is a compunction, a sense of the hollowness of
+all created things, a relenting, a wistful yearning after the true
+life, and ultimately a turning from darkness to light, and from the
+power of Satan unto God. The habits may rebel; the inclinations and
+emotions may shrink back; the consciousness of peace and joy may yet be
+far away--but the will has made its secret decision, and has begun to
+turn to God: as, in the revolution of the earth, the place where we
+live reaches its furthest point from the sunlight, passes it, and
+begins slowly to return towards its warm smiles and embrace.
+
+It cannot be too strongly emphasized that repentance is an act of the
+_will_. In its beginning there may be no sense of gladness or
+reconciliation with God: but just the consciousness that certain ways
+of life are wrong, mistaken, hurtful, and grieving to God; and the
+desire, which becomes the determination, to turn from them, to seek Him
+who formed the mountains and created the wind, that maketh the morning
+darkness and treadeth upon the high places of the earth.
+
+Repentance may be accounted as the other side of faith. They are the
+two sides of the same coin: the two aspects of the same act. If the
+act of the soul which brings it into right relation with God is
+described as a turning round, to go in the reverse direction to that in
+which it had been travelling, then _repentance_ stands for its desire
+and choice to turn from sin, and _faith_ for its desire and choice to
+turn to God. We must be willing to turn from sin and our own
+righteousness--that is _repentance_; we must be willing to be saved by
+God, in his own way, and must come to Him for that purpose--that is
+_faith_.
+
+We need to turn from our own righteousnesses as well as from our sins.
+Augustine spoke of his efforts after righteousness as splendid sins;
+and Paul distinctly disavows all those attempts to stand right with God
+which he made before he saw the face of the risen Christ looking out
+from heaven upon his conscience-stricken spirit. You must turn away
+from your own efforts to save yourself. These are, in the words of the
+prophet, but "filthy rags." Nothing, apart from the Saviour and his
+work, can avail the soul, which must meet the scrutiny of eternal
+justice and purity.
+
+Repentance is produced sometimes and specially by the presentation of
+the claims of Christ. We suddenly awake to realize what He is, how He
+loves, how much we are missing, the gross ingratitude with which we
+respond to his agony and bloody sweat, his cross and suffering, the
+beauty of his character, the strength of his claims.
+
+At other times repentance is wrought by the preaching of John the
+Baptist. Then we hear of the axe laid at the root of the trees, and
+the unquenchable fire for the consuming of the chaff: and the heart
+trembles. Then we are led to the brink of the precipice, and compelled
+to see the point at which the primrose-path we are travelling ends in
+the fatal abyss. Then our faith in our hereditary position and
+privilege is shattered by the iconoclasm of the preacher; and we are
+levelled to the position of stones which are lapped by the Jordan, but
+are insensible to its touch. It is at such a time as this that the
+soul sees the entire fabric of its vain confidences and hopes crumbling
+like a cloud-palace, and turns from it all--as Mary from the sepulchre,
+where her hopes lay entombed, to find Jesus standing with the
+resurrection glory on his face and radiant love in his eyes.
+
+For purposes of clear thinking it is well to discriminate in our use of
+the words Repentance and Penitence, using the former of the first act
+of the will, when, energized and quickened by the Spirit of God, it
+turns from dead works to serve the living and true God; and the latter,
+of the emotions which are powerfully wrought upon, as the years pass,
+by the Spirit's presentation of all the pain and grief which our sin
+has caused, and is causing, to our blessed Lord. We repent once, but
+are penitents always. We repent in the will; we are penitent in the
+heart. We repent, and believe the Gospel; we believe the Gospel of the
+Son of Man, and as we look on Him, whom our sins have pierced, we
+mourn. We repent when we obey his call to come unto Him and live; we
+are penitent as we stand behind Him weeping, and begin to wash his feet
+with our tears, and to wipe them with the hair of our head.
+
+If John the Baptist has never wrought his work in you, be sure to open
+your heart to his piercing voice. Let him fulfil his ministry. See
+that you do not reject the counsel of God, as it proceeds from his
+lips; but expose your soul to its searching scrutiny, and allow it to
+have free and uninterrupted course. He comes to prepare the way of the
+Lord, and to make through the desert of our nature a highway for our
+God. Of course, if, from the earliest you have been under the nurture
+of pious parents, and your young heart turned to God in the early dawn
+of consciousness, you will not pass through these experiences as those
+must who have spent years in the service of Satan. For these there is
+but one word--Repent! They must, in a moment of time, take up an
+entirely different attitude to God and holiness, to Christ and his
+salvation.
+
+II. THE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF REPENTANCE.--(1) _Confession_. "They
+were baptized of him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins." What
+this precisely means it is not possible to say in detail; but it is not
+improbable that beneath the strong pressure of inward remorse and
+bitterness of spirit, men of notoriously bad life, as well as those who
+had never abandoned themselves to the mad currents of temptation, but
+were none the less conscious of heart and hidden sins, stood up,
+"confessing and declaring their deeds," as in a memorable scene long
+afterwards (Acts xix. 17-20).
+
+The formalist confessed that the whited sepulchre of his religious
+observances had concealed a mass of putrefaction. The sceptic
+confessed that his refusal of religion was largely due to his hatred of
+the demands of God's holy law. The multitudes confessed that they had
+been selfish and sensual, shutting up their compassions, and refusing
+clothing and food to the needy. The publican confessed that he had
+extorted by false accusation and oppression more than his due. The
+soldier confessed that his profession had often served as the cloak for
+terrorizing the poor and vamping up worthless accusations. The
+notoriously evil liver confessed that he had lain in wait for blood,
+and destroyed the innocent and helpless for gain or hate. The air was
+laden with the cries and sighs of the stricken multitudes, who beheld
+their sin for the first time in the light of eternity and of its
+inevitable doom. The lurid flames of "the wrath to come" cast their
+searching light on practices which, in the comparative twilight of
+ignorance and neglect, had passed without special notice.
+
+Upon that river's brink, men not only confessed to God, but probably
+also to one another. Life-long feuds were reconciled; old quarrels
+were settled; frank words of apology and forgiveness were exchanged;
+hands grasped hands for the first time after years of alienation and
+strife.
+
+Confession is an essential sign of a genuine repentance, and without it
+forgiveness is impossible. "He that covereth his transgressions shall
+not prosper; but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall obtain
+mercy." "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us
+our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." So long as we
+keep silence, our bones wax old through our inward anguish; we are
+burnt by the fire of slow fever; we toss restlessly, though on a couch
+of down. But on confession there is immediate relief. "I said, I will
+confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and Thou forgavest me the
+iniquity of my sin."
+
+Confess your sin to God, O troubled soul, from whom the vision of
+Christ is veiled. It is more than likely that some undetected or
+unconfessed sin is shutting out the rays of the true sun. Excuse
+nothing, extenuate nothing, omit nothing. Do not speak of mistakes of
+judgment, but of lapses of heart and will. Do not be content with a
+general confession; be particular and specific. Drag each evil thing
+forth before God's judgment bar; let the secrets be exposed, and the
+dark, sad story told. Begin at the beginning, and go steadily through.
+Only be very careful to leave no trace of your experiences for human
+eyes or ears. To tell this story to another will rob it of its value
+to yourself and its acceptableness to God. It is enough for God to
+know it; and to tell Him all is to receive at once his assurance of
+forgiveness, for the sake of Him who loved us and gave Himself a
+propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but for those of the
+whole world. Directly the confession leaves our heart, nay, whilst it
+is in process, the Divine voice is heard assuring us that our sins,
+which are many, are put away as far as the east is from the west, and
+cast into the depths of the sea.
+
+But such confession should not be made to God alone, when sins are in
+question which have injured and alienated others. If our brother has
+aught against us, we must find him out, while our gift is left
+unpresented at the altar, and first be reconciled to him. We must
+write the letter, or speak the word; we must make honourable reparation
+and amends; we must not be behind the sinners under the old law, who
+were bidden to add a fifth part to the loss their brother had sustained
+through their wrong-doing, when they made it good. The only sin we are
+justified in confessing to our brother man is that we have committed
+against him. All else must be told in the ear of Jesus, that great
+High Priest, whose confessional is always open, and whose pure ear can
+receive our dark and sad stories without taint or soil.
+
+(2) _Fruit worthy of Repentance_. "Bring forth, therefore, fruit
+worthy of repentance," said John, with some indignation, as he saw many
+of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism. He insisted that
+practical and vital religion was not a rule, but a life; not outward
+ritual, but a principle; not works, but fruit: and he demanded that the
+genuineness of repentance should be attested by appropriate fruit. "Do
+men gather grapes of thorns, and figs of thistles?"
+
+Probably that demand of the Baptist accounted for the alteration in his
+life of which Zaccheus made confession to Christ, when He became his
+guest. The rich publican lived at Jericho, near which John was
+baptizing, and he was probably amongst the publicans who were attracted
+to his ministry. How well we can imagine the comments that would be
+passed on his presence, as each nudged his neighbour and whispered.
+"Is not that Zaccheus?" said one. "What is he doing here?" said
+another. "It is about time _he_ came to himself," muttered a third.
+"I wish the Baptist could do something for him," said a fourth.
+
+And something touched that hardened heart. A great hope and a great
+resolve sprang up in it. He may have joined in the confessions of
+which we have spoken, but he did more. On his arrival at Jericho he
+was a new man. He gave the half of his goods to feed the poor; and if
+he had wrongfully exacted aught of any man, he restored four-fold. His
+servant was often seen in the lowest and poorest parts of the old city,
+hunting up cases of urgent distress, and bestowing anonymous alms, and
+many a poor man was delighted to find a considerable sum of money
+thrust into his hands, with a scrap of paper signed by the rich
+tax-gatherer, saying, "I took so much from you, years ago, to which I
+had no claim; kindly find it enclosed, with fourfold as amends."
+Should any ask him the reason for it all, he would answer, "Ah, I have
+been down to the Jordan and heard the Baptist; I believe the Kingdom is
+coming, and the King is at hand; and I want to make ready for Him, so
+that, when He comes, He may be able to abide at my house."
+
+You will never get right with God till you are right with man. It is
+not enough to confess wrong-doing; you must be prepared to make amends
+so far as lies in your power. Sin is not a light thing, and it must be
+dealt with, root and branch.
+
+(3) _The baptism of repentance_. "They were baptized ... confessing
+their sins." The cleansing property of water has given it a religious
+significance from most remote antiquity Men have conceived of sin as a
+foul stain upon the heart, and have couched their petitions for its
+removal in words derived from its use: "Purge me with hyssop, and I
+shall be clean. Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." They have
+longed to feel that as the body was delivered from pollution, so the
+soul was freed from stain. In some cases this thought has assumed a
+gross and material form; and men have attributed to the water of
+certain rivers, such as the Ganges, the Nile, the Abana, the mysterious
+power of cleansing away sin.
+
+There was no trace of this, however, in John's teaching. It was not
+baptism _unto remission_, but _unto repentance_. It was the expression
+and symbol of the soul's desire and intention, so far as it knew, to
+confess and renounce its sins, as the necessary condition of obtaining
+the Divine forgiveness.
+
+It is not necessary to discuss the much-vexed question of the source
+from which the Baptist derived his baptism--some say it was from the
+habits of the Essenes, or the practice of the Rabbis, who subjected to
+this rite all proselytes to Judaism from the Gentile world. It is
+enough for us to remember that he was _sent_ to baptize; that the idea
+of his baptism was "from heaven"; and that in his hands the rite
+assumed altogether novel and important functions. It meant death and
+burial as far as the past was concerned; and resurrection to a new and
+better future. Forgetting and dying to the things that were behind,
+the soul was urged to realize the meaning of this symbolic act, and to
+press on and up to better things before; assured as it did so that God
+had accepted its confession and choice, and was waiting to receive it
+graciously and love it freely.
+
+It is easy to see how all this appealed to the people, and specially
+touched the hearts of young men. At that time, by the blue waters of
+the Lake of Galilee, there was a handful of ardent youths, deeply
+stirred by the currents of thought around them, who resented the Roman
+sway, and were on the tip-toe of expectation for the coming Kingdom.
+How they spoke together, as they floated at night in their fisherman's
+yawl over the dark waters of the Lake of Galilee, about God's ancient
+covenant, and the advent of the Messiah, and the corruptions of their
+beloved Temple service! And when, one day, tidings reached them of
+this strange new preacher, they left all and streamed with all the
+world beside to the Jordan valley, and stood fascinated by the spell of
+his words.
+
+One by one, or all together, they made themselves known to him, and
+became his loyal friends and disciples. We are familiar with the names
+of one or two of them, who afterwards left their earlier master to
+follow Christ; but of the rest we know nothing, save that he taught
+them to fast and pray, and that they clung to their great teacher,
+until they bore his headless body to the grave. After his death they
+joined themselves with Him whom they had once regarded with some
+suspicion as his rival and supplanter.
+
+How much this meant to John! He had never had a friend; and to have
+the allegiance and love of these noble, ingenuous youths must have been
+very grateful to his soul. But from them all he repeatedly turned his
+gaze, as though he were looking for some one who must presently emerge
+from the crowd; and the sound of whose voice would give him the deepest
+and richest fulfilment of his joy, because it would be the voice of the
+Bridegroom Himself.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+The Manifestation of the Messiah
+
+(JOHN I. 31.)
+
+ "Before me, as in darkening glass,
+ Some glorious outlines pass,
+ Of love, and truth, and holiness, and power--
+ I own them thine, O Christ,
+ And bless Thee in this hour."
+ F. R. HAVERGAL.
+
+
+The Herald's Proclamation--The Meeting of John and Jesus--Christ's
+Baptism--"It Becometh Us."--"My Beloved Son."
+
+
+John's life, at this period, was an extraordinary one. By day he
+preached to the teeming crowds, or baptized them; by night he would
+sleep in some slight booth, or darksome cave. But the conviction grew
+always stronger in his soul, that the Messiah was near to come; and
+this conviction became a revelation. The Holy Spirit who filled him,
+taught him. He began to see the outlines of his Person and work. As
+he thought upon Him, beneath the gracious teaching of Him who had sent
+him to baptize (John i. 33), the dim characteristics of his glorious
+personality glimmered out on the sensitive plate of his inner
+consciousness, and he could even describe Him to others, as well as
+delineate Him for himself.
+
+He conceived of the coming King, as we have seen, as the Woodman,
+laying his axe at the root of the trees; as the Husbandman, fan in hand
+to winnow the threshing-floor; as the Baptist, prepared to plunge all
+faithful souls in his cleansing fires; as the Ancient of Days, who,
+though coming after him in order of time, must be preferred before him
+in order of precedence, because He was before him in the eternal glory
+of his Being (John i. 15-30).
+
+It was this vision of the Sun before the sunrise, as he viewed it from
+the high peak of his own noble character, that induced in the herald
+his conspicuous and beautiful humility. He insisted that he was not
+worthy to perform the most menial service for Him whose advent he
+announced. "I am content," he said in effect, "to be a voice, raised
+for a moment to proclaim the King, and soon dying on the desert air,
+whilst the person of the crier is unnoticed and unsought for; but I may
+not presume to unloose the latchet of his shoes.... There cometh after
+me He that is mightier than I, the latchet of whose shoes I am not
+worthy to stoop down and unloose."
+
+John was not only humble in his self-estimate, but also in his modest
+appreciation of the results of his work. It was only transient and
+preparatory. It was given him to do; but it would soon be done. His
+course was a short one, and it would soon be fulfilled (Acts xiii. 25).
+His simple mission was to bid the people to believe on Him who should
+come after him (xix. 4.) He was the morning star ushering in the day,
+but destined to fade in the glory of ruddy dawn, flooding the eastern
+sky.
+
+But our impression of the sublime humility of this great soul will
+become deeper, as we consider that marvellous scene in which he first
+recognised the divine mission and claims of his Kinsman, Jesus of
+Nazareth. Consider the meeting between the Sun and the star, and take
+it as indicating an experience which must always supervene on the
+cleansed and holy soul, which desires and prepares for it.
+
+
+I. OUR LORD'S ADVENT TO THE JORDAN BANK.--For thirty years the Son of
+Man had been about his Father's business in the ordinary routine of a
+village carpenter's life. He had found scope enough there for his
+marvellously rich and deep nature; reminding us of the philosopher's
+garden, which, though only a dingy court in a crowded city, reached
+through to the other side of the world on the one hand, and up to the
+heaven of God on the other. Often He must have felt the strong
+attraction of the great world of men, which He loved; and the wild
+winds, as they careered over his village home, must have often borne to
+Him the wail of broken hearts, asking Him to hasten to their relief.
+On his ear must have struck the voices of Jairuses pleading for their
+only daughters; of sisters interceding for their Lazaruses; of halt and
+lame and blind entreating that He would come and heal them. But He
+waited still, his eye on the dial-plate of the clock, till the time was
+fulfilled which had been fixed in the Eternal Council Chamber.
+
+As soon, however, as the rumours of the Baptist's ministry reached Him,
+and He knew that the porter had taken up his position at the door of
+the sheepfold, ready to admit the true Shepherd (John x. 3), He could
+hesitate no longer. The Shechinah cloud was gathering up its fleecy
+folds, and poising itself above Him, and moving slowly towards the
+scene of the Baptist's ministry; and He had no alternative but to
+follow. He must tear Himself away from Nazareth, home, and mother, and
+take the road which would end at Calvary. "Then cometh Jesus from
+Galilee to the Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him."
+
+Tradition locates the scene of John's baptism as near Jericho, where
+the water is shallow and the river opens out into large lagoons. But
+some, inferring that Nazareth was within a day's journey of this
+notable spot, place it nearer the southern end of the Lake of Galilee.
+
+It may have been in the late afternoon when Jesus arrived. An
+expression made use of by the evangelist Luke might seem to suggest
+that all the people had been baptized for that day at least (Luke iii.
+21); so that perhaps the crowds had dispersed, and the great prophet
+was alone with one or two of those young disciples of whom we have
+spoken. Or, Jesus may have arrived when the Jordan banks were alive
+with the eager multitudes. But, in either case, a sudden and
+remarkable change passed over the Baptist's face as he beheld his
+Kinsman standing there.
+
+Picture that remarkable scene. The arrowy stream, rushing down from
+the Lake of Galilee to the Dead Sea; the rugged banks; the shadowy
+forests; the erect, sinewy form of the Baptist; and Jesus of Nazareth,
+as depicted by the olden traditions, with auburn hair, searching blue
+eye, strong, sweet face, and all the beauty of his young manhood. At
+the sight of Him, note how the high look on the Baptist's face lowers;
+how his figure stoops in involuntary obeisance; how the voice that was
+wont to ring out its messages in accents of uncompromising decision
+falters and trembles!
+
+John said, "I knew Him not" (John i. 31); but this need not be
+interpreted as indicating that he had no acquaintance whatever with his
+blameless relative. Such may have been the case, of course, since
+John's life had been spent apart from the haunts of men. It is more
+natural to suppose that the cousins had often met, as boys and
+afterwards. But the Baptist had never realized that Jesus was the
+Messiah whose advent he was sent to announce. He had not recognised
+his high descent and claims. It had never occurred to him that this
+simple village Carpenter, so closely related to himself, whose course
+of life was apparently so absolutely ordinary and commonplace, could be
+He of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write. In this sense
+John could truly say, "I knew Him not."
+
+But John knew enough of Him to be aware of his guileless, blameless
+life. The story of his tender love for Mary; of his devotion to the
+interests of his brothers and sisters; of his undefiled purity, of his
+long vigils on the mountains till the morning called Him back to his
+toils; of his deep acquaintance with Scripture; of his speech about the
+Father--had reached the Baptist's ears. He had come to entertain the
+profoundest respect amounting to veneration for his Kinsman; and, as He
+presented Himself for baptism, John felt that there was a whole heaven
+of difference between Him and all others. These publicans and sinners,
+these Pharisees and scribes, these soldiers and common people--had
+every need to repent, confess, and be forgiven; but there was surely no
+such need for Him, who had been always, and by general acknowledgment,
+"holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners." "I have need,"
+said he, "to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?" (Matt. iii.
+14).
+
+There may have been, besides, an indescribable presentiment that stole
+over that lofty nature--like that knowledge of good men and bad which
+is often given to noble women. He knew men; his eagle eye had searched
+their hearts, as he had heard them confess their sins; and at a glance
+he could tell what was in them. A connoisseur of souls was he. Among
+all the pearls that had passed through his hands--some goodly ones
+among them--none had seemed so rare and pure as this; it was a pearl of
+great price, for which a man might be prepared to part with all he
+possessed, if only to obtain it. There was an indefinable majesty, a
+moral glory, a tender grace, an ineffable attractiveness in this Man,
+which was immediately appreciated by the greatest of woman-born,
+because of his own intrinsic nobility and greatness of soul. It needed
+a Baptist to recognise the Christ. He who had never quailed before
+monarch or people, directly he came in contact with Christ, cast the
+crown of his manhood at his feet, and shrank away. The eagle that had
+soared unhindered in mid-heaven seemed transfixed by a sudden dart, and
+fell suddenly, with a strange, low cry, at the feet of its Creator. "I
+have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?"
+
+
+II. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF CHRIST'S BAPTISM.--"Suffer it to be so now:
+for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness"--with such words
+our Lord overruled the objections of his loyal and faithful Forerunner.
+This is the first recorded utterance of Christ, after a silence of more
+than twenty years; the first also of his public ministry: it demands
+our passing notice. He does not say, "I have need to be baptized of
+thee"; nor does He say, "Thou hast no need to be baptized of Me." He
+does not stay to explain why the greater should be baptized by the
+less: or why a rite which confessed sin was required for one who was
+absolutely sinless. It is enough to appeal to the Baptist as his
+associate in a joint necessary act, becoming to them both as part of
+the Divine procedure, and therefore claiming their common obedience.
+"Thus it becometh us (you and me) to fulfil all righteousness."
+
+In his baptism, our Lord acknowledged the divine authority of the
+Forerunner. As the last and greatest of the prophets, who was to close
+the Old Testament era, for "the law and the prophets prophesied until
+John"; as the representative of Elijah the prophet, before the great
+and notable day of the Lord could come; as the porter of the Jewish
+fold--John occupied a unique position, and it was out of deference to
+his appointment by the Father, and as an acknowledgment of his office,
+that Jesus sought baptism at his hands.
+
+John's baptism, moreover, was the inauguration of the Kingdom of
+Heaven. In it the material made way for the spiritual. The old
+system, which gave special privileges to the children of Abraham, was
+in the act of passing away, confessing that God could raise up children
+to Abraham from the stones at the water's edge; and demanding that
+those who would enter the Kingdom must be born from above, of water and
+of the Spirit. It was the outward and visible sign that Judaism was
+unavailing for the deepest needs of the spirit of man, and that a new
+and more spiritual system was about to take its place, and Christ said,
+in effect, "I, too, though King, obey the law of the Kingdom, and bow
+my head, that, by the same sign as the smallest of my subjects, I may
+pass forward to my throne."
+
+There was probably a deeper reason still. That Jordan water, flowing
+downwards to the Dead Sea, was symbolical. In the purity of its
+origin, amid the snows of Hermon, and in the beauty of its earlier
+course, it was an emblem of man's original constitution, when the
+Creator made him in His own image and pronounced him very good; but in
+these sullied and troubled waters hurrying on to the Sea of
+Death--waters in which thousands of sinners had confessed their sins,
+with tears and sighs--how apt an emblem was there of the history of our
+race, contaminated by the evil that is in the world through lust, and
+meriting the wages of sin--death! With that race, in its sin and
+degradation, our Lord now formally identified Himself. His baptism was
+his formal identification with our fallen and sinful race, though He
+knew no sin for Himself, and could challenge the minutest inspection of
+his enemies: "Which of you convinceth Me of sin?"
+
+Was He baptized because He needed to repent, or to confess his sins?
+Nay, verily! He was as pure as the bosom of God, from which He came;
+as pure as the fire that shone above them in the orb of day; as pure as
+the snows on Mount Hermon, rearing itself like a vision of clouds on
+the horizon: but He needed to be made sin, that we might be made the
+righteousness of God in Him. When the paschal lamb had been chosen by
+the head of a Jewish household, it was customary to take it, three days
+before it would be offered, to the priest, to have it sealed with the
+Temple seal; so our Lord, three years before his death, must be set
+apart and sealed by the direct act of the Holy Spirit, through the
+mediation of John the Baptist. "Him hath God the Father sealed."
+
+"It becometh us"--I like that word, _becometh_. If the Divine Lord
+thought so much about what was becoming, surely we may. It should
+not be a question with us, merely as to what may be forbidden or
+harmful, what may or may not be practised and permitted by our
+fellow-Christians, or even whether there are distinct prohibitions in
+the Bible that bar the way--but if a certain course is becoming. "Need
+I pass through that rite?" _It is becoming_. "Need I perform that
+lowly act?" _It is becoming_. "Need I renounce my liberty of action in
+that respect?" _It would be very becoming_. And whenever some
+hesitant soul, timid and nervous to the last degree, dares to step out,
+and do what it believes to be the right thing because it is becoming,
+Jesus comes to it, enlinks his arm, and says, "Thou art not alone in
+this. Thou and I stand together here. It becomes us to fill up to its
+full measure all righteousness." Ah, soul, thou shalt never step forth
+on a difficult and untrodden path without hearing his footfall behind
+thee, and becoming aware that in every act of righteousness Christ
+identifies Himself, saying, "Thus it becometh _us_ to fulfil all
+righteousness."
+
+A friend suggests that the Lord Jesus was here referring to the sublime
+prophecy of Daniel ix. 24. That He might make an end of sin and bring
+in everlasting righteousness, it was essential that the Lamb of God
+should confess the sins of the people as his own (see Psa. lxix. 5).
+This was his first step on his journey to the Cross, every step of
+which was in fulfilment of all righteousness, in order that He might
+bring in everlasting righteousness.
+
+"Then he suffered Him." Some things we have to _do_ for Christ, and
+some to _bear_ for Him. Active virtues are great; but the passive ones
+are rarer and cost more, especially for strong natures like the
+Baptist's. But, in all our human life, there is nothing more
+attractive than when a strong man yields to another, accepts a deeper
+interpretation of duty than he had perceived, and is prepared to set
+aside his strong convictions of propriety before the tender pleadings
+of a still, soft voice. Yield to Christ, dear heart. Suffer Him to
+have his way. Take his yoke, and be meek and lowly of heart--so shalt
+thou find rest.
+
+
+III. THE DESIGNATION OF THE MESSIAH.--It is not to be supposed that
+the designation of Jesus as the Christ was given to any but John. It
+was apparently a private sign given to him, as the Forerunner and
+Herald, through which he might be authoritatively informed as to the
+identity of the Messiah. To say nothing of the impossibility of
+ordinary and unanointed eyes beholding the descent of the Holy Spirit,
+John's own statements seem to point clearly in this direction. He
+says, "I knew Him not" (_i.e._, as Son of God), "but He that sent me to
+baptize with water, He said unto me, 'Upon whomsoever thou shalt see
+the Spirit descending, and abiding upon Him, the same is He that
+baptizeth with the Holy Spirit.' And I have seen, and have borne
+witness that this is the Son of God" (John i. 32-34). The same thought
+appears from putting a perfectly legitimate construction on the words
+of the first evangelist: "Lo, the heavens were opened unto him"
+(_i.e._, the Baptist), "and he saw the Spirit of God descending as a
+dove, and coming upon Him" (Matt. iii. 16).
+
+What a theophany was here! As the Man of Nazareth emerged from the
+water, the sign for which John had been eagerly waiting and looking was
+granted. He had believed he would see it, but had never thought to see
+it granted to one so near akin to himself. We never expect the great
+God to come to us! And the exclamation, Lo, indicates his startled
+surprise. He saw far away into the blue vault, which had opened into
+depth after depth of golden glory. The vail was rent to admit of the
+coming forth of the Divine Spirit, who seemed to descend in visible
+shape--as a dove might, with gentle, fluttering motion--and to alight
+on the head of the Holy One, who stood there fresh from his baptism.
+The stress of the narrator, as he told the story afterwards, was that
+the Spirit not only came, but _abode_. Here was the miracle of
+miracles, that He should be willing to _abide_ in any human temple, who
+for so many ages had wandered restlessly over the deluge of human sin,
+seeking a resting-place, but finding none. Here, at least, was an ark
+into which this second Noah might pull in the fluttering dove, unable
+to feed, like the raven, on corruption and death.
+
+The voice of God from heaven proclaimed that Jesus of Nazareth was his
+beloved Son, in whom He was well pleased; and the Baptist could have no
+further doubt that the Desire of all Nations, the Lord whom his people
+sought, the Messenger of the Covenant, had suddenly come to his temple
+to act as a refiner's fire and as fullers' soap. "John bare witness,
+saying, I have beheld the Spirit descending as a dove out of heaven;
+and it abode upon Him." "John beareth witness of Him and crieth" (John
+i. 15, 32).
+
+How much that designation meant to Christ! It was his Pentecost, his
+consecration and dedication to his life-work; from thenceforth, in a
+new and special sense, the Spirit of the Lord was upon Him, and He was
+anointed to preach. But it was still more to the Baptist. He knew
+that his mission was nearly fulfilled, that his office was ended. He
+had opened the gate to the true Shepherd, and must now soon consign to
+Him all charge of the flock. Jesus must increase, while he decreased.
+He that was from heaven was above all; as for himself, he was of the
+earth, and spake of the earth. The Sun had risen, and the day-star
+began to wane.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+Not that Light, but a Witness.
+
+(John I. 8.)
+
+ "Nothing resting in its own completeness
+ Can have worth or beauty; but alone
+ Because it leads and tends to farther sweetness,
+ Fuller, higher, deeper than its own.
+
+ "Spring's real glory dwells not in the meaning,
+ Gracious though it be, of her blue hours;
+ But is hidden in her tender leaning
+ To the summer's richer wealth of flowers."
+ A. A. PROCTOR.
+
+
+Resentment of the Sanhedrim--The Baptist's Credentials--Spiritual
+Vision--"Behold the Lamb of God"--The Baptism of the Spirit
+
+
+The baptism and revelation of Christ had a marvellous effect on the
+ministry of the Forerunner. Previous to that memorable day, the burden
+of his teaching had been in the direction of repentance and confession
+of sin. But afterwards, the whole force of his testimony was towards
+the person and glory of the Shepherd of Israel. He understood that for
+the remainder of his brief ministry, which perhaps did not greatly
+exceed six months, he must bend all his strength to announcing to the
+people the prerogatives and claims of Him who stood amongst them,
+though they knew Him not. "There came a man, sent from God, whose name
+was John. The same came for witness, that he might bear witness of the
+Light, that all might believe through him. He was not the Light, but
+came that he might bear witness of the Light."
+
+Our subject, therefore, naturally divides itself into two divisions:
+John's admissions about himself, and his testimony to the Lord. And it
+is interesting to notice that they were given on three successive days,
+as appears from the twofold use of the phrase, "On the morrow." "On
+the morrow" (_i.e._, after he had met and answered the deputation from
+the Sanhedrim), "he seeth Jesus coming unto him..." (i. 29). "Again,
+on the morrow John was standing, and two of his disciples..." (35).
+
+These events took place at Bethany, or Bethabara, on the eastern bank
+of the Jordan. The river there is one hundred feet in width, and,
+except in flood, some five to seven feet deep. It lies in a tropical
+valley, the verdure of which is in striking contrast to the desolation
+which reigns around.
+
+
+I. THE BAPTIST'S ADMISSIONS ABOUT HIMSELF.--When the fourth Evangelist
+uses the word _Jews_, he invariably means the Sanhedrim. John had
+become so famous, and his influence so commanding, that he could not be
+ignored by the religious leaders of the time. In their hearts they
+derided him, and desired to do with him "whatsoever they listed." His
+preaching of repentance, and his unmeasured denunciation of themselves
+as a brood of vipers, were not to be borne. But they forbore to meet
+him in the open field, and resolved to send a deputation, which might
+extract some admission from his lips that would furnish them with
+ground for subsequent action. "The Jews sent unto him from Jerusalem
+priests and Levites to ask him, 'Who art thou?' ... 'Why baptizest
+thou?'" The first question was universally interesting; the second
+specially so to the Pharisee party, who were the high ritualists of
+their day, and who were reluctant that a new rite, which they had not
+sanctioned, should be added to the Jewish ecclesiastical system.
+
+It is a striking scene. The rushing river; the tropical gorge; the
+dense crowds of people standing thick together; the Baptist in his
+sinewy strength and uncouth attire, surrounded by the little group of
+disciples; while through the throng a deputation of grey-beards, the
+representatives of a decadent religion, makes its difficult way--these
+are the principal features of a memorable incident.
+
+There was a profound silence, and men craned their necks and strained
+their ears to see and hear everything, as the deputation challenged the
+prophet with the inquiry, "Who art thou?" There was a great silence.
+Men were prepared to believe anything of the eloquent young preacher.
+"The people were in expectation, and all men reasoned in their hearts
+concerning John, whether haply he were the Christ" (Luke iii. 15). If
+he had given the least encouragement to their dreams and hopes, they
+would have unfurled again the tattered banner of the Maccabees; and
+beneath his leadership would have swept, like a wild hurricane, against
+the Roman occupation, gaining, perhaps, a momentary success, which
+afterwards would have been wiped out in blood. "And he confessed, and
+denied not; and he confessed, I am not the Christ."
+
+If a murmur of voices burst out in anger, disappointment, and chagrin,
+as this answer spread from lip to lip, it was immediately hushed by the
+second inquiry propounded, "What then? Art thou Elijah?" (alluding to
+the prediction of Malachi iv. 5). If they had worded their question
+rather differently, and put it thus, "Hast thou come in the power of
+Elias?" John must have acknowledged that it was so; but if they meant
+to inquire if he were literally Elijah returned again to this world, he
+had no alternative but to say, decisively and laconically, "I am not."
+
+There was a third arrow in their quiver, since the other two had missed
+the mark: and amid the deepening attention of the listening multitudes,
+and in allusion to Moses' prediction that God would raise up a Prophet
+like to himself (Deut. xviii. 15; Acts iii. 22; vii. 37), they said,
+"Art thou the Prophet?" and he answered, "No."
+
+The deputation was nonplussed. They had exhausted their repertory of
+questions. Their mission threatened to become abortive, unless they
+could extract some positive admission. They must put a leading
+question; and their spokesman, for the fourth time, challenged the
+strange being, whom they found it so hard to label and place on any
+shelf of their ecclesiastical museum. "They said therefore unto him,
+'Who art thou?--that we may give an answer to them that sent us.' What
+sayest thou of thyself?" "He said, 'I am the voice of one crying in
+the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said Isaiah the
+prophet.'"
+
+How infinitely noble! How characteristic of strength! A weak man
+would have launched himself on the flowing tide of enthusiasm, and
+allowed himself to be swept away by its impetuous rush. What a
+mingling of strength and humility! When men suggested that he was the
+Christ, he insisted that he was only a voice--the voice of the herald,
+whom men hardly notice, because they strain their eyes in the direction
+from which he has come, to behold the King Himself. When they
+complimented him on his teaching, he told them that He who would winnow
+the wheat from the chaff was yet to appear. And when they crowded to
+his baptism, he reiterated that it was only the baptism of negation,
+_of water_, but the Christ would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire.
+
+Why was this? Ah, he knew his limitations! He was the greatest-born
+of woman, yet he knew that his bosom was not broad enough, nor his
+heart tender enough, to justify him in bidding all weary and
+heavy-laden ones to come to him for rest; he could not say that he and
+God were one, and include himself with the Deity, in the majestic
+pronoun, we; he never dared to ask men to believe in himself as they
+believed in the Father: but there came after him One who dared to say
+all these things; and this is the inevitable conclusion, that either
+Jesus was inferior to John in all that goes to make a strong and noble
+character, or that Jesus was all that John said He was, "The Son of
+God, and King of Israel." There is no third suggestion possible. We
+must either estimate Jesus as immeasurably inferior, or incomparably
+superior, to the strong, sane, Spirit-filled prophet, who never wearied
+in declaring the impassable chasm that yawned between them.
+
+Such humility always accompanies a true vision of Christ. If we view
+it from the low ground, the mountain may appear to reach into the sky;
+but when we reach the mountain-top, we are immediately aware of the
+infinite distance between the highest snow-peak and the nearest star.
+To the crowds John may have seemed to fulfil all the essential
+conditions of the prophetic portraiture of the Messiah; but _he_ stood
+on the mountain, and knew how infinitely the Christ stood above him.
+This is apparent in his reply to the final inquiry of the Sanhedrim,
+"And they asked him, and said unto him, 'Why, then, baptizest thou, if
+thou art not the Christ, neither Elijah, neither the Prophet?'" And
+John said in effect, "I baptize because I was sent to baptize, and I
+know very well that my work in this respect is temporary and transient;
+but what matters that? In the midst of you standeth One whom ye know
+not, even He that cometh after me, the latchet of whose shoe I am not
+worthy to unloose. The Christ is come. Have not I seen Him, standing
+amid your crowds, yea, descending these very banks?"
+
+The people must have turned one to another, as he spoke. What! Had
+the Messiah come! It could hardly be. There had been no prodigies in
+earth or sky worthy of his advent. How could He be amongst them, and
+they unaware! But it was even so, and it is so still. The Christ is
+in us, and with us still. There may be no transcendent symptoms of his
+blessed presence, as He stands in the little groups of two and three
+gathered in his name; but the eye of faith detects Him. Where others
+see only the bare cliffs of Patmos, or the mines with their gangs of
+convicts, the anointed gaze beholds a face brighter than the sun, the
+purged ear catches the accents of a voice like the murmur of waters on
+the still night air. Remember how He said, "He that loveth Me shall be
+loved of my Father; and I will love him, and will manifest Myself to
+him." As the Holy Spirit revealed Him to John, so He will reveal Him
+to us, if only, like John, we will be content with nothing less, and
+wait expectant with the heart on the outlook for the manifestation of
+the Son of God; for so He promised, saying, "He shall take of mine, and
+shall declare it unto you." And when the child of faith speaks thus,
+with the accent of conviction, of what he has seen, and tasted, and
+handled, of the Word of life, it is not strange that the children of
+this world, whose eyes are blinded, begin to question and deride. What
+is there to be seen that they cannot see? What heard that they cannot
+detect? Ah, "the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of
+God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know them,
+because they are spiritually discerned." "There standeth One among
+you," said the Baptist, "whom ye know not."
+
+
+II. THE BAPTIST'S WITNESS TO THE LORD.--Six weeks passed by from that
+memorable vision of the opened heaven and the descending Spirit, and
+John had eagerly scanned every comer to the river-bank to see again
+that divinely beautiful face. But in vain: for Jesus was in the
+wilderness, being tempted of the devil, for forty days and nights, the
+companion of wild beasts, and exposed to a very hurricane of temptation.
+
+At the end of the six weeks, the interview with the deputation from the
+Sanhedrim took place, which we have already described; and on the day
+after, when his confession of inferiority was still fresh in the minds
+of his hearers, when some were criticising and others pitying, when
+symptoms that the autumn of his influence had set in were in the air,
+his eye flashed, his face lit up, and he cried, saying: "This is He of
+whom I said, 'After me cometh a man who is become before me, for He was
+before me.' Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
+world."
+
+Did all eyes turn towards the Christ? Was there a ripple of interest
+and expectancy through the crowd? Did any realize the unearthly beauty
+and spiritual power of his presence? We know not. Scripture is
+silent, only telling us that on the following day, when, with two
+disciples, he looked on Jesus as He walked, and repeated his
+affirmation, "Behold the Lamb of God," those two disciples followed
+Him, never to return to their old master--who knew it must be so, and
+was content to decrease if only _He_ might increase.
+
+Let us notice the successive revelations which were made to John, and
+through him to Israel, who, you remember, held him, as they had every
+warrant for doing, to be in the deepest sense a prophet of the Lord.
+This conviction has been definitely endorsed by succeeding ages, which
+have classed him as one of the six greatest men that ever left their
+mark on the world.
+
+(1) _He rightly conceived of Christ's pre-existence_. "He was before
+me" (John i. 30). The phrase resembles Christ's own words, when He
+said: "Before Abraham was, I am." In John's case it developed soon
+after into another and kindred expression: "He that cometh from above,
+is above all" (John iii. 31). With such words the Baptist taught his
+disciples. He insisted that Jesus of Nazareth had an existence
+anterior to Nazareth, and previous to his birth of the village maiden.
+He recognised that his goings had been of old, even from everlasting,
+that He was the mighty God, the Father of the Ages, and the Prince of
+Peace. As for himself, he was of the earth, and of the earth he spoke;
+as for this One, He came from above, and was above all. It is not
+surprising, therefore, that one of his disciples, catching his Master's
+spirit, wrote: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
+God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God.
+All things were made by Him."
+
+(2) _He rightly apprehended the sacrificial aspect of Christ's work_.
+"Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." Was
+it that his priestly lineage gave Him a special right to coin and use
+this appellation? It was, without doubt, breathed into his heart by
+the Holy Spirit; but his whole previous training, as the son of a
+priest, fitted him to receive and transmit it. An attempt has been
+made to limit the meaning of these words to the personal character of
+Jesus, his purity, and gentleness; but, to the Jews who listened, the
+latter part of his exclamation could have but one significance. They
+would at once connect with his words, those of the Law, the Prophets,
+and the Psalms. "The goat shall bear upon him all their iniquities
+unto a solitary land." "He bare the sin of many." "He is led as a
+lamb to the slaughter."
+
+From the slopes of Mount Moriah, a young voice has expressed the
+longing of the ages, "Behold the fire and the wood; but where is the
+lamb?" This has been the cry of the human heart in all generations.
+From the days of Abel men have brought the firstlings of their flocks,
+laying them on the altar, and consuming them with fire; but there was
+always a sense of failure and insufficiency. Through the ages, and in
+every clime, priest after priest offered the lamb upon the altar, but
+by the very fact of continual repetition, bore witness to the
+insufficiency of its propitiation. "Every priest, indeed," is the
+comment of inspiration, "standeth day by day ministering and offering
+oftentimes the same sacrifices, the which can never take away sins."
+Must not the hearts of hundreds of saintly priests have been filled
+with the same inquiry, Where is the lamb? As the prophets understood
+more clearly the nature of God's dealing with man--as, for instance,
+Micah saw that even the offering of the first-born could never atone
+for the sin of the soul--may we not suppose that from their lips also
+the same inquiry was elicited, Where is the lamb? Nature cannot answer
+that cry. She is fascinating, especially when she dimples with the
+smile of spring, and unveils her face in summer to receive the caresses
+of the sun. But with all her beauty and fascination she cannot answer
+the entreaty of the conscience that the penalty of sin may be removed,
+its power broken, so that man may walk with God with a fearless heart.
+Animals at the best are only symbols of the complete solution to the
+ever-recurring problem of human sin: thus from all the ages goes forth
+the cry, Where is the lamb? Then from his heaven God sends forth his
+Son to be the sufficient answer to the universal appeal: and the
+heaven-sent messenger, from his rocky pulpit, as he sees Jesus coming
+to him, cries, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
+the world."
+
+Dear soul, thou mayest venture on Him. He is God's Lamb; on Him the
+sin of our race has been laid, and He stood before God with the
+accumulated load--"made sin"; the iniquity of us all was laid upon Him;
+wounded for our transgressions; bruised for our iniquities; chastised
+for our peace; stricken for our transgression; bearing the sin of many.
+As the first Adam brought sin on the race, the second Adam has put it
+away by the sacrifice of Himself. Men are lost now, not because of
+Adam's sin, nor because they were born into a race of sinners, but for
+the sin which they presumptuously and wilfully commit, or because by
+unbelief they contract themselves out of the benefits of Christ's
+death. The servant who had been forgiven by his king, but took his
+brother by the throat, brought back upon himself the full penalty from
+which the royal warrant had freed him; and if any one of us cling to
+sin, rejecting and trampling under foot the Saviour's work on our
+behalf, we cancel so far all those benefits of our Saviour's passion
+which otherwise would accrue, and bring back upon ourselves the
+penalties from which He would fain have delivered us.
+
+(3) _He understood the baptism of the Holy Spirit_. "The same is He
+that baptizeth with the Holy Spirit." As Son of God, our Saviour from
+all eternity was one with the Holy Spirit in the mystery of the blessed
+Trinity; but as "the one Man," He received in his human nature the
+fulness of the Divine Spirit. It pleased the Father that in Him should
+all the fulness of the Godhead dwell, that He might be able to
+communicate Him to all the sons of men who were united to Him by a
+living faith. Thus it fell that He was able to assure his disciples
+that if they waited in Jerusalem for the promise of the Father, as John
+baptized with water, they should be baptized with the Holy Spirit (Acts
+i. 4, 5).
+
+The term _baptism_, as applied to the Holy Spirit, had better be
+confined to those marvellous manifestations of spiritual power which
+are recorded in Acts ii., viii., x., xix., whilst the word _filling_
+should be used of those experiences of the indwelling and anointing of
+the Divine Spirit which are within the reach of us all. Still, we may
+all adopt the words of the Baptist, and tell our living Head that we
+have need to be baptized of Him--need to be plunged into the fiery
+baptism; need to be searched by the stinging flame; need to be cleansed
+from dross and impurity; need to be caught in the transfiguring,
+heaven-leaping energy of the Holy Spirit, borne upon his bosom into the
+rare atmosphere where the seven lamps burn always before the throne of
+God. The blood of the Lamb and the fire of the Holy Spirit are thus
+inextricably united.
+
+(4) _He beheld the mystery of the Holy Trinity_. For the first time
+this was made manifest to man. On the one hand there was the Father
+speaking from heaven; on the other the Spirit descending as a dove--and
+between them was the Son of Man who was proclaimed to be the Son of
+God, the beloved Son. Surely John might say that flesh and blood had
+not revealed these things, but they had been made known to him by a
+divine revelation.
+
+The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is a profound mystery, hidden from the
+intellect, but revealed to the humble and reverent heart; hidden from
+the wise and prudent, and revealed to babes. Welcome Jesus Christ as
+John did; and, as to John, so the whole wonder of the Godhead will be
+made known to thy heart. Thou wilt hear the Father bearing witness to
+his Son; thou wilt see how clearly the Son reveals the Father, and
+achieves redemption; thou shalt know what it is to stand beneath the
+open heaven and behold and participate in the Divine anointing. Of
+what good is it to reason about the Trinity if thou hast no spiritual
+appetite for the gifts of the Trinity? But if this is thine, and thou
+openest thine heart, thou wilt receive the gift and understand the
+doctrine.
+
+(5) _He appreciated the Divine Sonship of Christ_. "I have seen and
+have borne witness that this is the Son of God." This witness counts
+for much. John knew men, knew himself, knew Christ. He would not have
+said so much unless he had been profoundly convinced; and he would not
+have been profoundly convinced unless irrefragable evidence had been
+presented to him. What though, when on the following day he repeats
+his exclamation, his whole congregation leaves him to follow the Man of
+Nazareth to his home? The heart of the Forerunner is satisfied, for he
+has heard the Bridegroom's voice. The Son of God has come, and has
+given him an understanding that he might know Him that is true.
+
+
+
+
+IX.
+
+"We must increase, but I must decrease."
+
+(JOHN III. 30.)
+
+ "Where is the lore the Baptist taught,
+ The soul unswerving and the fearless tongue?
+ The much-enduring wisdom, sought
+ By lonely prayer the haunted rocks among?
+ Who counts it gain
+ His light would wane,
+ So the whole world to Jesus throng?"
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+The Moral Greatness of the Baptist--Thoughts on Envy--Christian
+Consecration--The Baptist's Creed--The Voice of the Beloved
+
+
+From the Jordan Valley our Lord returned to Galilee and Nazareth. The
+marriage feast of Cana, his return to Jerusalem, the cleansing of the
+Temple, and the interview with Nicodemus, followed in rapid succession.
+And when the crowds of Passover pilgrims were dispersing homewards, He
+also left the city with his disciples, and began a missionary tour
+throughout the land of Judaea.
+
+This tour is not much dwelt upon in Scripture. We only catch a glimpse
+of it here in the 22nd verse, and again in the address of the apostle
+Peter to Cornelius, where he speaks of Christ preaching good tidings of
+peace throughout all Judaea (Acts x. 36, 37). How long it lasted we
+cannot tell; but it must have occupied some months, for He tarried from
+time to time at different points.
+
+It is not likely that our Lord unfolded his Messianic character, or
+taught with the same clearness as in after days. For the most part, He
+would adopt the cry of the Baptist. Of the commencement of his
+ministry it is recorded: "Jesus came, ... preaching the Gospel of God,
+and saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand:
+repent ye, and believe in the Gospel'" (Mark i. 14, 15). But his deeds
+declared his royalty.
+
+Wherever He went He was welcomed with vast enthusiasm. The scenes
+which had occurred a few months before to inaugurate the Baptist's
+ministry were re-enacted. The progress of the heaven-sent Teacher
+(John iii. 2) was accompanied by immense throngs of people, who,
+wearied with the tiresome exactions of Pharisee and scribe, turned with
+eagerness to the humanness and holiness of the True Shepherd. It is
+said that cattle, sick and harried with the voyage across the Atlantic,
+will show signs of revival as they sniff the first land breezes laden
+with the breath of the clover fields.
+
+During all this time the Baptist was continuing his preparatory work in
+the Jordan Valley, though now driven by persecution to leave the
+western bank for Aenon and Salim on the eastern side, where a handful
+of followers still clung to him. "John was not yet cast into prison,"
+but the shadow of his impending fate was already gathering over him;
+and so he was baptizing in Aenon, near to Salim, where the Jordan
+sweeps out into broad sheets of water, eminently suitable for his
+purpose. Thither they came and were baptized. The morning star
+lingers in the same heavens with the sun, whom it has announced; but
+its lustre has paled, and its glories are shorn.
+
+It would appear from the R.V. (ver. 25) that a Jew, probably an
+emissary of the Sanhedrim, brought tidings to that little circle of
+true-hearted disciples of the work that Jesus was doing in Judaea, and
+drew them into a discussion as to the comparative value of the two
+baptisms. It was acknowledged that Jesus did not, with his own hands,
+perform the rite of baptism, probably for reasons afterwards cited by
+his great apostle (iv. 2; compare 1 Cor. i. 14-17): but it would be
+administered by his disciples, at his direction, and with his
+countenance, and therefore it could be reported to the Baptist by his
+disciples, who came to him with eyes flashing with indignation, and
+faces heated with the excitement of the discussion: "Rabbi, He that was
+with thee beyond Jordan, to whom thou hast borne witness, the same
+baptizeth, and all men come to Him" (ver. 26).
+
+It was as though they said, "Master, is it not too bad? See how thy
+generous testimony has been requited! In the day of thy glory thou
+wert too profuse in thy acknowledgments, too prodigal in thy
+testimonials. Now this new Teacher has taken a leaf out of thy
+programme; He too is preaching, baptizing, and gathering a school of
+disciples." But there was no tinder in that noble breast which these
+jealous sparks could kindle. Nothing but love dwelt there. He had
+been plunged into the baptism of a holy love, which had burnt out the
+selfishness and jealousy, which were as natural to him as to us all.
+It was as when a spark falls into an ocean and is instantly
+extinguished. Thus his reply will ever rank among the greatest
+utterances of mortal man. The Lord said that of those born of woman
+none was greater than John; and, if by nothing else, by these words his
+moral stature and superlative excellence were vindicated. He seemed
+great when his voice rang like a clarion through Palestine, attracting
+and thrilling the mighty throngs; great, when he dared to tell Herod
+that it was unlawful for him to have his brother's wife, uttering words
+which those palace walls must have been startled to hear; great, when
+he baptized Him for whom the world was waiting, and who was declared to
+be the Son of God with power; but he never seemed so great as when he
+refused to enter into those acrimonious altercations and discussions,
+and said simply, "A man can receive nothing, except it be given him
+from heaven."
+
+
+I. JOHN COUNTED INFLUENCE AND POSITION AS DIVINE GIFTS.--What
+startling differences obtain among men--Peter and John, Calvin and
+Melancthon, John Knox and Samuel Rutherford, Kingsley and Keble! Each
+of these has left his imprint on human history; each so needful to do
+his own special work, but each so diverse from all others. We are
+sometimes tempted to attribute their special powers and success to
+their circumstances, their times, their parents and teachers; but there
+is a deeper and more satisfactory explanation. Adopting the words of
+the Forerunner, we may say--They had nothing that they had not received
+from heaven, by the direct appointment and decree of God.
+
+It was thus that the Baptist reasoned: "Whatever success and blessing I
+had are due to the appointment of Him who sent me to preach his Gospel
+and announce the advent of his Son. Every man has his work and sphere
+appointed him of God. If this new Teacher meet with such success, we
+have no right to be jealous of Him, lest we sin against God, who has
+made Him what He is. And if we have not the same crowds as once, let
+us be content to take this, too, as the appointment of Heaven, glad to
+do whatever is assigned to us, and to leave all results with God."
+
+This is a golden sentence, indeed!--"A man can receive nothing, except
+it be given him from heaven." Hast thou great success in thy
+life-work? Do crowds gather around thy steps and throng thy
+audience-chamber? Do not attribute them to thyself. They are all the
+gifts of God's grace. He raiseth up one and setteth down another.
+Thou hast nothing that thou hast not received; and if thou hast
+received it, see to it that thou exercise perpetually the faculty of
+receptiveness, so that thou mayest receive more and more, grace on
+grace. The river in its flow should hollow out the channel-bed through
+which it flows. Be thankful, but never vain. He who gave may take.
+Great talents bestowed imply great responsibility in the day of
+reckoning. Be not high-minded, but fear. Much success can only be
+enjoyed without injury to the inner life by being considered as the
+dear gift of Christ, to be used for Him.
+
+Hast thou but one talent, and little success?--yet this is as God has
+willed it. He might have given more had He willed it so; be thankful
+that He has given any. Use what thou hast. The five barley loaves and
+two small fishes will so increase, as they are distributed, that they
+will supply the want of thousands. Do not dare to envy one more
+successful and used than thyself, lest thou be convicted of murmuring
+against the appointment of thy Lord. Here, too, is the cure of
+jealousy, which more than anything else blights the soul of the servant
+of God. To an older minister, who has passed the zenith of his
+popularity and power, it is often a severe trial to see younger men
+stepping into positions which he once held and has been compelled to
+renounce. He is mightily tempted to disparage their power, and condemn
+them by faint praise; or, if he praise, to add one biting comment which
+undoes the generosity and frankness of the eulogium. Why should this
+younger man, who was not born when his own ministry was at full tide,
+now carry all before him, while the waves are quietly withdrawing from
+the margin of seaweed they once cast up! Thoughts like these corrode
+and canker the soul; and there is no arrest to them, unless, by a
+definite effort of the Spirit-energised will, the soul turns to God
+with the words: "A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from
+heaven. I had my glad hours of meridian glory, and have still the
+mellow light of a summer sunset. It was God's gift to me, as rest is
+now; and I will rejoice that He raises up others to do his work. I
+will rejoice that the Kingdom is coming, that Christ is satisfied, that
+men are being saved; this shall be my joy, and it shall be fulfilled."
+
+How much misery, heart-burning, and disappointment would be saved if,
+at the beginning of life, each of us inquired seriously what that
+special work in the world might be to which he was called, and for
+which he is fitted. Then, instead of being poor imitations, we might
+be good originals. Instead of spending our time in going off on side
+issues, we might bend all our strength to the main purpose of our
+existence. God has meant each of us for something; incarnating in us
+one of his own great thoughts, and equipping us with all material that
+is necessary for its realization. We may probably discover its meaning
+by the peculiarities of our mental endowments or the advice of friends;
+by the necessity of our circumstances or the prompting of the Holy
+Spirit. Otherwise we must be content to go on making each day
+according to the pattern shown us--not as a whole, but in detail--sure
+that some day each bit and scrap, each vail and hanging, will find its
+place, and the tabernacle of our life stand complete.
+
+Every name is historic in God's estimate. The obscurest among us has
+his place in the Divine plan, his lesson to learn, his work to do. The
+century opening before us can no more dispense with us than an
+orchestra with the piccolo. A pawn on God's chessboard may take a
+knight, or give check to a king. "We are his workmanship, created in
+Christ Jesus unto good works which God has before prepared (R.V.), that
+we should walk in them" (Eph. ii. 10).
+
+
+II. JOHN CAUGHT SIGHT OF A FULLER AND RICHER IDEAL THAN HIS
+OWN.--Tidings had, without doubt, been brought to him of our Lord's
+first miracle in Cana of Galilee. We know that it had made a great
+impression on the little group of ardent souls, who had been called to
+share the village festivities with their newly-found Master; and we
+know that some of them were still deeply attached to their old friend
+and leader. From these he would learn the full details of that
+remarkable inauguration of this long-expected ministry. How startled
+he must have been at the first hearing! He had announced the
+Husbandman with his fan to thoroughly winnow his floor; the Baptist
+with his fire; the Lamb of God, holy, harmless, and separate from
+sinners. But the Messiah opens his ministry among men by mingling with
+the simple villagers in their wedding joy, and actually ministers to
+their innocent mirth, as He turns the water into wine! The Son of Man
+has come "eating and drinking"! What a contrast was here to the
+austerity of the desert, the coarse raiment, the hard fare! "John the
+Baptist came neither eating nor drinking." Could this be He? And yet
+there was no doubt that the heaven had been opened above Him, that the
+Dove had descended, and that God's voice had declared Him to be the
+"Beloved Son." But what a contrast to all that he had looked for!
+
+Further reflection, however, on that incident, in which Jesus
+manifested forth his glory, and the cleansing of the Temple which
+immediately followed, must have convinced the Baptist that this
+conception of holiness was the true one. His own type could never be
+universal or popular. It was not to be expected that the mass of men
+could be spared from the ordinary demands of daily life to spend their
+days in the wilderness as he had done; and it would not have been for
+their well-being, or that of the world, if his practice had become the
+rule. It would have been a practical admission that ordinary life was
+common and unclean; and that there was no possibility of infusing it
+with the high principles of the Kingdom of Heaven. Consecration to God
+would have become synonymous with the exclusion of wife and child, of
+home and business, of music and poetry, from the soul of the saint;
+whereas its true conception demands that nothing which God has created
+can be accounted common or unclean, but all may be included within the
+encircling precincts of the Redeemer's Kingdom. The motto of Christian
+consecration is, therefore, given in that remarkable assertion of the
+apostle; "Every creature of God is good, and nothing is to be rejected,
+if it be received with thanksgiving: for it is sanctified through the
+Word of God and prayer" (1 Tim. iv. 4, 5).
+
+John saw, beneath the illuminating ray of the Holy Spirit, that this
+was the Divine Ideal; that the Redeemer could not contradict the
+Creator; that the Kingdom was consistent with the home; and the
+presence of the King with the caress of woman and the laughter of the
+child, and the innocent mirth of the village feast. This he saw, and
+cried in effect: "That village scene is the key to the Messiah's
+ministry to Israel. He is not only Guest at a bridegroom's table, but
+the Bridegroom Himself. He has come to woo and win the chosen race.
+Of old they were called Hephzibah and Beulah; and now those ancient
+words come back to mind with newly-minted meaning, with the scent of
+spring. Our land, long bereaved and desolate, is to be married. Joy,
+joy to her! The Bridegroom is here. He that hath the bride is the
+Bridegroom. As for me, I am the Bridegroom's friend, sent to negotiate
+the match, privileged to know and bring together the two parties in the
+blessed nuptials--blessed with the unspeakable gladness of hearing the
+Bridegroom's manly speech. Do you tell me that He is preaching, and
+that all come to Him? That is what I have wanted most of all. This my
+joy, therefore, is fulfilled. 'He must increase, but I must decrease.'"
+
+
+III. JOHN HAD ENLARGED PERCEPTION OF THE TRUE NATURE OF CHRIST.--It
+has been questioned whether the paragraph which follows (John iii.
+31-36) was spoken by the Baptist, or is the comment of the Evangelist.
+With many eminent commentators, I incline strongly to the former view.
+The phraseology employed in this paragraph is closely similar to the
+words addressed by Christ to Nicodemus, and often used by Himself, as
+in John v.; and they may well have filtered through to the Baptist, by
+the lips of Andrew, Peter, and John, who would often retail to their
+venerated earliest teacher what they heard from Jesus.
+
+Consider, then, the Baptist's creed at this point of his career. He
+_believed_ in the heavenly origin and divinity of the Son of Man--that
+He was from heaven and above all. He _believed_ in the unique and
+divine source of his teaching--that He did not communicate what He had
+learnt at second-hand, but stood forth as one speaking what He knows,
+and testifying what He has seen--"For He whom God has sent, speaketh
+the words of God." He _believed_ in his copious enduement with the
+Holy Spirit. Knowing that human teachers, at the best, could only
+receive the Spirit in a limited degree, he recognised that when God
+anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit there was no limit, no
+measuring metre, no stint. It was copious, rich, unmeasured--so much
+so that it ran down from his head, as Hermon's dews descend to the
+lonely heights of Zion. He _believed_ in his near relationship to God,
+using the well-known Jewish phrase of sonship to describe his
+possession of the Divine nature in a unique sense, and recalling the
+utterance of the hour of baptism, to give weight to his assurance that
+the Father loved Him as Son. Lastly, He _believed_ in the mediatorial
+function of the Man of Nazareth--that the Father had already given all
+things into his hand; and that the day was coming when He would sit on
+the throne of David, yea, on the mediatorial throne itself, King of
+kings, and Lord of lords, the keys of Death and Hades, of the realms of
+invisible existence and spiritual power, hanging at his girdle.
+
+To that creed the Baptist added a testimony, which has been the means
+of light and blessing to myriads. Being dead, he yet has spoken
+through the ages, assuring us that to believe on Jesus is to have, as a
+present fact, eternal life, the life which fills the Being of God and
+defies time and change. Faith is the act by which we open our heart to
+receive the gift of God; as earth bares her breast to sun and rain, and
+as the good wife flings wide her doors and windows to let in the spring
+sunshine and the summer air. Ah, reader, I would that thou hadst this
+faith! The open heart towards Christ! The yielded will! Thou needst
+only will to have Him, and He has already entered, though thou canst
+not detect his footfall, or the chime of the bells around his garment's
+hem. And to shut thy heart against Him not only excludes the life
+which might be thine, but incurs the wrath of God.
+
+_There are two concluding thoughts_. First: The only hope of a
+decreasing self is an increasing Christ. There is too much of the
+self-life in us all, chafing against God's will, refusing God's gifts,
+instigating the very services we render to God, simulating humility and
+meekness for the praise of men. But how can we be rid of this accursed
+self-consciousness and pride? Ah! we must turn our back on our shadow,
+and our face towards Christ. We must look at all things from his
+standpoint, trying to realize always how they affect Him, and then
+entering into his emotions. It has been said that "the woman who loves
+thinks with the brain of the man she loves", and surely if we love
+Christ with a constraining passion, we shall think his thoughts and
+feel his joys, and no longer live unto ourselves, but unto Him.
+
+ "Love took up the Harp of Life
+ And smote on all its chords with might;
+ Smote the chord of self, that trembling,
+ Passed in music out of sight."
+
+
+Second: we must view our relationship to Christ as the betrothal and
+marriage of our soul to our Maker and Redeemer, who is also our
+Husband. "Wherefore, my brethren," says the apostle, "ye also were
+made dead to the law through the body of Christ; that ye should be
+married to another, even to Him who was raised from the dead, that we
+should bring forth fruit unto God" (Rom. vii. 4).
+
+The Son of God is not content to love us. He cannot rest till He has
+all our love in return. "He looketh in at the windows" of the soul,
+"and showeth Himself through the lattice." Our Beloved speaks, and
+says unto us, "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away." And, as
+our response, He waits to hear us say:
+
+ "My Beloved is mine, and I am his;
+ He feedeth his flock among the lilies.
+ Until the day break, and the shadows flee away,
+ Turn, my Beloved!"
+
+
+
+
+X.
+
+The King's Courts
+
+(MARK VI.)
+
+ "The number of thine own complete,
+ Sum up and make an end;
+ Sift clean the chaff, and house the wheat;
+ And then, O Lord, descend.
+
+ "Descend, and solve by that descent
+ This mystery of life;
+ Where good and ill, together blent,
+ Wage an undying strife."
+ J. H. N.
+
+
+Under Royal Surveillance--"It is not Lawful."--The Revenge of
+Herodias--The Upbraidings of Conscience--Devotion to Truth--"A Sin unto
+Death."
+
+
+Our story brings us next to speak of the Baptist's relations with Herod
+Antipas, son of the great Herod, a contemptible princeling who
+inherited a fourth part of his father's dominions (hence known as the
+Tetrarch), ruling over Galilee and part of Perea. For the most part he
+lived at Tiberias, in great state, which he had imported from Rome,
+where he had spent part of his early life. From an early age he had
+been entrusted with despotic power, and, as the natural and inevitable
+result, had become sensual, weak, capricious, and cruel.
+
+It is of the collision between this man, whom our Lord compared to a
+fox, and John the Baptist, that we have now to treat. We need only
+notice here that every great character on the page of history has had
+his vehement antagonist. Moses, Pharaoh; Elijah, Ahab; Jeremiah,
+Jehoiakim; Paul, Nero; Savonarola, the Medici; Luther, the Emperor
+Charles V.; John Knox, Queen Mary.
+
+
+I. THE CAUSE OF THE COLLISION.--All the world had flocked to see and
+hear John the Baptist. Every mouth was full of his eccentricities and
+eloquence. Marvellous stories were being told of the effect which he
+had produced on the lives of those who had come under his influence.
+All this was well known to Herod. His spies were present in every
+great gathering, and served the purpose of the newspaper of to-day; so
+that he was well informed of all the topics that engaged the popular
+mind.
+
+For some months, also, Herod had watched the career of the preacher.
+When he least expected it, he was under the surveillance of the closest
+criticism. A fierce light, like that which beats about a throne, fell
+strongly on his most secret actions. And the result had been perfectly
+satisfactory. Herod felt that John was a true man. He observed him,
+and was satisfied that he was a just man and a holy. Reasons of state
+forbade the king from going in person to the Jordan Valley; but he was
+extremely eager to see and hear this mighty man of God: and so, one
+day, at the close of a discourse, an argument with the Pharisees, or
+the administration of the rite of baptism, John found himself accosted
+by one of the court chamberlains, and summoned to deliver his message
+before the court. Herod "sent for him."
+
+We might wonder how it could happen that a man like Herod, who
+notoriously lived in a glass house, so far as character went, should be
+so willing to call in so merciless a preacher of repentance as John the
+Baptist was--before whose words, flung like stones, full many a glass
+house had crashed to the ground, leaving its tenant unsheltered before
+the storm. But it must be remembered that most men, when they enter
+the precincts of the court, are accustomed to put velvet in their
+mouths; and, however vehement they may have been in denouncing the sins
+of the lower classes, they change their tone when face to face with
+sinners in high places. Herod, therefore, had every reason to presume
+that John would obey this unwritten law; and, whilst denouncing sin in
+general, would refrain from anything savouring of the direct and
+personal.
+
+Another reason probably actuated Herod. He knew that the land was
+filled with the fame of the Baptist, and it seemed an easy path to
+popularity, and likely to divert attention from his private sins, which
+had made much scandal, to patronize the religion of the masses. At
+this point he probably entertained much the same feeling toward the
+desert-prophet that led Simon the Pharisee to invite Jesus to eat with
+him. "Yes, let John the Baptist come. Court life is dreary and
+monotonous enough. It will make a little diversion, like a breath of
+fresh air on a sultry day. It is worth risking a little roughness in
+his speech, and uncouthness in his manner, if only he while away an
+afternoon. Besides, it will please his following, which is
+considerable. Let him come, by all means."
+
+We are reminded of a similar scene in Old Testament history, when, at
+the solicitation of Jehoshaphat, Ahab sent for Micaiah. "The messenger
+that went to call Micaiah spake unto him, saying, 'Behold, the words of
+the prophets declare good to the king with one mouth; let thy word
+therefore, I pray thee, be like one of theirs, and speak thou good.'"
+
+One interpretation of Mark vi. 20 suggests that the Baptist's first
+sermon before Herod was followed by another, and yet another. The
+Baptist dealt with general subjects, urged on the King's attention some
+minor reforms, which were not too personal or drastic, and won his
+genuine regard. We are told that he used to hear (the _imperfect
+tense_) him gladly, and "did many things." It was a relief to Herod's
+mind to feel that there were many things which he could do, many wrongs
+which he could set right, while the main wrong of his life was left
+untouched. Ah! it is remarkable how much men will do in the direction
+of amendment and reform, if only, by a tacit understanding, nothing is
+said, or hinted at, which threatens the one sin in which the heart's
+evil has concentrated itself. But John knew that his duty to Herod, to
+truth, to public morality, demanded that he should go further, and
+pierce to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, of the joints and
+marrow; and therefore on one memorable occasion he accosted the royal
+criminal with the crime of which men were speaking secretly everywhere,
+and uttered the memorable sentence which could not be forgiven: "It is
+not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife."
+
+We can imagine how some room in the palace, which had often been the
+scene of wild riot, would be improvised as an audience chamber, filled
+with seats, and crowded on each occasion of the Baptist's appearance
+with a strange and brilliant throng. In the midst, the king and the
+woman with whom he was living in illicit union; next them her daughter,
+Salome; around them courtiers and ladies, nobles and pages, soldiers
+and servants. On all sides splendid dresses, magnificent uniforms,
+rare jewels, luxurious upholstery, added light and colour to the scene.
+
+The sermon began. As was John's wont, he arraigned the sin, the
+formalism, the laxity of the times; he proclaimed the advent of the
+Kingdom, the presence of the King; he demanded, in the name of God,
+repentance and reform. Herod was, as usual, impressed and convinced;
+he assented to the preacher's propositions; already he had settled
+himself into his usual posture for hearing gladly. It was as when we
+watch summer-lightning playing around the horizon; we have no fear so
+long as it is not forked.
+
+Presently, however, John becomes more personal and direct than ever
+before. He begins, in no measured terms, to denounce the sin of men in
+high places, and holds up the dissoluteness which disgraced the court.
+As he proceeds, a breathless silence falls on the crowd sitting, or
+hanging around him, their dresses in curious contrast to his severe
+garment of camel's hair, their nervous dread in as great contrast to
+his incisive and searching eloquence. Here were the people clothed in
+soft raiment, and accustomed to sumptuous fare, bending as reeds before
+the gusts of wind sweeping fiercely across the marsh.
+
+Finally, the preacher comes closer still, and pointing to the princess
+who sat beside Herod, looking Herod in the face, he exclaims: "It is
+not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife."
+
+We need not dwell on all the terrible details of that disgraceful sin.
+But every circumstance which could deepen its infamy was present.
+Herod's wife, the daughter of Aretas, King of Arabia, was still living;
+as was Philip, the husband of Herodias. The _liaison_ commenced at
+Rome, when Herod was the guest of his brother Philip, while apparently
+engaged on a mission of holy devotion to the religious interests of the
+Jewish nation.
+
+The ground of John's accusation calls for a heavier emphasis than
+appears in a superficial consideration of the words. He might have
+said: "It is not expedient; your wife's father will rise in arms
+against you, and threaten the Eastern border of your kingdom. It is
+not expedient to run the risk of war, which may give Rome a further
+excuse against you." He might have said: "This is an unwise step, as
+it will cut you off from your own family, and leave you exposed to the
+brunt of popular hate." He might have said: "It is impolitic and
+incautious to risk the adverse judgment of the Emperor." But he said
+none of these things. He took the matter to a higher court. He
+arraigned the guilty pair before God; and, laying his axe at the root
+of the tree--calling on Herod's conscience, long gagged and silent, to
+take part in the impeachment--he said, in effect: "I summon you before
+the bar of God, and in the pure light which streams from his holy
+Oracle, your consciences being witnesses against you, you know
+perfectly well that it is not right for you to be living as you are
+living. 'Thou shalt not commit adultery.'"
+
+Every hearer stood aghast. A death-like hush fell on the assembly,
+which probably broke up in dismay. So paralyzed was every one that no
+hand was laid on the preacher. We are expressly told that "Herod _sent
+forth_ and laid hold upon John" (Mark vi. 17); from which we infer that
+the fearless preacher passed out through the paralyzed and
+conscience-stricken assemblage, leaving dismay, like that which befell
+the roysterers in Belshazzar's court, when the hand of the Almighty
+traced the mysterious characters on the palace wall in lines of fire.
+
+The first feeling of awe and conscience-stricken remorse would,
+however, soon pass off. Some would hasten to condole with Herodias;
+some to sympathize with Herod. Herodias would retire to her
+apartments, accompanied by her high ladies, vowing fiery vengeance on
+the preacher--a very Jezebel, thirsting for the blood of another
+Elijah. Throughout Herod's court there would be an effort to dismiss
+the allusion as "Altogether uncalled for;" as "What might have been
+expected from such a man;" as "A gross breach of manners," as "An
+affront against delicacy of taste."
+
+But Herodias would give her paramour no rest; and, perhaps one evening,
+when John had retired for meditation and prayer, his disciples being
+off their guard and the people absent, a handful of soldiers arrested
+him, bound him, and led him off to the strong castle of Machaerus.
+
+
+II. JOHN'S IMPRISONMENT AND ITS OPPORTUNITIES.--The castle of
+Machaerus was known as "the diadem," or "the black tower." It lay on
+the east side of the Dead Sea, almost on a line with Bethlehem. The
+ruins of the castle are still to be seen, in great masses of squared
+stone, on the top of a lofty hill, surrounded on three sides by
+unscaleable precipices, descending to such depths that Josephus says
+the eye could not reach their bottom. The fourth side is described as
+only a little less terrible. Wild desolation reigned far and near. A
+German traveller mentions the masses of lava, brown, red, and black,
+varied with pumice-stone, distributed in huge broken masses, or rising
+in perpendicular cliffs; whilst the rushing stream, far below, is
+overgrown with oleanders and date-palms, willows, poplars, and tall
+reeds. Here and there, thick mists of steam arise, where the hot
+sulphur springs gush from the clefts of the rocks.
+
+On this impregnable site, Dr. Geikie tells us that Herod had erected a
+great wall, enclosing the summit of the hill, with towers two hundred
+feet high at the corners, and in the space thus gained had built a
+grand palace, with rows of columns of a single stone apiece, halls
+lined with many-coloured marbles, magnificent baths, and all the
+details of Roman luxury, not omitting huge cisterns, barracks, and
+store-houses, with everything needed in case of a siege. From the
+windows there was a magnificent view of the Dead Sea, the whole course
+of the Jordan, Jerusalem, Hebron, the frowning fortress of Marsaba, and
+away to the north, the wild heights of Pisgah and Abarim. Detached
+from the palace was a stern and gloomy keep, with underground dungeons
+still visible, hewn down into the solid rock. This was the scene of
+John's imprisonment.
+
+The Evangelist says expressly that they _bound_ the child of the
+desert-wastes, with his love for dear liberty--sensitive to the touch
+of the sunshine and the breeze, to the beauty that lay over the hills,
+accustomed to go and come at his will--as though it were the last
+indignity and affront to fetter those lithe and supple limbs, and place
+them under constraint. Ah, it is little short of a sin to encage a
+wild bird, beating its heart against the bars of its narrow cage, when
+the sun calls it to mount up with quivering ecstasy to the gates of
+day; but what a sin to bind the preacher of righteousness, and imprison
+him in sunless vaults--what an agony! What a contrast between the gay
+revelry that reigned yonder within the palace, and the slow torture
+which the noble spirit of the Baptist was doomed to suffer through
+those weary months!
+
+Is there anything like that in your life, my reader? In many an old
+castle the attention of the visitor is directed to a haunted room,
+where ghosts are said to walk at night; but in how many hearts there
+are dark subterranean apartments, where conscience, gagged and bound,
+lies imprisoned! Outwardly there is the gaiety and mirth as of a
+palace; but inwardly there is remorse, misery, unrest. In lonely hours
+there is a voice which pierces the thickest walls of your assumed
+indifference, and rings up into the house of your life, where the soul
+seeks to close its ear in vain. It is a sad, monotonous,
+heart-piercing cry which that voice repeats: "It is not lawful, not
+lawful, not lawful." Whenever there is a moment of silence and
+respite, you hear it--"Not lawful, not lawful." And nothing can stay
+it but repentance, confession, restitution, so far as may be, and the
+blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, which cleanseth from all sin.
+
+From time to time it would seem as though the strictness of John's
+imprisonment was relaxed. His disciples were permitted to see him, and
+tell him of what was happening in the world without; but stranger than
+all, he was summoned to have audiences with Herod himself.
+
+Another rendering of Mark vi. 19, 20, which is perfectly legitimate,
+and is favoured by the R.V., suggests that the king was ill at ease,
+and swept to and fro by very different currents.
+
+First, he was deeply incensed. As he thought of the manner in which
+the Baptist had treated him, denouncing him before his court, the fire
+of anger burnt fiercely within his breast; and he had beside him a Lady
+Macbeth, a beautiful fiend and temptress, who knew that while the
+Baptist lived, and dared to speak as he had done, her position was not
+safe. She knew Herod well enough to dread the uprising of his
+conscience at the appeals of truth. And perpetually, when she saw her
+chance, she whispered in Herod's ear, "The sooner you do away with that
+man the better. You don't love me perfectly, as long as you permit him
+to breathe. Unmannerly cur!" "Herodias set herself against him, and
+desired to kill him; but she could not."
+
+On the other side, Herod was in fear. He feared John, "knowing that he
+was a righteous man and a holy." He feared the people, because they
+held him for a prophet. And, beneath all, he feared God, lest he
+should step in to avenge any wrong perpetrated against his servant.
+
+Between these two influences he was "much perplexed" (Mark vi. 20,
+R.V.). When he was with Herodias, he thought as she did, and left her,
+almost resolved to give the fatal order; but when he was alone, the
+other influence made itself felt, and he would send for John:
+
+"I would like to see him again, chamberlain--tell the gaoler to send
+the Baptist hither; let his coming to my private room be, however, kept
+secret. I don't want all my court blabbing."
+
+And the gaoler would come to the cell door, and call to his prisoner,
+with a mixture of effrontery and obsequiousness, "Up, man; the king
+wants you. Put on your softest speech. It will serve you better than
+that rasping tongue of yours. Why cannot you leave the king and his
+private affairs alone? They are no business of yours or mine."
+
+And might not Herod attempt to induce the prophet to take back his
+ruthless sentence? "Come," he might say, "you remember what you said.
+If you unsay that sentence, I will set you free. I cannot, out of
+respect for my consort, allow such words to remain unretracted. There,
+you have your freedom in your own hands. One word of apology, and you
+may go your way; and my solemn bond is yours, that you shall be kept
+free from molestation."
+
+If such an offer were made, it must have presented a strong temptation
+to the emaciated captive, whose physique had already lost the
+elasticity and vigour of his early manhood, and was showing signs of
+his grievous privation. But he had no alternative; and, however often
+the ordeal was repeated, he met the royal solicitation with the same
+unwavering reply: "I have no alternative. It is not lawful for thee to
+have thy brother's wife. I should betray my God, and act treacherously
+to thyself, if I were to take back one word which I have spoken; and
+thou knowest that it is so." And as he reasoned of righteousness,
+temperance, and a judgment to come, the royal culprit trembled.
+
+John could do no other; but it was a sublime act of devotion to God and
+Truth. He had no thought for himself at all, and thought only of the
+choice and destiny of that guilty pair, from which he would warn and
+save them, if he might. Well might the Lord ask, in after days, if
+John were a reed shaken with the wind. Rather he resembled a forest
+tree, whose deeply-struck and far-spreading roots secure it against the
+attack of the hurricane; or a mighty Alp, which defies the tremor of
+the earthquake, and rears its head above the thunder-storms, which
+break upon its slopes, to hold fellowship with the skies.
+
+How many men are like Herod! They resemble the superficial ground, on
+which the seed springs into rapid and unnatural growth; but the rock
+lies close beneath the surface. Now they are swayed by the voice of
+the preacher, and moved by the pleadings of conscience, allowed for one
+brief moment to utter its protests and remonstrances; and then they
+feel the fascination of their sin, that unholy passion, that sinful
+habit, that ill-gotten gain--and are sucked back from the beach, on
+which they were almost free, into the sea of ink and death.
+
+You may be trying, my reader, to steer a middle course between John the
+Baptist and Herodias. Now you resolve to get free of her guilty
+charms, and break the spell that fascinates you. Merlin will
+emancipate himself from Vivien, before she learn his secret, and dance
+with it down the wood, leaving him dishonoured and ashamed. But,
+within an hour, the Syren is again singing her dulcet notes, and
+drawing the ship closer and closer to the rocks, with their black
+teeth, waiting to grind it to splinters. Oh that there might come to
+you the voice that spoke with such power to Augustine, and that like
+him you might now and here yield yourself to it; so that when the
+temptress, whatever form she may assume, approaches you with the
+whisper: "I am _she_, Augustine," you may answer: "But I am not _he_!"
+
+So John was left in prison. Month after month he languished in the
+dark and stifling dungeon, wondering a little, now and again, why the
+Master, if He were the Son of God, did not interpose to work his
+deliverance. But of that anon.
+
+
+III. HEROD'S INEVITABLE DETERIORATION.--Again and again John was
+remanded to his cell. Probably twelve months passed thus. But each
+time the king failed to act on the preacher's remonstrances; he became
+more impervious to his appeals, more liable to the sway of passion.
+Thus, when a supreme moment came, in which he was under the influence
+of drink and unholy appetite, and the reign of such moral nature as
+remained was greatly enfeebled, it is not to be wondered at that
+Herodias had her way, and before her murderous request the last thin
+fence of resistance broke down, and he gave orders that it should be as
+she desired.
+
+The story does not end here. He not only murdered John the Baptist,
+but he inflicted a deadly wound on his own moral nature, from which it
+never recovered, as we shall see. Ultimately he had no thought in the
+presence of Christ other than to see Him work a miracle; and when his
+desire was refused, set him at nought with his mighty men, mocked his
+claims to be the King of Israel, did not scruple to treat Him with
+indignity and violence, and so dismissed Him.
+
+Is it wonderful that our Lord was speechless before such a man? What
+else could He be? The deterioration had been so awful and complete.
+For the love of God can say nothing to us, though it be prepared to die
+on our behalf, so long as we refuse to repent of, and put away, our
+sin. We remember some solemn words, which may be applied in all their
+fearful significance to that scene: "There is a sin unto death; not
+concerning this do I say that he should make request."
+
+
+
+
+XI.
+
+"Art Thou He?"
+
+(MATTHEW XI.)
+
+ "He fought his doubts and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them;--thus he came, at length,
+
+ "To find a stronger faith his own,
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone."
+ TENNYSON.
+
+
+John's Misgivings--Disappointed Hopes--Signs of the Christ--The
+Discipline of Patience--A New Beatitude
+
+
+It is very touching to remark the tenacity with which some few of
+John's disciples clung to their great leader. The majority had
+dispersed: some to their homes; some to follow Jesus. Only a handful
+lingered still, not alienated by the storm of hate which had broken on
+their master, but drawn nearer, with the unfaltering loyalty of
+unchangeable affection. They could not forget what he had been to
+them--that he had first called them to the reality of living; that he
+had taught them to pray; that he had led them to the Christ: and they
+dare not desert him now, in the dark sad days of his imprisonment and
+sorrow.
+
+What an inestimable blessing to have friends like this, who will not
+leave our side when the crowd ebbs, but draw closer as the shadows
+darken over our path, and the prison damp wraps its chill mantle about
+us! To be loved like that is earth's deepest bliss! These heroic
+souls risked all the peril that might accrue to themselves from this
+identification with their master; they did not hesitate to come to his
+cell with tidings of the great outer world, and specially of what He
+was doing and saying, whose life was so mysteriously bound up with his
+own. "The disciples of John told him of all these things" (Luke vii.
+18, R.V.).
+
+It was to two of these choice and steadfast friends that John confided
+the question which had long been forming within his soul, and forcing
+itself to the front. "And John, calling unto him two of his disciples,
+sent them to the Lord, saying, Art Thou He that cometh, or look we for
+another?"
+
+
+I. JOHN'S MISGIVINGS.--Can this be he who, but a few months ago, had
+stood in his rock-hewn pulpit, in radiant certainty? The brilliant
+eastern sunlight that bathed his figure, as he stood erect amid the
+thronging crowds, was the emblem and symbol of the light that filled
+his soul. No misgiving crossed it. He pointed to Christ with
+unfaltering certitude, saying, This is He, the Lamb of God, the Son of
+the Father, the Bridegroom of the soul. How great the contrast between
+that and this sorrowful cry, "Art Thou He?"
+
+Some commentators, to save his credit, have supposed that the embassy
+was sent to the Lord for the sake of the disciples, that their hearts
+might be opened, their faith confirmed--and that they might have a head
+and leader when he was gone. But the narrative has to be greatly
+strained and dragged out of its obvious course to make it cover the
+necessities of such an hypothesis. It is more natural to think that
+John the Baptist was for a brief spell under a cloud, involved in
+doubt, tempted to let go the confidence that had brought him such
+ecstatic joy when he first saw the Dove descending and abiding.
+
+The Bible does not scruple to tell us of the failures of its noblest
+children: of Abram, thinking that the Egyptians would take his life; of
+Elijah, stretching himself beneath the shadow of the desert bush, and
+asking that he might die; of Thomas, who had been prepared to die with
+his Lord, but could not believe that He was risen. And in this the
+Spirit of God has rendered us untold service, because we learn that the
+material out of which He made the greatest saints was flesh and blood
+like ourselves; and that it was by Divine grace, manifested very
+conspicuously towards them, that they became what they were. If only
+the ladder rests on the low earth, where we live and move and have our
+being, there is some hope of our climbing to stand with others who have
+ascended its successive rungs and reached the starry heights. Yes, let
+us believe that, for some days at least, John's mind was overcast, his
+faith lost its foothold, and he seemed to be falling into bottomless
+depths. _He sent them to Jesus, saying, Art Thou He that should come_?
+We can easily trace this lapse of faith to three sources.
+
+(1) _Depression_. He was the child of the desert. The winds that
+swept across the waste were not freer. The boundless spaces of the
+Infinite had stretched above him, in vaulted immensity, when he slept
+at night or wrought through the busy days; and as he found himself
+cribbed, cabined, and confined in the narrow limits of his cell, his
+spirits sank. He pined with the hunger of a wild thing for liberty--to
+move without the clanking fetters; to drink of the fresh water of the
+Jordan, to breathe the morning air; to look on the expanse of nature.
+Is it hard to understand how his deprivations reacted on his mental and
+spiritual organization, or that his nervous system lost its elasticity
+of tone, or that the depression of his physical life cast a shadow on
+his soul?
+
+We are all so highly strung, so delicately balanced. Often the lack of
+spiritual joy and peace and power in prayer is attributable to nothing
+else than our confinement in the narrow limits of a tiny room; to the
+foul, gaseous air we are compelled to breathe; to our inability to get
+beyond the great city, with its wilderness of brick, into the country,
+with its blossoms, fields, and woodland glades. In a large number of
+spiritual maladies the physician is more necessary than the minister of
+religion; a holiday by the seaside or on the mountains, than a
+convention.
+
+What an infinite comfort it is to be told that God knows how easily our
+nature may become jangled and out of tune. He can attribute our doubts
+and fears to their right source. He knows the bow is bent to the point
+of breaking, and the string strained to its utmost tension. He does
+not rebuke his servants when they cast themselves under juniper bushes,
+and ask to die; but sends them food and sleep. And when they send from
+their prisons, saying, Art Thou He? there is no word of rebuke, but of
+tender encouragement and instruction.
+
+(2) _Disappointment_. When first consigned to prison, he had expected
+every day that Jesus would in some way deliver him. Was He not the
+opener of prison-doors? Was not all power at his disposal? Did He not
+wield the sceptre of the house of David? Surely He would not let his
+faithful follower lie in the despair of that dark dungeon! In that
+first sermon at Nazareth, of which he had been informed, was it not
+expressly stated to be part of the Divine programme, for which He had
+been anointed, that He would open prison-doors, and proclaim liberty to
+captives? He would surely then send his angels to open his
+prison-doors, and lead him forth into the light!
+
+But the weeks grew to months, and still no help came. It was
+inexplicable to John's honest heart, and suggested the fear that he had
+been mistaken after all. We can sympathize in this also. Often in our
+lives we have counted on God's interfering to deliver us from some
+intolerable sorrow. With ears alert, and our heart throbbing with
+expectancy, we have lain in our prison-cell listening for the first
+faint footfall of the angel; but the weary hours have passed without
+bringing him, and we have questioned whether God were mindful of his
+own; whether prayer prevailed; whether the promises were to be
+literally appropriated by us?
+
+(3) _Partial views of Christ_. "John heard in the prison the works of
+Jesus." They were wholly beneficent and gentle.
+
+"What has He done since last you were here?"
+
+"He has laid his hands on a few sick folk, and healed them; has
+gathered a number of children to his arms, and blessed them; has sat on
+the mountain, and spoken of rest and peace and blessedness."
+
+"Yes; good. But what more?"
+
+"A woman touched the hem of his garment, and trembled, and confessed,
+and went away healed."
+
+"Good! But what more?"
+
+"Well, there were some blind men, and He laid his hands on them, and
+they saw."
+
+"Is that all? Has He not used the fan to winnow the wheat, and the
+fire to burn up the chaff? This is what I was expecting, and what I
+have been taught to expect by Isaiah and the rest of the prophets. I
+cannot understand it. This quiet, gentle life of benevolence is
+outside my calculations. There must be some mistake. Go and ask Him
+whether we should expect _another_, made in a different mould, and who
+shall be as the fire, the earthquake, the tempest, while He is as the
+still small voice."
+
+John had partial views of the Christ--he thought of Him only as the
+Avenger of sin, the Maker of revolution, the dread Judge of all. There
+was apparently no room in his conception for the gentler, sweeter,
+tenderer aspects of his Master's nature. And for want of a clearer
+understanding of what God by the mouth of his holy prophets had spoken
+since the world began, he fell into this Slough of Despond.
+
+It was a grievous pity; yet let us not blame him too vehemently, lest
+we blame ourselves. Is not this what we do? We form a notion of God,
+partly from what we think He ought to be, partly from some distorted
+notions we have derived from others; and then because God fails to
+realize our conception, we begin to doubt. We think, for instance,
+that if there be a righteous God, He will not permit wrong to triumph;
+little children to suffer for the sins of their parents; the innocent
+to be trodden beneath the foot of the oppressor and the proud; or the
+dumb creatures to be tortured in the supposed interest of medical
+science. Surely God will step out of his hiding-place and open all
+prisons, emancipate all captives, and wave a hand of benediction over
+all creation. Thus we think and say; and then, because the world still
+groans and travails, we question whether God is in his high heaven.
+Like John, men have a notion, founded on some faulty knowledge of
+Scripture, that God will act in a certain preconceived way, in the
+thunder, the whirlwind, and the fire; and when God does not, but
+pursues his tender, gentle ministries, descending in summer showers,
+speaking in soft, still tones, distilling in the dew-drops, winning his
+empire over men by love, they say--"Is this He?"
+
+II. THE LORD'S REPLY.--"In that hour He cured many of diseases, and
+plagues, and evil spirits; and on many that were blind He bestowed
+sight." Through the long hours of the day, the disciples stood in the
+crowd, while the pitiable train of sick and demon-possessed passed
+before the Saviour, coming in every stage of need, and going away
+cleansed and saved. Even the dead were raised. And at the close the
+Master turned to them, and with a deep significance in his tone, said,
+"Go your way, and tell John what things ye have seen and heard; the
+blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and
+the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good tidings
+preached to them. And blessed is he, whosoever shall find none
+occasion of stumbling in Me."
+
+(1) _It was Indirect_. He did not say, I am He that was to come, and
+there is no need to look for another. Had He done so, He might have
+answered John's intellect, but not his heart. After a few hours the
+assurance would have waxed dim, and he would have questioned again. He
+might have wondered whether Jesus were not Himself deceived. One
+question always leads to another, so long as the heart is unsatisfied;
+hence the refusal on the part of our Lord to answer the question, and
+his evident determination to allay the restlessness and disquietude of
+the heart that throbbed beneath.
+
+God might, had He so willed, have written in starry characters across
+the sky the Divine words, "I am Jehovah, and ye shall have no other
+gods beside Me"; or He might have flashed it, and obliterated it to
+flash it again, as the electric cylinders which serve the purposes of
+advertisements in our large cities by night. This might have awed the
+intellect, but it would not have convinced the heart. Were this God's
+method, we should miss the benediction on those who have not seen and
+yet have believed. We should miss the discipline of waiting until our
+doubts are dissolved by the Spirit of God. The intellect might be
+temporarily overpowered with the evidence; but the soul, the heart, and
+the spirit, would miss the true knowledge that comes through purity,
+faith, and waiting upon God--the deepest knowledge of all. Besides,
+though one were to rise from the dead, and come to men with the awe of
+the vision of the other world stamped on his face, they would not
+believe. The evidence of the unseen and eternal must be given, not to
+the startled physical sense, but to the soul. Some other deeper method
+must be adopted; the heart must be taught to wait, trust, and accept
+those deep intuitions and revelations which establish the being of God.
+
+(2) _The Answer was Mysterious_. Surely, if He were able to do so
+much, He could do more. The power that healed the sick and lame and
+blind, and cast out demons, could surely deliver John. It made his
+heart the more wistful, to hear of these displays of power. He had to
+learn that the Lord healed these poor folks so easily because the light
+soil of their nature could not bear the richer harvests; because their
+soul could not stand the cutting through which alone the brilliant
+facets which were possible to his could be secured. It was because
+John was a royal soul, the greatest of woman born, because his nature
+was capable of yielding the best results to the Divine culture, that he
+was kept waiting, whilst others caught up the blessing and went away
+healed. Only three months remained of life, and in these the
+discipline of patience and doubt must do their perfect work.
+
+That is where you have made a mistake. You have thought God was hard
+on you, that He would help everybody but you; but you have not
+understood that your nature was so dear to God, and so precious in his
+sight, and so capable of the greatest development, that God loved you
+too much to let you off so lightly, and give you what you wanted, and
+send you on your way. God could have given you sight, made that lame
+foot well, restored the child to health, and opened the iron prison
+door of your circumstances. _He could_; but for all eternity you will
+thank Him He did not, because you are capable of something else. We
+are kept waiting through the long years--not that He loves us less, but
+more; not that He refuses what we ask, but that in the long strain and
+tension He is making us partakers of his blessedness. John's nature
+would presently yield a martyr and win a martyr's crown: was not that
+reason enough for not giving him at once the deliverance he sought?
+
+(3) _The Answer was Sufficient_. Together with the works of
+beneficence, the Lord drew John's attention to words he seemed in
+danger of forgetting; "Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the
+feeble knees. Say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong; fear
+not! Behold, your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of
+God. He will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be
+opened; and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped; then shall the
+lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing; for in
+the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams in the desert."
+"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me, because the Lord hath anointed
+Me to preach good tidings unto the meek; He hath sent Me to bind up the
+broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of
+the prison to them that are bound." The Lord strove to convince the
+questioner that his views were too partial and limited, and to send him
+back to a more comprehensive study of the old Scriptures. It was as
+though Jesus said, "Go to your master, and tell him to take again the
+ancient prophecy and study it. He has taken the sterner predictions to
+the neglect of the gentler, softer ones. It is true that I am to
+proclaim the day of vengeance; but first I must reveal the acceptable
+year. It is true that I am to come as a Mighty One, and my arm shall
+rule for Me; but it is also true that I am to feed my flock like a
+Shepherd, and gather the lambs in my arm."
+
+We make the same mistake. We have but a partial view of Christ, and
+need to get back to the Bible afresh, and study anew its comprehensive
+words; then we shall come to understand that the present is the time of
+the hiding of his power, the time of waiting, the time of the gentler
+ministries. Some day He will gird on his sword; some day He will
+winnow his floor; some day He will ride in a chariot of flame; some day
+He will sit upon the throne and judge those who oppress the innocent
+and take advantage of the poor. We have not yet seen the end of the
+Lord: we have not all the evidence. This is our mistake. But our
+Saviour is offering us every day evidences of his Divine and loving
+power. Last week I saw Him raise the dead; yesterday, before my eyes,
+He struck the chains from a prisoner; at this hour He is giving sight
+to the blind; to-morrow He will cast out demons. The world is full of
+evidences of his gracious and Divine power. They are not so striking
+and masterful as deeds of judgment and wrath might be--they need a
+quicker eye, a purer heart to discern; but they are not less
+significant of the fact that He liveth who was dead, and that He is
+alive for evermore. And these are sufficient, not only because of the
+transformations which are effected, but because of their moral quality,
+to show that there is One within the vail who lives in the power of an
+indissoluble life.
+
+
+III. A NEW BEATITUDE.--"Blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended
+in Me." Our Lord put within the reach of his noble Forerunner the
+blessedness of those who have not seen and yet have believed; of those
+who trust though they are slain; of those who wait the Lord's leisure;
+and of those who cannot understand his dealings, but rest in what they
+know of his heart. This is the beatitude of the unoffended, of those
+who do not stumble over the mystery of God's dealings with their life.
+
+This blessedness is within our reach also. There are times when we are
+overpowered with the mystery of life and nature. The world is so full
+of pain and sorrow, the litany of its need is so sad and pitiful,
+strong hearts are breaking under an intolerable load; while the battle
+seems only to the strong and the race to those who, by some mysterious
+providence, come of a healthy, though not specially moral or religious,
+stock. And if the incidence of pain and sorrow on the world be
+explained by its ungodliness, why does nature groan and travail? why
+are the forest glades turned into a very shambles? why does creation
+seem to achieve itself through the terrific struggle for survival?
+
+God's children are sometimes the most bitterly tried. For them the
+fires are heated seven times; days of weariness and nights of pain are
+appointed them; they suffer, not only at the hand of man, but it seems
+as though God Himself were turned against them, to become their enemy.
+The heavens seem as brass to their cries and tears, and the enemy has
+reason to challenge them with the taunt, "Where is now your God!" The
+waters of a full cup are wrung out in days like these; and the cry is
+extorted, "How long, O Lord, how long?"
+
+You and I have been in this plight. We have said, "Hath God forgotten
+to be gracious? Has He in anger shut up his tender mercies?" From our
+prison-cell we send up the appeal to our Brother in the glory: "Help
+us; for if Thou leavest us to our fate, we shall question if Thou art
+He." We are tempted to stumbling. We are like to fall over the
+mysteries of God's dealings with us. We are more able than ever before
+to appreciate the standpoint occupied by Job's wife, when she said to
+her husband, "Curse God, and die."
+
+Then we have the chance of inheriting a new beatitude. By refusing to
+bend under the mighty hand of God--questioning, chafing, murmuring--we
+miss the door which would admit us into rich and unalloyed happiness.
+We fumble about the latch, but it is not lifted. But if we will quiet
+our souls like a weaned child, anointing our heads, and washing our
+faces, light will break in on us as from the eternal morning; the peace
+of God will keep our hearts and minds, and we shall enter on the
+blessedness which our Lord unfolded before the gaze of his faithful
+Forerunner.
+
+
+
+
+XII.
+
+None greater than John the Baptist, yet...
+
+(MATTHEW XI.)
+
+ "Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+ In others, in thyself may be;
+ All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+ Be thou the same man thou dost seek!
+
+ "Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+ The whitest of the saints of God!
+ To show thee where their feet were set,
+ The light which led them shineth yet."
+ WHITTIER.
+
+
+Christ's Appreciation--His Independence--The Simplicity of his
+Life--His Place in the Devine Economy--The Spirit of Meekness--The
+Greatness of Humility
+
+
+While John's disciples were standing there, our Lord said nothing in
+his praise, but as soon as they had departed, the flood-gates of his
+heart were thrown wide open, and He began to speak to the multitudes
+concerning his faithful servant. It was as though He would give him no
+cause for pride by what He said. He desired to give his friend no
+additional temptation during those lonely hours. We say our kind
+things before each other's faces; our hard things when the back is
+turned. It is not so with Christ. He passes his most generous
+encomiums when we are not there to hear them. Christ may never tell
+you how greatly He loves and values you; but while you lie there in
+your prison, with sad and overcast heart, He is saying and thinking
+great things about you yonder.
+
+
+I. THE TIME CHOSEN FOR THE LORD'S COMMENDATION OF THE BAPTIST.--It was
+when John had fallen beneath his usual level, below high-water mark,
+that Jesus uttered his warmest and most generous words of
+appreciation--"Among them that are born of women, there hath not risen
+a greater than John the Baptist."
+
+"But, dost Thou really mean, most holy Lord, that this one is the
+greatest born of woman?"
+
+"Certainly," saith Christ, in effect.
+
+"But he has asked if Thou art really the Messiah."
+
+"I know it," saith the Lord.
+
+"But how canst Thou say that he is to be compared with Moses, Isaiah,
+or Daniel? Did they doubt Thee thus? And how canst Thou say that he
+is not a reed shaken with the wind, when, but now, he gave patent
+evidence that he was stooping beneath the hurrying tread of gales of
+doubt and depression?"
+
+"Ah," the Master seems to say, "Heaven judges, not by a passing mood,
+but by the general tenor and trend of a man's life; not by the
+expression of a doubt, caused by accidents which may be explained, but
+by the soul of man within him, which is as much deeper than the
+emotions as the heart of the ocean is deeper than the cloud-shadows
+which hurry across its surface."
+
+Yes, the Lord judges us by that which is deepest, most permanent, most
+constant and prevalent with us; by the ideal we seek to apprehend; by
+the decision and choice of our soul; by that bud of possibility which
+lies as yet furled, and unrealized even by ourselves.
+
+There is a remarkable parallel to this incident in the Old Testament.
+When we are first introduced to Gideon, the youngest son of Joash the
+Abi-ezrite, he is not in a very dignified position. He is threshing
+wheat by the wine-press, to hide it from the hosts of Midian, which
+devoured the produce of the entire country. There was no moral wrong
+in eluding the vigilance of the Midian spies, in transporting the wheat
+from the open country, where the wind might fan away the chaff, to the
+comparative seclusion and unlikeliness of the wine-press; but there was
+nothing specially heroic or inspiring in the spectacle. Yet, when the
+angel of the Lord appeared unto him, he said, "The Lord is with thee,
+thou mighty man of valour."
+
+"Mighty man of valour!" At first there is an apparent incongruity
+between this high-sounding salutation and the bearing of the man to
+whom it was addressed. Surely such an address is far-fetched and
+fulsome; yet subsequent events prove that every syllable of it was
+deservedly true. Gideon was a mighty man of valour, and God was with
+him. The heavenly messenger read beneath the outward passing incident,
+and saw under the clumsy letters of the palimpsest the deep and holy
+characters which were awaiting the moment of complete discovery.
+
+Is not this, in fact, the meaning of the apostle, when he says that
+faith is reckoned to us for righteousness? In the fullest sense, of
+course, we know that to each believer in Jesus there is reckoned the
+entire benefit of his glorious person and work, so that we are accepted
+in the Beloved, and He is "made unto us ... Righteousness." But there
+is another sense in which faith is reckoned to us for righteousness,
+because it contains within itself the power and potency of the perfect
+life. It is the seed-germ from which is developed in due course the
+plant, the flower, the bud, the seed, and the reproduction of the plant
+in unending succession. God reckoned to Abraham all that his faith was
+capable of producing, which it did produce, and which it would have
+produced had he possessed all the advantages which pertain to our own
+happy lot. There is thus the objective and the subjective: in virtue
+of the first, through faith in Jesus, all his righteousness is
+accounted to us; in virtue of the second, God reckons to us all that
+blessed flowering and fruitage of which our faith will be capable, when
+patience has had its perfect work and we are perfect and entire,
+wanting nothing.
+
+
+II. THE OUTSTANDING FEATURES OF JOHN'S CHARACTER AND MINISTRY TO WHICH
+OUR LORD DREW ATTENTION.--(1) _His Independence_. "What went ye out
+into the wilderness to behold? A reed shaken with the wind?" The
+language of the Bible is so picturesque, so full of natural imagery,
+that it appeals to every age, and speaks in every language of the
+world. If its descriptions of character had been given in the language
+of the philosopher or academist, what was intelligible to one age would
+have been perplexing or meaningless to the next. Remember that the
+long gallery in the Pyramids, which was directed to the pole-star when
+they were constructed, is now hopelessly out of course, because the
+position of the pole-star, in relation to the earth, has so entirely
+altered; and what is true among the spheres is true in the use of
+terms. But the Word of God employs natural figures and parables, which
+the wayfaring man, though a fool, comprehends at a glance.
+
+Who, for instance, on a gusty March day, has not watched the wind
+blowing lustily across a marsh or the reedy margin of a lake,
+compelling all the reeds to stoop in the same direction? Has one
+resisted the current or stood stoutly forth in protesting
+non-compliance? Has one dared to adopt an unbending posture? Not one.
+They have been as obsequious as were all the king's servants that were
+in the king's gate to the imperious Haman when he happened to enter the
+palace.
+
+Thus, when our Lord asked the people whether John resembled a reed
+shaken by the wind, and implied their answer in the negative, could He
+have more clearly indicated one of the most salient characteristics of
+John's career--his daring singularity, his independence of mere custom
+and fashion, his determination to follow out the pattern of his own
+life as God revealed it to him? In this he resembles the good
+Nehemiah, when he refers to the usual practice of men of his position,
+and says, "So did not I, because of the fear of the Lord"; or the three
+young men who, when all the myriads fell down and worshipped
+Nebuchadnezzar's golden image, remained erect. In the singularity of
+his dress and food; in the originality of his message and demand for
+baptism; in his independence of the religious teachers and schools of
+his time; in his refusal to countenance the flagrant sins of the
+various classes of the community, and especially in his uncompromising
+denunciation of Herod's sin--he proved himself to be as a sturdy oak in
+the forest of Bashan, or a deeply-rooted cedar in Lebanon, and not as a
+reed shaken by the wind.
+
+Many a saintly soul has followed him since along this difficult and
+lonely track. Indeed, it is the ordinary path for most of the choicest
+spirits of these Christian centuries. I do not say of all, because the
+great Gardener has his violets and lilies in sheltered spots; but
+certainly most of the trees of his right-hand planting have not stood
+thickly-planted in the sheltered woodland, but have braved the winds
+sweeping in at the gates of the hills.
+
+You, my reader, admire, but feel you cannot follow. When your
+companions and friends are speaking depreciating and ungenerous words
+of some public man whom you love; when unkind and scandalous stories
+are being passed from lip to lip; when a storm of execration and hatred
+is being poured on a cause, which in your heart you favour and
+espouse--you find it easier to bow before the gale, with all the other
+reeds around you, than to enter your protest, even though you stand
+alone. Yet the reed thrust by the soldiers into the hands of Christ
+may become the rod of iron with which He rules the nations. He can
+take the most pliant and yielding natures, and make them, as He made
+Jeremiah, "a defenced city, and an iron pillar, and brazen walls,
+against the whole land." Thou canst not; but He can. He will
+strengthen thee; yea, He will help thee; yea, He will uphold thee with
+the right hand of his righteousness. Keep looking steadfastly up to
+Him, that He may teach thy hands to war, and thy fingers to fight; for
+thou shalt be able to do all things through Him that strengtheneth thee.
+
+(2) _His simplicity_. A second time the Master asked the people what
+they went forth into the wilderness to behold; and by his question
+implied that John was no Sybarite clothed in soft raiment, and feasting
+in luxury, but a strong, pure soul, that had learnt the secret of
+self-denial and self-control. Too many of us are inclined to put on
+the soft raiment of self-indulgence and luxury. We are the slaves of
+fashion, or we are perpetually considering what we shall eat, what we
+shall drink, and with what we shall be clothed: or we act as though we
+supposed that life consisted in the number of things we possessed, and
+the variety of servants that waited upon us: whereas the exact contrary
+is the case. The real happiness of life consists not in increasing our
+possessions, but in limiting our wants.
+
+To all my young brothers and sisters who may read this page, and who
+have yet the making of their lives in their own hands, I would say,
+with all my heart, learn to do without the soft clothing and the many
+servants which characterise kings' courts. At table have your eye on
+the simpler dishes, those which supply the maximum of nutriment and
+strength, and do not allow your choice to be determined by what pleases
+the palate or gratifies the taste. A young friend stood me out the
+other day against some article of diet, which was acknowledged to be
+the more nutritious (it was whole-meal bread), because another was
+sweeter and more palatable (some white, light French rolls, from which
+all the nutriment had been extracted). This is the deliberate
+preference of the fare of kings' courts to Daniel's pulse and the
+Baptist's locusts and wild honey. Please note, here, that there was
+nothing inconsistent in his taking honey. We are not to refuse a
+certain diet because it is pleasant; but we are not to choose it
+because it is so.
+
+So with dress. Our Master does not require of us to dress grotesquely,
+or to attract notice by the singularity and grotesqueness of our
+attire. We must dress suitably and in conformity with that station in
+life to which He has called us. But what a difference there is between
+making our dress our main consideration, and considering first and
+foremost the attire of the soul in meekness and truth, purity and
+unselfishness. They who are set upon these may be trusted to put the
+other in the right place. But, on the whole, the truly consecrated
+soul should study simplicity. It should not endeavour to attract
+notice by glaring colours or extravagant display. It ought not to seek
+a large variety of dresses and costumes, but be satisfied with what may
+be really needed for the exigencies of climate and health. Let it take
+no pleasure in vying with others, because dress is a question of
+utility and not of pride. On the whole, we should set our faces
+against the soft raiment which enervates the health, and unfits us to
+stretch out our hands in ready help to those who need assistance along
+the highways of life.
+
+So with service. It is not well to depend on others. If it is part of
+our lot to be surrounded by servants, let us accept their offices with
+grace and kindliness, but never allow ourselves to lean on them. We
+should know how to do everything for ourselves, and be prepared to do
+it whenever it is necessary. Of course, with some of us, it is
+essential that we should have servants, that we may be set free to do
+the special work of our lives. Nothing would be more unfortunate than
+that those who are highly gifted in some special direction should
+fritter away their time and strength in doing trifles which others
+could do for them equally well. To think of a physician whose
+consulting room was crowded with patients needing help which he alone,
+of all men living, could give, spending the precious morning hours in
+the minutiae of household arrangements, blacking his boots, or
+preparing his food! Let these things be left to those who cannot do
+the higher work to which he is called.
+
+This is the secret of making the best of your life. Discover what you
+can do best--the one thing which you are called to do for others, and
+which probably no one else can do so well. Set yourself to do this,
+devolving on voluntary or paid helpers all that they can do as well as,
+and perhaps better than, yourself. It was in this spirit that the
+apostles said, "It is not fit that we should forsake the Word of God
+and serve tables. Look ye out, therefore, men ... whom we may appoint
+over this business; but we will continue steadfastly in prayer, and in
+the ministry of the Word."
+
+It is specially the temptation of Eastern life, where the climate is
+enervating and service is cheap and plentiful, to seek the soft raiment
+and the large assistance of attendants, and it is almost impossible to
+yield to one or the other without relaxing the fibre of the soul. The
+temptation is always around us; and it is well to look carefully into
+our life from time to time, to be quite sure, lest almost insensibly
+its strong energetic spirit may not be in process of deterioration--as
+the soldiers of Hannibal in the plains of Capua. If so, resolve to do
+without, not for merit's sake, but to conserve the strength and
+simplicity of your soul.
+
+(3) _His noble office_. "But wherefore went ye out?--to see a prophet?
+Yea, I say unto you, and much more than a prophet." Nothing is more
+difficult than to measure men while they are living. Whilst the
+fascination of their presence and the music of their voice are in the
+air, we are apt to exaggerate their worth. The mountain towers so far
+above us that we are apt, in the absence of other mountains, or in our
+too great proximity to it, to think of it as the greatest of all the
+mountain-range. But it is not so, as we discover when we remove
+further. But subsequent ages, so far from correcting, have only
+confirmed our Saviour's estimate of his Forerunner. We are able to
+locate him in the Divine economy. He was a prophet, yes, and much
+more. To employ the predictive words of Malachi, he was Jehovah's
+messenger, the courier who announced the advent of the King, the last
+of the prophets--for all the prophets and the law prophesied until
+John--and the herald of that new and greater era, whose gates he
+opened, but into which he was not permitted to enter.
+
+But our Lord went further, and did not hesitate to class John with the
+greatest of those born of woman. He was absolutely in the front rank.
+He may have had peers, but no superiors; equals, but no over-lords.
+Who may be classed with him, we cannot, dare not, say. But probably
+Abraham, Moses, Paul. "There hath not arisen a greater than John the
+Baptist." No brighter star shines in the celestial firmament than that
+of this brief young life, which had only time enough to proclaim the
+advent of the Lord, and after some brief six months of ministry by the
+Jordan, followed by twelve months in the gaol, waned here to shine in
+undimming brilliancy yonder.
+
+There was a further tribute paid by our Lord to his noble servant.
+Some two or three centuries before, Malachi had foretold that Elijah,
+the prophet, would be sent before the great and terrible day of the
+Lord came; and the Jews were always on the outlook for his coming.
+Even to the present day a chair is set for him at their religious
+feasts. This is what was meant when they asked the Baptist, at the
+commencement of his ministry, if he were Elijah. He shrank, as we have
+seen, from assuming so great a name, though he could not have refused
+the challenge, had it been worded to include the spirit and power of
+the great prophet of Thisbe. But here our Lord went beyond John's own
+modest, self-depreciating estimate, and declared, "If ye are willing to
+receive it, this is Elijah which is to come." As He descended from the
+Mount of Transfiguration, He returned to the same subject: "And they
+asked Him, saying, The scribes say that Elijah must first come. And He
+said unto them, Elijah indeed cometh first, and restoreth all
+things.... But I say unto you that Elijah is come, and they have also
+done unto him whatsoever they listed, even as it is written of him"
+(Mark ix. 9-13).
+
+
+III. THE MASTER'S RESERVATION. Let us again quote His memorable
+words: "Among them that are born of women there hath not arisen a
+greater than John the Baptist; yet he that is but little in the Kingdom
+of heaven is greater than he" (Matt. xi. 11, R.V.).
+
+The greatness of John the Baptist shone out in conspicuous beauty in
+his meek confession of inferiority. It is always a sign of the
+greatest knowledge, when its possessor confesses himself to be as a
+child picking up shells on the shores of a boundless ocean. And the
+Baptist's greatness was revealed in the lowliness of his self-estimate.
+
+When the Lord Jesus summarized his own character He said, "I am meek
+and lowly in heart." In doing so He expressed the character of God;
+for He was the Revealer of God, "the brightness of his glory, and the
+express image of his person." He was "God manifested in flesh." He
+was not only the Son of God, He was God the Son: "He that hath seen Me
+hath seen the Father. I and the Father are one." The greatness of
+John was proved in this, that like his Lord he was meek and lowly in
+heart. Neither before nor since has a son of Adam lived in whom these
+divine qualities were more evident. No sublimer, no more God-like
+utterance ever passed the lips of man than John's answer to his
+disciples: "A man can receive nothing except it have been given him
+from heaven. He must increase, but I must decrease" (see the whole
+passage, John iii. 27-36). The very same spirit of meekness was
+speaking in John as acted in his Lord, when, knowing that the Pharisees
+had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John
+(though Jesus Himself baptized not, but his disciples), "He left Judea
+and departed into Galilee." What divisions might have been avoided in
+the Church had his people followed his example! But there was no man,
+not even the apostle John or Paul, whose spirit accorded more exactly
+with the Master's than his faithful and self-effacing herald and
+forerunner, John the Baptist. It might well be said, that of them that
+were born of women there had not arisen a greater than he.
+
+But what was in our Lord's thought when He made the reservation, "_Yet
+he that is but little in the Kingdom of heaven is greater than he_"?
+It has been suggested that the Lord was speaking of John not only as a
+man, but as a prophet, and that this declaration applies more
+particularly to John as a prophet. The words of the evangelist Luke
+are noticeable--"There hath not risen a greater prophet than John the
+Baptist": because to balance the sentence it seems needful to supply
+the word _prophet_ in the second clause--"The least prophet in the
+Kingdom of heaven is a greater prophet than he." John could say,
+"Behold the Lamb of God"; but the least of those who, being scattered
+abroad, went everywhere proclaiming the word of the Kingdom, preached
+"Jesus and the resurrection."
+
+But there is another way of interpreting Christ's words. John ushered
+in the Kingdom, but was not in it. He proclaimed a condition of
+blessedness in which he was not permitted to have a part. And the Lord
+says that to be in that Kingdom gives the opportunity of attaining to a
+greatness which the great souls outside its precincts cannot lay claim
+to. There is a greatness which comes from nature, and another
+greatness from circumstances. The child on the mountain is higher than
+the giant in the valley. The boy in our village schools knows more on
+certain subjects than Socrates or Confucius, the greatest sages of the
+world. The least instructed in the Kingdom of heaven is privileged to
+see and hear the things which prophets and kings longed and waited for
+in vain. The least in the higher dispensation may know and understand
+more than the loftiest souls of the dispensations that have preceded.
+
+And may there not be even more than this? The character of John was
+strong, grand in its wild magnificence--like some Alpine crag, with the
+pines on its slopes and the deep dark lake at its foot; he had courage,
+resolution, an iron will, a loftiness of soul that could hold commerce
+with the unseen and eternal. He was a man capable of vast heights and
+depths. He could hold fellowship with the eternal God as a man speaks
+with his friend, and could suffer unutterable agonies in
+self-questioning and depression. But is this the loftiest ideal of
+character? Is it the most desirable and blessed? Assuredly not; and
+this may have been in the Saviour's mind when He made his notable
+reservation. To come neither eating nor drinking; to be stern,
+reserved, and lonely; to live apart from the homes of men, to be the
+severe and unflinching rebuker of other men's sins--this was not the
+loftiest pattern of human character.
+
+There was something better, as is manifest in our Lord's own perfect
+manhood. The balance of quality; the power to converse with God, mated
+with the tenderness that enters the homes of men, wipes the tears of
+those that mourn, and gathers little children to its side; that has an
+ear for every complaint, and a balm of comfort for every heart-break;
+that pities and soothes, teaches and leads; that is able not only to
+commune with God alone in the desert, but brings Him into the lowliest
+deeds and commonplaces of human life--this is the type of character
+which is characteristic of the Kingdom of heaven. It is described best
+in those inimitable beatitudes which canonize, not the stern and
+rugged, but the sweet and tender, the humble and meek; and stamp
+Heaven's tenderest smile on virtues which had hardly found a place in
+the strong and gritty character of the Baptist.
+
+Yes, there is more to be had by the humble heart than John possessed or
+taught. The passive as well as the active; the glen equally with the
+bare mountain peak; the feminine with the masculine; the power to wait
+and be still, combined with the swift rush to capture the position; the
+cross of shame as well as the throne of power. And if thou art the
+least in the Kingdom of God, all this may be thine, by the Holy Spirit,
+who introduces the very nature of the Son of Man into the heart that
+loves Him truly. "He that is least in the Kingdom of heaven is greater
+than he."
+
+
+
+
+XIII.
+
+A Burning and Shining Lamp.
+
+(JOHN V. 35.)
+
+ "Men as men
+ Can reach no higher than the Son of God,
+ The Perfect Head and Pattern of Mankind.
+ The time is short, and thus sufficeth us
+ To live and die by; and in Him again
+ We see the same first starry attribute,
+ '_Perfect through suffering_,' our salvation's seal,
+ Set in the front of His humanity...."
+ MRS. HAMILTON KING.
+
+
+The Rest-Day--The Light of Life--Shining, because Burning--"Let your
+Light Shine"--A Light in the Darkness
+
+
+Our Master, Christ, was on his trial. He was challenged by the
+religious leaders of the people because He had dared to heal a man and
+to command him to carry his bed--his straw pallet--on the Sabbath day.
+He was therefore accused, and, so to speak, put in his defence.
+
+Of course we must not for a moment think that our Lord was lax in his
+observance of the Sabbath, but simply that He desired to emancipate the
+day from the intolerable burdens and restrictions with which the Jewish
+leaders had surrounded it. It was his desire to show, for all after
+time, that the Sabbath was made for useful purposes, and specially for
+deeds of mercy, beneficence, and gentle kindness. The Lord Jesus was
+maligned and persecuted because He was the Emancipator of the Sabbath
+day from foolish and mistaken notions of sanctity.
+
+It is of the greatest importance that we should do what we may to
+conserve one rest-day in seven to our country and our world; and I
+cannot help noticing in the story of the life of the great statesman
+and Christian, who recently passed from us, how careful he was to guard
+the day from unnecessary intrusion. It has been attested by those who
+knew him well, that physically, intellectually, and spiritually, the
+Lord's day to him was a priceless blessing. Let your rest on the one
+rest-day consist, not in lolling idly and carelessly, but in turning
+your faculties in some other direction; because the truest rest is to
+be found, not in luxurious ease, but in using the fresh vigour of your
+life in other compartments of the brain than those which have been worn
+by the demands of the six days. Then, fresh from the Sunday-school
+class, the worship of the church, and the sermon, you will return to
+the desk or office, or whatever may be your toil, with new and
+rejuvenated strength.
+
+There is a great distinction between shining and burning: shining is
+the light-giving, the illuminating, that comes forth from the enkindled
+wick; but it cannot shine unless it burns. The candle that gives light
+wastes inch by inch as it gives it. The very wick of your lamp, that
+conducts the oil to the flame, chars, and you have to cut it off bit by
+bit until the longest coil is at length exhausted. We must never
+forget that, if we would shine, we must burn. Too many of us want to
+shine, but are not prepared to pay the cost that must be faced by every
+true man that wants to illuminate his time. We must burn down until
+there is but an eighth of an inch left in the candlestick, till the
+light flickers a little and drops, makes one more eager effort, and
+then ceases to shine--"a burning and shining light."
+
+Obviously, then, we have first _the comparison between John and the
+candle, or lamp_; then we have _the necessary expenditure, burning to
+shine_; and, thirdly, we have _the misuse that people may make of their
+opportunities_.
+
+
+I. THE LORD'S COMPARISON.--"John was a burning and shining lamp." In
+the original a great contrast is suggested between _lamp_, as it is
+given in the Revised Version, and _light_. The Old Version put it
+thus: "He was a burning and shining light"; but the Revised Version
+puts it thus: "He was a burning and shining lamp"; and there is a
+considerable difference between the two. In the first chapter of the
+Gospel, the apostle John tells us, speaking of the Baptist, that he was
+not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light, that all
+men through him [John] might believe. "That was the True Light, which
+lighteth every man coming into the world."
+
+Jesus Christ is the Light of the World; and I believe that in every age
+He has been waiting to illumine the hearts and spirits of men,
+reminding us of the expression in the Book of Proverbs--and it is
+wonderfully significant--"The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord."
+
+Here is a candle, yonder is the wick; but it gives no light. The air
+may be full of luminousness, but as yet it has found no point on which
+to kindle and from which to irradiate. But, see, of a sudden the light
+gathers to the candle-wick, which had stood helpless and useless,
+touches it, and it begins to shine with a light not its own. It is
+borrowed light, caught from some burning cone of flame.
+
+Men are born into the world like so many unlighted candles. They may
+stand in chaste candlesticks, all of gold or silver, of common tin or
+porcelain. But all are by nature unlit. On the other hand, Jesus
+Christ, the Light of men, waits with yearning desire, and, as each
+successive generation passes across the stage of human life, He is
+prepared to illumine the spirits which are intended to be the candles
+of the Lord. In these ages He illumines us with the Gospel; but I
+believe that all moral intuitions, all instincts of immortality, all
+cravings after God, all gropings in the dark for the true Light, all
+helpful moral revolutions which have swept over mankind, have been the
+result of his influence, who, as the true Light, lighteth every man
+coming into the world. Whenever and wherever a man has flamed up with
+unusual fervour and spiritual power, with a desire to help his fellows,
+and has shone like a torch, we must believe that he was illumined by
+the Son of God, the Wisdom of the Book of Proverbs, whom he may not
+have known, but whom he would recognise as soon as he crossed the
+portal of the New Jerusalem. He lighteth every man; He is willing to
+illumine every man that comes into the world.
+
+This conception casts a considerable light on some of the enigmas of
+human experience. We have known illiterate, uncultured men, without
+many gifts of style or grace of speech, yet they have shone to such an
+extent that every one in their neighbourhood has been lit by the
+radiance that has streamed from them. On the other hand, we have met
+men who have passed through a college course and been carefully trained
+for their life-work; important pulpits and opportunities of great
+usefulness have been opened to them; but their lives have been a
+disappointment. Why? Ah, the answer is easy. The former class were
+as candles, made of ordinary wax, and placed in inconspicuous
+candle-sticks, which had been ignited by the fire of God through the
+Holy Spirit; and the latter were like exquisitely prepared
+candlesticks, the candles in which had never been kindled by the fire
+of God. There are hundreds of professing Christians, and some may read
+these pages, who have never really been kindled; who have never been
+touched by the Son of God; who do not know what it is to shine with his
+light and to burn with his fire.
+
+What is the process of lighting? The wick of the candle is simply
+brought into contact with the flame, and the flame leaps to it, kindles
+on it, without parting with any of its vigour or heat, and continues to
+burn, drawing to itself the nourishment which the candle supplies. So
+let Jesus Christ touch you. Believe in the Light, that you may become
+a child of the Light. Take off the extinguisher; cast away your
+prejudice; put off those misconceptions; have done with those unworthy
+habits; putting them all aside, let Jesus kindle you. "Arise, shine;
+for thy light is come." "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the
+dead, and Christ shall give thee light."
+
+We were kindled that we might kindle others. I would like, if I might
+have my choice, to burn steadily down, with no guttering waste, and as
+I do so to communicate God's fire to as many unlit candles as possible;
+and to burn on steadily until the socket comes in view, then to light,
+in the last flicker, twenty, thirty, or a hundred candles at once; so
+that as one expires they may begin burning and spreading light which
+shall shine till Jesus comes. Get light from Christ, then share it;
+and remember that it is the glory of fire that one little candle may go
+on lighting hundreds of candles--one insignificant taper may light all
+the lamps of a cathedral church, and yet not be robbed of its own
+little glow of flame. Andrew was lit by Christ Himself, and passed on
+the flame to Simon Peter, and he to three thousand more on the Day of
+Pentecost. Every Christian soul illumined by the grace of God thus
+becomes, as John the Baptist was, a lamp. But there is always the same
+impassable chasm between these and the Lord. They are derived; He is
+original. They need to be sustained and fed; He is the fountain of
+Light: because, as the Father hath life in Himself, He hath given to
+Him also to have life in Himself, and his life is the light of men.
+
+
+II. THE INEVITABLE EXPENDITURE.--"He was a burning and shining lamp."
+_If you would shine, you must burn_. The ambition to shine is
+universal; but all are not prepared to pay the price by which alone
+they can acquire the right to give the true light of life. There are
+plenty of students who would win all the prizes, and wear all the
+honours, apart from days and nights of toil; but they find it a vain
+ambition. Before a man can become Senior Wrangler he must have burnt,
+not only the midnight oil, but some of the very fibre of his soul.
+Conspicuous positions in the literary and scientific world are less the
+reward of genius than of laborious, soul-consuming toil. The great
+chemist will work sixteen hours out of twenty-four. The illustrious
+author acquires, by profound research, the materials which he weaves
+into his brilliant page. Such men shine because they burn.
+
+But this is pre-eminently the principle in the service of Christ. It
+was so with the Lord Himself. He shone, and his beams have illumined
+myriads of darkened souls, and shall yet bring dawn throughout the
+world; but, ah, how He burned! The disciples remembered that it was
+written of Him: "The zeal of thy house hath eaten Me up." He suffered,
+that He might serve. He would not save Himself, because He was bent on
+saving others. He ascended to the throne because He spared not Himself
+from the cruel tree. Pilate marvelled that his death came so soon, and
+sent for the centurion to be certified that in so few hours He had
+succumbed. But he did not realize that in three short years He had
+expended his vital strength so utterly, that there was no reserve to
+fall back upon. There had been an inward consumption, an exhaustion of
+nervous power, a wearing down of the springs of vitality. He shone
+because of the fire that burned within Him.
+
+It was so with the great apostle, who said that he filled up that which
+was lacking in the afflictions of Christ, not of course that there was
+any lack in the work of propitiation which required his further help,
+but that the saints are called to share with their Lord his sorrows for
+men, his tears, to lift the burdens and crosses of others, to give of
+their very life-blood for the replenishing of the exhausted fountains
+of human faith, and hope, and love. Paul gave freely of his best. He
+shone because he never hesitated to burn. Remember how he affirmed
+that he was pressed down, perplexed, pursued, and always bore about in
+his body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of Jesus might be
+manifested in his mortal flesh. The price paid for the life that
+wrought in the hearts of his converts was that death should work in
+himself.
+
+All the saints have passed through similar experiences. They knew, as
+Cranmer said, that they could never hope to kindle a fire that should
+never be put out, unless they were prepared to stand steadily at the
+stake and give their bodies to be burned. But they counted not their
+lives dear unto them, if they might but finish their course with joy,
+and the ministry which they had received of the Lord Jesus, to testify
+the Gospel of the grace of God. The men and women who shine as
+beacon-lights across the centuries are those whose tears were their
+meat day and night, whose prayers rose with strong cryings and tears;
+while, as with Palissy, the Huguenot potter, the very furniture of the
+house was brought out to feed the flame in which the precious glaze was
+being precipitated.
+
+If the Christian worker longs to benefit the poor slum district in
+which he is located, he must be prepared to live amongst the people and
+expend himself. Presently, in his hollow cheeks, his sallow
+complexion, his attenuated form, his diminishing strength, you will see
+that he is paying the price for his 100-candle illuminating power,
+because he is being consumed. Every successful worker for God must
+learn that lesson. You must be prepared to suffer; you can only help
+men when you die for them. If you desire to save others you cannot
+save yourself; you must be prepared to fall into the ground and die, if
+you would not abide alone: there must be with you, as with Paul, the
+decaying of the outward man, that the inward man may be renewed day by
+day. You must be prepared to say with him, "Death worketh in us, but
+life in you."
+
+_If you burn, you will shine_. The burning and the shining do not
+always go together; often the burning goes on a long time without much
+illumination resulting from the expenditure. Those who are rich in
+gifts and natural endowments cast in much, and the poor cast in all
+their living; this they continue to do, year after year, and none seems
+to heed the awful cost at which their testimony is given. Moreover, to
+use a well-known phrase, the game hardly seems worth the candle. The
+area they influence is so limited, the souls affected so few, the
+glimmer of their light, like a street-lamp in a fog, hardly reaches
+across the street or to the ground. Sometimes it appears only to make
+the darkness denser and thicker. In many cases, the saints of God have
+burnt down to the last film of vital energy and expired, and there has
+been no shining that the world has taken cognisance of. Their bitter
+complaint has been, "I have laboured in vain; I have spent my strength
+for nought, and in vain." But even these shall shine. They shall
+shine as the stars for ever and ever in that world where all holy and
+faithful souls obtain their due.
+
+Let us see to the burning; God will see to the shining. It is ours to
+feed the sacred heaven-enkindled flame with the daily fuel of the Word
+of God and holy service; and God will see to it that no ray of power or
+love is wasted. He will place reflectors around us, to catch up and
+repeat the influences that proceed from us. "The Lord was with Samuel,
+and did let none of his words fall to the ground." It is ours to keep
+in company with the risen Lord, listening to Him as He opens to us the
+Scriptures, until our hearts burn within us; then, as we hasten to tell
+what we have seen, tasted, and handled of the Word of Life, there will
+be a glow on our faces, whether we know it or not; and men shall say of
+us: "They have been with Jesus." If we think only of the shining, we
+shall probably miss both it and the burning. But if we devote
+ourselves to the burning, even though it involve the hidden work of the
+mine, the stoke-hole, and the furnace-room, there will be the raying
+forth of a light that cannot be hid. Where there is the burning heat,
+there must be the soft, gleaming light. Let there be but summer, and
+the flowers cover the land.
+
+_For the burning and the shining, God will provide the fuel_. The fire
+which burnt in the bush needed no fuel; "the bush was not consumed."
+With us there is perpetual need for the nourishment of the fire of love
+and the light of life by the administration of appropriate fuel. The
+oil must be supplied to the lamp. The fire cannot be kept burning on
+the altar apart from the incessant care and attention of the priests.
+But be of good cheer; He who hath begun a good work in you will perfect
+it unto the day of Jesus Christ. All grace will be made to abound
+towards you, that you may have all sufficiency for all things, and
+abound to every good work. The Lord will give grace and glory; no good
+thing will He withhold from them that walk uprightly. God will supply
+all your need, according to his riches in glory, by Christ Jesus. It
+is especially helpful to ponder the full import of the phrase--"the
+supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ." It is as though we had access
+to one of those oil-wells of the west, which seem practically
+inexhaustible.
+
+It is a wonderful thing how often God puts his lighted candles in the
+cellar. We would have supposed that He would have placed a man like
+John on a pedestal or a throne, that his influence might reach as far
+as possible. Instead of that He allowed him to spend the precious
+months of his brief life in prison. And the lamp flickered somewhat in
+the pestilential damp. It may be that this is your place also. In the
+silence of a sick chamber, in the obscurity of some country parish,
+amid obloquy and hatred, you are doomed to spend your slowly-moving
+years. It seems such a waste. Loneliness and depression are hard to
+endure; but the consciousness of accomplishing so little, though at
+such cost, is very painful. This is your cellar-life, your dungeon
+experience. Remember that Joseph and Rutherford, John Bunyan and
+Madame Guyon, have been there before you. Probably, because the cellar
+is so very dark, God wants to station a candle there, and has placed
+you there because you can accomplish a work for Him, and for others, of
+priceless importance. Where is the light needed so much as on a dark
+landing or a sunken reef? Go on shining, and you will find some day
+that God will make that cellar a pedestal out of which your light shall
+stream over the world; for it was out of his prison cell that John
+illuminated the age in which his lot was cast, quite as much as from
+his rock-pulpit beside the Jordan. "I would have you know, brethren,"
+said the apostle, "that the things which happened unto me have fallen
+out rather unto the progress of the Gospel, so that my bonds became
+manifest in Christ throughout the Praetorian guard" (Phil. i. 12, 13,
+R.V.).
+
+
+III. CHRIST'S WARNING AGAINST THE MISUSE OF OPPORTUNITIES.--"Ye were
+willing for a season to rejoice in his light." The Greek word rendered
+_rejoice_ has in it the idea of moths playing around a candle, or of
+children dancing around a torch-light, as it burns lower and lower. It
+is as though a light were given to men for an hour, for them to use for
+some high and sacred purpose, but they employ it for dancing and
+card-playing, instead of girding up their loins to serious tasks. "You
+were willing," says the Master, in effect, "to rejoice, to dance and
+sing, in his light. You treated his ministry as a pastime. As long as
+he spoke to you about the coming Kingdom, you listened and were glad;
+but when he began to call you to repentance and warn you of wrath to
+come, you left him." He is now like an almost extinguished lamp. His
+hour is all but done. The brief space he was sent to occupy has been
+fulfilled. "Behold, the night cometh, when no man can work."
+
+The ministry of the Gospel is but for "an hour." The story of man may
+be compared to a brief day (1 Cor. iv. 3, _marg._, R.V.); and in that
+day the proclamation of the good news from God occupies but a very
+limited space. The hour-glass was turned when Jesus ascended, and it
+is more than likely that the last grains are running through; then the
+cry of the herald shall be hushed, and the servants' voices will be no
+more heard in the streets inviting to the marriage supper, and there
+shall be none to break or distribute the bread of life.
+
+With what eager care men should prize these fleeting opportunities, not
+listening to the preacher's voice, as of one that can make a pleasant
+sound from the harp or organ--not seeking merely the delight of the ear
+or intellect; but taking heed to hear for eternity, receiving in meek
+and retentive hearts the precious grain as it falls from the sower's
+hand, and giving diligence that the best possible results may accrue.
+
+Oh, children of the sunny market-place, playing giddily throughout the
+long afternoon, take heed lest your opportunities of preparing for the
+serious work of life slip away unimproved, and you find yourselves face
+to face with death and judgment without a screen, without hope, and
+without God. John murdered in prison; Jesus nailed to the cross; the
+apostles and martyrs done to death on the scaffold and at the
+stake--and the ship drifting on the rocks, without a warning voice to
+arouse the thoughtless crowd of dice-throwers and dancers to the
+certainty and nearness of their doom!
+
+
+
+
+XIV.
+
+Set at Liberty.
+
+(MARK VI. 27.)
+
+ "Hush my soul, and vain regrets be stilled;
+ Now rest in Him who is the complement
+ Of whatsoe'er transcends our mortal doom,
+ Of baffled hope and unfulfilled intent;
+ In the clear vision and aspect of whom
+ All longings and all hopes shall be fulfilled."
+ ARCHBISHOP TRENCH.
+
+
+The Genesis of a Great Crime--The Strength of Evil Influences--An
+Accomplice of Satan--The Triumph of Hate--The Baptist Beheaded--A Place
+of Repentance
+
+
+The evangelist Mark tells us, in the twenty-first verse of this
+chapter, that Herod on his birthday made a supper to his lords, and the
+high captains, and the chief men of Galilee. Now, of course, Galilee,
+over which Herod had jurisdiction, and where, for the most part, he
+dwelt, in the beautiful city of Tiberias, the ruins of which are still
+washed by the blue waters of the lake, was a considerable distance from
+the Castle of Machaerus, which, as we have seen, was situated in the
+desolate region on the eastern side of the Dead Sea. There would
+probably, therefore, have been a martial and noble procession from
+Galilee, which followed the course of the Jordan to the oasis of
+Jericho, and then branched off to the old, grim fortress, which, like
+one of those ruined castles on the Rhine, had been for many years the
+scene of brigandage, pillage, and bloodshed.
+
+It is not difficult to imagine that sumptuous and splendid retinue.
+Roman soldiers and officials in all the splendour of their
+accoutrements and mounting; carriages conveying the royal consort,
+Herodias, Salome, and their ladies; large numbers of native soldiers;
+swarthy Bedouin and Greek traders; priests and levites, who lived on
+the smile of the Court; court officials, camp-bearers, a motley
+following of servants and slaves. In the front of the cavalcade,
+Herod, on a magnificent steed. The line of march, enlivened by the
+sound of martial music, and the flaunting of innumerable banners.
+Slowly they made their way through those desert solitudes, across the
+pasture-lands, and finally swept up through the little village that lay
+at the foot of the hill to the castellated fortress which covered the
+summit, edging its mighty walls to the brink of the steep cliffs. Soon
+the last straggler would be lost to view, the heavy portcullis fall,
+and the massive iron gate swing to, and the first step would be taken
+towards the tragedy, which lay right before Herod's path. One
+sometimes wonders whether the whole of these circumstances had not been
+planned by the cunning device of Herodias. In any case, nothing could
+have been arranged more exactly to suit her murderous schemes.
+
+The days that preceded the celebration of Herod's birthday were
+probably filled with merry-making and carouse. Groups of nobles,
+knights, and ladies, would gather on the terraces, looking out over the
+Dead Sea, and away to Jerusalem, and in the far distance to the
+gleaming waters of the Mediterranean. Picnics and excursions would be
+arranged into the neighbouring country. Archery, jousts, and other
+sports would beguile the slowly-moving hours. Jests, light laughter,
+and buffoonery would fill the air. And all the while, in the dungeons
+beneath the castle, lay that mighty preacher, the confessor,
+forerunner, herald, and soon to be the martyr.
+
+But this contrast was more than ever accentuated on the evening of
+Herod's birthday, when the great banqueting-chamber was specially
+illuminated; the tables decked with flowers and gold and silver plate;
+laughter and mirth echoing through the vaulted roof from the splendid
+company that lay, after the Eastern mode, on sumptuous couches,
+strewing the floor from one end to the other of the spacious hall.
+Servants, in costly liveries, passed to and fro, bearing the rich
+dainties on massive salvers, one of which was to be presently
+besprinkled with the martyr's blood.
+
+In such a scene, I would have you study the genesis of a great crime,
+because you must remember that in respect to sin, there is very little
+to choose between the twentieth century and the first; between the sin
+of that civilization and of ours. This is why the Bible must always
+command the profound interest of mankind--because it does not concern
+itself with the outward circumstances and setting of the scenes and
+characters it describes, but with those great common facts of
+temptation, sin, and redemption, which have a meaning for us all.
+
+This chapter is therefore written under more than usual solemnity,
+because one is so sure that, in dealing with that scene and the
+passions that met there in a foaming vortex, words may be penned that
+will help souls which are caught in the drift of the same black
+current, and are being swept down. Perhaps this page shall utter a
+warning voice to arrest them, ere it be too late, and be a life-buoy,
+or rope, or brother's hand reached out to save them as they rush past
+on the boiling waters. For there is help and grace in God by which a
+Herod and a Judas, a Jezebel and a Lady Macbeth, a royal criminal or an
+ordinary one, may be arrested, redeemed, and saved.
+
+In this, as in every sin, there were three forces at work:--First, the
+predisposition of the soul, which the Bible calls "lust," and "the
+desire of the mind." "Among whom," says the apostle, "we also all once
+lived in the lusts of our flesh, doing the desires of the flesh and of
+the mind, and were by nature children of wrath." Second, the
+suggestion of evil from without. Finally, the act of the will by which
+the suggestion was accepted and finally adopted.
+
+It is, in this latter phase, that sin especially comes in. There may
+be sin in being able and disposed to sin. The possession of a sinful
+nature needs the atonement and propitiation of the precious blood.
+There may be sin, also, in dallying with temptation, in not
+anticipating its advent at a further distance. But, after all, that
+which is of the essence of sin is in the act of the will, which allows
+itself to admit and entertain some foul suggestion, and ultimately
+sends its executioner below to carry its sentence into effect.
+
+
+I. THE PREDETERMINATION TOWARDS THIS SIN.--The word "lust" is now
+universally employed and understood in one direction only. It is a
+pity and a mistake; because we fail to appreciate many of the warning
+signals which the Spirit of God stations along our path. Any
+inordinate desire for sensual and pleasurable excitement, whether fixed
+on a right object, or directed towards a wrong one, comes under the
+denomination of "lust." Strong and ill-regulated desire or passion, in
+whatever direction it expresses itself, will work our ruin, and not
+that alone of impurity, to which this old word is now specially
+confined.
+
+In dealing with temptation and sin, we must always take into account
+the presence in the human heart of that sad relic of the Fall, which
+biases men towards evil. Every one that has handled bowls on the green
+is familiar with the effect of the bias. The bowls are not perfect
+spheres, and are weighted on one side in such a way that, as they leave
+the hand, they will inevitably turn off from a straight course; and on
+this account the greater skill is required from the hands that
+manipulate and impel them. Such a bias has come to us all: first, from
+our ancestor Adam; and, secondly, by that law of heredity which has
+been accumulating its malign and sinister force through all the ages.
+God alone can compute the respective strength of these forces; but He
+can, and He will, as each separate soul stands before his judgment bar.
+
+Herod was the son of the great Herod, a voluptuous, murderous tyrant;
+and, from some source or other, he had inherited a very weak nature.
+Perhaps, if he had come under strong, wholesome influences, he would
+have lived a passably good life; but it was his misfortune to fall
+under the influence of a beautiful fiend, who became his Lady Macbeth,
+his Jezebel, and wrought the ruin of his soul. It is a remarkable
+thing, how strong an influence a beautiful and unscrupulous woman may
+have over a weak man. And for this reason, amongst others, weakness
+becomes wickedness. The man who allows himself to drift weakly before
+the strongest influence is almost certain to discover that, in this
+world, the strongest influences are those which make for sin; these
+touch him most closely, and operate most continuously, and find in his
+nature the best _nidus_, or nest, in which to breed.
+
+The influences that suggest and make for sin in this world are so
+persistent--at every street corner, in every daily newspaper, among
+every gathering of well-dressed people, or ill--that if my readers have
+no other failing than that they are weak, I am bound to warn them, in
+God's name, that unless they succeed in some way, directly or
+indirectly, in linking themselves to the strength of the Son of. God,
+they will inevitably become wicked. Remember that the men, and
+especially the women, who are filling our gaols as criminals, were, in
+most cases, only weak, but they therefore drifted before the strong,
+black current which flows through the world, and have become objects
+against whom all parents warn their children. With all my soul--and I
+have had no small experience of myself and of others--I implore that if
+you are conscious of your weakness, you shall do what the sea-anemone
+and the limpet do, which cling to the rock when the storms darken the
+sky. "Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might."
+
+Herod was reluctant to take the course to which his evil genius urged
+him. He made a slight show of resistance, as we have seen--but he did
+not break with her; and so she finally had her way, and dragged him to
+her lowest level. Here was the cause of his ruin, as it may be of
+yours. You, too, have become allied with one who is possessed by a
+more imperious will, and dominated by a stronger passion, than yours.
+You suppose, however, that you can act as a make-weight, a drag on the
+chariot-wheel; that you will be able to keep and steady the pace; and
+that, when you like, you may arrest the onward progress. Ah, it is not
+so! Herodias will have her way with you. You may be reluctant, will
+falter and hesitate, will remonstrate, will resist, but ultimately you
+will drift into doing the very sins, the mention of which in your
+presence brings the red blood to your face.
+
+Beware, then, of yourself. If you are so impressible to John the
+Baptist, remember that you may be equally so to evil suggestion: take
+heed, therefore, to guard against anything in your life that may open
+the gates of your sensitive nature to a temptation, which you may not
+be able to withstand. If you are weak in physical health, you guard
+against draught and fatigue, against impure atmosphere and
+contagion--how much more should you guard against the scenes and
+company which may act prejudicially on the health of your soul? Of all
+our hours, none are so fraught with danger as those of recreation. In
+these we cast ourselves, with the majority of Gideon's men, on the bank
+of the stream, with relaxed girdles, drinking at our ease, without a
+thought of the proximity of the foe; and, therefore, in these we are
+more likely to fall. The Christian soldier is never off duty, never
+out of the enemy's reach, never at liberty to relax his watch. The
+sentries must always be posted, and the pickets kept well out on the
+veldt.
+
+It was the most perilous thing that Herod could do, to have that
+banquet. Lying back on his divan, lolling on his cushions, eating his
+rich food, quaffing the sparkling wine, exchanging repartee with his
+obsequious followers, it was as though the petals and calyx of his soul
+were all open to receive the first insidious spore of evil that might
+float past on the sultry air. That is why some of us dare not enter
+the theatre, or encourage others to enter. This is not the place to
+enter into a full discussion of the subject; but, even when a play may
+be deemed inoffensive and harmless, the sensuous attractions of the
+place, the glitter, the music, the slightly-dressed figures of the
+actors and actresses, the entire atmosphere and environment, which
+appeal so strongly to the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and
+the pride of life, break down some of the fortifications, which would
+otherwise resist the first incidence and assault of evil. The air of
+the theatre, the ball-room, the race-course, seem so impregnated with
+the nocuous germs and microbes of evil, that it is perilous for the
+soul to expose itself to them, conscious as it is of predisposing bias
+and weakness. It is this consciousness, also, which prompts the daily
+prayer, "Lead us not into temptation."
+
+
+II. TEMPTATION. In the genesis of a sin we must give due weight to
+the power of the Tempter, whether by his direct suggestion to the soul
+or by the instrumentality of men and women whom he uses for his fell
+purpose. In this case Satan's accomplice was the beautiful
+Herodias--beautiful as a snake, but as deadly. She knew the influence
+that John the Baptist wielded over her weak paramour, that he was
+accustomed to attach unmeasured importance to his words, and do "many
+things." She realized that his conscience was uneasy, and therefore
+the more liable to be affected by his words when he reasoned of
+righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come. She feared for the
+consequences if the Baptist and Herod's conscience should make common
+cause against her. What if her power over the capricious tyrant were
+to begin to wane, and the Baptist gain more and more influence, to her
+discredit and undoing? She was not safe so long as John the Baptist
+breathed. Herod feared him, and perhaps she feared him with more
+abject terror, and was bent on delivering her life of his presence.
+
+She watched her opportunity, and it came on the occasion we have
+described. The ungodly revel was at its height. Such a banquet as
+Herod had often witnessed in the shameless court of Tiberius, and in
+which luxury and appetite reached their climax, was in mid-current.
+The strong wines of Messina and Cyprus had already done their work.
+The hall resounded with ribald joke and merriment. Towards the end of
+such a feast it was the custom for immodest women to be introduced,
+who, by their gestures, imitated scenes in certain well-known
+mythologies, and still further inflamed the passions of the banqueters.
+But instead of the usual troupe, which Herod probably kept for such an
+occasion, Salome herself came in and danced a wild nautch-dance. What
+shall we think of a mother who could expose her daughter to such a
+scene, and suggest her taking a part in the half-drunken orgy? To what
+depths will not mad jealousy and passion urge us, apart from the
+restraining grace of God! The girl, alas, was as shameless as her
+mother.
+
+She pleased Herod, who was excited with the meeting of the two strong
+passions, which have destroyed more victims than have fallen on all the
+battlefields of the world; and in his frenzy, he promised to give her
+whatever she might ask, though it were to cost half his kingdom. She
+rushed back to her mother with the story of her success. "What shall I
+ask?" she cried. The mother had, perhaps, anticipated such a moment as
+this, and had her answer ready. "Ask," she replied instantly, "for
+John the Baptist's head." Back from her mother she tripped into the
+banqueting-hall, her black eyes flashing with cruel hate, lighted from
+her mother's fierceness. A dead silence fell on the buzz of
+conversation, and every ear strained for her reply. "And she came in
+straightway with haste unto the king, and asked, saying, I will that
+thou forthwith give me in a charger the head of John the Baptist."
+
+Mark that word, "forthwith." Her mother and she were probably fearful
+that the king's mood would change. What was to be done must be done at
+once, or it might not be done at all. "Quick, quick," the girl seemed
+to say, "the moments seem like hours; now, in this instant, give me
+what I demand. I want my banquet, too; let it be served up on one of
+these golden chargers." The imperious demand of the girl showed how
+keenly she had entered into her mother's scheme.
+
+It is thus that suggestions come to us; and, so far as I can
+understand, we may expect them to come so long as we are in this world.
+There seems to be a precise analogy between temptation and the microbes
+of disease. These are always in the air; but when we are in good
+health they are absolutely innocuous, our nature offers no hold or
+resting place for them. The grouse disease only makes headway when
+there has been a wet season, and the young birds are too weakened by
+the damp to resist its attack. The potato blight is always lying in
+wait, till the potato plants are deteriorated by a long spell of rain
+and damp; it is only then that it can effect its fell purpose. The
+microbes of consumption and cancer are probably never far away from us,
+but are powerless to hurt us, till our system has become weakened by
+other causes. So temptation would have no power over us, if we were in
+full vigour of soul. It is only when the vitality of the inward man is
+impaired, that we are unable to withstand the fiery darts of the wicked
+one.
+
+This shows how greatly we need to be filled with the life of the Son of
+God. In his life and death, our Lord, in our human nature, met and
+vanquished the power of sin and death; He bore that nature into the
+heavenly places, whence He waits to impart it, by the Holy Spirit, to
+those who are united with Him by a living faith. Is not this what the
+apostle John meant, when he said that his converts--his little
+children--could overcome, because greater was He that was in them than
+he that was in the world? He who has the greatest and strongest nature
+within him must overcome an inferior nature; and if you have the
+victorious nature of the living Christ in you, you must be stronger
+than the nature which He bruised beneath his feet.
+
+
+III. THE CONSENT OF THE WILL.--"The king was exceeding sorry." The
+girl's request sobered him. His face turned pale, and he clutched
+convulsively at the cushion on which he reclined. On the one hand, his
+conscience revolted from the deed, and he was more than fearful of the
+consequences; on the other, he said to himself, "I am bound by my oath.
+I have sworn; and my words were spoken in the audience of so many of my
+chief men, I dare not go back, lest they lose faith in me." "And
+straightway the king sent forth a soldier of his guard and commanded to
+bring the Baptist's head."
+
+Is it not marvellous that a man who did not refrain from doing deeds of
+incest and murder, should be so scrupulous about violating an oath that
+ought never to have been sworn? You have thought that you were bound
+to go through with your engagement, because you had pledged yourself,
+although you know that it would condemn you to lifelong misery and
+disobedience to the law of Christ. But stay for a moment, and tell me!
+What was your state of mind when you pledged your word? Were you not
+under the influence of passion? Did you not form your plan in the
+twilight of misinformation, or beneath the spell of some malign and
+unholy influence, that exerted a mesmeric power over you? Looking back
+on it, can you not see that you ought never to have bound yourself, and
+do you not feel that if you had your time again you would not bind
+yourself? Then be sure that you are not bound by that "dead hand."
+You must act in the clearer, better light, which God has communicated.
+Even though you called on the sacred name of God, God cannot sanction
+that which you now count mistaken, and wrong. You had no right to
+pledge half the kingdom of your nature. It is not yours to give, it is
+God's. And if you have pledged it, through mistake, prejudice, or
+passion, dare to believe that you are absolved from your vow, through
+repentance and faith, and that the breach is better than the observance.
+
+"And he went and beheaded John in prison." Had the Baptist heard aught
+of the unseemly revelry? Had any strain of music been waited down to
+him? Perhaps so. Those old castles are full of strange echoes. His
+cell was perfectly dark. He might be lying bound on the bare ground,
+or some poor bed of straw. Was his mind glancing back on those
+never-to-be-forgotten days, when the heaven was opened above him, and
+he saw the descending Dove? Was he wondering why he was allowed to lie
+there month after month, silenced and suffering? Ah, he did not know
+how near he was to liberty!
+
+There was a tread along the corridor. It stopped outside his cell.
+The light gleamed under the door; the heavy wards of the lock were
+turned: in a moment more he saw the gleam of the naked sword, and
+guessed the soldier's errand. There was no time to spare; the royal
+message was urgent. Perhaps one last message was sent to his
+disciples; then he bowed his head before the stroke; the body fell
+helpless here, the head there, and the spirit was free, with the
+freedom of the sons of God, in a world where such as he stand among
+their peers. Forerunner of the Bridegroom here, he was his forerunner
+there also; and the Bridegroom's friend passed homeward to await the
+Bridegroom's coming, where he ever hears the voice he loves.
+
+"And the soldier brought his head in a charger, and gave it to the
+damsel; and the damsel gave it to her mother." There would not be so
+much talking while the tragedy was being consummated. The king and
+courtiers must have been troubled under the spell of that horror, as
+Belshazzar when the hand wrote in characters of mystery over against
+the sacred candlestick. And when the soldier entered, carrying in the
+charger that ghastly burden, they beheld a sight which was to haunt
+some of them to their dying day. Often Herod would see it in his
+dreams, and amid the light of setting suns. It would haunt him, and
+fill his days and nights with anguish that all the witchery of Herodias
+could not dispel.
+
+Months afterwards, when he heard of Jesus, the conscience-stricken
+monarch said: "It is John the Baptist, whom I beheaded; he is risen
+from the dead." And still afterwards, when Jesus Himself stood before
+him, and refused to speak one word, he must have associated that
+silence and his deed together, as having a fatal and necessary
+connection.
+
+So the will, which had long paltered with the temptress, at last took
+the fatal step, and perpetrated the crime which could never be undone.
+There is always a space given, during which a tempted soul is allowed
+time to withdraw from the meshes of the net of temptation. Sudden
+falls have always been preceded by long dallying with Delilah. The
+crashing of the tree to the earth has been prepared for by the ravages
+of the borer-worm, which has eaten out its heart.
+
+If you have taken the fatal step, and marred your life by some sad and
+disastrous sin, dare to believe that there is forgiveness for you with
+God. Men may not forgive, but God will. As far as the east is from
+the west, so far will He remove our transgressions from us. Perhaps we
+can never again take up public Christian work; but we may walk humbly
+and prayerfully with God, sure that we are accepted of Him, and
+forgiven, though we can hardly forgive ourselves.
+
+But if we have not yet come to this, let us devoutly thank God, and be
+on the watch against any influences that may drift us thither. We may
+yet retreat. We may yet disentangle ourselves. We may yet receive
+into our natures the living power of the Lord Jesus. We may yet cut
+off the right hand and right foot, and pluck out the right eye, which
+is causing us to offend. Better this, and go into life maimed, than be
+cast, as Herod was, to the fire and worm of unquenchable remorse.
+
+
+
+
+XV.
+
+The Grave of John, and Another Grave
+
+(MATTHEW XIV. 12.)
+
+ "When some beloved voice, that was to you
+ Both sound and sweetness, faileth suddenly,
+ And silence, against which you dare not cry,
+ Aches round you like a strong disease and new,--
+ What hope, what help, what music will undo
+ That silence to your sense? Not friendship's sigh,
+ Not reason's subtle count.... Nay, none of these!
+ Speak, Thou availing Christ!--and fill this pause."
+ E. B. BROWNING.
+
+
+"Tell Jesus"--The Sin-Bearer--The Resurrection of Jesus--The Followers
+of John, and of Jesus--"He is Risen!"
+
+
+We have beheld the ghastly deed with which Herod's feast ended--the
+golden charger, on which lay the freshly-dissevered head of the
+Baptist, borne by Salome to her mother, that the two might gloat on it
+together. Josephus says that the body was cast over the castle wall,
+and lay for a time unburied. Whether that were so, we cannot tell;
+but, in some way, John's disciples heard of the ghastly tragedy, which
+had closed their master's life, and they came to the precincts of the
+castle to gather up the body as it lay dishonoured on the ground, or
+ventured into the very jaws of death to request that it might be given
+to them. In either case, it was a brave thing for them to do; an
+altogether heroic exploit, which may be classed in the same category
+with that of the men of Jabesh-Gilead, who travelled all night through
+the country infested by the Philistines to rescue the bodies of Saul
+and his sons from the temple of Bethshan.
+
+The headless body was then borne to a grave, either in the grim, gaunt
+hills of Moab, or in that little village, away on the southern slopes
+of the Judaean hills, where, some thirty years before, the aged pair
+had rejoiced over the growing lad. God knows where that grave lies;
+and some day it will yield up to honour and glory the body which was
+sown in weakness and corruption.
+
+Having performed the last sad rites, the disciples "went and told
+Jesus." Every mourner should go along the path they trod, to the same
+gentle and tender Comforter; and if any who read these words have
+placed within the narrow confines of a grave the precious remains of
+those dearer than life, let them follow where John's disciples have
+preceded them, to the one Heart of all others in the universe which is
+able to sympathize and help; because it also has sorrowed unto tears at
+the grave of its beloved, even though it throbbed with the fulness of
+the mighty God. Go, and tell Jesus!
+
+The telling will bring relief. Though the great High-Priest knows all
+the story, He loves to hear it told, because of the relief which the
+recital necessarily imparts to the surcharged soul. He will tell you
+that your brother shall rise again; that your child is safe in the
+flowery meadows of Paradise; that those whom you have loved and lost
+are engaged in high service amid the ministries of eternity; that every
+time-beat is bringing nearer the moment of inseparable union.
+
+It is not, however, on these details that we desire to dwell, but to
+use the scenes before us as a background and contrast to magnify
+certain features in the death, grave, and abiding influence of Jesus of
+Nazareth.
+
+
+I. CONTRAST THE DEATH OF JOHN AND THAT OF JESUS.--There were many
+points of similarity between their careers. These two rivers sprang
+from the same source, in a quiet glen far up among the hills; lay in
+deep lagoons during their earlier course; leapt down in the same mighty
+torrent when their time had come; and for the first few miles watered
+the same tract of country.
+
+It would be possible to enumerate a large number of identical facts of
+the life-courses of the two cousins. Their births were announced, and
+their ministries anticipated, under very special circumstances; Mary
+was unmarried, and Elisabeth past age--and an angel of the Lord came to
+each. John seemed, to the superficial view, the stronger and mightier
+of the two; but Jesus followed close behind and took up a similar
+burden, as He bade the people repent and believe the Gospel. They were
+alike in attending no prophetic school, and avoiding each of the great
+Jewish sects. Neither Hillel nor Shammai could claim them. They had
+no ecclesiastical connections; they stood aloof from the Pharisees and
+Sadducees, the Herodians and Essenes. They attracted similar
+attention, gathered the same crowds, and protested against the same
+sins. Rearing the same standard, they summoned men from formality and
+hypocrisy to righteousness and reality. They incurred the same hatred
+on the part of the religious leaders of their nation, and suffered
+violent deaths--the one beneath the headsman's blade in the dungeons of
+Herod's castle, the other on the cross, at the hand of Pilate and the
+Roman soldiers. Each suffered a death of violence at the hand of men
+whom he had lived to succour; each died when the life-blood throbbed
+with young manhood's prime, and while there was sweet fragrance as of
+early summer; each was loved and mourned by a little handful of devoted
+followers.
+
+But there the similarity ends, and the contrast begins. With John, it
+was the tragic close of a great and epoch-making career. When he died
+men said--Alas! a prophet's voice is silenced. What a pity that in a
+moment of passion the tyrant took his life! Let him sleep! Rest will
+be sweet to one who expended his young strength with such spendthrift
+extravagance! Such men are rare! Ages flower thus but once, and then
+years of barrenness! But as we turn to the death of Jesus, other
+feelings than those of pity or regret master us. We are neither
+surprised, nor altogether sorry. We do not recognise that there is in
+any sense an end of his work--rather it is the beginning. The corn of
+wheat has fallen into the ground to die, that it may not abide alone,
+but bear much fruit. Here, at the Cross, is the head of waters, rising
+from unknown depths, which are to heal the nations; here the sacrifice
+is being offered which is to expiate the sin of man, and bring peace to
+myriads of penitents; here the last Adam at the tree undoes the deadly
+work wrought by the first at another tree. This is no mere martyr's
+last agony; but a sacrifice, premeditated, prearranged, the effects of
+which have already been prevalent in securing the remission of sins
+done aforetime. This is an event for which millenniums have been
+preparing, and to which millenniums shall look back. John's death
+affected no destiny but his own; the death of Jesus has affected the
+destiny of our race. As his forerunner explained, He was the Lamb of
+God who bore away the sin of the world. The Lord hath laid on Him the
+iniquity of us all.
+
+But there is another contrast. In the case of John, the martyr had no
+control on his destiny; he could not order the course of events; there
+was no alternative but to submit. When he opened his ministry, he had
+no thought that such a fate would befall. As he stood boldly forth
+upon his rock-hewn pulpit, and preached to the eager crowds, do you
+suppose that the idea ever flashed across his mind that his path,
+carpeted with flowers and lined on either side with applause, could end
+in the loneliness of a desert track, lying across a barren waste where
+no man dwelt or came, and where the vast expanse engulphs the last cry
+of the perishing? But, from the first, Jesus meant to die. If, eight
+centuries ago, you had seen the first outlines drawn of the Cologne
+Cathedral, whose noble structure has been brought to completion within
+only the last decades, you would have been convinced that the completed
+fabric would enclose a cross; so the life of Jesus, from the earliest,
+portended Calvary. He had received power and commandment from the
+Father to lay down his life. For this cause He was born, and for this
+He came into the world. Others die because they have been born: Jesus
+was born that He might die.
+
+In his great picture of the Carpenter's shop, Millais depicts the
+shadow of the Cross, flung back by the growing lad, on the wall,
+strongly-defined in the clear oriental light. Mary beholds it with a
+look of horror on her face. The thought is a true one. From the
+earliest, the Cross cast its shadow over the life of the Son of Man.
+He was never deceived as to his ultimate destiny. He told Nicodemus
+that He must be lifted up. He knew that as the Good Shepherd He would
+have to give his life for the sheep. He assured his disciples that He
+would be delivered up to the chief priests and scribes, who would
+condemn Him to death, crucify, and slay. Man does not need primarily
+the teacher, the example, nor the miracle-worker; but the Saviour who
+can stand in his stead, and put away his sin by the sacrifice of
+Himself. When the soul is burdened with the weight of its sins, and
+the conscience is ill at ease, whither can we turn save to the Cross,
+on which the Prince of Glory died!
+
+What answer and explanation can be given to account for the marvellous
+spell that the Cross of Christ exerts over the hearts of men? You
+cannot trace it to the influence of early association merely, or to the
+effect of heredity, or to the fact of our having come of generations
+which have turned to the green hill far away, in life and death;
+because if you take the preaching of the Cross to savage and heathen
+tribes, who have no advantage of Christian centuries behind them,
+whenever you begin to explain its significance, the sob of the soul is
+hushed, and its dread dissipated. Tears of anguish are changed into
+tears of penitence. The shuttles of a new hope begin to weave the
+garments of a new purity. No other death affects us thus or effects so
+immediate a transformation. And may not this be cited as the proof
+that the death of Jesus is unique; the supreme act of love; the gift of
+that Father-heart which knew the need of the world, and the only way of
+appeasing it?
+
+
+II. CONTRAST THE GRAVE OF JOHN AND THAT OF JESUS.--Men have alleged
+that the Lord did not really rise from the dead, and that the tale of
+his resurrection, if it were not a fabrication, was the elaboration of
+a myth. But neither of these alternatives will bear investigation. On
+the one hand, it is absurd to suppose that the temple of truth could be
+erected on the quagmire and morass of falsehood--impossible to believe
+that the one system in the world of mind which has attracted the true
+to its allegiance, and been the stimulus of truth-seeking throughout
+the ages, can have originated in a tissue of deliberate falsehoods. On
+the other hand, it is a demonstrated impossibility that a myth could
+have found time to grow into the appearance of substantial fact during
+the short interval which elapsed between the death of Christ and the
+first historical traces of the Church.
+
+In this connection, it is interesting to consider one sentence dropped
+by the sacred chronicler. He tells us, that when Herod heard of the
+works of Jesus, he said immediately, "It is John the Baptist--he is
+risen from the dead." Herod could not believe that that mighty
+personality was quenched, even for this life, by that one blow of the
+executioner's sword. Surely he had risen! There was a feverish dread
+that he would yet be confronted by the murdered man, whose face haunted
+his dreams. His courtiers, ready to take the monarch's cue, would be
+equally credulous. From one to another the surmise would pass--"John
+the Baptist is risen from the dead."
+
+Why, then, did that myth not spread, until it became universally
+accredited? Ah, there was no chance of such a thing, for the simple
+reason that there was the grave of John the Baptist to disprove it. If
+Herod had seriously believed it, or the disciples of John attempted to
+spread it, nothing would have been easier than to exhume the body from
+its sepulture, and produce the ghastly but indubitable refutation of
+the royal delusion.
+
+When the statement began to spread and gain credence that Christ had
+risen from the dead; when Peter and John stood up and affirmed that He
+was living at the right hand of God; if it had been a mere surmise, the
+fond delusion of loyal and faithful hearts, an hallucination of two or
+three hysterical women--would it not have been easy for the enemies of
+Christianity to go forthwith to the grave in the garden of Joseph, and
+produce the body of the Crucified, with the marks of the nails in hands
+and feet? Why did they not do it? If it be said that it could not be
+produced, because it had been taken away, let this further question be
+answered: Who had taken it away? Not his friends; for they would have
+taken the cerements and wrappings with which Joseph and Nicodemus had
+enswathed it. Not his enemies; for they would have been only too glad
+to produce it. What glee in the grim faces of Caiaphas and Annas, if
+at the meeting of the Sanhedrim, called to deal with the new heresy,
+there could have been given some irrefragable proof that the body of
+Jesus was still sepulchred, if not in Joseph's tomb, yet somewhere
+else, to which their emissaries had conveyed it!
+
+It is difficult to exaggerate the significance and force of this
+contrast. And the devout soul cannot but derive comfort from comparing
+the allegation of the superstitious king, which could have been so
+easily refuted by the production of the Baptist's body, with that of
+the disciples, which was confirmed and attested by the condition of the
+grave which, in spite of the watch and ward of the Roman soldiers, had
+been despoiled of its prey on the morning of the third day. Herod
+expected John to rise, and gave his royal authority to the rumour of
+his resurrection; but it fell to the ground still-born. The disciples
+did not expect Jesus to rise. They stoutly held that the women were
+mistaken, when they brought to them the assurance that it was even so.
+But as the hours passed, the tidings of the empty grave were
+corroborated by the vision of the Risen Lord, and they were convinced
+that He who was crucified in weakness was living by the power of God.
+There could, henceforth, be no hesitation in their message to the
+world. "The God of our fathers hath glorified his Son Jesus, whom ye
+denied in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let Him
+go.... But ye killed the Prince of Life, whom God raised from the
+dead." Thank God, we have not followed cunningly-devised fables. "Now
+is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that
+slept. And as by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of
+the dead."
+
+
+III. THE CONTRAST BETWEEN THE EFFECTS OF THEIR TWO DEATHS ON THE
+FOLLOWERS OF JOHN THE BAPTIST AND OF JESUS RESPECTIVELY.--What a
+picture for an artist of sacred subjects is presented by the
+performance of the last rites to the remains of the great Forerunner!
+There was probably neither a Joseph nor a Nicodemus among his
+disciples; certainly no Magdalene nor mother. Devout men bore him to
+his grave, and made great lamentation over him. He had taught them to
+pray, to know God, to prepare for the Kingdom of God. They had also
+fasted oft beneath his suggestion; but they were destined to experience
+what fasting meant, after a new fashion, now that their leader was
+taken away from them.
+
+The little band broke up at his grave. Farewell! they said to him;
+farewell to their ministry and mission; farewell to one another. "I go
+back to my boats and fishing-nets," said one; and "I to my farm," said
+another; and "We shall go and join Jesus of Nazareth," said the rest.
+"Good-bye!" "Good-bye!" And so the little band separated, never to
+meet in a common corporate existence again.
+
+When Jesus lay in his grave, this process of disintegration began at
+once among his followers also. The women went to embalm Him; the men
+were apart. Peter and John broke off together--at least they ran
+together to the sepulchre; but where were the rest? Two walked to
+Emmaus apart; whilst Thomas was not with them when Jesus came on the
+evening of Easter Day. As soon as the breath leaves the body
+disintegration begins; and when Jesus was dead, as they supposed, the
+same process began to show itself. Soon Peter would have been back in
+Gennesaret; Nathanael beneath his fig-tree, Luke in his dispensary, and
+Matthew at his toll-booth.
+
+What arrested that process and made it impossible? Why did the day,
+which began with a certain amount of separation and decay, end with a
+closer consolidation than ever, so that they were, for the most part,
+gathered in the upper room; and forty days after they were all with one
+accord in one place? Why was it that they who had been like timid
+deer, before He died, became as lions against the storm of Pharisaic
+hate, and stronger as the weeks passed?
+
+There is only one answer to these questions. The followers of Jesus
+were convinced by irrefragable proofs that their Master was living at
+the right hand of power; nay, that He was with them all the
+days--nearer them than ever before, as much their Head and Leader as at
+any previous moment. When the shepherd is smitten, the flock is
+scattered; and this flock was not scattered, because the Shepherd had
+recovered from his mortal wound, and was alive for evermore.
+
+And surely the evidence which sufficed for them is enough for us.
+Again and again, in dark hours, when I have longed to have the
+demonstration of sense added to that of faith, it has been an untold
+comfort to feel that sufficient evidence was given to the Lord's
+disciples to persuade them against their contrary expectations and
+unbelief; to hold them together in spite of every possible inducement
+to disperse, and to transform a number of units into the Church,
+against which the gates of hell have not been able to prevail. If they
+were convinced, we may be. If their eyes beheld and their hands
+touched the body of the risen Lord, we may be of good cheer. Their
+behaviour proves that they were thoroughly convinced. They acted as
+only those can act whose feet are on a rock. They knew whom they had
+believed; and they had no doubt that He would perfect the work which He
+had begun. What He had begun in the flesh, He would perfect in the
+Spirit.
+
+In after days Peter spoke of Him as the Prince, or File-leader of Life;
+and suggests the conception, that through all the ages He is marching
+on through the gates of death and the grave, unlocking them for us, and
+opening the pathway into the realms of more and more abundant life.
+Let us follow Him. It is not for us to linger around the grave: even
+John's disciples forbore to do this. But let us join ourselves by
+faith with our Prince and Leader, our Head and Captain, as He waits to
+succour us from the excellent glory, sure that where He is, we too
+shall be; but in the meanwhile we are assured that He is not in the
+grave, where loving hands laid Him, but risen, ascended, glorified--our
+Emmanuel, our Bridegroom, our Love and Life. "The Lord is my Shepherd,
+I shall not want: ... He leadeth me, ... He maketh me to lie down;
+... He restoreth my soul.... Though I walk through the valley of the
+shadow of death, ... Thou _art_ with me."
+
+
+
+
+XVI.
+
+Yet Speaking.
+
+(JOHN X. 40-42.)
+
+ "Shine Thou upon us, Lord,
+ True Light of men, to-day;
+ And through the written Word
+ Thy very self display;
+ That so from hearts which burn
+ With gazing on Thy face,
+ Thy little ones may learn
+ The wonders of Thy grace."
+ J. ELLERTON.
+
+
+Desert Solitudes--Modern Miracles--Our own Age--Nothing Common or
+Unclean--How to Witness for Jesus--After Many Days
+
+
+"Beyond Jordan!" To the Jews that dwelt at Jerusalem that was
+banishment indeed. The tract of country beyond Jordan was known as
+Perea, and was very sparsely populated. There were some tracts of
+fertile country, dotted by a few scattered villages, but no one of
+repute lived there; and the refinement, religious advantages, and
+social life of the metropolis, were altogether absent. Perea was to
+Jerusalem what the Highlands, a century ago, were to Edinburgh. There
+our Lord spent the last few months of his chequered career.
+
+But why? Why did the Son of Man banish Himself from the city He loved
+so dearly? Surely the home at Bethany would have welcomed Him? Or,
+failing this, for any reason over which the sisters had no control, He
+might have found a temporary home at Nazareth, where He had been
+brought up; or Capernaum, in which He had wrought so many of his mighty
+works, might have provided Him a palace, whose white marble steps would
+have been lapped by the blue waters of the lake! Not so! The Son of
+Man had not where to lay his head. The nation, whose white flower He
+was, had rejected Him; and the world, for which He came to shed his
+blood, knew Him not. The religious leaders of the age were pursuing
+Him with relentless malice, and would have taken his life before the
+predestined hour had arrived, had He not escaped from their hands, and
+gone away "beyond Jordan into the place where John was at the first
+baptizing; and there He abode: and many came unto Him."
+
+There was a peculiar fascination to the Lord Jesus in those solitudes,
+because of their connection with the Forerunner. Those desert
+solitudes had been black with crowds of men. Those hill-slopes had
+been covered with booths and tents, in which the mighty congregations
+tabernacled, whilst they waited on his words. Those banks had
+witnessed the baptism of thousands of people, who, in the symbolic act
+of baptism, had put away their sins. And the villagers, who lived
+around, could tell wonderful tales of the radiant opening of that brief
+but epoch-making ministry; they could speak for hours together about
+the habits of the austere preacher, and the marvellous power of his
+eloquence.
+
+As Jesus and his disciples wandered from place to place, Andrew would
+indicate the spot where he was baptized; and John and he would recall
+together the place where they were standing when their great teacher
+and master pointed to Jesus as He walked, and said, "Behold the Lamb of
+God." Bartholomew would find again the spot where Jesus accosted him
+as the guileless Israelite, a salutation for which also he had been
+prepared by the preaching of the Forerunner. Two or three could
+localize the scene where the deputation from the Sanhedrim accosted the
+Baptist with the enquiry, "Who art thou?"
+
+It was as though, years after the Battle of Waterloo, some soldiers of
+the Iron Duke had visited the historic cornfields, and had recited
+their reminiscences of the memorable incidents of that memorable fight.
+Here the long, thin red line stood during the whole day. There
+Napoleon waited to see the effect of the last charge of his cavalry.
+Yonder, through the wood, Blucher's troops hurried to reinforce their
+brothers in arms. And down those slopes the old Guard broke with a
+cheer, as the Duke gave the long-looked-for word. It was in some such
+spirit that our Lord and his apostles revisited those scenes, where
+many of them had seen the gate of heaven opened for the first time.
+
+Probably our Lord would resume his ministry of preaching the good
+tidings. He could not be in any place where the sins and sorrows of
+men called for his gracious words, without speaking them; and to Him
+they probably brought the lame, the blind, the sick, and paralyzed--and
+He healed them all. Many came to Him, and went away blessed and
+helped. So much so, that the people could not help contrasting the two
+ministries. There was a touch of disparagement in their comments on
+the Baptist's ministry. "They said, John indeed did no miracle." No
+lame man had leaped as an hart; the tongue of no dumb man had sung; no
+widow had received her son raised to life from his hands; no leper's
+flesh had come to him, as the flesh of a little child. It was quite
+true--John had done no miracle.
+
+But with this slight disparagement, there was a generous tribute and
+acknowledgment. "But all things whatsoever John spake of this Man were
+true." He said that He was the Lamb of God, pure and gentle, holy,
+harmless, and undefiled; _and it was true_. He said that He would use
+his fan, separating the wheat from the chaff; _and it was true_. He
+said that He would baptize with fire; _and it was true_. He said that
+He was the Bridegroom of Israel; _and it was true_. He did no miracle,
+but he spoke strong, true words of Jesus, and they have been abundantly
+verified. And these simple-hearted people of Perea did what the
+Pharisees and scribes, with all their fancied wisdom, had failed to do:
+they put the words of the Baptist and the life of Jesus together, and
+reasoned that since this had fitted those, as a key fits the lock,
+therefore Jesus was indeed the Son of God and the King of Israel; and
+"many believed on Him there."
+
+
+I. LIFE WITHOUT MIRACLES.--The people were inclined to disparage the
+life of John because there was no miracle in it. But surely his whole
+life was a miracle; from first to last it vibrated with Divine power.
+And did he work no miracle? If he did not open the eyes of the blind,
+did not multitudes, beneath his words, come to see themselves sinners,
+and the world a passing show, and the Eternal as alone enduring and
+desirable? If he did not lay his priestly hand on leprous flesh, as
+Jesus did, did not many a moral leper go from the waters of his
+baptism, with new resolves and purposes, to sin no more? If he did not
+raise dead bodies, did not many, who were immured in the graves of
+pride, and lust, and worldliness, hear his voice, and come forth to the
+life--which is life indeed? No miracles! Surely his life was one long
+pathway of miracle, from the time of his birth of aged parents, to the
+last moment of his protest against the crimes of Herod!
+
+This is still the mistake of men. They allege that the age of miracles
+has passed. If they admit that such prodigies may possibly have
+happened once, they insist that the world has grown out of them, and
+that with its arrival at maturity the race has put them away as
+childish things. God, they think, is either Absentee, or the Creature
+of Laws, which He established, and which now hold Him, as the
+graveclothes held Lazarus. No miracles! But last summer He made the
+handfuls of grain, which the farmers cast on the fields, suffice to
+feed all the population of the globe--as easily as He made five barley
+loaves provide a full meal for more than ten thousand persons. No
+miracles! But last autumn, in ten thousand vineyards, He turned the
+dews of the night and the showers of the morning into the wine that
+rejoices man's heart; as once, in Cana, He changed the water drawn from
+the stone jars into the blushing wine. No miracles! Explain, then,
+why it is, that though ice is of denser specific gravity than water, it
+does not sink to the bottom of rivers and ponds, by which they would be
+speedily transformed into masses of ice, but floats on the surface of
+the water, affording a pathway across from bank to brae, as Jesus once
+walked on the water from the shores of the Lake of Galilee! No
+miracles! It was only yesterday that He cleansed a leper; and healed a
+sin-sick soul; and raised from his bier a young man dead in trespasses
+and sins; and took a maiden by the hand, saying, Talitha cumi, "Maid,
+arise!" As I passed by, I saw Him strike a rock, and torrents of tears
+gushed out: I beheld a tree, with its sacred burden, and the
+serpent-poison ceased to inflame: I saw the iron swim against its
+natural bent, and the lion crouch as though it beheld an angel of God
+with a flaming sword. Again, the seas made a passage for the
+sacramental hosts, and the waters shrank away before the touch of the
+Priestly feet, making a passage through the depths. No; it is still
+the age of miracles.
+
+_Let us not disparage the age in which we live_. To look back on the
+Day of Pentecost with a sigh, as though there were more of the Holy
+Spirit on that day than to-day; and as though there were a larger
+Presence of God in the upper room than in the room in which you sit, is
+a distinct mistake and folly. We may not have the sound as of a
+rushing mighty wind, nor the crowns of fire; there is no miracle to
+startle and arrest: but the Holy Spirit is with the Church in all the
+old gracious and copious plenitude; the river is sweeping past in
+undiminished fulness; though there may not be the flash of the electric
+spark, the atmosphere is as heavily charged as ever with the presence
+and power of the Divine Paraclete. The Lord said of the
+Baptist--though he wrought no miracle--that there was none greater of
+those born of woman; and perchance He is pronouncing that this age is
+greater than all preceding ages in its possibilities. In His view, it
+may be that greater deeds may be attempted and accomplished by the
+Church of to-day than ever in that past age, when she grappled with and
+vanquished the whole force of Paganism.
+
+If there is any failure, it is with ourselves. We have not believed in
+the mighty power and presence of God, because we have missed the
+outward and visible sign of his working. We have thought that He was
+not here, because He has not been in the fire, the earthquake, or the
+mighty wind which rends the mountains. We have become so accustomed to
+associate the startling and spectacular with the Divine, that we fail
+to discover God, when the heaven is begemmed with stars, and the earth
+carpeted with flowers: as though the lightning were more to us than
+starlight, and the destructive than the peaceful and patient
+constructive forces, which are ever at work building up and repairing
+the fabric of the universe.
+
+Do not look back on the Incarnation, or forward to the Second Advent,
+as though there were more of God in either one or the other than is
+within our reach. God is; God is here; God is indivisible: all of God
+is present at any given point of time or place. He may choose to
+manifest Himself in outward signs, which impress the imagination more
+at one time than another; the faith of the Church maybe quicker to
+apprehend and receive in one century than the next: but all time is
+great--every age is equally his workmanship, and equally full of his
+wonder-working power. Alas for us, that our eyes are holden!
+
+_Let us not disparage the ordinary and commonplace_. We are all taught
+to run after the startling and extraordinary--the statesman who
+accomplishes the _coup d'état_; the painter who covers a large canvas
+with a view to scenic effects; the preacher who indulges in superficial
+and showy rhetoric, the musician whose execution is brilliant and
+astonishing. We like miracles! Whatever appeals to our love for the
+sensational and unexpected is likely enough to displace our
+appreciation of the simple and ordinary. When the sun is eclipsed, we
+all look heavenward; but the golden summer days may be filled with
+sunlight, which is dismissed with a commonplace remark about the
+weather. A whole city will turn out to see the illuminations, whilst
+the stars hardly attract a passing notice. Let there be a show of
+curiously-shaped orchids, and society is stirred; but who will travel
+far to see a woodland glade blue with wild hyacinths, or a meadow-lawn
+besprent with daisies. Thus our tastes are vitiated and blinded.
+
+It is good to cultivate simple tastes. The pure and childlike heart
+will find unspeakable enjoyment in all that God has made, though it be
+as familiar as a lawn sparkling with dewdrops, a hay-field scented by
+clover-blooms, a streamlet murmuring over the pebbles, or the drawl of
+the shingle after a retreating wave. It is a symptom of a weak and
+unstable nature to be always in search for some new thing, for some
+greater sensation, for some more startling sign. "Show us a sign from
+heaven," is the incessant cry of the Pharisee and Scribe: and when the
+appetite has been once created, it can never be appeased, but is always
+set on some novelty more marvellous and startling than anything which
+has preceded. Be content with a holy ministry which does not dazzle by
+its fireworks, but sheds a steady sunshine on the sacred page.
+Cultivate familiarity with the grand, solid works of our English
+literature. Avoid the use of extravagant adjectives. Take an interest
+in the games of children; in the common round and daily task of
+servants and employés; in the toils and tears of working-girls; in the
+struggling lot of the charwoman who scrubs your floors, and the lad who
+cleans your boots. Do not be always gaping at the window for bands to
+come down the street; but be on the pavement before your house with a
+helping-hand and kindly word for the ordinary folk that labour and are
+heavy-laden. It is remarkable that in all these there are tragedies
+and comedies; the raw material for novels and romances; the characters
+which fill the pages of a Shakespeare or George Eliot. All life is so
+interesting; but we need eyes to see, and hearts to understand. There
+has been no age greater than this; there is no part of the world more
+full of God than yours; there is no reason why you should not see
+Madonnas in the ordinary women, and Last Suppers in the ordinary meals,
+and Holy Families in the ordinary groups around you--if only you have
+the anointed eyes of a Raffaelle or a Leonardo de Vinci. If the world
+seems common or unclean to you, the fault lies in your eyes that have
+made it so.
+
+_Let us not disparage ourselves_. We know our limitations; we are not
+capable of working miracles--our best friends are well acquainted with
+this, for no eyes are quicker than Love's. We are sparrows, not larks;
+clay, not alabaster; deal, not mahogany. But if we cannot work
+miracles, we can speak true, strong words about Jesus Christ; we can
+bear witness to Him as the Lamb of God; we can urge men to repent and
+believe the Gospel. The world would have been in a sorry plight if it
+had depended entirely on its geniuses and miracle-workers. Probably it
+owes less to them than to the untold myriads of simple, humble,
+obscure, and commonplace people, whose names will never be recorded in
+its roll-call, but whose lives have laid the foundations on which the
+superstructure of good order, and government, and prosperity, has been
+reared.
+
+Remember that God made you what you are, and placed you. Dare to be
+yourself--a simple, humble, sincere follower of Jesus. Do not seek to
+imitate this or the other great speaker or leader. Be content to find
+out what God made you for, and be that at its best. You will be a bad
+copy, but a unique original; for the Almighty always breaks the pattern
+from which He has made one vase. Above all, speak out the truth, as
+God has revealed it to you, distorting, exaggerating, omitting nothing;
+and long after you have passed away, those who remember you will gather
+at your grave and say, "he did no miracle--there was nothing
+sensational or phenomenal in his life-work; but he spake true things
+about Jesus Christ, which we have tested for ourselves, and are
+undeniable. Indeed, they led us to believe in Him for ourselves."
+
+
+II. THE WAYS IN WHICH WE MAY BEAR TESTIMONY TO THE LORD JESUS.--There
+is no miracle in your life, my reader. You are no genius; you do not
+know what it is to have the rush of thought, the power of brilliant
+speech, the burst of song. You have no wealth, only just enough for
+your bare sustenance, and nothing to spare. You have no rich blood in
+your veins, come of a line of heroes or saints. As you look daily into
+the common routine of your lot, it seems ordinary enough. Be it so;
+there is at least one thing you can do, as we have seen--like the
+Baptist, you may witness for Jesus.
+
+_Speak to others privately_. When only two disciples were standing
+beside him, John preached the same sermon as he had delivered to the
+crowd the day before, and both of them went to the frail lodging where
+Jesus was making his abode. There is nothing that more deeply searches
+a man than the habit of speaking to individuals about the love of God.
+We cannot do it unless we are in living union with Himself. Nothing so
+tests the soul. It is easy to preach a sermon, when the inner life is
+out of fellowship with God, because you can preach your ideals, or
+avenge on others the sins of which you are inwardly conscious; but to
+speak to another about Christ involves that there should be an
+absolutely clear sky between the speaker and the Lord of whom he
+speaks. But as this practice is the most difficult, it is the most
+blessed in its reflex influence. To lead another to Jesus is to get
+nearer Him. To chafe the limbs of some frozen companion is to send the
+warm blood rushing through your own veins. To go after one lost sheep
+is to share the shepherd's joy. Whether by letters addressed to
+relatives or companions, or by personal and direct appeal, let each one
+of us adopt the sacred practice, which Mr. Moody followed and
+commended, of allowing no day to pass without seeking to use some
+opportunity given by God for definite, personal dealings with others.
+
+The apostle Andrew seems to have specially consecrated his life to
+this. On each of the occasions he is referred to in the Gospels he is
+dealing with individuals. He brought his own brother; was the first to
+seek after a boy to bring to the Saviour's presence; and at the close
+of our Lord's ministry he brings the seeking Greeks. Did he not learn
+this blessed art from his master, the Baptist?
+
+It is requisite that there should be the deliberate resolution to
+pursue this holy habit; definite prayer for guidance as one issues from
+the morning hour of prayer; abiding fellowship with the Son of God,
+that He may give the right word at the right moment; and a willingness
+to open the conversation by some manifestation of the humble, loving
+disposition begotten by the Holy Spirit, which is infinitely attractive
+and beautiful to the most casual passer-by.
+
+_Speak experimentally_. "I saw and bare record." John spoke of what
+he had seen, and tasted, and handled. Be content to say, "I was lost,
+but Jesus found me, blind, and He gave me sight; unclean, and He
+cleansed my heart." Nothing goes so far to convince another as to hear
+the accent of conviction on the lips of one whose eyes survey the
+landscape of truth to which he allures, and whose ears are open to the
+eternal harmonies which he describes.
+
+_Speak from a full heart_. The lover cannot but speak about his love;
+the painter can do no other than transfer to canvas the conceptions
+that entrance his soul; the musician is constrained to give utterance
+to the chords that pass in mighty procession through his brain. "We
+cannot but speak the things that we have seen and heard."
+
+Does it seem difficult to have always a full heart? Verily, it is
+difficult, and impossible, unless the secret has been acquired of
+abiding always in the love of God, of keeping the entire nature open to
+the Holy Spirit, and of nourishing the inward strength by daily
+meditation on the truth. We must close our senses to the sounds and
+sights around us, that our soul may open to the unseen and eternal. We
+must have deep and personal fellowship with the Father and the Son by
+the Holy Ghost. We must live at first-hand on the great essentials of
+our faith. Then, as the vine-sap arises from the root, its throb and
+pulse will be irresistible in our behaviour and testimony. We shall
+speak true things about Jesus Christ. Our theme will be evermore the
+inexhaustible one of Christ--Christ, only Christ--not primarily the
+doctrine about Him, or the benefits accruing from fellowship with Him,
+but Himself.
+
+Thus, some day, at your burying, as men turn homewards from the
+new-made grave, and speak those final words of the departed, which
+contain the most unerring verdict and summing-up of the life, they will
+say, "He will be greatly missed. He was no genius, not eloquent nor
+profound; but he used to speak about Christ in such a way that he led
+me to know Him for myself: I owe everything to him. He did no miracle;
+but whatever he said of Jesus was true."
+
+
+III. THE POWER OF POSTHUMOUS INFLUENCE.--John had been dead for many
+months, but the stream he had set flowing continued to flow; the
+harvests he sowed sprang into mature and abundant fruitage; the
+wavelets of tremulous motion which he had started circled out and on.
+
+How many voices are speaking still in our lives--voices from the grave!
+voices from dying beds! voices from books and sermons! voices from
+heaven! "Being dead, they yet speak." Let us live so that, when we
+are gone, our influence shall tell, and the accents of our voice
+linger. No one lives or dies to himself. Each grain on the
+ocean-shore affects the position of every other. Each star is needed
+for the perfect balance of the spheres. Each of us is affecting the
+lives of all that are now existing with us in the world, or will exist.
+To untold ages, what we have been and said will affect all other beings
+for good or ill. We may be forgiven for having missed our
+opportunities, or started streams of poison instead of life; but the
+ill effect can never be undone.
+
+Parents, put your hands on those young childish heads, and say pure,
+sweet words of Christ, which will return to memory and heart long after
+you have gone to your reward! Ministers of religion, and Sunday school
+teachers, remember your tremendous responsibility to use to the
+uttermost the opportunity of saying words which will never die!
+Friend, be true and faithful with your friend; he may turn away in
+apparent thoughtlessness or contempt, but no right word spoken for
+Christ can ever really die. It will live in the long after years, and
+bear fruit, as the seeds hidden in the old Egyptian mummy-cases are
+bearing fruit to-day in English soil.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.
+
+The Spirit and Power of Elias.
+
+(LUKE I. 17.)
+
+ "Oh, may I join the choir invisible
+ Of those immortal dead who live again
+ In minds made better by their presence: live
+ In pulses stirred to generosity;
+ In deeds of daring rectitude; in scorn
+ For miserable aims that end with self;
+ In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
+ And with their mild persistence urge man's search
+ To vaster issues."
+
+
+The Old Covenant and the New--Elijah and the Baptist--A Parallel--The
+Servant inferior to the Lord--The Baptism of the Holy Ghost--The
+Indwelling Spirit
+
+
+Great men are God's greatest gifts to our race; and it is only by their
+interposition that mankind is able to step up to higher and better
+levels of life. The doctrine of evolution is supposed to explain the
+history of the universe. Men would have us believe that certain forces
+have been set in motion which have elaborated this great scheme of
+which we are a part, and the evolutionist would go so far as to say
+that man himself has been evolved from protoplasm, and that the brains
+of a Socrates, of a Milton, or of any genius who has left his mark upon
+the world, have simply emanated from the whole process which culminates
+in them. We believe, on the contrary, that at distinct points in the
+history of the universe, there has been a direct interposition of the
+will and hand of God; and it is remarkable that in the first chapter of
+Genesis that august and majestic word _create_ is three times
+introduced, as though the creation of matter, the creation of the
+animal world, and the creation of man, were three distinct stages, at
+which the direct interposition of the will and workmanship of the
+Eternal was specially manifest. Similarly, we believe that there have
+been great epochs in human history, which cannot be accounted for by
+the previous evolution of moral and religious thought, and which must
+be due to the fact that God Himself stepped in, and by the direct
+raising up of a man, who became the apostle of the new era, lifted the
+race to new levels of thought and action. It is in this light that we
+view the two illustrious men who were, each in his own measure, the
+apostles of new epochs in human history--Elijah in the old Covenant,
+and John the Baptist in the new.
+
+It is remarkable that the prophet Malachi tells us that the advent of
+the Messiah should be preceded and heralded by Elijah the prophet; and
+that Gabriel, four hundred years after, said that John the Baptist,
+whose birth he announced, would come in the spirit and power of Elijah.
+This double prediction was referred to by our Lord when, descending
+from the Mount of Transfiguration, in conversation with the apostles,
+He indicated John the Baptist as the Elijah who was to come. And,
+indeed, there was a marvellous similarity between these two men, though
+each of them is dwarfed into insignificance by the unique and original
+personality of the Son of Man, who towers in inaccessible glory above
+them.
+
+
+I. LET US INSTITUTE A COMPARISON BETWEEN ELIJAH THE TISHBITE, AND JOHN
+THE BAPTIST.--They resembled each other in dress. We are told that
+Elijah was a hairy man--an expression which is quite as likely to refer
+to the rough garb in which he was habited, as to the unshorn locks that
+fell upon his shoulders. And John the Baptist wore a coarse dress of
+camel's hair.
+
+Each of them sojourned in Gilead. In the remarkable sentence, which,
+for the first time, introduces Elijah to the Bible and the world, we
+are told that he was one of the sojourners in Gilead, that great tract
+of country, thinly populated, and largely given over to shepherds and
+their flocks, which lay upon the eastern side of the Jordan. And we
+know that it was there amid the shaggy forests, and closely-set
+mountains, with their rapid torrents, that John the Baptist waited,
+fulfilled his ministry, preached to and baptized the teeming crowds.
+
+Each of them learnt to make the body subservient to the spirit. Elijah
+was able to live on the sparse food brought by ravens, or provided from
+the meal barrel of the widow, was able to outstrip the horses of Ahab's
+chariot in their mad rush across the valley of Jezreel; and after a
+brief respite, given to sleep and food, went in the strength of it for
+forty days and nights, through the heart of the desert until he came to
+Horeb, the Mount of God. His body was but the vehicle of the fiery
+spirit that dwelt within; he never studied its gratification and
+pleasure, but always handled it as the weapon to be wielded by his
+soul. And what was true in his case, was so of John the Baptist, whose
+food was locusts and wild honey. The two remind us of St. Bernard, who
+tells us that he never ate for the gratification of taking food, but
+only that he might the better serve God and man.
+
+We remember also that each of these heroic spirits was confronted by a
+hostile court. In the case of Elijah, Ahab and Jezebel, together with
+the priests of Baal and Astarte, withstood every step of his career;
+and in the case of John the Baptist, Herod, Herodias, and the whole
+drift of religious opinion, with its repeated deputations to ask who he
+might be, dogged his steps, and ultimately brought him to a martyr's
+end.
+
+How distinctly, also, in each case there was the consciousness of the
+presence of God. One of the greatest words which man has ever uttered
+was that in which Elijah affirmed, in the presence of king Ahab, that
+he was conscious of standing at the same moment in the presence of the
+Eternal: "And Elijah the Tishbite, who was of the sojourners of Gilead,
+said unto Ahab, 'As the Lord, the God of Israel, liveth, before whom I
+stand'"--a phrase afterwards used by Gabriel himself when he told
+Zacharias that he was one of the presence angels. "And the angel
+answering, said unto him, 'I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of
+God.'" This consciousness of the Divine presence in his life revealed
+itself in his great humility, when he cast himself on the ground with
+his face between his knees; and in the unflinching courage which
+enabled him to stand like a rock on Mount Carmel, when king, and
+priest, and people, were gathered in their vast multitudes around him,
+sufficient to daunt the spirit that had not beheld a greater than any.
+This God-consciousness was especially manifest in the Baptist, who
+referred so frequently to the nearness of the kingdom of God. "The
+kingdom of heaven," he said, "is at hand." And when Jesus came,
+unrecognised by the crowds, his high spirit prostrated itself, and his
+very visage was shadowed with the vail of intense modesty and humility,
+as he cried; "In the midst of you standeth One whom ye know not, the
+latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and unloose."
+Coupled with this sense of God, there was, in each case, a marvellous
+fearlessness of man. When Obadiah met Elijah, and was astonished to
+hear that the prophet was about to show himself to Ahab, Elijah
+overbore his attempts to dissuade him, saying: I will certainly show
+myself to thy master: go, tell him Elijah is here. And when afterwards
+the heavenly fire had descended, and the prophets of Baal were standing
+bewildered by their altar, he did not flinch from arresting the whole
+crowd of them, leading them down to the valley of the Kishon brook
+beneath and there slaying them, so that the waters ran crimson to the
+sea. This fearlessness was also conspicuous in the Forerunner, who
+dared to beard the king in his palace, asserting that he must be judged
+by the same standard as the meanest of his subjects, and that it was
+not lawful for him to have his brother's wife.
+
+To each there came moments of depression. In the case of Elijah, the
+glory of his victory on the brow of Carmel was succeeded by the weight
+of dark soul-anguish. Did he not cast himself, within twenty-four
+hours, beneath the juniper tree of the desert, and pray that he might
+die, because he was no better than his fathers--a mood which God, who
+pities his children and remembers that they are dust, combated, not by
+expostulation, but by sending him food and sleep, knowing that it was
+the result of physical and nervous overstrain? And did not John the
+Baptist from his prison cell send the enquiry to Jesus, as to whether,
+after all, his hopes had been too glad, his anticipations too great,
+and that perhaps after all He was not the Messiah for whom the nation
+was waiting?
+
+Both Elijah and John the Baptist had the same faith in the baptism of
+fire. We never can forget the scene on Carmel when Elijah proposed the
+test that the God who answered by fire should be recognised as God; nor
+how he erected the altar, and laid the wood, and placed the bullock
+there, and drenched the altar with water; and how, in answer to his
+faith, at last the fire fell. John the Baptist passed through no such
+ordeal as that; but it was his steadfast faith that Christ should come
+to baptize with the Holy Ghost and fire.
+
+Each of them turned the hearts of the people back. It was as though
+the whole nation were rushing towards the edge of the precipice which
+overhung the bottomless pit, like a herd of frightened horses on the
+prairie, and these men with their unaided hands turned them back. It
+would be impossible for one man to turn back a whole army in mad
+flight--he would necessarily be swept away in their rush; but this is
+precisely what the expression attributes to the exertions of Elijah and
+John. The one turned Israel back to cry, Jehovah, He is God; the other
+turned the whole land back to repentance and righteousness, so that
+publicans and soldiers, Sadducees and Pharisees, began to confess their
+sin, put away their evil courses, and return to the God of their
+fathers.
+
+Each prophet was succeeded by a gentler ministry. Elijah was sent from
+Horeb to anoint Elisha, who, for the most part, passed through the land
+like genial sunshine--a perpetual benediction to men, women, and
+children; while John the Baptist opened the door for the Shepherd,
+Christ, who went about doing good, and whose holy, tender ministry fell
+on his times like rain on the mown grass.
+
+From the solitudes beyond the Jordan, as he walked with Elisha, talking
+as they went, the chariot and horses of fire which the Father had sent
+for his illustrious servant from heaven bore him homeward, while his
+friends and disciples stood with outstretched hands, crying: The
+chariot and horses of Israel are leaving us, bearing away our most
+treasured leader. In those same solitudes, or within view of them, the
+spirit of John the Baptist swept up in a similar chariot. As the
+headsman, with a flash of his sword, put an end to his mortal career,
+though no mortal eyes beheld them, and no chronicler has told the
+story, there must have been horses and chariots of fire waiting to
+convey the noble martyr-spirit to its God. The parallel is an
+interesting one--it shows how God repeats Himself; and, if time and
+space permitted, we might elaborate the repetition of a similar
+conception, either in Savonarola of Florence, or in Martin Luther, or
+in John Knox, who had been baptized into the same Spirit, and inspired
+to perform the same ministry. That Spirit is waiting still--waiting to
+clothe Himself with our life; waiting to do in us, and through us,
+similar work for the time in which we live. What these men did far
+back in the centuries, it is probable that others Will have to do
+before this dispensation passes utterly away. A man, or men, shall
+again rise up, who will tower over their fellows, who will speak and
+act in the spirit and power of Elijah--men like Edward Irving, but
+without the mistakes that characterized his heroic life. Perhaps some
+young life may be inspired by this page to yield itself to God, so that
+it may be sent forth to turn back the hearts and lives of vast
+multitudes from their evil way, turning the heart of the fathers to
+their children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, to make
+ready a people prepared for the Lord.
+
+
+II. NOTICE THE INFERIORITY OF THESE GREAT MEN TO THE LORD.--Neither
+Elisha, the disciple of Elijah, nor the eloquent Apollos, the disciple
+of John the Baptist, would have dared to say of their respective
+masters what Philip and Andrew, Peter and Thomas, habitually said of
+Christ. Greatly as they revered and loved their masters, they knew
+that they were men like themselves; that their nature was made in the
+same mould, though, perhaps, of finer clay; that there were limitations
+beyond which they could not go, and qualities of mind and soul in which
+they were not perfected. They dared not say of them, "My Lord and my
+God." They never thought of prostrating themselves at their feet in
+worship; they never appealed to them after their decease as able to
+hear and answer prayer from the heaven into which they had passed.
+
+Neither Elijah nor John had what Jesus asserted--the consciousness of
+an unique union with God; neither of them dared to affirm, as Jesus
+did, that he was the Son of God, in the sense that made other use of
+that term blasphemy; neither of them thought of anticipating a moment
+when he should be seen sitting at the right hand of power, and coming
+in the clouds; neither of them dared to couple himself with Deity in
+the sublime and significant pronoun _we_--"We will come and make our
+abode with Him." Neither of them would have dreamed of accepting the
+homage which Jesus took quite naturally, when men worshipped Him, and
+women washed and kissed his feet: and I ask how it could be that Jesus
+Christ, so essentially meek and lowly, so humble and unwilling to
+obtrude Himself, should have spoken and acted so differently, unless
+his nature had been separated by an impassable gulf from that of other
+men, however saintly and gifted? The very fact that these men,
+acknowledged amongst the greatest of our race, drew a line, and said:
+Beyond that we cannot pass; we are conscious of defilement and need; we
+require forgiveness and grace, equally with those to whom we minister.
+And this compels on our part the acknowledgment that Jesus Christ was
+all He claimed to be, and that He is worthy to receive glory, and
+honour, and riches, and power, and blessing; for He is Man of men, the
+second Man, the Lord from Heaven.
+
+Neither of these dared to offer himself as the Comforter and Saviour of
+men. Elijah could only rebuke sin, which he did most strenuously; but
+he had no panacea for the sin and sorrow of his countrymen. He could
+bid them turn to God; and he did. But he could say nothing of any
+inherent virtue, or power, which could proceed from him to save and
+help. It was never suggested for a moment that he could act as
+mediator between God and men, though he might be an intercessor. And
+as for John the Baptist, though he deeply stirred the religious
+convictions of his countrymen, he could only point to One who came
+after him, and say: "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin
+of the world." But within six months after the commencement of his
+ministry, Jesus says; "Son, thy sins are forgiven thee"; "The Son of
+Man hath authority on earth to forgive sins"; "Daughter, thy sins,
+which are many, are forgiven thee: go in peace"; and presently: "This
+is the cup of the New Covenant in my blood, shed for many, for the
+remission of sins", and again: "The Son of Man came to give his life a
+ransom for many." Tell me of any, either in the story of Elijah or of
+John the Baptist, to compare with these words, spoken by the lowest and
+humblest being that ever trod time's sands? Does that not indicate
+that He stood in a relationship to God and man which has never been
+realized by another?
+
+Besides, neither of them introduced a new type of living. Their own
+method of life seemed to indicate that there was sin in the body, or
+sin in matter; and that the only way of holiness was by an austerity
+that lived apart in the deserts, dreading and avoiding the presence of
+men. That was a type of holiness which every great religious teacher
+has followed; for you remember that Buddha used to say that all the
+present is an illusion and a dream, while the realities await us
+beyond. On the other hand, Jesus taught that the Redeemer was also the
+Creator; that there was nothing common or unclean in man's original
+constitution; that sin consisted not in certain actions, functions, or
+duties--but in man's heart, and will, and choice; and that if a man
+were only right there, all his nature and circumstances would become
+illumined and transfigured by the indwelling Spirit. Let it never be
+forgotten that Christ taught that God is not going to cancel the nature
+which He Himself has bestowed in all its human and innocent out-goings,
+but only to eliminate the self-principle which has cursed it--as you
+would wish to take small-pox from the body of the little child, or the
+taint out of the rotting flesh of the leper.
+
+O Christ, Thou standest pre-eminent in thy unparalleled glory! Let
+Elijah and John the Baptist withdraw, but oh, do Thou tarry! To whom
+shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life. All the prophets
+and kings of men without Thee will not suffice; but to have Thee is to
+have all that is strong, and wise, and good, gathered up into the
+perfect beauty of a man, with the Divine glory of the Infinite God.
+
+
+III. HOW MAY WE HAVE THAT SAME SPIRIT?--John the Baptist came in the
+spirit and power of Elijah: that spirit and power are for us too. Just
+as the dawn touches the highest peaks of the Alps, and afterwards, as
+the morning hours creep on, the tide of light passes down into the
+valley, so the Spirit that smote that glorious pinnacle Elijah, and
+that nearer pinnacle the Baptist, is waiting to descend upon and
+empower us.
+
+We are all believers in Jesus, but did we receive the Holy Ghost when
+we believed? (Acts xix. 2). When the great apostle of the Gentiles met
+the little handful of John's disciples, gathered in the great
+idolatrous city of Ephesus, the first word he addressed to them was the
+eager enquiry, "Did ye receive the Holy Ghost when ye believed?" And
+they replied, "Nay, we did not so much as hear whether the Holy Ghost
+was given." In other words: We heard from our master, John, that
+Jesus, of whom he spake, would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire; but we have never heard of the fulfilment of his prediction--we
+only know of Him, concerning whom our great leader so often spake, as
+the great Teacher, Miracle-worker, and Sacrifice for the sins of the
+people--but what more there is to tell and know we wait to hear from
+thee.
+
+Then Paul explained that John's baptism had stood only for confession
+and repentance: "John baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying
+unto the people that they should believe on Him, which should come
+after him, that is, on Jesus." Those who descended the shelving banks
+of Jordan to be plunged beneath its arrowy waters, declared their
+discontent with the past, their desire to be free of it, and their
+belief in the Messianic character of Jesus of Nazareth, who was to
+introduce a new and better age.
+
+But the apostle hastened to explain that this Jesus, whom the Jews had
+delivered up and slain by wicked hands, was the Prince of Life; that
+God had raised Him from the dead; and that being by the right hand of
+God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy
+Ghost, He had poured Him forth in mighty power on the waiting Church,
+anointing it for its ministry to mankind. It was as though he had
+said: Our Lord, on his Ascension, baptized those that had believed with
+the Spirit of which Joel spake. The water of John's baptism symbolised
+a negation, but this baptism is positive; it is as cleansing, purifying
+flame; it was good to know Jesus after the flesh, it is a thousand
+times better to know Him after the Spirit: and this gift is to us and
+to our children, and to all that are far off, even as many as the Lord
+our God shall call.
+
+When they heard this they were baptized into the name of the Lord
+Jesus. They exalted Him to the throne of their hearts as the glorified
+and ever-blessed Son of God. They directed their longing eyes towards
+Him in his risen glory, that He should do for them as He had already
+done for so many. And in answer to their expectant faith, the blessing
+of Abraham came upon them--they received the promise of the Spirit by
+faith; the Holy Ghost came upon them, and they were equipped for
+witness-bearing in Ephesus by the very power which had rested once on
+Elijah, and also on their first teacher and guide; and, as the result,
+a revival broke out in that city of such magnitude that the magic books
+were burned, and the trade of the silversmiths grievously injured.
+
+This power of the Holy Spirit is for us all. Of course we could not
+believe in Jesus in the remission of sin, or the quickening of our
+spiritual life, apart from the work of the Holy Spirit; but there is
+something more than this, there is a power, an anointing, a gracious
+endowment of fitness for service--which are the privilege of every
+believer. The Holy Spirit is prepared, not only to be within us for
+the renewal and sanctification of character, but to anoint us as He did
+the Lord at his baptism. He waits to empower us to witness for Jesus,
+to endure the persecution and trial which are inevitable to the
+exercise of a God-given ministry, and to bring other men to God. It
+would be well to tarry to receive it. It is better to wait for hours
+for an express train than to start to walk the distance; the hours
+spent in waiting will be more than compensated for by the rapidity with
+which the traveller will be borne to his destination. Stay from your
+work for a little, and wait upon the ascended, glorified Redeemer, in
+whom the Spirit of God dwells. Ask Him to impart to you that which He
+received on your behalf. Never rest until you are sure that the Spirit
+dwells in you fully, and exercises through you the plenitude of his
+gracious power. We cannot seek Him at the hand of Christ in vain.
+Dare to believe this: dare to believe that if your heart is pure, and
+your motives holy, and your whole desire fervent--and if you have dared
+to breathe in a deep, long breath of the Holy Spirit--that according to
+your faith so it has been done to you; and that you may go forth
+enjoying the same power which rested on the Baptist, though you may not
+be conscious of any Divine afflatus, though there may have been no
+stroke of conscious power, no crown of flame, no rushing as of the
+mighty wind.
+
+God is still able to vouchsafe to us as large a portion of his Spirit
+as to the disciples on the day of Pentecost. We are not straitened in
+Him, but in ourselves. The power of his grace is not passed away with
+the primitive times, as fond and faithless men imagine; but his Kingdom
+is now at hand, and Christ, standing on the threshold of the century,
+waits to lead his Church to greater triumphs than she has ever known.
+Oh that He would hasten to come forth from his royal chambers! Oh that
+He would take his throne as Prince of the kings of the earth! Oh that
+He would put on the robe of his majesty, and assume the sceptre of his
+unlimited and almighty reign. Creation travails; the Spirit and the
+Bride invoke; the mind of man has tried all possible combinations of
+sovereignty, and in vain.
+
+"O Lord Jesus Christ, who at thy first coming didst send thy messenger
+to prepare the way before Thee; grant that the ministers and stewards
+of thy mysteries may likewise so prepare and make ready thy way, by
+turning the hearts of the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; that,
+at thy second coming to judge the world, we may be found an acceptable
+people in thy sight, who livest and reignest with the Father and the
+Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen."
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN THE BAPTIST***
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, John the Baptist, by F. B. Meyer
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: John the Baptist
+
+
+Author: F. B. Meyer
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 26, 2008 [eBook #25904]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN THE BAPTIST***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ In the original book, each right-hand page had its own header.
+ In this e-book, each chapter's headers have been collected into
+ an introductory paragraph immediately following that chapter's
+ introductory poem. (The left-hand pages' header was the
+ chapter's title.)
+
+
+
+
+
+JOHN THE BAPTIST
+
+by
+
+F. B. MEYER, B.A.
+
+Author of
+Paul: A Servant of Jesus Christ
+The Prophet of Hope
+Saved and Kept
+etc., etc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+London: Morgan and Scott
+Office of The Christian
+12, Paternoster Buildings, E.C.
+And may be Ordered of any Bookseller
+1911
+
+
+
+
+By Rev. F. B. MEYER, B.A.
+
+
+ THE "BIOGRAPHICAL" SERIES.
+
+ ABRAHAM: Or, The Obedience of Faith.
+ ISRAEL: A Prince with God.
+ JOSEPH: Beloved--Hated--Exalted.
+ MOSES: The Servant of God.
+ JOSHUA: And the Land of Promise.
+ DAVID: Shepherd, Psalmist, King.
+ ELIJAH: And the Secret of his Power.
+ JEREMIAH: Priest and Prophet.
+ JOHN THE BAPTIST.
+ PAUL: A Servant of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+The life and character of John the Baptist have always had a great
+fascination for me; and I am thankful to have been permitted to write
+this book. But I am more thankful for the hours of absorbing interest
+spent in the study of his portraiture as given in the Gospels. I know
+of nothing that makes so pleasant a respite from the pressure of life's
+fret and strain, as to bathe mind and spirit in the translucent waters
+of Scripture biography.
+
+As the clasp between the Old Testament and the New--the close of the
+one and the beginning of the other; as among the greatest of those born
+of women; as the porter who opened the door to the True Shepherd; as
+the fearless rebuker of royal and shameless sin--the Baptist must ever
+compel the homage and admiration of mankind.
+
+In many respects, such a life cannot be repeated. But the spirit of
+humility and courage; of devotion to God, and uncompromising loyalty to
+truth, which was so conspicuous in him, may animate us. We, also, may
+be filled with the spirit and power of Elijah, as he was; and may
+point, with lip and life, to the Saviour of the world, crying, "Behold
+the Lamb of God."
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ I. THE INTEREST OF HIS BIOGRAPHY
+ II. THE HOUSE OF ZACHARIAS
+ III. HIS SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLMASTERS
+ IV. THE PROPHET OF THE HIGHEST
+ V. THE FIRST MINISTRY OF THE BAPTIST
+ VI. BAPTISM UNTO REPENTANCE
+ VII. THE MANIFESTATION OF THE MESSIAH
+ VIII. NOT THAT LIGHT, BUT A WITNESS
+ IX. "HE MUST INCREASE, BUT I MUST DECREASE"
+ X. THE KING'S COURTS
+ XI. "ART THOU HE?"
+ XII. "NONE GREATER THAN JOHN THE BAPTIST, YET..."
+ XIII. A BURNING AND SHINING LIGHT
+ XIV. SET AT LIBERTY
+ XV. THE GRAVE OF JOHN, AND ANOTHER GRAVE
+ XVI. YET SPEAKING
+ XVII. THE SPIRIT AND POWER OF ELIAS
+
+
+
+
+JOHN THE BAPTIST.
+
+
+I.
+
+The Interest of his Biography.
+
+ "John, than which man a sadder or a greater
+ Not till this day has been of woman born;
+ John, like some iron peak by the Creator
+ Fired with the red glow of the rushing morn.
+
+ "This, when the sun shall rise and overcome it,
+ Stands in his shining, desolate and bare;
+ Yet not the less the inexorable summit
+ Flamed him his signal to the happier air."
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+John and Jesus--Contemporary History--Anticipation of the Advent.
+
+
+The morning star, shining amid the brightening glow of dawn, is the
+fittest emblem that Nature can supply of the herald who proclaimed the
+rising of the Sun of Righteousness--answering across the gulf of three
+hundred years to his brother prophet, Malachi, who had foretold that
+Sunrise and the healing in His wings.
+
+Every sign attests the unique and singular glory of the Baptist. Not
+that his career was signalized by the blaze of prodigy and wonder, like
+the multiplication of the widow's meal or the descent of the fire of
+heaven to consume the altar and the wood; for it is expressly said that
+"John did no miracle." Not that he owed anything to the adventitious
+circumstances of wealth and rank; for he was not a place-loving
+courtier, "clothed in soft raiment or found in kings' courts." Not
+that he was a master of a superb eloquence like that of Isaiah or
+Ezekiel; for he was content to be only "a cry"--short, thrilling,
+piercing through the darkness, ringing over the desert plains. Yet,
+his Master said of him that "among them that are born of women there
+hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist"; and in six brief
+months, as one has noticed, the young prophet of the wilderness had
+become the centre to which all the land went forth. We see Pharisees
+and Sadducees, soldiers and publicans, enthralled by his ministry; the
+Sanhedrim forced to investigate his claims; the petty potentates of
+Palestine caused to tremble on their thrones; while he has left a name
+and an influence that will never cease out of the world.
+
+But there is a further feature which arrests us in the life and
+ministry of the Baptist. He was ordained to be "the clasp" of two
+covenants. In him Judaism reached its highest embodiment, and the Old
+Testament found its noblest exponent. It is significant, therefore,
+that through his lips the law and the prophets should announce their
+transitional purpose, and that he who caught up the torch of Hebrew
+prophecy with a grasp and spirit unrivalled by any before him, should
+have it in his power and in his heart to say: "The object of all
+prophecy, the purpose of the Mosaic law, the end of all sacrifices, the
+desire of all nations, is at hand." And forthwith turning to the True
+Shepherd, who stood at the door waiting to be admitted, to Him the
+porter opened, bowing low as He passed, and crying: "This is He of whom
+Moses in the law and the prophets did write, Jesus of Nazareth, who was
+for to come."
+
+Few studies can bring out to clearer demonstration the superlative
+glory of Christ than a thoughtful consideration of the story of the
+forerunner. They were born at the same time; were surrounded from
+their birth by similar circumstances; drank in from their earliest days
+the same patriotic aspirations, the same sacred traditions, the same
+glowing hopes. But the parallel soon stops. John the Baptist is
+certainly a grand embodiment of the noblest characteristics of the
+Jewish people. We see in him a conspicuous example of what could be
+developed out of eight hundred years of Divine revelation and
+discipline. But Jesus is the Son of Man: there is a width, a breadth,
+a universality about Him which cannot be accounted for save on the
+hypothesis which John himself declared, that "He who cometh from above
+is above all."
+
+In each case, life was strenuous and short--an epoch being inaugurated,
+in the one case in about six months, in the other some three years. In
+each case, at first, there was abounding enthusiasm, bursting forth
+around their persons as they announced the Kingdom of God, like the
+flowers which carpet their own fair land after the rains; but side by
+side the unconcealed hatred of the religious world of their time. In
+each case, the brief sunny hours of service were soon succeeded by the
+rolling up of the thunderous clouds, and these by the murderous tempest
+of deadly hatred, even unto death: "Their dead bodies lay in the street
+of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt." In
+each case, there was a little handful of detached disciples, who
+bitterly mourned their master's death, and took up the desecrated
+corpse to lay it in the tomb; whilst they that dwelt in the earth
+rejoiced and made merry, and sent gifts to one another, because they
+had been tormented by their words (Rev. xi. 10).
+
+But there the parallel ends. The life purpose of the one culminated in
+his death; with the other, it only began. In the case of John, death
+was a martyrdom, which shines brilliantly amid the murky darkness of
+his time; in the case of Jesus, death was a sacrifice which put away
+the sin of the world. For John there was no immediate resurrection,
+save that which all good men have of their words and influence; but his
+Master saw no corruption--it was not possible for Him to be holden by
+it--and in his resurrection He commenced to wield his wide and mighty
+supremacy over human hearts and wills. When the axe of Herod's
+executioner had done its deadly work in the dungeons of Machaerus, the
+bond which knit the disciples of John was severed also, and they were
+absorbed in the followers of Christ; but when the Roman soldiers
+thought their work was done, and the cry "It is finished!" had escaped
+the parched lips of the dying Lord, his disciples held together in the
+upper room, and continued there for more than forty days, until the
+descent of the Holy Spirit formed them into the strongest organization
+that this world has ever beheld.
+
+John's influence on the world has diminished as men have receded
+further from his age; but Jesus is King of the ages. He creates, He
+fashions, He leads them forth; He is with us always, to the end of the
+age. We have not to go back through the centuries to find Him in the
+cradle or in Mary's arms, in the fishing-boat or on the mountain, on
+the cross or in the grave; He is _here_ beside us, with us, in us, "all
+the days." John, then, was "a burning and shining torch," lifted for a
+moment aloft in the murky air; but Jesus was THAT LIGHT. As the
+star-light, which fails to illumine the page of your book or the
+dial-plate of your watch, is to the sunlight, as the courier is to the
+sovereign, as the streamlet is to the ocean--such was John as compared
+with Him whose shoe-latchet he felt himself unworthy to stoop down and
+unloose. Greatest born of women he might be; "sent from God" he was:
+but One came after him who bore upon his front the designation of his
+Divine origin and mission, behind whom the gates of the past closed as
+when a king has passed through, and at whose girdle hang the keys of
+the doors and gates of the Ages.
+
+To read the calm idyllic pages of the Gospels, apart from some
+knowledge of contemporary history, is to miss one of their deepest
+lessons--that such piety and beneficence were set in the midst of a
+most tumultuous and perilous age. Those times were by no means
+favourable to the cultivation of the deepest life. The flock of God
+had long left the green pastures and still waters of outward peace, and
+were passing through the valley of death-shadow, every step of the path
+being infested by the enemies of their peace. The wolf, indeed, was
+coming. The national life was already being rent by those throes of
+agony which betokened the passing away of an age, and reached their
+climax in the Fall of Jerusalem, of which Jesus said there had been
+nothing, and would be nothing, like it in the history of the world.
+
+Herod was on the throne--crafty, cruel, sensual, imperious, and
+magnificent. The gorgeous Temple which bore his name was the scene of
+priestly service and sacramental rites. The great national feasts of
+the Passover, of Tabernacles, and of Pentecost, were celebrated with
+solemn pomp, and attracted vast crowds from all the world. In every
+part of the land synagogues were maintained with punctilious care, and
+crowds of scribes were perpetually engaged in a microscopic study of
+the law, and in the instruction of the people. In revenue, and popular
+attention, and apparent devoutness, that period had not been excelled
+in the most palmy days of Solomon or Hezekiah. But beneath this
+decorous surface the rankest, foulest, most desperate corruption throve.
+
+To the aged couple in the hill-country of Judaea, as to Mary and Joseph
+at Nazareth, must have come tidings of the murder of Aristobulus, of
+the cruel death of Mariamne and her sons, and of the aged Hyrcanus.
+They must have groaned beneath the grinding oppression by which Herod
+extorted from the poorer classes the immense revenues which he
+squandered on his palaces and fortresses and on the creation of new
+cities. That he was introducing everywhere Gentile customs and games;
+that he had dared to place the Roman eagle on the main entrance of the
+Temple; that he had pillaged David's tomb; that he had set aside the
+great council of their nation, and blinded the saintly Jochanan; that
+the religious leaders, men like Caiaphas and Annas, were quite willing
+to wink at the crimes of the secular power, so long as their prestige
+and emoluments were secured; that the national independence for which
+Judas and his brothers had striven, during the Maccabean wars, was fast
+being laid at the feet of Rome, which was only too willing to take
+advantage of the chaos which followed immediately upon Herod's hideous
+death--such tidings must have come, in successive shocks of anguish, to
+those true hearts who were waiting for the redemption of Israel, with
+all the more eagerness as it seemed so long delayed, so urgently
+needed. Still, they made their yearly journeys to Jerusalem, and
+participated in the great convocations, which, in outward splendour,
+eclipsed memories of the past; but they realized that the glory had
+departed, and that the mere husk of externalism could not long resist
+the incoming tides of militarism, of the love of display, and the
+corrupting taint of the worst aspects of Roman civilization. When the
+feasts were over, these pious hearts turned back to their homes among
+the hills, tearing themselves from the last glimpse of the beautiful
+city, with the cry, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!"
+
+The darkest hour precedes the dawn, and it was just at this point that
+Old Testament predictions must have been so eagerly scanned by those
+that watched and waited. That the Messiah was nigh, they could not
+doubt. The term of years foretold by Daniel had nearly expired. The
+sceptre had departed from Judah, and the lawgiver from between his
+feet. Even the Gentile world was penetrated with the expectation of a
+King. Sybils in their ancient writings, hermits in their secret cells,
+Magi studying the dazzling glories of the eastern heavens, had come to
+the conclusion that He was at hand who would bring again the Golden Age.
+
+And so those loyal and loving souls that often spake together, while
+the Lord hearkened and heard, must have felt that as the advent of the
+Lord whom they sought was nigh, that of his messenger must be nearer
+still. They started at every footfall. They listened for every voice.
+They scanned the expression of every face. "Behold, he shall come,"
+rang in their hearts like a peal of silver bells. At any moment might
+a voice be heard crying, "Cast up, cast up the highway; gather out the
+stones; lift up an ensign for the peoples. Say ye to the daughter of
+Sion, Behold, thy salvation cometh." Those anticipations were realized
+in the birth of John the Baptist.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+The House of Zacharias.
+
+(LUKE I.)
+
+ "There are in this loud stunning tide
+ Of human care and crime,
+ With whom the melodies abide
+ Of the everlasting chime;
+ Who carry music in their heart
+ Through dusky lane and wrangling mart
+ Plying their daily task with busier feet,
+ Because their secret souls a holy strain repeat."
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+Early History of the Baptist--God's Hidden Ones--The Hill Country of
+Judea--A Childless Home--The Forerunner Announced.
+
+
+To the evangelist Luke we are indebted for details of those antecedent
+circumstances that ushered John the Baptist into the world. He tells
+us that he had "traced the course of all things accurately from the
+first." And in those final words, "from the first," he suggests that
+he had deliberately sought to examine into those striking events from
+which, as from a wide-spreading root, the great growth of Christianity
+had originated. Who of us has not sometimes followed the roots of some
+newly-discovered plant deep into the black mould, intent on pursuing
+them to their furthest extremity, and extricating them from the
+clinging earth without injuring one delicate radicle? So this good
+physician, accustomed by his training to accurate research and
+experiment, went back to scenes and events anterior to any which his
+brother Evangelists recorded. He compensated for the authority of an
+eye-witness by the thoroughness and care of his investigation.
+
+What were the sources from which the third Evangelist drew his
+information? We cannot be sure, but may hazard a suggestion, which is
+supported by the archaic simplicity, the indescribable grace, the
+almost idyllic beauty of his two opening chapters. Critics have
+repeatedly drawn attention to their unique character, and insisted that
+they are due to some other hand than that which has given us the rest
+of the story of "the Son of Man." And why should we not attribute them
+to "the Mother" herself? It has been truly said that mothers are the
+natural historians of their children's early days--never tired of
+observing them, they never tire of recounting their prodigies; and, in
+an especial manner, Mary had kept all things, pondering in her heart
+those wonderful circumstances which had left so indelible an impression
+on her life. She who, in her over-welling joy, uttered "the
+Magnificat," was surely capable, even judging from a literary and human
+standpoint, of the language in which the story is told; and the facts
+themselves would only stand out the clearer in her closing years, as
+many another memory faded from her mind. The granite remains when the
+floods have swept away the light soil that filled the interstices of
+the rocks.
+
+It were a theme worthy of a great artist to depict! Mary's face,
+furrowed by deep lines of anguish, yet glowing with sacred fire and
+holy memory. Luke, sitting at his manuscript, now letting her tell her
+story without interruption, and again interpolating an inquiry, the
+words growing on the page; while, nearer than each to either, making no
+tremor in the hot summer air as He comes, casting no shadow in the
+brilliant eastern light--He of whom they speak and write steals in to
+stand beside them, bringing all things to their remembrance by the Holy
+Spirit's agency, even as He had told them.
+
+The story of John the Baptist was so clearly part of that of Jesus,
+that Mary could hardly recall the one without the other. And, besides,
+Elisabeth, as the angel said, was her kinswoman--perhaps her cousin--to
+whom she naturally turned in the hour of her maidenly astonishment and
+rapture. Though much younger, Mary was united to her relative by a
+close and tender tie, and it was only natural that what had happened to
+Elisabeth should have impressed her almost as deeply as her own
+memorable experiences. So it is possible that from the lips of the
+mother of our Lord we obtain these details of the House of Zacharias.
+
+
+I. THE QUIET IN THE LAND.--God has always had his hidden ones; and,
+while the world has been rent by faction and war, ravaged by fire and
+sword, and drenched with the blood of her sons, these have heard his
+call to enter their chamber, and shut themselves in until the storm had
+spent its fury. It was so during the days of Ahab, when the eye of
+omniscience beheld at least seven thousand who had not bowed the knee
+to Baal. It was so in the awful days of the Civil War, when Puritan
+and Royalist faced each other at Naseby and Marston Moor, and the land
+seemed swept in a blinding storm. Groups of ardent souls gathered to
+spend their time in worship and acts of mercy--like those at Little
+Gidding, in Huntingdonshire, under the direction of Mr. Nicholas
+Ferrar. It was so when the thirty years' war desolated Germany, and
+"the quiet in the land" withdrew themselves from the agitated scene of
+human affairs to wait on God, embalming their hearts in hymns and poems
+which exhale a perfume as from crushed flowers.
+
+It was eminently so in the days of which we write. Darkness covered
+the earth, and gross darkness the peoples. Herod's infamous cruelties,
+craft, and bloodshed were at their height. The country questioned with
+fear what new direction his crimes might take. The priesthood was
+obsequious to his whim; the bonds of society seemed dissolved. Theudas
+and Judas of Galilee, mentioned by Gamaliel, were but specimens of the
+bandit leaders who broke into revolt and harried the country districts
+for the maintenance of their followers. Greed, peculation, and lawless
+violence, had ample and undisputed opportunity to despoil the national
+glory and corrupt the heart of the national life.
+
+Is it to be wondered that the godly remnant would meet in little groups
+and secluded hiding-places to comfort themselves in God? We are told,
+for instance, that Anna spake of the Babe, whom she had probably
+embraced in her aged trembling arms, "to all them that were looking for
+the redemption of Jerusalem" (Luke ii. 38, R.V.). What would we not
+give to know something more of the members of this sacred society,
+which preserved the loftiest traditions, and embodied in their lives
+some of the finest traits of the religion of their forefathers! The
+gloom of their times only led them more eagerly to con the predictions
+of their Hebrew prophets, and desire their accomplishment. Full often
+they would climb the heights and look out over the desert wastes to
+descry the advent of the Mighty One, coming from Edom, with his
+garments stained with the blood of Israel's foes. When they met, the
+burden of conversation, which flowed under vine or fig-tree, by the
+wayside or in humble homes, would be of their cherished hope. And as
+they beheld the hapless condition of their fatherland, the land of
+Abraham, the city of David, the cry must often have been extorted; "How
+long, O Lord, holy and true, will it be ere He shall come whose right
+it is who shall sit on the throne of his father David, and of whose
+kingdom there shall be no end? Come forth out of thy royal chambers, O
+Prince of all the kings of the earth! Put on the visible robes of thy
+imperial majesty; take up that unlimited sceptre which thy Almighty
+Father hath bequeathed Thee; for now the voice of thy bride calls Thee,
+and all creatures sigh to be renewed." So our great Milton prayed in
+more recent days.
+
+We are not drawing on our imagination in describing these true-hearted
+watchers for the rising of the Day-star. They are fully indicated in
+the Gospel story. There was Simeon, righteous and devout, unto whom it
+had been revealed by the Holy Spirit that he should not see death
+before he had seen the Lord's Christ; and Anna, the prophetess, who
+departed not from the temple, worshipping with fastings and
+supplications night and day; and the guileless Nathanael, an Israelite
+indeed, who had perhaps already commenced to sit at the foot of the
+ladder which bound his fig-tree to the highest heaven; and the peasant
+maiden Mary, the descendant of a noble house, though with fallen
+fortunes, who, like some vestal virgin, clad in snowy white, watched
+through the dark hours beside the flickering flame; and last, but not
+least, Zacharias and his wife Elisabeth, "who were both righteous
+before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord
+blameless."
+
+For us, too, the times are dark. It is as though the shadows were
+being thrown far across the fields, and the light were becoming dim.
+Let the children of God draw together, to encourage each other in their
+holy faith, and to speak of their great hopes; for He who appeared once
+to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself shall appear a second time
+without sin unto salvation. We are, as the French version puts it,
+_burgesses of the skies_, "whence we wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus
+Christ, who shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation, that it may
+be conformed to the body of his glory, according to the working whereby
+He is able even to subject all things unto Himself."
+
+But this attitude of spirit, which dwells in the unseen and eternal,
+which counts on the indwelling of the Son of God by faith, and which
+ponders deeply over the sins and sorrows of the world around, is the
+temper of mind out of which the greatest deeds are wrought for the
+cause of God on the earth. The Marys who sit at Christ's feet arise to
+anoint Him for his burying. Take, for instance, the Moravian Church,
+born and cradled amid the pietism of which Spener of Berlin and Franke
+of Halle were the acknowledged leaders; and it has given to the world a
+far larger number of missionaries in proportion to its membership than
+any church of the age. Or take the followers of George Fox, who have
+maintained through unparalleled suffering their testimony for
+spirituality of worship; and it is undeniable that some of the greatest
+reforms which have characterised the century recently closed have found
+their foremost advocates and apologists from their somewhat meagre
+ranks. Those who wait on God renew their strength. The world ignores
+them, scorning to reckon their tears and toils amid its renovating
+energies; but they refuse to abate their endeavours and sacrifices on
+its behalf. They repay its neglect by more assiduous exertions, its
+ingratitude by more exhausting sacrifices; content if, from out their
+ranks, there presently steps one who, like John the Baptist, opens a
+new chapter in the history of the race, and accelerates the advent of
+the Christ.
+
+
+II. THE PARENTAGE OF THE FORERUNNER.--As the traveller emerges from
+the dreary wilderness that lies between Sinai and the southern frontier
+of Palestine--a scorching desert, in which Elijah was glad to find
+shelter from the sword-like rays in the shade of the retem shrub--he
+sees before him a long line of hills, which is the beginning of "the
+hill country of Judaea" (Luke i. 39). In contrast with the sand wastes
+which he has traversed, the valleys seem to laugh and sing. Greener
+and yet greener grow the pasture lands, till he can understand how
+Nabal and other sheep-masters were able to find maintenance for vast
+flocks of sheep. Here and there are the crumbled ruins which mark the
+site of ancient towns and villages tenanted now by the jackal or the
+wandering Arab. Amongst these, a modern traveller has identified the
+site of Juttah, the village home of the priest Zacharias and his wife
+Elisabeth.
+
+To judge by their names, we may infer that their parents years before
+had been godly people. _Zacharias_ meant _God's remembrance_; as
+though he were to be a perpetual reminder to his fellows of what God
+had promised, and to God of what they were expecting from his hand.
+_Elisabeth_ meant _God's oath_; as though her people were perpetually
+appealing to those covenant promises in which, since He could swear by
+no greater, God had sworn by Himself, that He would never leave nor
+forsake, and that when the sceptre departed from Judah and the
+law-giver from between his feet, Shiloh should come.
+
+Zacharias was a priest, "of the course of Abijah," and twice a year he
+journeyed to Jerusalem to fulfil his office, for a week of six days and
+two Sabbaths. There were, Josephus tells us, somewhat more than 20,000
+priests settled in Judaea at this time; and very many of them were like
+those whom Malachi denounced as degrading and depreciating the Temple
+services. The general character of the priesthood was deeply tainted
+by the corruption of the times, and as a class they were blind leaders
+of the blind. Not a few, however, were evidently deeply religious men,
+for we find that "a great number of the priests," after the
+crucifixion, believed on Christ and joined his followers. In this
+class we must therefore place Zacharias, who, with his wife, herself of
+the daughters of Aaron, is described as being "righteous before God."
+
+The phrases are evidently selected with care. Many are righteous
+before men; but they were righteous _before God_. Their daily life and
+walk were regulated by a careful observance of the ordinances of the
+ceremonial and the commandments of the moral law. It is evident, from
+the apt and plentiful quotations from Scripture with which the song of
+Zacharias is replete, that the Scriptures were deeply pondered and
+reverenced in that highland home; and we have the angel's testimony to
+the prayers that ascended day and night. In all these things they were
+blameless--not faultless, as judged by God's infinite standard of
+rectitude, but blameless--because they lived up to the fullest limit of
+their knowledge of the will of God. They were blameless and harmless,
+the children of God, without blemish, in the midst of a crooked and
+perverse generation, among whom they were seen as lights in the world,
+holding forth amid neighbours and friends the Word of Truth.
+
+But they lived under the shadow of a great sorrow. "They had no child,
+because Elisabeth was barren, and they both were now well stricken in
+years." When the good priest put off his official dress of white
+linen, and returned to his mountain home, there was no childish voice
+to welcome him. It seemed almost certain that their family would soon
+die out and be forgotten; that no child would close their eyes in
+death; and that by no link whatsoever could they be connected with the
+Messiah, to be the progenitor of whom was the cherished longing of each
+Hebrew parent.
+
+"They had no child!" They would, therefore, count themselves under the
+frown of God; and the mother especially felt that a reproach lay on
+her. What a clue to the anguish of the soul is furnished by her own
+reflection, when she recognised the glad divine interposition on her
+behalf, and cried, "Thus hath the Lord done unto me in the days wherein
+He looked upon me, to take away _my reproach among men_" (Luke i. 25).
+
+But had it not been for this sorrow they might never have been
+qualified to receive the first tidings of the near approach of the
+Messiah. _Sorrow_ opens our eyes, and bids us see visions within the
+vail, which cannot be described by those who have not wept. _Sorrow_
+leads us up the steep mountain of vision, and opens the panorama which
+lies beyond the view of those who dare not attempt the craggy steep.
+_Sorrow_ prepares us to see angels standing beside the altar of incense
+at the hour of prayer, and to hear words that mortal lips may not utter
+until they are fulfilled. _Sorrow_ leads us to open our house to those
+who carry a great anguish in their hearts, who come to us needing
+shelter and comfort; to discover finally that we have entertained an
+angel unawares, and that in some trembling maiden, threatened by
+divorce from her espoused, we have welcomed the mother of the Lord
+(ver. 43). Shrink not from sorrow. It endures but for the brief
+eastern night; joy cometh in the morning, to remain. It may be caused
+by long waiting and apparently fruitless prayer. Beneath its pressure
+heart and flesh may faint. All natural hope may have become dead, and
+the soul be plunged in hopeless despair. "Yet the Lord will command
+his loving-kindness in the morning;" and it will be seen that the dull
+autumn sowings of tears and loneliness and pain were the necessary
+preliminary for that heavenly messenger who, standing "on the right
+side of the altar of incense," shall assure us that our prayer is heard.
+
+
+III. THE ANGEL'S ANNOUNCEMENT.--One memorable autumn, when the land
+was full of the grape-harvest, Zacharias left his home, in the cradle
+of the hills, some three thousand feet above the Mediterranean, for his
+priestly service. Reaching the temple he would lodge in the cloisters,
+and spend his days in the innermost court, which none might enter save
+priests in their sacred garments. Among the various priestly duties,
+none was held in such high esteem as the offering of incense, which was
+presented morning and evening, on a special golden altar, in the Holy
+Place at the time of prayer. "The whole multitude of the people were
+praying without at the time of incense." So honourable was this office
+that it was fixed by lot, and none was allowed to perform it twice.
+Only once in a priest's life was he permitted to sprinkle the incense
+on the burning coals, which an assistant had already brought from the
+altar of burnt-sacrifice, and spread on the altar of incense before the
+vail.
+
+The silver trumpets had sounded. The smoke of the evening sacrifice
+was ascending. The worshippers that thronged the different courts,
+rising tier on tier, were engaged in silent prayer. The assistant
+priest had retired; and Zacharias, for the first and only time in his
+life, stood alone in the holy shrine, while the incense which he had
+strewn on the glowing embers arose in fragrant clouds, enveloping and
+veiling the objects around, whilst it symbolized the ascent of prayers
+and intercessions not only from his own heart, but from the hearts of
+his people, into the presence of God. "And their prayer came up to his
+holy habitation, even unto heaven."
+
+What a litany of prayer poured from his heart! For Israel, that the
+chosen people should be delivered from their low estate; for the cause
+of religion, that it might be revived; for the crowds without, that God
+would hear the prayers they were offering toward his holy sanctuary,
+and, perhaps, for Elisabeth and himself, that, if possible, God would
+hear their prayer, and, if not, that He would grant them to bear
+patiently their heavy sorrow.
+
+"And there appeared unto him an angel of the Lord standing on the right
+side of the altar of incense." Mark how circumstantial the narrative
+is. There could be no mistake. He stood--and he stood on the right
+side. It was Gabriel who stands in the presence of God, who had been
+sent to speak to him, and declare the good tidings that his prayer was
+heard; that his wife should bear a son, who should be called John, that
+the child should be welcomed with joy, should be a Nazarite from his
+birth, should be filled with the Holy Spirit from his birth, should
+inherit the spirit and power of Elias, and should go before the face of
+Christ to prepare his way, by turning the hearts of the fathers to the
+children, and the disobedient to walk in the wisdom of the just.
+
+He tarried long in the temple, and what wonder! The people would have
+ceased to marvel at the long suspense, could they have known the cause
+of the delay. Presently he came out; but when he essayed to pronounce
+the customary blessing his lips were dumb. He made signs as he reached
+forth his hands in the attitude of benediction; but that day no
+blessing fell on their upturned faces. He continued making signs unto
+them and remained dumb. Dumb, because he questioned the likelihood of
+so good and gracious an answer. Dumb, because he believed not the
+archangel's words. Dumb, that he might learn in silence and solitude
+the full purposes of God, to set them presently to song. Dumb, that
+the tidings might not spread as yet. Dumb, as the representative of
+that wonderful system, which for so long had spoken to mankind with
+comparatively little result, but was now to be superseded by the Word
+of God.
+
+With the light of that glory on his face, and those sweet notes of
+"Fear not" ringing in his heart, Zacharias continued to fulfil the
+duties of his ministration, and, when his work was fulfilled, departed
+unto his house. But that day was long remembered by the people,
+prelude as it was to the time when their blessings would no longer come
+from Ebal or Gerizim, but from Calvary; and when the great High Priest
+would utter from heaven the ancient words:
+
+ The Lord bless thee and keep thee.
+ The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee.
+ The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+His Schools and Schoolmasters.
+
+(LUKE 1.)
+
+ "Oh to have watched thee through the vineyards wander,
+ Pluck the ripe ears, and into evening roam!--
+ Followed, and known that in the twilight yonder
+ Legions of angels shone about thy home!"
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+Home-Life--Preparing for his Life-Work--The Vow of Separation--A Child of
+the Desert
+
+
+Zacharias and Elisabeth had probably almost ceased to pray for a child,
+or to urge the matter. It seemed useless to pray further. There had
+been no heaven-sent sign to assure them that there was any likelihood of
+their prayer being answered, and nature seemed to utter a final No; when
+suddenly the angel of God broke into the commonplace of their life, like
+a meteorite into the unrippled water of a mountain-sheltered lake,
+bringing the assurance that there was no need for fear, and the
+announcement that their prayer was heard. It must have been like hearing
+news that a ship, long overdue and almost despaired of, has suddenly made
+harbour.
+
+It is not impossible that prayers that we have ceased to pray, and are in
+despair about, will yet return to us with the words, _Thy supplication is
+heard_, endorsed on them in our Father's handwriting. Not infrequently
+dividends are paid on investments which we have given up as valueless.
+Fruit that mellows longest in the sun is ripest. Such things may
+transcend altogether our philosophy of prayer; but we are prepared for
+this, since God is accustomed to do exceeding abundantly above all that
+we ask or think.
+
+On his arrival in his home, the aged priest, by means of the
+writing-table afterwards referred to, informed his wife, who apparently
+had not accompanied him, of all that had happened, even to the name which
+the child was to bear, She, at least, seems to have found no difficulty
+in accepting the divine assurance, and during her five months of
+seclusion she nursed great and mighty thoughts in her heart, in the
+belief and prayer that her child would become all that his name is
+supposed to signify, _the gift of Jehovah_. It was Elisabeth also who
+recognised in Mary the mother of her Lord, greeted her as blessed among
+women, and assured her that there would be for her a fulfilment of the
+things which had been promised her.
+
+Month succeeded month, but Zacharias neither heard nor spoke. His
+friends had to make signs to him, for unbelief has the effect of shutting
+man out of the enjoyment of life, and hindering his usefulness. How
+different this time of waiting from the blessedness it brought to his
+wife's young relative, who believed the heavenly messenger. He was
+evidently a good man, and well versed in the history of his people. His
+soul, as we learn from his song, was full of noble pride in the great and
+glorious past. He could believe that when Abraham and Sarah were past
+age, a child was born to _them_, who filled their tent with his merry
+prattle and laughter; but he could not believe that such a blessing could
+fall to his lot. And is not that the point where our faith staggers
+still? We can believe in the wonder-working power of God on the distant
+horizon of the past, or on the equally distant horizon of the future; but
+that He should have a definite and particular care for _our_ life, that
+_our_ prayers should touch Him, that He should give us the desire of our
+heart--this staggers us, and we feel it is too good to be true.
+
+During the whole period that the stricken but expectant priest spent in
+his living tomb, shut off from communication with the outer world, his
+spirit was becoming charged with holy emotion, that waited for the first
+opportunity of expression. Such an opportunity came at length. His
+lowly dwelling was one day crowded with an eager and enthusiastic throng
+of relatives and friends. They had gathered to congratulate the aged
+pair, to perform the initial rite of Judaism, and to name the infant boy
+that lay in his mother's arms. Ah, what joy was hers when they came to
+"magnify the Lord's mercy towards her, and to rejoice with her"! As the
+people passed in and out, there was a new glow in the brilliant eastern
+sunlight, a new glory on the familiar hills.
+
+In their perplexity at the mother's insistence that the babe's name
+should be John--none of his kindred being known by that name--they
+appealed to his father, who with trembling hand inscribed on the wax of
+the writing tablet the verdict, "His name is John." So soon as he had
+broken the iron fetter of unbelief in thus acknowledging the fulfilment
+of the angel's words, "his mouth was opened immediately, and his tongue
+loosed, and he spake, blessing God. And fear came on all that dwelt
+round about them." All these sayings quickly became the staple theme of
+conversation throughout all the hill-country of Judaea; and wherever they
+came, they excited the profoundest expectation. People laid them up in
+their hearts, saying, "What, then, shall this child be?"
+
+"And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit." "And the hand of the
+Lord was with him."
+
+There were several remarkable formative influences operating on this
+young life.
+
+
+I. THE SCHOOL OF HOME.--_His father was a priest_. John's earliest
+memories would register the frequent absence of his father in the
+fulfilment of his course; and, on his return, with what eagerness would
+the boy drink in a recital of all that had transpired in the Holy City!
+We can imagine how the three would sit together beneath their trellised
+vine, in the soft light of the fading sunset, and talk of Zion, their
+chief joy. No wonder that in after days, as he looked on Jesus as He
+walked, he pointed to Him and said, "Behold the Lamb of God"; for, from
+the earliest, his young mind had been saturated with thoughts of
+sacrifice.
+
+When old enough his parents would take him with them to one of the great
+festivals, where, amid the thronging crowds, his boyish eyes opened for
+the first time upon the stately Temple, the order and vestments of the
+priests, the solemn pomp of the Levitical ceremonial. The young heart
+dilated and expanded with wonder and pride; but how little he realized
+that his ministry would be the first step to its entire subversal.
+
+He would be also taught carefully in the _Holy Scriptures_. Like the
+young Timothy, he would know them from early childhood. The song of
+Zacharias reveals a vivid and realistic familiarity with the prophecies
+and phraseology of the Scriptures; and as the happy parents recited them
+to his infant mind, they would stay to emphasize them with impressive
+personal references. What would we not have given to hear Zacharias
+quote Isaiah xl. or Malachi iii., and turn to the lad at his knee,
+saying--"These words refer to thee".--
+
+"Yea, and thou, child, shalt be called the Prophet of the Most High; for
+thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways."
+
+Would not the aged priest speak to his son in thoughts and words like
+those with which his song is so replete; might he not speak to him in
+some such way as this: "My boy, God has fulfilled his holy covenant, the
+oath which He sware unto Abraham, our father; because of the tender mercy
+of our God, the Dayspring from on high has visited us, to shine upon them
+that sit in darkness, and to guide our feet into the way of peace." Then
+he would proceed to tell him the marvellous story of his Kinsman's birth
+in Bethlehem, and of his growing grace in Nazareth. "Blessed be the
+Lord, the God of Israel," the old man said; "for He hath visited and
+redeemed his people, and hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in the
+house of his servant David, as He spake by the mouth of his holy
+prophets, which have been since the world began." Next the father would
+tell as much of the story of Herod's crimes, and of his oppressive rule,
+as the lad could understand; and explain how there would soon be
+"salvation from their enemies, and from the hand of all that hated them."
+And his young soul would be thrilled by the hopes which were bursting in
+the bud, and so near breaking into flower.
+
+Sometimes when they were abroad together in the early dawn, and saw the
+first peep of day, the father would say: "John, do you see that light
+breaking over the hills? What that day-spring is to the world, Jesus,
+thy cousin at Nazareth, will be to the darkness of sin." Then, turning
+to the morning star, shining in the path of the dawn, and paling as they
+gazed, he would say: "See thy destiny, my son: I am an old man, and shall
+not live to see thee in thy meridian strength; but thou shalt shine for
+only a brief space, and then decrease, whilst He shall increase from the
+faint flush of day-spring to the perfect day." And might not the child
+reply, with a flash of intelligent appreciation?--"Yes, father, I
+understand; but I shall be satisfied if only I have prepared the way of
+the Lord."
+
+_There were also the associations of the surrounding country_. The story
+of Abraham would often be recited in the proximity of Machpelah's sacred
+cave. The career of David could not be unfamiliar to a youth who was
+within easy reach of the haunts of the shepherd-psalmist. And the story
+of the Maccabees would stir his soul, as his parents recounted the
+exploits of Judas and his brethren, in which the ancient Hebrew faith and
+prowess had revived in one last glorious outburst.
+
+How ineffaceable are the impressions of the Home! What the father is
+when he comes back at night from his toils, and what the mother is all
+day; what may be the staple of conversation in the home: whether the
+father is willing to be the companion of his child, answering his
+questions, and superintending the gradual unfolding of his mind; how
+often the Bible is opened and explained; how the weekly rest-day is
+spent; the attitude of the home towards strong drink in every shape and
+form, and all else that might injure the young life, as gas does
+plants--all these are vital to the right nurture and direction of boys
+and girls who can only wax strong in spirit when all early influences
+combine in the same direction.
+
+
+II. THERE WAS THE SCHOOL OF HIS NAZARITE-VOW.--The angel, who announced
+his birth, foretold that he should drink neither wine nor strong drink
+from his birth, but that he should be filled with the Holy Spirit.
+"John," said our Lord, "came neither eating nor drinking." This
+abstinence from all stimulants was a distinct sign of the Nazarite,
+together with the unshorn locks, and the care with which he abstained
+from contact with death. In some cases, the vow of the Nazarite might be
+taken for a time, or, as in the case of Samson, Samuel, and John, it
+might be for life. But, whether for shorter or longer, the Nazarite held
+himself as peculiarly given up to the service of God, pliant to the least
+indication of his will, quick to catch the smallest whisper of his voice,
+and mighty in his strength.
+
+"Mother, why do I wear my hair so long? You never cut it, as the mothers
+of other boys do."
+
+"No, my son," was the proud and glad reply; "you must never cut it as
+long as you live: _you are a Nazarite_."
+
+"Mother, why may I not taste the grapes? The boys say they are so nice
+and sweet. May I not, next vintage?"
+
+"No, never," his mother would reply; "you must never touch the fruit of
+the vine: _you are a Nazarite_."
+
+If, as they walked along the public way, they saw a bone left by some
+hungry dog, or a little bird fallen to the earth to die, and the boy
+would approach to touch either, the mother would call him back to her
+side, saying, "Thou must never touch a dead thing. If thy father were to
+die, or I, beside thee, thou must not move us from the spot, but call for
+help. Remember always that thou art separated unto God; his vows are
+upon thee, and thou must let nothing, either in symbol or reality, steal
+away his power from thy young heart and life."
+
+The effect of this would be excellent. It would give a direction and
+purpose to the lad's thoughts and anticipations. He realized that he was
+set apart for a great mission in life. The brook heard the call of the
+sea. Besides which, he would acquire self-restraint, self-mastery.
+
+What is it to be "strong in spirit"? The man who carries everything
+before him with the impetuous rush of his nature, before whose outbursts
+men tremble, and who insists in all things on asserting his wild,
+masterful will--is he the strong man? Nay! most evidently he must be
+classed among the weaklings. The strength of a man is in proportion to
+the feelings which he curbs and subdues, and not which subdue him. The
+man who receives a flagrant insult, and answers quietly; the man who
+bears a hopeless daily trial, and remains silent; the man who with strong
+passions remains chaste, or with a quick sense of injustice can refrain
+himself and remain calm--these are strong men; and John waxed strong,
+because, from the earliest dawn of thought, he was taught the necessity
+of refusing things which in themselves might have been permissible, but
+for him were impossible.
+
+On each of us rests the vow of separation by right of our union with the
+Son of God, who was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners.
+Remember how He went without the camp, bearing our reproach; how they
+cast Him forth to the death of the cross; and how He awaits us on the
+Easter side of death--and surely we can find no pleasure in the world
+where He found no place. His death has made a lasting break between his
+followers and the rest of men. They are crucified to the world, and the
+world to them. Let us not taste of the intoxicating joys in which the
+children of the present age indulge; let us allow no Delilah passion to
+pass her scissors over our locks; and let us be very careful not to
+receive contamination; to have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of
+darkness, but to come out and be separate, not touching the unclean thing.
+
+But while we put away all that injures our own life or the lives of
+others, let us be very careful to discriminate, to draw the line where
+God would have it drawn, exaggerating and extenuating nothing. It is
+important to remember that while the motto of the old covenant was
+Exclusion, even of innocent and natural things, that of the new is
+Inclusion. Moses, under the old, forbade the Jews having horses; but
+Zechariah said that in the new they might own horses, only "Holiness to
+the Lord" must be engraven on the bells of their harness. Christ has
+come to sanctify all life. Whether we eat, or drink, or whatever we do,
+we are to do all to his glory. Disciples are not to be taken out of the
+world, but kept from its evil. "Every creature of God is good, and
+nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving; for it is
+sanctified by the Word of God, and prayer." Natural instincts are not to
+be crushed, but transfigured.
+
+This is the great contrast between the Baptist and the Son of Man. The
+Nazarite would have felt it a sin against the law of his vocation and
+office to touch anything pertaining to the vine. Christ began his signs
+by changing water into wine, though of an innocuous kind, for the
+peasants' wedding at Cana of Galilee. John would have lost all sanctity
+had he touched the bodies of the dead, or the flesh of a leper. Christ
+would touch a bier, pass his hands over the seared flesh of the leper,
+and stand sympathetically beside the grave of his friend. Thus we catch
+a glimpse of our Lord's meaning when He affirms that, though John was the
+greatest of women born, yet the least in the Kingdom of heaven is greater
+than he.
+
+
+III. THERE WAS THE SCHOOL OF THE DESERT.--"The child was in the deserts
+till the day of his showing unto Israel." Probably Zacharias, and
+Elisabeth also, died when John was quite young. But the boy had grown
+into adolescence, was able to care for himself, and "the hand of the Lord
+was with him."
+
+Beneath the guidance and impulse of that hand he tore himself from the
+little home where he had first seen the tender light of day, and spent
+happy years, to go forth from the ordinary haunts of men, perhaps hardly
+knowing whither. There was a wild restlessness in his soul. A young
+man, pleading the other day with his father to be allowed to emigrate to
+the West, urged that whereas there are _inches_ here there are _acres_
+there; and something of this kind may have been in the heart of John. He
+desired to free himself from the conventionalities and restraints of the
+society amid which he had been brought up, that he might develop after
+his own fashion, with no laws but those he received from heaven.
+
+Fatherless, motherless, brotherless, sisterless--a lone man, he passed
+forth into the great and terrible wilderness of Judaea, which is so
+desolate that the Jews called it the abomination of desolation.
+Travellers who have passed over and through it say that it is destitute
+of all animal life, save a chance vulture or fox. For the most part, it
+is a waste of sand, swept by wild winds. When Jesus was there some two
+or three years after, He found nothing to eat; the stones around mocked
+his hunger; and there was no company save that of the wild beasts.
+
+In this great and terrible wilderness, John supported himself by eating
+locusts--the literal insect, which is still greatly esteemed by the
+natives--and wild honey, which abounded in the crevices of the rocks;
+while for clothing he was content with a coat of coarse camel's hair,
+such as the Arab women make still; and a girdle of skin about his loins.
+A cave, like that in which David and his men often found refuge, sufficed
+him for a home, and the water of the streams that hurried to the Dead
+Sea, for his beverage.
+
+Can we wonder that under such a regimen he grew strong? We become weak
+by continual contact with our fellows. We sink to their level, we
+accommodate ourselves to their fashions and whims; we limit the natural
+developments of character on God's plan; we take on the colour of the
+bottom on which we lie. But in loneliness and solitude, wherein we meet
+God, we become strong. God's strong men are rarely clothed in soft
+raiment, or found in kings' courts. Obadiah, who stood in awe of Ahab,
+was a very different man from Elijah, who was of the inhabitants of
+Gilead, and stood before the Lord.
+
+Yes, and there is a source of strength beside. He who is filled and
+taught, as John was, by the Spirit, is strengthened by might in the inner
+man. All things are possible to him that believes. Simon Bar-Jona
+becomes Peter when he touches the Christ. The youths faint and are
+weary, and the young men utterly fall; but they that wait on the Lord
+renew their strength: they who know God are strong and do exploits.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+The Prophet of the Highest.
+
+(LUKE I.)
+
+ "Ye hermits blest, ye holy maids,
+ The nearest heaven on earth,
+ Who talk with God in shadowy glades,
+ Free from rude care and mirth;
+ To whom some viewless Teacher brings
+ The secret love of rural things,
+ The moral of each fleeting cloud and gale,
+ The whispers from above, that haunt the twilight vale."
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+Formative Influences--A Historical Parallel--The Burning of the
+Vanities--"Sent from God"
+
+
+"Thou, child, shalt be called the Prophet of the Most High"--thus
+Zacharias addressed his infant son, as he lay in the midst of that
+group of wondering neighbours and friends. What a thrill of ecstasy
+quivered in the words! A long period, computed at four hundred years,
+had passed since the last great Hebrew prophet had uttered the words of
+the Highest. Reaching back from him to the days of Moses had been a
+long line of prophets, who had passed down the lighted torch from hand
+to hand. And the fourteen generations, during which the prophetic
+office had been discontinued, had gone wearily. But now hope revived,
+as the angel-voice proclaimed the advent of a prophet. Our Lord
+corroborated his words when, in after days, He said that John had been
+a prophet, and something more. "But what went ye out to see?" He
+asked. "A prophet? Yea, I say unto you, and much more than a prophet."
+
+The Hebrew word that stands for _prophet_ is said to be derived from a
+root signifying "to boil or bubble over," and suggests a fountain
+bursting from the heart of the man into which God had poured it. It is
+a mistake to confine the word to the prediction of coming events; for
+so employed it would hardly be applicable to men like Moses, Samuel,
+and Elijah, in the Old Testament, or John the Baptist and the apostle
+Paul, in the New, who were certainly prophets in the deepest
+significance of that term. Prophecy means the forth-telling of the
+Divine message. The prophet is borne along by the stream of Divine
+indwelling and inflowing, whether he utters the truth for the moment or
+anticipates the future. "God spake _in_ the prophets" (Hebrews i. 1,
+R.V.). And when they were conscious of his mighty moving and stirring
+within, woe to them if they did not utter it in burning words, fresh
+minted from the heart.
+
+With Malachi, the succession that had continued unbroken from the very
+foundation of the Jewish commonwealth had terminated. Pious Israelites
+might have found befitting expression for that lament in the words, "We
+see not our signs: there is no more any prophet" (Psa. lxxiv. 9).
+
+But as the voice of Old Testament prophecy ceased, with its last breath
+it foretold that it would be followed, in the after time, by a new and
+glorious revival of the noblest traditions of the prophetic office.
+"Behold," so God spake by Malachi, "I will send you Elijah the prophet
+before the great and terrible day of the Lord come. And he shall turn
+the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children
+to their fathers; lest I come and smite the earth with a curse" (Mal.
+iv. 5, 6).
+
+
+I. THE FORMATIVE INFLUENCES BY WHICH THE BAPTIST'S PROPHETIC NATURE
+WAS MOULDED.--Amongst these we must place in the foremost rank _the
+Prophecies_, which had given a forecast of his career. From his
+childhood and upwards they had been reiterated in his ear by his
+parents, who would never weary of reciting them.
+
+How often he would ponder the reference to himself in the great
+Messianic prediction--"Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your
+God.... The voice of one that crieth, Prepare ye the way of the Lord;
+make straight in the desert a highway for our God...." There was no
+doubt as to the relevance of those words to himself (Luke i. 76; Matt.
+iii. 3). And it must have unconsciously wrought mightily in the
+influence it wielded over his character and ministry.
+
+There was, also, that striking anticipation by Malachi which we have
+already quoted, and which directly suggested Elijah as his model. Had
+not Gabriel himself alluded to it, when he foretold that the predicted
+child would go before the Messiah, in the spirit and power of Elijah
+(Luke i. 17)? And again his statement was confirmed by our Lord in
+after days (Matt. xi. 14).
+
+Thus the great figure of Elijah was ever before the mind of the growing
+youth, as his model and inspiration. He found himself perpetually
+asking, How did Elijah act, and what would he do here and now? And
+there is little doubt that his choice of the lonely wilderness, of the
+rough mantle of camel's hair, of the abrupt and arousing form of
+address, was suggested by that village of Thisbe in the land of Gilead,
+and those personal characteristics which were so familiar in the
+Prophet of Fire.
+
+But the mind of the Forerunner must also have been greatly exercised by
+_the lawlessness and crime_ which involved all classes of his
+countrymen in a common condemnation. The death of Herod, occurring
+when John was yet a child, dependent on the care of the good Elisabeth,
+had led to disturbances which afforded an excuse for the Roman
+occupation of Jerusalem. The sceptre had departed from Judah, and the
+lawgiver from between his feet. The high priesthood was a mere forfeit
+in the deals of Idumaean tetrarchs and Roman governors. The publicans
+were notorious for their exactions, their covetousness, their cheating
+and oppression of the people. Soldiers filled the country with
+violence, extortion, and discontent. The priests were hirelings; the
+Pharisees were hypocrites; the ruling classes had set aside their
+primitive simplicity and purity, and were given up to the
+voluptuousness and licence of the Empire. "Brood of vipers" was
+apparently not too strong a phrase to use of the foremost religious
+leaders of the day--at least, when used, its relevance passed without
+challenge.
+
+Tidings of the evil that was overflowing the land like a deluge of ink
+were constantly coming to the ears of this eager soul, filling it with
+horror and dismay; and to this must be traced much of the austerity
+which arrested the attention of his contemporaries. The idea which
+lies beneath the fasting and privation of so many of God's servants,
+has been that of an overwhelming sorrow, which has taken away all taste
+for the pleasures and comforts of life. And this was the thought by
+which John was penetrated. On the one hand, there was his deep and
+agonizing conviction of the sin of Israel; and on the other, the belief
+that the Messiah must be nigh, even at the doors. Thus the pressure of
+the burden increased on him till he was forced to give utterance to the
+cry it extorted from his soul: "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at
+hand."
+
+But in addition to these we must add _the vision of God_, which must
+have been specially vouchsafed to him whilst he sojourned in those
+lonely wilds. He spoke once of Him "who sent him to baptize."
+Evidently he had become accustomed to detect his presence and hear his
+voice. Those still small accents which had fallen on the ear of his
+great prototype had thrilled his soul. He, too, had seen the Lord high
+and lifted up, had heard the chant of the seraphim, and had felt the
+live coal touch his lips, as it had been caught from the altar by the
+seraph's tongs.
+
+This has ever been characteristic of the true prophet. He has been a
+seer. He has spoken, because he has beheld with his eyes, looked upon,
+and handled, the very Word of God. The Divine Prophet, speaking for
+all that had preceded Him, said: "We speak that which we know, and
+testify that we have seen."
+
+In this we may have some share. It is permitted to us also to see; to
+climb the Mount of Vision, and look on the glory of God in the face of
+Jesus Christ; to have revealed to us things that eye hath not seen, nor
+ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived. Let us remember that we are
+to be God's _witnesses_ in the Jerusalem of the home, the Judaea of our
+immediate neighbours, and to the uttermost parts of the earth of our
+profession or daily calling. God demands not advocates, but witnesses;
+and we must see for ourselves, before we can bear witness to others,
+the glory of that light still flushing our faces, and the accent of
+conviction minted in our speech.
+
+These are the three signs of a prophet: vision, a deep conviction of
+sin and impending judgment, and the gushing forth of moving and
+eloquent speech; and each of these was apparent, in an exalted and
+extreme degree, in John the son of Zacharias.
+
+
+II. AN ILLUSTRATIVE AND REMARKABLE PARALLEL.--As John came in the
+spirit and power of Elijah, so, four hundred years ago, in the lovely
+city of Florence, a man was sent from God to testify against the sins
+of his age, who in many particulars so exactly corresponds with our
+Lord's forerunner that the one strongly recalls the other, and it may
+help us to bring the circumstances of the Baptist's ministry within a
+measurable distance of ourselves if we briefly compare them with the
+career of Girolamo Savonarola. It must, of course, be always borne in
+mind that the great Florentine could lay no claim to the peculiar and
+unique position and power of the Baptist. But, in many respects, there
+is a remarkable parallel and similarity between them, which will help
+us to translate the old Hebrew conceptions into our modern life.
+
+The physician's household at Ferrara, into which Savonarola was born on
+September 21, 1452, was probably no more distinguished amid other
+families of the town than that of Zacharias and Elisabeth in the hill
+country of Judaea.
+
+And as we read of the invincible love of truth which characterized the
+keen and intelligent lad, we are forcibly reminded of the Baptist,
+whose whole life was an eloquent protest on behalf of reality. In one
+of his greatest sermons Savonarola declared that he had always striven
+after truth with all his might, and maintained a constant war against
+falsehood. "The more trouble"--they are his own words--"I bestowed
+upon my quest, the greater became my longing, so that for it I was
+prepared to abandon life itself. When I was but a boy, I had such
+thoughts; and from that time, the desire and longing after this good
+has gone on increasing to the present day."
+
+We cannot read of Savonarola's saintly life, over which even the breath
+of calumny has never cast a stain--of his depriving himself of every
+indulgence, content with the hardest couch and roughest clothing, and
+just enough of the plainest food to support life--without remembering
+the camel's cloth, the locusts and wild honey of the Baptist.
+
+If John's lot was cast on evil days, when religion suffered most in the
+house of her friends, so was it with Savonarola. The fourteenth and
+fifteenth centuries witnessed the increasing corruption and
+licentiousness of popes and clergy. The offices of cardinal and bishop
+were put up to auction, and sold to the highest bidder. The bishop
+extorted money from the priests, and these robbed the people. The
+grossest immorality was prevalent in all ranks of the Church, and
+without concealment. Even the monasteries and convents were often dens
+of vice. "Italy," said Machiavelli, "has lost all piety and all
+religion. We have to thank the Church and the priests for our
+abandoned wickedness."
+
+As John beheld the fire and fan of impending judgment, so the burden of
+Savonarola's preaching was that the Church was about to be chastised,
+and afterwards renewed. So powerful was this impression on the
+preacher's mind that it can best be described in his own words as a
+vision. He tells us that on one occasion the heavens seemed to open
+before him, and there appeared a representation of the calamities that
+were coming on the Church; on another, he saw, in the middle of the
+sky, a hand bearing a sword, on which words of doom were written. He
+described himself as one who looked into the invisible world.
+
+The herald of Jesus possessed a marvellous eloquence, beneath which the
+whole land was moved; and so it was with Savonarola. During the eight
+years that he preached in the cathedral, it was thronged with vast
+crowds; and as he pleaded for purity of life and simplicity of manners,
+"women threw aside jewels and finery, libertines were transformed into
+sober citizens, bankers and tradesmen restored their ill-gotten gains."
+In Lent, 1497, took place what is known as the Burning of the Vanities.
+Bands of children were sent forth to collect from all parts of the
+city, indecent books and pictures, carnival masks and costumes, cards,
+dice, and all such things. A pile was erected, sixty feet in height,
+and fired amid the sound of trumpets and pealing bells.
+
+What Herod was to John the Baptist, the Pope and the magnificent
+Lorenzo di Medici were to Savonarola. The latter seems to have felt a
+strange fascination towards the eloquent preacher, tried to attach him
+to his court, was frequent in his attendance at San Marco, and gave
+largely to his offertories. To use the words of the New Testament, he
+feared him, "knowing that he was a righteous man, and a holy" (Mark vi.
+20). But Savonarola took care to avoid any sign of compliance or
+compromise; declined to pay homage to Lorenzo for promotion to high
+ecclesiastical functions; returned his gold from the offertories; and
+when they ran to tell him that Lorenzo was walking in the convent
+garden, answered, "If he has not asked for me, do not disturb his
+meditations or mine."
+
+Like John, Savonarola was unceasing in his denunciation of the
+hypocritical religion which satisfied itself with outward observances.
+"I tell you," he said, "that the Lord willeth not that ye fast on such
+a day or at such an hour; but willeth that ye avoid sin all the days of
+your life. Observe how they go about--seeking indulgences and pardons,
+ringing bells, decking altars, dressing churches. God heedeth not your
+ceremonies."
+
+John's exhortation to "Behold the Lamb of God" finds an echo in the
+noble utterance of this illumined soul, who, be it remembered,
+anticipated Luther's Reformation by a hundred years. "If all the
+ecclesiastical hierarchy be corrupt, the believer must turn to Christ,
+who is the primary cause, and say: 'Thou art my Priest and my
+Confessor.'"
+
+The fate of martyrdom that befell John was awarded also to Savonarola.
+Through the impetuosity of his followers, he was involved in a
+challenge to ordeal by fire. But by the manoeuvres of his foes, the
+expectations of the populace in this direction were disappointed, and
+their anger aroused. "To San Marco!" shouted their leaders. To San
+Marco they went, fired the buildings, burst open the doors, fought
+their way into the cloisters and church, dragged Savonarola from his
+devotions, and thrust him into a loathsome dungeon. After languishing
+there, amid every indignity and torture, for some weeks, on May 23,
+1498, he was led forth to die. The bishop, whose duty it was to
+pronounce his degradation, stumbled at the formula declaring--"I
+separate thee from the Church, militant and triumphant." "From the
+militant thou mayest, but from the triumphant thou canst not," was the
+martyr's calm reply. He met his end with unflinching fortitude. He
+was strangled, his remains hung in chains, burned, and the ashes flung
+into the river. When the commissioners of the Pope arrived at his
+trial, they brought with them express orders that he was to die, "even
+though he were a _second John the Baptist_." It is thus that the
+apostate Church has always dealt with her noblest sons. But Truth,
+struck to the ground, revives. Hers are the eternal years. Within a
+few years, Luther was nailing his theses at the door of the church at
+Wittenberg, and the Reformation was on its way.
+
+There is a legend, which at least contains a true suggestion, that when
+Savonarola was on his way to Florence from Genoa, as a young man, his
+strength failed him as he was crossing the Apennines, but that a
+mysterious stranger appeared to him, restored his courage, led him to a
+hospice, compelled him to take food, and afterwards accompanied him to
+his destination; but on reaching the San Gallo gate he vanished, with
+the words, _Remember to do that for which God hath sent thee!_
+
+The story recalls forcibly the words with which the evangelist John
+introduces his notice of the Forerunner--"There was a man sent from
+God, whose name was John." Men are always coming, sent from God,
+specially adapted to their age, and entrusted with the message which
+the times demand. See to it that thou too realize thy divine mission;
+for Jesus said, "As the Father hath sent Me, even so send I you."
+Every true life is a mission from God.
+
+And when we read the words of the apostle Paul about John "fulfilling
+his course," we may well ask for grace that we may fill up to the brim
+the measure of our opportunities, that we may realize to the full God's
+meaning and intention in creating us: and so our lives shall mate with
+the Divine Ideal, like sublime words with some heavenly strain, each
+completing the other.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+The First Ministry of the Baptist.
+
+(LUKE III.)
+
+ "Hark, what a sound, and too divine for hearing,
+ Stirs on the earth and trembles in the air!
+ Is it the thunder of the Lord's appearing?
+ Is it the music of his people's prayer?
+
+ "Surely He cometh, and a thousand voices
+ Shout to the saints, and to the deaf and dumb;
+ Surely He cometh, and the earth rejoices,
+ Glad in his coming who hath sworn, I come."
+ F. W. H. MYERS.
+
+
+The Preaching of Repentance--His Power as a Preacher--His
+Message--Warning of Impending Judgment--The Wages of Sin
+
+
+Thirty years had left their mark on the Forerunner. The aged priest
+and his wife Elisabeth had been carried to their grave by other hands
+than those of the young Nazarite. The story of his miraculous birth,
+and the expectations it had aroused, had almost died out of the memory
+of the countryside. For many years John had been living in the caves
+that indent the limestone rocks of the desolate wilderness which
+extends from Hebron to the western shores of the Dead Sea. By the use
+of the scantiest fare, and roughest garb, he had brought his body under
+complete mastery. From nature, from the inspired page, and from direct
+fellowship with God, he had received revelations which are only
+vouchsafed to those who can stand the strain of discipline in the
+school of solitude and privation. He had carefully pondered also the
+signs of the times, of which he received information from the Bedouin
+and others with whom he came in contact. Blended with all other
+thoughts, John's heart was filled with the advent of Him, so near akin
+to himself, who, to his certain knowledge, was growing up, a few months
+his junior, in an obscure highland home, but who was speedily to be
+manifested to Israel.
+
+At last the moment arrived for him to utter the mighty burden that
+pressed upon him; and "in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar,
+Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea, Herod the tetrarch of Galilee,
+Annas and Caiaphas the high priests, the word of God came unto John,
+the son of Zacharias, in the wilderness." It may have befallen thus.
+One day, as a caravan of pilgrims was slowly climbing the mountain
+gorges threaded by the road between Jerusalem and Jericho, or halted
+for a moment in the noontide heat, they were startled by the appearance
+of a gaunt and sinewy man, with flowing raven locks, and a voice which
+must have been as sonorous and penetrating as a clarion, who cried,
+"Repent! the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand."
+
+It was as though a spark had fallen on dry tinder. The tidings spread
+with wonderful rapidity that in the wilderness of Judaea one was to be
+met who recalled the memory of the great prophets, and whose burning
+eloquence was of the same order as of Isaiah or Ezekiel. Instantly
+people began to flock to him from all sides. "There went out to him
+Jerusalem, and all Judaea, and all the region round about Jordan." The
+neighbourhood suddenly became black with hurrying crowds--as Klondike,
+when the news of the discovery of gold began to spread. From lip to
+lip the tidings sped of a great leader and preacher, who had suddenly
+appeared.
+
+He seems finally to have taken his stand not far from the rose-clad
+oasis of Jericho, on the banks of the Jordan; and men of every tribe,
+class, and profession, gathered thither, listening eagerly, or
+interrupting him with loud cries for help. The population of the
+metropolis, familiar with the Temple services, and accustomed to the
+splendour of the palace; fishermen from the Lake of Gennesaret, dusky
+sons of Ishmael from the desert of Gilead; the proud Pharisee; the
+detested publican, who had fattened on the sorrows and burdens of the
+people--were there, together with crowds of ordinary people that could
+find no resting-place in the schools or systems of religious thought of
+which Jerusalem was the centre.
+
+
+1. MANY CAUSES ACCOUNTED FOR JOHN'S IMMENSE POPULARITY.--_The office
+of the prophet was almost obsolete_. Several centuries, as we have
+seen, had passed since the last great prophet had finished his
+testimony. The oldest man living at that time could not remember
+having seen a man who had ever spoken to a prophet. It seemed as
+unlikely, to adopt the phrase of another, that another prophet should
+arise in that formal, materialistic age, as that another cathedral
+should be added to the splendid remains of Gothic glory which tell us
+of those bygone days when there were giants in the land.
+
+Moreover, _John gave such abundant evidence of sincerity--of reality_.
+His independence of anything that this world could give made men feel
+that whatever he said was inspired by his direct contact with things as
+they literally are. It was certain that his severe and lonely life had
+rent the vail, and given him the knowledge of facts and realities,
+which were as yet hidden from ordinary men, though waiting, soon to be
+revealed; and it was equally certain that his words were a faithful and
+adequate presentation of what he saw. He spoke what he knew, and
+testified what he had seen. His accent of conviction was unmistakable.
+When men see the professed prophet of the Unseen and Eternal as keen
+after his own interests as any worldling, shrewd at a bargain,
+captivated by show, obsequious to the titled and wealthy; when they
+discover the man who predicts the dissolution of all things carefully
+investing the proceeds of the books in which he publishes his
+predictions--they are apt to reduce to a minimum their faith in his
+words. But there was no trace of this in the Baptist, and therefore
+the people went forth to him.
+
+_Above all, he appealed to their moral convictions, and, indeed,
+expressed them_. The people knew that they were not as they should be.
+For a long time this consciousness had been gaining ground; and now
+they flocked around the man who revealed themselves to themselves, and
+indicated with unfaltering decision the course of action they should
+adopt. How marvellous is the fascination which he exerts over men who
+will speak to their inner-most souls! This has always been the source
+of power to the great orators of the Romish Church--men like Massillon,
+for instance--and to refuse to use this method of approach is to forego
+one of the mightiest weapons in the repertory of Christian appeal. If
+we deal only with the intellect or imagination, the novelist or
+essayist may successfully compete with us. It is in his direct appeal
+to the heart and conscience, that the servant of God exerts his supreme
+and unrivalled power. Though a man may shrink from the preaching of
+repentance, yet, if it tell the truth about himself, he will be
+irresistibly attracted to hear the voice that harrows his soul. John
+rebuked Herod for many things; but still the royal offender sent for
+him again and again, and heard him gladly.
+
+It is expressly said that John saw many Pharisees and Sadducees coming
+to his baptism (Matt. iii. 7). Their advent appears to have caused him
+some surprise. "Ye offspring of vipers, who warned you to flee from
+the wrath to come?" The strong epithet he used of them suggests that
+they came as critics, because they were unwilling to surrender the
+leadership of the religious life of Israel, and were anxious to keep in
+touch with the new movement, until they could sap its vitality, or
+divert its force into the channels of their own influence.
+
+But it is quite likely that in many cases there were deeper reasons.
+_The Pharisees_ were the ritualists and formalists of their day, who
+would wrangle about the breadth of a phylactery, and decide to an inch
+how far a man might walk on the Sabbath day; but the mere externals of
+religion will never permanently satisfy the soul made in the likeness
+of God. Ultimately it will turn from them with a great nausea and an
+insatiable desire for the living God. As for _the Sadducees_, they
+were the materialists of their time. The reaction of superstition, it
+has been said, is to infidelity; and the reaction from Pharisaism was
+to Sadduceeism. Disgusted and outraged by the trifling of the
+literalists of Scripture interpretation, the Sadducee denied that there
+was an eternal world and a spiritual state, and asserted that "there is
+no resurrection, neither angel, nor spirit." But mere negation can
+never satisfy. The heart still moans out its sorrow under the darkness
+of agnosticism, as the ocean sighing under a starless midnight.
+Nature's instincts are more cogent than reason. It was hardly to be
+wondered at, then, that these two great classes were largely
+represented in the crowds that gathered on the banks of the Jordan.
+
+
+II. LET US BRIEFLY ENUMERATE THE MAIN BURDEN OF THE BAPTIST'S
+PREACHING.--(1) "_The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand_." To a Jew that
+phrase meant the re-establishment of the Theocracy, and a return to
+those great days in the history of his people when God Himself was
+Lawgiver and King. Had not Daniel predicted that in the days of the
+last of the great empires, prefigured in Nebuchadnezzar's dream, the
+God of heaven would set up a kingdom which should never be
+destroyed--which should break in pieces all other kingdoms and stand
+for ever? Had he not foreseen a time when One like unto a son of man
+should come to the Ancient of Days to receive a dominion which should
+not pass away, and a kingdom which should not be destroyed? Had he not
+foretold that the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven
+should be given to the saints of the Most High? Surely, then, all
+these anticipations were on the eve of fulfilment. The long-expected
+Messiah was at hand; and here was the forerunner described by Isaiah,
+the prophet, saying:--
+
+ "The voice of one crying in the wilderness,
+ Make ye ready the way of the Lord,
+ Make his paths straight."
+
+
+But some misgiving must have passed over the minds of his hearers when
+they heard the young prophet's description of the conditions and
+accompaniments of that long-looked-for reign. Instead of dilating on
+the material glory of the Messianic period, far surpassing the
+magnificent splendour of Solomon, he insisted on the fulfilment of
+certain necessary preliminary requirements, which lifted the whole
+conception of the anticipated reign to a new level, in which the inward
+and spiritual took precedence of the outward and material. It was the
+old lesson, which in every age requires repetition, that unless a man
+is born again, and from above, he cannot see the kingdom of God.
+
+Be sure of this, that no outward circumstances, however propitious and
+favourable, can bring about true blessedness. We might be put into the
+midst of heaven itself, and be poor, and miserable, and blind, and
+naked, unless the heart were in loving union with the Lamb, who is in
+the midst of the throne. He is the light of that city, his countenance
+doth lighten it--from his throne the river of its pleasure flows, his
+service is its delightful business; and to be out of fellowship with
+Him would make us out of harmony with its joy. Life must be centred in
+Christ if it is to be concentric with all the circles of heaven's
+bliss. We can never be at rest or happy whilst we expect to find our
+fresh springs in outward circumstances. It is only when we are right
+with God that we are blest and at rest. Righteousness is blessedness.
+Where the King is enthroned within the heart, the soul is in the
+kingdom, which is righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost;
+nay, perhaps more accurately, that kingdom is in the soul. And when
+all hearts are yielded to the King; when all gates lift up their heads,
+and all everlasting doors are unfolded for his entrance--then the curse
+which has so long brooded over the world shall be done away. The whole
+creation groaneth and travaileth for the manifestation of the sons of
+God: but when they are revealed in all their beauty, then judgment
+shall dwell in the wilderness, and righteousness shall abide in the
+fruitful field, and the work of righteousness shall be peace, and the
+effect of righteousness quietness and confidence for ever; and the
+mirage shall become a pool, and the thirsty ground springs of water
+(Isa. xxxii. 15, 16; xxxv. 7, R.V.).
+
+(2) Alongside the proclamation of the kingdom was the uncompromising
+insistence on "_the wrath to come_." John saw that the Advent of the
+King would bring inevitable suffering to those who were living in
+self-indulgence and sin.
+
+There would be careful discrimination. He who was coming would
+carefully discern between the righteous and the wicked; between those
+who served God and those who served Him not: and the preacher enforced
+his words by an image familiar to orientals. When the wheat is reaped,
+it is bound in sheaves and carted to the threshing-floor, which is
+generally a circular spot of hard ground from fifty to one hundred feet
+in diameter. On this the wheat is threshed from the chaff by manual
+labour, but the two lie intermingled till the evening, when the grain
+is caught up in broad shovels or fans, and thrown against the evening
+breeze, as it passes swiftly over the fevered land; thus the light
+chaff is borne away, while the wheat falls heavily to the earth.
+Likewise, cried the Baptist, there shall be a very careful process of
+discrimination, before the unquenchable fires are lighted; so that none
+but chaff shall be consigned to the flames--a prediction which was
+faithfully fulfilled. At first Christ drew all men to Himself; but, as
+his ministry proceeded, He revealed their quality. A few were
+permanently attracted to Him; the majority were as definitely repelled.
+There was no middle class. Men were either for or against Him. The
+sheep on this side; the goats on that. The five wise virgins, and the
+five foolish. Those who entered the strait gate, and those who flocked
+down the broad way that leadeth to destruction. So it has been in
+every age. Jesus Christ is the touchstone of trial. Our attitude
+towards Him reveals the true quality of the soul.
+
+There would also be a period of probation. "The axe laid to the root
+of the trees" is familiar enough to those who know anything of
+forestry. The woodman barks some tree which seems to him to be
+occupying space capable of being put to better use. There is no undue
+haste. It is only after severe and searching scrutiny that the word
+goes forth: "Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?" But when once
+that word is spoken, there is no appeal. The Jewish people had become
+sadly unfruitful; but a definite period was to intervene--three years
+of Christ's ministry and thirty years beside--before the threatened
+judgment befell. All this while the axe lay ready for its final
+stroke; but only when all hope of reformation was abandoned was it
+driven home, and the nation crashed to its doom.
+
+Perhaps this may be the case with one of my readers. You have been
+planted on a favourable site, and have drunk in the dews and rain and
+sunshine of God's providence; but what fruit have you yielded in
+return? How have you repaid the heavenly Husbandman? May He not be
+considering whether any result will accrue from prolonging your
+opportunities for bearing fruit? He has looked for grapes, and lo, you
+have brought forth only wild grapes; He may well consider the
+advisability of removing you from the stewardship, which you have used
+for your own emolument, and not for his glory.
+
+For all such there must be "wrath to come." After there has been
+searching scrutiny and investigation, and every reasonable chance has
+been given for amendment, and still the soul is impenitent and
+disobedient, there must be "a certain fearful looking for of judgment
+and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries."
+
+The fire of John's preaching had its primary fulfilment, probably, in
+the awful disasters which befell the Jewish people, culminating in the
+siege and fall of Jerusalem. We know how marvellously the little
+handful of believers which had been gathered out by the preaching of
+Christ and his disciples were accounted worthy to escape all those
+things that came to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man. But the
+unbelieving mass of the Jewish people were discovered to be worthless
+chaff and unfruitful trees, and assigned to those terrible fires which
+have left a scar on Palestine to this day.
+
+But there was a deeper meaning. The wrath of God avenges itself, not
+on nations but on individual sinners. "He that believeth not the Son
+shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." The penalty
+of sin is inevitable. The wages of sin is death. The land which
+beareth thorns and thistles, after having drunk of the rain which
+cometh often upon it, is rejected and nigh unto a curse, its end is to
+be burned; under the first covenant, every transgression and
+disobedience received a just recompense of reward; the man that set at
+nought Moses' law died without compassion, on the word of two or three
+witnesses--of how much sorer punishment shall he be judged worthy who
+hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of
+the covenant a common thing, and hath done despite to the Spirit of
+grace!
+
+Even if we grant, as of course we must, that many of the expressions
+referring to the ultimate fate of the ungodly are symbolical, yet it
+must be granted also, that they have counterparts in the realm of soul
+and spirit, which are as terrible to endure, as the nature of the soul
+is more highly organized than that of the body. Fire to the body is
+easy to bear in comparison with certain forms of suffering to which the
+heart and soul are sometimes exposed even in this life. Have we not
+sometimes said, "If physical suffering were concerned, we could bear
+it; but oh, this pain which is gnawing at the heart--this awful inward
+agony, which burns like fire!" And if we are capable of suffering so
+acutely from remorse and shame, from ingratitude and misrepresentation,
+in this life where there are so many distractions and temporary
+alleviations, what may not be the possibility of pain in that other
+life, where there is no screen, no covering, no alleviation, no cup of
+water to slake the thirst! Believe me, when Jesus said, "These shall
+go away into eternal punishment," He contemplated a retribution so
+terrible, that it were good for the sufferers if they had never been
+born.
+
+All the great preachers have seen and faithfully borne witness to the
+fearful results of sin, as they take effect in this life and the next.
+These threw Brainerd into a dripping sweat, whilst praying on a cool
+day for his Indians in the woods; these drew John Welsh from his bed,
+at all hours of the night, to plead for his people; these inspired
+Baxter to write his _Call to the Unconverted_; these drew Henry Martyn
+from his fellowship at Cambridge to the burning plains of India; these
+forced tears from Whitefield as he preached to the crowding thousands;
+these burn in the memorable sermon by Jonathan Edwards on "Sinners in
+the hands of an angry God." The notable revival which broke out at
+Kirk o' Shotts was due, under God, to Livingston congratulating the
+people that drops of rain alone were falling, and not the fire of
+Divine wrath. The sermons of Ralph Erskine, of McCheyne and W. C.
+Burns, of Brownlow Northland Reginald Radcliffe, in the last
+generation, were characterized by the same appeals. Though, on the
+other hand, because God is not confined to any one method, the
+preaching of the late D. L. Moody was specially steeped in the love of
+God. It is for want of a vision of the inevitable fate of the godless
+and disobedient, that much of our present-day preaching is so powerless
+and ephemeral. You cannot get crops out of the land merely by summer
+showers and sunshine; there must be the subsoil ploughing, the
+pulverizing frost, the wild March wind. And only when we modern
+preachers have seen sin as God sees it, and begin to apply the divine
+standard to the human conscience; only when our eagerness and yearning
+well over into our eyes and broken tones, only when we know the terror
+of the Lord, and begin to persuade men as though we would pluck them
+out of the fire, by our strenuous expostulation and entreaties--shall
+we see the effects that followed the preaching of the Baptist when
+soldiers, publicans, Pharisees, and scribes, crowded around him,
+saying, "What shall we do?"
+
+All John's preaching, therefore, led up to the demand for repentance.
+The word which was oftenest on his lips was "Repent ye!" It was not
+enough to plead direct descent from Abraham, or outward conformity with
+the Levitical and Temple rites. God could raise up children to Abraham
+from the stones of the river bank. There must be the renunciation of
+sin, the definite turning to God, the bringing forth of fruit meet for
+an amended life. In no other way could the people be prepared for the
+coming of the Lord.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+Baptism unto Repentance
+
+(MARK I. 4.)
+
+ "The last and greatest herald of heaven's King,
+ Girt with rough skins, hies to the desert wild;
+ Among that savage brood the woods doth bring,
+ Which he more harmless found than man, and mild.
+
+ "His food was locusts and what there doth spring,
+ With honey that from virgin hives distill'd,
+ Parch'd body, hollow eyes, some uncouth thing
+ Made him appear, long since from earth exiled."
+ W. DRUMMOND, of Hawthornden.
+
+
+Repentance: its Nature--Repentance: how Produced--Repentance: its
+Evidences--Repentance: its Results--John's Baptism: from Heaven
+
+
+At the time of which we are speaking, an extraordinary sect, known as
+the Essenes, was scattered throughout Palestine, but had its special
+home in the oasis of Engedi; and with the adherents of this community
+John must have been in frequent association. They were the recluses or
+hermits of their age.
+
+The aim of the Essenes was moral and ceremonial purity. They sought
+after an ideal of holiness, which they thought could not be realized in
+this world; and therefore, leaving villages and towns, they betook
+themselves to the dens and caves of the earth, and gave themselves to
+continence, abstinence, fastings, and prayers, supporting themselves by
+some slight labours on the land. Those who have investigated their
+interesting history tell us that the cardinal point with them was faith
+in the inspired Word of God. By meditation, prayer, and mortification,
+frequent ablutions, and strict attention to the laws of ceremonial
+purity, they hoped to reach the highest stage of communion with God.
+They agreed with the Pharisees in their extraordinary regard for the
+Sabbath. Their daily meal was of the simplest kind, and partaken of in
+their house of religious assembly. After bathing, with prayer and
+exhortation they went, with veiled faces, to their dining-room, as to a
+holy temple. They abstained from oaths, despised riches, manifested
+the greatest abhorrence of war and slavery, faced torture and death
+with the utmost bravery, refused the indulgence of pleasure.
+
+It is clear that John was not a member of this holy community, which
+differed widely from the Pharisaism and Sadduceeism of the time. The
+Essenes wore white robes, emblematic of the purity they sought; whilst
+he was content with his coat of camel's hair and leathern girdle. They
+seasoned their bread with hyssop, and he with honey. They dwelt in
+brotherhoods and societies; while he stood alone from the earliest days
+of his career. But it cannot be doubted that he was in deep accord
+with much of the doctrine and practice of this sect.
+
+John the Baptist, however, cannot be accounted for by any of the
+pre-existing conditions of his time. He stood alone in his God-given
+might. That he was conscious of this appears from his own declaration
+when he said, "He that sent me to baptize in water, He said unto me."
+And that Christ wished to convey the same impression is clear from his
+question to the Pharisees: "The baptism of John, was it from heaven or
+from men?" Moreover, the distinct assertion of the Spirit of God,
+through the fourth Evangelist, informs us: "There came a man, sent from
+God, whose name was John, the same came for witness, that all might
+believe through him." "The Word of God came unto John, the son of
+Zacharias, in the wilderness. And he came."
+
+
+I. THE SUMMONS TO REPENT.--John has a ministry with all men. In other
+words, he represents a phase of teaching and influence through which we
+must needs pass if we are properly to discover and appreciate the grace
+of Christ. With us, too, a preparatory work has to be done. There are
+mountains and hills of pride and self-will that have to be levelled;
+crooked and devious ways that have to be straightened; ruggednesses
+that have to be smoothed--before we can fully behold the glory of God
+in the face of Jesus Christ. In proportion to the thoroughness and
+permanence of our repentance will be our glad realization of the
+fulness and glory of the Lamb of God.
+
+But we must guard ourselves here, lest it be supposed that repentance
+is a species of good work which must be performed in order that we may
+merit the grace of Christ. It must be made equally clear, that
+repentance must not be viewed apart from faith in the Saviour, which is
+an integral part of it. It is also certain that, though "God
+commandeth all men everywhere to repent," yet Jesus is exalted "to give
+repentance and the remission of sins."
+
+Repentance, according to the literal rendering of the Greek word, is "a
+change of mind." Perhaps we should rather say, it is a change in the
+attitude of the will. The unrepentant soul chooses its own way and
+will, regardless of the law of God. "The mind of the flesh is enmity
+against God, for it is not subject to the law of God, neither, indeed,
+can it be; and they that are in the flesh cannot please God." But in
+repentance the soul changes its attitude. It no longer refuses the
+yoke of God's will, like a restive heifer, but yields to it, or is
+willing to yield. There is a compunction, a sense of the hollowness of
+all created things, a relenting, a wistful yearning after the true
+life, and ultimately a turning from darkness to light, and from the
+power of Satan unto God. The habits may rebel; the inclinations and
+emotions may shrink back; the consciousness of peace and joy may yet be
+far away--but the will has made its secret decision, and has begun to
+turn to God: as, in the revolution of the earth, the place where we
+live reaches its furthest point from the sunlight, passes it, and
+begins slowly to return towards its warm smiles and embrace.
+
+It cannot be too strongly emphasized that repentance is an act of the
+_will_. In its beginning there may be no sense of gladness or
+reconciliation with God: but just the consciousness that certain ways
+of life are wrong, mistaken, hurtful, and grieving to God; and the
+desire, which becomes the determination, to turn from them, to seek Him
+who formed the mountains and created the wind, that maketh the morning
+darkness and treadeth upon the high places of the earth.
+
+Repentance may be accounted as the other side of faith. They are the
+two sides of the same coin: the two aspects of the same act. If the
+act of the soul which brings it into right relation with God is
+described as a turning round, to go in the reverse direction to that in
+which it had been travelling, then _repentance_ stands for its desire
+and choice to turn from sin, and _faith_ for its desire and choice to
+turn to God. We must be willing to turn from sin and our own
+righteousness--that is _repentance_; we must be willing to be saved by
+God, in his own way, and must come to Him for that purpose--that is
+_faith_.
+
+We need to turn from our own righteousnesses as well as from our sins.
+Augustine spoke of his efforts after righteousness as splendid sins;
+and Paul distinctly disavows all those attempts to stand right with God
+which he made before he saw the face of the risen Christ looking out
+from heaven upon his conscience-stricken spirit. You must turn away
+from your own efforts to save yourself. These are, in the words of the
+prophet, but "filthy rags." Nothing, apart from the Saviour and his
+work, can avail the soul, which must meet the scrutiny of eternal
+justice and purity.
+
+Repentance is produced sometimes and specially by the presentation of
+the claims of Christ. We suddenly awake to realize what He is, how He
+loves, how much we are missing, the gross ingratitude with which we
+respond to his agony and bloody sweat, his cross and suffering, the
+beauty of his character, the strength of his claims.
+
+At other times repentance is wrought by the preaching of John the
+Baptist. Then we hear of the axe laid at the root of the trees, and
+the unquenchable fire for the consuming of the chaff: and the heart
+trembles. Then we are led to the brink of the precipice, and compelled
+to see the point at which the primrose-path we are travelling ends in
+the fatal abyss. Then our faith in our hereditary position and
+privilege is shattered by the iconoclasm of the preacher; and we are
+levelled to the position of stones which are lapped by the Jordan, but
+are insensible to its touch. It is at such a time as this that the
+soul sees the entire fabric of its vain confidences and hopes crumbling
+like a cloud-palace, and turns from it all--as Mary from the sepulchre,
+where her hopes lay entombed, to find Jesus standing with the
+resurrection glory on his face and radiant love in his eyes.
+
+For purposes of clear thinking it is well to discriminate in our use of
+the words Repentance and Penitence, using the former of the first act
+of the will, when, energized and quickened by the Spirit of God, it
+turns from dead works to serve the living and true God; and the latter,
+of the emotions which are powerfully wrought upon, as the years pass,
+by the Spirit's presentation of all the pain and grief which our sin
+has caused, and is causing, to our blessed Lord. We repent once, but
+are penitents always. We repent in the will; we are penitent in the
+heart. We repent, and believe the Gospel; we believe the Gospel of the
+Son of Man, and as we look on Him, whom our sins have pierced, we
+mourn. We repent when we obey his call to come unto Him and live; we
+are penitent as we stand behind Him weeping, and begin to wash his feet
+with our tears, and to wipe them with the hair of our head.
+
+If John the Baptist has never wrought his work in you, be sure to open
+your heart to his piercing voice. Let him fulfil his ministry. See
+that you do not reject the counsel of God, as it proceeds from his
+lips; but expose your soul to its searching scrutiny, and allow it to
+have free and uninterrupted course. He comes to prepare the way of the
+Lord, and to make through the desert of our nature a highway for our
+God. Of course, if, from the earliest you have been under the nurture
+of pious parents, and your young heart turned to God in the early dawn
+of consciousness, you will not pass through these experiences as those
+must who have spent years in the service of Satan. For these there is
+but one word--Repent! They must, in a moment of time, take up an
+entirely different attitude to God and holiness, to Christ and his
+salvation.
+
+II. THE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF REPENTANCE.--(1) _Confession_. "They
+were baptized of him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins." What
+this precisely means it is not possible to say in detail; but it is not
+improbable that beneath the strong pressure of inward remorse and
+bitterness of spirit, men of notoriously bad life, as well as those who
+had never abandoned themselves to the mad currents of temptation, but
+were none the less conscious of heart and hidden sins, stood up,
+"confessing and declaring their deeds," as in a memorable scene long
+afterwards (Acts xix. 17-20).
+
+The formalist confessed that the whited sepulchre of his religious
+observances had concealed a mass of putrefaction. The sceptic
+confessed that his refusal of religion was largely due to his hatred of
+the demands of God's holy law. The multitudes confessed that they had
+been selfish and sensual, shutting up their compassions, and refusing
+clothing and food to the needy. The publican confessed that he had
+extorted by false accusation and oppression more than his due. The
+soldier confessed that his profession had often served as the cloak for
+terrorizing the poor and vamping up worthless accusations. The
+notoriously evil liver confessed that he had lain in wait for blood,
+and destroyed the innocent and helpless for gain or hate. The air was
+laden with the cries and sighs of the stricken multitudes, who beheld
+their sin for the first time in the light of eternity and of its
+inevitable doom. The lurid flames of "the wrath to come" cast their
+searching light on practices which, in the comparative twilight of
+ignorance and neglect, had passed without special notice.
+
+Upon that river's brink, men not only confessed to God, but probably
+also to one another. Life-long feuds were reconciled; old quarrels
+were settled; frank words of apology and forgiveness were exchanged;
+hands grasped hands for the first time after years of alienation and
+strife.
+
+Confession is an essential sign of a genuine repentance, and without it
+forgiveness is impossible. "He that covereth his transgressions shall
+not prosper; but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall obtain
+mercy." "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us
+our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." So long as we
+keep silence, our bones wax old through our inward anguish; we are
+burnt by the fire of slow fever; we toss restlessly, though on a couch
+of down. But on confession there is immediate relief. "I said, I will
+confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and Thou forgavest me the
+iniquity of my sin."
+
+Confess your sin to God, O troubled soul, from whom the vision of
+Christ is veiled. It is more than likely that some undetected or
+unconfessed sin is shutting out the rays of the true sun. Excuse
+nothing, extenuate nothing, omit nothing. Do not speak of mistakes of
+judgment, but of lapses of heart and will. Do not be content with a
+general confession; be particular and specific. Drag each evil thing
+forth before God's judgment bar; let the secrets be exposed, and the
+dark, sad story told. Begin at the beginning, and go steadily through.
+Only be very careful to leave no trace of your experiences for human
+eyes or ears. To tell this story to another will rob it of its value
+to yourself and its acceptableness to God. It is enough for God to
+know it; and to tell Him all is to receive at once his assurance of
+forgiveness, for the sake of Him who loved us and gave Himself a
+propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but for those of the
+whole world. Directly the confession leaves our heart, nay, whilst it
+is in process, the Divine voice is heard assuring us that our sins,
+which are many, are put away as far as the east is from the west, and
+cast into the depths of the sea.
+
+But such confession should not be made to God alone, when sins are in
+question which have injured and alienated others. If our brother has
+aught against us, we must find him out, while our gift is left
+unpresented at the altar, and first be reconciled to him. We must
+write the letter, or speak the word; we must make honourable reparation
+and amends; we must not be behind the sinners under the old law, who
+were bidden to add a fifth part to the loss their brother had sustained
+through their wrong-doing, when they made it good. The only sin we are
+justified in confessing to our brother man is that we have committed
+against him. All else must be told in the ear of Jesus, that great
+High Priest, whose confessional is always open, and whose pure ear can
+receive our dark and sad stories without taint or soil.
+
+(2) _Fruit worthy of Repentance_. "Bring forth, therefore, fruit
+worthy of repentance," said John, with some indignation, as he saw many
+of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism. He insisted that
+practical and vital religion was not a rule, but a life; not outward
+ritual, but a principle; not works, but fruit: and he demanded that the
+genuineness of repentance should be attested by appropriate fruit. "Do
+men gather grapes of thorns, and figs of thistles?"
+
+Probably that demand of the Baptist accounted for the alteration in his
+life of which Zaccheus made confession to Christ, when He became his
+guest. The rich publican lived at Jericho, near which John was
+baptizing, and he was probably amongst the publicans who were attracted
+to his ministry. How well we can imagine the comments that would be
+passed on his presence, as each nudged his neighbour and whispered.
+"Is not that Zaccheus?" said one. "What is he doing here?" said
+another. "It is about time _he_ came to himself," muttered a third.
+"I wish the Baptist could do something for him," said a fourth.
+
+And something touched that hardened heart. A great hope and a great
+resolve sprang up in it. He may have joined in the confessions of
+which we have spoken, but he did more. On his arrival at Jericho he
+was a new man. He gave the half of his goods to feed the poor; and if
+he had wrongfully exacted aught of any man, he restored four-fold. His
+servant was often seen in the lowest and poorest parts of the old city,
+hunting up cases of urgent distress, and bestowing anonymous alms, and
+many a poor man was delighted to find a considerable sum of money
+thrust into his hands, with a scrap of paper signed by the rich
+tax-gatherer, saying, "I took so much from you, years ago, to which I
+had no claim; kindly find it enclosed, with fourfold as amends."
+Should any ask him the reason for it all, he would answer, "Ah, I have
+been down to the Jordan and heard the Baptist; I believe the Kingdom is
+coming, and the King is at hand; and I want to make ready for Him, so
+that, when He comes, He may be able to abide at my house."
+
+You will never get right with God till you are right with man. It is
+not enough to confess wrong-doing; you must be prepared to make amends
+so far as lies in your power. Sin is not a light thing, and it must be
+dealt with, root and branch.
+
+(3) _The baptism of repentance_. "They were baptized ... confessing
+their sins." The cleansing property of water has given it a religious
+significance from most remote antiquity Men have conceived of sin as a
+foul stain upon the heart, and have couched their petitions for its
+removal in words derived from its use: "Purge me with hyssop, and I
+shall be clean. Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." They have
+longed to feel that as the body was delivered from pollution, so the
+soul was freed from stain. In some cases this thought has assumed a
+gross and material form; and men have attributed to the water of
+certain rivers, such as the Ganges, the Nile, the Abana, the mysterious
+power of cleansing away sin.
+
+There was no trace of this, however, in John's teaching. It was not
+baptism _unto remission_, but _unto repentance_. It was the expression
+and symbol of the soul's desire and intention, so far as it knew, to
+confess and renounce its sins, as the necessary condition of obtaining
+the Divine forgiveness.
+
+It is not necessary to discuss the much-vexed question of the source
+from which the Baptist derived his baptism--some say it was from the
+habits of the Essenes, or the practice of the Rabbis, who subjected to
+this rite all proselytes to Judaism from the Gentile world. It is
+enough for us to remember that he was _sent_ to baptize; that the idea
+of his baptism was "from heaven"; and that in his hands the rite
+assumed altogether novel and important functions. It meant death and
+burial as far as the past was concerned; and resurrection to a new and
+better future. Forgetting and dying to the things that were behind,
+the soul was urged to realize the meaning of this symbolic act, and to
+press on and up to better things before; assured as it did so that God
+had accepted its confession and choice, and was waiting to receive it
+graciously and love it freely.
+
+It is easy to see how all this appealed to the people, and specially
+touched the hearts of young men. At that time, by the blue waters of
+the Lake of Galilee, there was a handful of ardent youths, deeply
+stirred by the currents of thought around them, who resented the Roman
+sway, and were on the tip-toe of expectation for the coming Kingdom.
+How they spoke together, as they floated at night in their fisherman's
+yawl over the dark waters of the Lake of Galilee, about God's ancient
+covenant, and the advent of the Messiah, and the corruptions of their
+beloved Temple service! And when, one day, tidings reached them of
+this strange new preacher, they left all and streamed with all the
+world beside to the Jordan valley, and stood fascinated by the spell of
+his words.
+
+One by one, or all together, they made themselves known to him, and
+became his loyal friends and disciples. We are familiar with the names
+of one or two of them, who afterwards left their earlier master to
+follow Christ; but of the rest we know nothing, save that he taught
+them to fast and pray, and that they clung to their great teacher,
+until they bore his headless body to the grave. After his death they
+joined themselves with Him whom they had once regarded with some
+suspicion as his rival and supplanter.
+
+How much this meant to John! He had never had a friend; and to have
+the allegiance and love of these noble, ingenuous youths must have been
+very grateful to his soul. But from them all he repeatedly turned his
+gaze, as though he were looking for some one who must presently emerge
+from the crowd; and the sound of whose voice would give him the deepest
+and richest fulfilment of his joy, because it would be the voice of the
+Bridegroom Himself.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+The Manifestation of the Messiah
+
+(JOHN I. 31.)
+
+ "Before me, as in darkening glass,
+ Some glorious outlines pass,
+ Of love, and truth, and holiness, and power--
+ I own them thine, O Christ,
+ And bless Thee in this hour."
+ F. R. HAVERGAL.
+
+
+The Herald's Proclamation--The Meeting of John and Jesus--Christ's
+Baptism--"It Becometh Us."--"My Beloved Son."
+
+
+John's life, at this period, was an extraordinary one. By day he
+preached to the teeming crowds, or baptized them; by night he would
+sleep in some slight booth, or darksome cave. But the conviction grew
+always stronger in his soul, that the Messiah was near to come; and
+this conviction became a revelation. The Holy Spirit who filled him,
+taught him. He began to see the outlines of his Person and work. As
+he thought upon Him, beneath the gracious teaching of Him who had sent
+him to baptize (John i. 33), the dim characteristics of his glorious
+personality glimmered out on the sensitive plate of his inner
+consciousness, and he could even describe Him to others, as well as
+delineate Him for himself.
+
+He conceived of the coming King, as we have seen, as the Woodman,
+laying his axe at the root of the trees; as the Husbandman, fan in hand
+to winnow the threshing-floor; as the Baptist, prepared to plunge all
+faithful souls in his cleansing fires; as the Ancient of Days, who,
+though coming after him in order of time, must be preferred before him
+in order of precedence, because He was before him in the eternal glory
+of his Being (John i. 15-30).
+
+It was this vision of the Sun before the sunrise, as he viewed it from
+the high peak of his own noble character, that induced in the herald
+his conspicuous and beautiful humility. He insisted that he was not
+worthy to perform the most menial service for Him whose advent he
+announced. "I am content," he said in effect, "to be a voice, raised
+for a moment to proclaim the King, and soon dying on the desert air,
+whilst the person of the crier is unnoticed and unsought for; but I may
+not presume to unloose the latchet of his shoes.... There cometh after
+me He that is mightier than I, the latchet of whose shoes I am not
+worthy to stoop down and unloose."
+
+John was not only humble in his self-estimate, but also in his modest
+appreciation of the results of his work. It was only transient and
+preparatory. It was given him to do; but it would soon be done. His
+course was a short one, and it would soon be fulfilled (Acts xiii. 25).
+His simple mission was to bid the people to believe on Him who should
+come after him (xix. 4.) He was the morning star ushering in the day,
+but destined to fade in the glory of ruddy dawn, flooding the eastern
+sky.
+
+But our impression of the sublime humility of this great soul will
+become deeper, as we consider that marvellous scene in which he first
+recognised the divine mission and claims of his Kinsman, Jesus of
+Nazareth. Consider the meeting between the Sun and the star, and take
+it as indicating an experience which must always supervene on the
+cleansed and holy soul, which desires and prepares for it.
+
+
+I. OUR LORD'S ADVENT TO THE JORDAN BANK.--For thirty years the Son of
+Man had been about his Father's business in the ordinary routine of a
+village carpenter's life. He had found scope enough there for his
+marvellously rich and deep nature; reminding us of the philosopher's
+garden, which, though only a dingy court in a crowded city, reached
+through to the other side of the world on the one hand, and up to the
+heaven of God on the other. Often He must have felt the strong
+attraction of the great world of men, which He loved; and the wild
+winds, as they careered over his village home, must have often borne to
+Him the wail of broken hearts, asking Him to hasten to their relief.
+On his ear must have struck the voices of Jairuses pleading for their
+only daughters; of sisters interceding for their Lazaruses; of halt and
+lame and blind entreating that He would come and heal them. But He
+waited still, his eye on the dial-plate of the clock, till the time was
+fulfilled which had been fixed in the Eternal Council Chamber.
+
+As soon, however, as the rumours of the Baptist's ministry reached Him,
+and He knew that the porter had taken up his position at the door of
+the sheepfold, ready to admit the true Shepherd (John x. 3), He could
+hesitate no longer. The Shechinah cloud was gathering up its fleecy
+folds, and poising itself above Him, and moving slowly towards the
+scene of the Baptist's ministry; and He had no alternative but to
+follow. He must tear Himself away from Nazareth, home, and mother, and
+take the road which would end at Calvary. "Then cometh Jesus from
+Galilee to the Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him."
+
+Tradition locates the scene of John's baptism as near Jericho, where
+the water is shallow and the river opens out into large lagoons. But
+some, inferring that Nazareth was within a day's journey of this
+notable spot, place it nearer the southern end of the Lake of Galilee.
+
+It may have been in the late afternoon when Jesus arrived. An
+expression made use of by the evangelist Luke might seem to suggest
+that all the people had been baptized for that day at least (Luke iii.
+21); so that perhaps the crowds had dispersed, and the great prophet
+was alone with one or two of those young disciples of whom we have
+spoken. Or, Jesus may have arrived when the Jordan banks were alive
+with the eager multitudes. But, in either case, a sudden and
+remarkable change passed over the Baptist's face as he beheld his
+Kinsman standing there.
+
+Picture that remarkable scene. The arrowy stream, rushing down from
+the Lake of Galilee to the Dead Sea; the rugged banks; the shadowy
+forests; the erect, sinewy form of the Baptist; and Jesus of Nazareth,
+as depicted by the olden traditions, with auburn hair, searching blue
+eye, strong, sweet face, and all the beauty of his young manhood. At
+the sight of Him, note how the high look on the Baptist's face lowers;
+how his figure stoops in involuntary obeisance; how the voice that was
+wont to ring out its messages in accents of uncompromising decision
+falters and trembles!
+
+John said, "I knew Him not" (John i. 31); but this need not be
+interpreted as indicating that he had no acquaintance whatever with his
+blameless relative. Such may have been the case, of course, since
+John's life had been spent apart from the haunts of men. It is more
+natural to suppose that the cousins had often met, as boys and
+afterwards. But the Baptist had never realized that Jesus was the
+Messiah whose advent he was sent to announce. He had not recognised
+his high descent and claims. It had never occurred to him that this
+simple village Carpenter, so closely related to himself, whose course
+of life was apparently so absolutely ordinary and commonplace, could be
+He of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write. In this sense
+John could truly say, "I knew Him not."
+
+But John knew enough of Him to be aware of his guileless, blameless
+life. The story of his tender love for Mary; of his devotion to the
+interests of his brothers and sisters; of his undefiled purity, of his
+long vigils on the mountains till the morning called Him back to his
+toils; of his deep acquaintance with Scripture; of his speech about the
+Father--had reached the Baptist's ears. He had come to entertain the
+profoundest respect amounting to veneration for his Kinsman; and, as He
+presented Himself for baptism, John felt that there was a whole heaven
+of difference between Him and all others. These publicans and sinners,
+these Pharisees and scribes, these soldiers and common people--had
+every need to repent, confess, and be forgiven; but there was surely no
+such need for Him, who had been always, and by general acknowledgment,
+"holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners." "I have need,"
+said he, "to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?" (Matt. iii.
+14).
+
+There may have been, besides, an indescribable presentiment that stole
+over that lofty nature--like that knowledge of good men and bad which
+is often given to noble women. He knew men; his eagle eye had searched
+their hearts, as he had heard them confess their sins; and at a glance
+he could tell what was in them. A connoisseur of souls was he. Among
+all the pearls that had passed through his hands--some goodly ones
+among them--none had seemed so rare and pure as this; it was a pearl of
+great price, for which a man might be prepared to part with all he
+possessed, if only to obtain it. There was an indefinable majesty, a
+moral glory, a tender grace, an ineffable attractiveness in this Man,
+which was immediately appreciated by the greatest of woman-born,
+because of his own intrinsic nobility and greatness of soul. It needed
+a Baptist to recognise the Christ. He who had never quailed before
+monarch or people, directly he came in contact with Christ, cast the
+crown of his manhood at his feet, and shrank away. The eagle that had
+soared unhindered in mid-heaven seemed transfixed by a sudden dart, and
+fell suddenly, with a strange, low cry, at the feet of its Creator. "I
+have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?"
+
+
+II. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF CHRIST'S BAPTISM.--"Suffer it to be so now:
+for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness"--with such words
+our Lord overruled the objections of his loyal and faithful Forerunner.
+This is the first recorded utterance of Christ, after a silence of more
+than twenty years; the first also of his public ministry: it demands
+our passing notice. He does not say, "I have need to be baptized of
+thee"; nor does He say, "Thou hast no need to be baptized of Me." He
+does not stay to explain why the greater should be baptized by the
+less: or why a rite which confessed sin was required for one who was
+absolutely sinless. It is enough to appeal to the Baptist as his
+associate in a joint necessary act, becoming to them both as part of
+the Divine procedure, and therefore claiming their common obedience.
+"Thus it becometh us (you and me) to fulfil all righteousness."
+
+In his baptism, our Lord acknowledged the divine authority of the
+Forerunner. As the last and greatest of the prophets, who was to close
+the Old Testament era, for "the law and the prophets prophesied until
+John"; as the representative of Elijah the prophet, before the great
+and notable day of the Lord could come; as the porter of the Jewish
+fold--John occupied a unique position, and it was out of deference to
+his appointment by the Father, and as an acknowledgment of his office,
+that Jesus sought baptism at his hands.
+
+John's baptism, moreover, was the inauguration of the Kingdom of
+Heaven. In it the material made way for the spiritual. The old
+system, which gave special privileges to the children of Abraham, was
+in the act of passing away, confessing that God could raise up children
+to Abraham from the stones at the water's edge; and demanding that
+those who would enter the Kingdom must be born from above, of water and
+of the Spirit. It was the outward and visible sign that Judaism was
+unavailing for the deepest needs of the spirit of man, and that a new
+and more spiritual system was about to take its place, and Christ said,
+in effect, "I, too, though King, obey the law of the Kingdom, and bow
+my head, that, by the same sign as the smallest of my subjects, I may
+pass forward to my throne."
+
+There was probably a deeper reason still. That Jordan water, flowing
+downwards to the Dead Sea, was symbolical. In the purity of its
+origin, amid the snows of Hermon, and in the beauty of its earlier
+course, it was an emblem of man's original constitution, when the
+Creator made him in His own image and pronounced him very good; but in
+these sullied and troubled waters hurrying on to the Sea of
+Death--waters in which thousands of sinners had confessed their sins,
+with tears and sighs--how apt an emblem was there of the history of our
+race, contaminated by the evil that is in the world through lust, and
+meriting the wages of sin--death! With that race, in its sin and
+degradation, our Lord now formally identified Himself. His baptism was
+his formal identification with our fallen and sinful race, though He
+knew no sin for Himself, and could challenge the minutest inspection of
+his enemies: "Which of you convinceth Me of sin?"
+
+Was He baptized because He needed to repent, or to confess his sins?
+Nay, verily! He was as pure as the bosom of God, from which He came;
+as pure as the fire that shone above them in the orb of day; as pure as
+the snows on Mount Hermon, rearing itself like a vision of clouds on
+the horizon: but He needed to be made sin, that we might be made the
+righteousness of God in Him. When the paschal lamb had been chosen by
+the head of a Jewish household, it was customary to take it, three days
+before it would be offered, to the priest, to have it sealed with the
+Temple seal; so our Lord, three years before his death, must be set
+apart and sealed by the direct act of the Holy Spirit, through the
+mediation of John the Baptist. "Him hath God the Father sealed."
+
+"It becometh us"--I like that word, _becometh_. If the Divine Lord
+thought so much about what was becoming, surely we may. It should
+not be a question with us, merely as to what may be forbidden or
+harmful, what may or may not be practised and permitted by our
+fellow-Christians, or even whether there are distinct prohibitions in
+the Bible that bar the way--but if a certain course is becoming. "Need
+I pass through that rite?" _It is becoming_. "Need I perform that
+lowly act?" _It is becoming_. "Need I renounce my liberty of action in
+that respect?" _It would be very becoming_. And whenever some
+hesitant soul, timid and nervous to the last degree, dares to step out,
+and do what it believes to be the right thing because it is becoming,
+Jesus comes to it, enlinks his arm, and says, "Thou art not alone in
+this. Thou and I stand together here. It becomes us to fill up to its
+full measure all righteousness." Ah, soul, thou shalt never step forth
+on a difficult and untrodden path without hearing his footfall behind
+thee, and becoming aware that in every act of righteousness Christ
+identifies Himself, saying, "Thus it becometh _us_ to fulfil all
+righteousness."
+
+A friend suggests that the Lord Jesus was here referring to the sublime
+prophecy of Daniel ix. 24. That He might make an end of sin and bring
+in everlasting righteousness, it was essential that the Lamb of God
+should confess the sins of the people as his own (see Psa. lxix. 5).
+This was his first step on his journey to the Cross, every step of
+which was in fulfilment of all righteousness, in order that He might
+bring in everlasting righteousness.
+
+"Then he suffered Him." Some things we have to _do_ for Christ, and
+some to _bear_ for Him. Active virtues are great; but the passive ones
+are rarer and cost more, especially for strong natures like the
+Baptist's. But, in all our human life, there is nothing more
+attractive than when a strong man yields to another, accepts a deeper
+interpretation of duty than he had perceived, and is prepared to set
+aside his strong convictions of propriety before the tender pleadings
+of a still, soft voice. Yield to Christ, dear heart. Suffer Him to
+have his way. Take his yoke, and be meek and lowly of heart--so shalt
+thou find rest.
+
+
+III. THE DESIGNATION OF THE MESSIAH.--It is not to be supposed that
+the designation of Jesus as the Christ was given to any but John. It
+was apparently a private sign given to him, as the Forerunner and
+Herald, through which he might be authoritatively informed as to the
+identity of the Messiah. To say nothing of the impossibility of
+ordinary and unanointed eyes beholding the descent of the Holy Spirit,
+John's own statements seem to point clearly in this direction. He
+says, "I knew Him not" (_i.e._, as Son of God), "but He that sent me to
+baptize with water, He said unto me, 'Upon whomsoever thou shalt see
+the Spirit descending, and abiding upon Him, the same is He that
+baptizeth with the Holy Spirit.' And I have seen, and have borne
+witness that this is the Son of God" (John i. 32-34). The same thought
+appears from putting a perfectly legitimate construction on the words
+of the first evangelist: "Lo, the heavens were opened unto him"
+(_i.e._, the Baptist), "and he saw the Spirit of God descending as a
+dove, and coming upon Him" (Matt. iii. 16).
+
+What a theophany was here! As the Man of Nazareth emerged from the
+water, the sign for which John had been eagerly waiting and looking was
+granted. He had believed he would see it, but had never thought to see
+it granted to one so near akin to himself. We never expect the great
+God to come to us! And the exclamation, Lo, indicates his startled
+surprise. He saw far away into the blue vault, which had opened into
+depth after depth of golden glory. The vail was rent to admit of the
+coming forth of the Divine Spirit, who seemed to descend in visible
+shape--as a dove might, with gentle, fluttering motion--and to alight
+on the head of the Holy One, who stood there fresh from his baptism.
+The stress of the narrator, as he told the story afterwards, was that
+the Spirit not only came, but _abode_. Here was the miracle of
+miracles, that He should be willing to _abide_ in any human temple, who
+for so many ages had wandered restlessly over the deluge of human sin,
+seeking a resting-place, but finding none. Here, at least, was an ark
+into which this second Noah might pull in the fluttering dove, unable
+to feed, like the raven, on corruption and death.
+
+The voice of God from heaven proclaimed that Jesus of Nazareth was his
+beloved Son, in whom He was well pleased; and the Baptist could have no
+further doubt that the Desire of all Nations, the Lord whom his people
+sought, the Messenger of the Covenant, had suddenly come to his temple
+to act as a refiner's fire and as fullers' soap. "John bare witness,
+saying, I have beheld the Spirit descending as a dove out of heaven;
+and it abode upon Him." "John beareth witness of Him and crieth" (John
+i. 15, 32).
+
+How much that designation meant to Christ! It was his Pentecost, his
+consecration and dedication to his life-work; from thenceforth, in a
+new and special sense, the Spirit of the Lord was upon Him, and He was
+anointed to preach. But it was still more to the Baptist. He knew
+that his mission was nearly fulfilled, that his office was ended. He
+had opened the gate to the true Shepherd, and must now soon consign to
+Him all charge of the flock. Jesus must increase, while he decreased.
+He that was from heaven was above all; as for himself, he was of the
+earth, and spake of the earth. The Sun had risen, and the day-star
+began to wane.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+Not that Light, but a Witness.
+
+(John I. 8.)
+
+ "Nothing resting in its own completeness
+ Can have worth or beauty; but alone
+ Because it leads and tends to farther sweetness,
+ Fuller, higher, deeper than its own.
+
+ "Spring's real glory dwells not in the meaning,
+ Gracious though it be, of her blue hours;
+ But is hidden in her tender leaning
+ To the summer's richer wealth of flowers."
+ A. A. PROCTOR.
+
+
+Resentment of the Sanhedrim--The Baptist's Credentials--Spiritual
+Vision--"Behold the Lamb of God"--The Baptism of the Spirit
+
+
+The baptism and revelation of Christ had a marvellous effect on the
+ministry of the Forerunner. Previous to that memorable day, the burden
+of his teaching had been in the direction of repentance and confession
+of sin. But afterwards, the whole force of his testimony was towards
+the person and glory of the Shepherd of Israel. He understood that for
+the remainder of his brief ministry, which perhaps did not greatly
+exceed six months, he must bend all his strength to announcing to the
+people the prerogatives and claims of Him who stood amongst them,
+though they knew Him not. "There came a man, sent from God, whose name
+was John. The same came for witness, that he might bear witness of the
+Light, that all might believe through him. He was not the Light, but
+came that he might bear witness of the Light."
+
+Our subject, therefore, naturally divides itself into two divisions:
+John's admissions about himself, and his testimony to the Lord. And it
+is interesting to notice that they were given on three successive days,
+as appears from the twofold use of the phrase, "On the morrow." "On
+the morrow" (_i.e._, after he had met and answered the deputation from
+the Sanhedrim), "he seeth Jesus coming unto him..." (i. 29). "Again,
+on the morrow John was standing, and two of his disciples..." (35).
+
+These events took place at Bethany, or Bethabara, on the eastern bank
+of the Jordan. The river there is one hundred feet in width, and,
+except in flood, some five to seven feet deep. It lies in a tropical
+valley, the verdure of which is in striking contrast to the desolation
+which reigns around.
+
+
+I. THE BAPTIST'S ADMISSIONS ABOUT HIMSELF.--When the fourth Evangelist
+uses the word _Jews_, he invariably means the Sanhedrim. John had
+become so famous, and his influence so commanding, that he could not be
+ignored by the religious leaders of the time. In their hearts they
+derided him, and desired to do with him "whatsoever they listed." His
+preaching of repentance, and his unmeasured denunciation of themselves
+as a brood of vipers, were not to be borne. But they forbore to meet
+him in the open field, and resolved to send a deputation, which might
+extract some admission from his lips that would furnish them with
+ground for subsequent action. "The Jews sent unto him from Jerusalem
+priests and Levites to ask him, 'Who art thou?' ... 'Why baptizest
+thou?'" The first question was universally interesting; the second
+specially so to the Pharisee party, who were the high ritualists of
+their day, and who were reluctant that a new rite, which they had not
+sanctioned, should be added to the Jewish ecclesiastical system.
+
+It is a striking scene. The rushing river; the tropical gorge; the
+dense crowds of people standing thick together; the Baptist in his
+sinewy strength and uncouth attire, surrounded by the little group of
+disciples; while through the throng a deputation of grey-beards, the
+representatives of a decadent religion, makes its difficult way--these
+are the principal features of a memorable incident.
+
+There was a profound silence, and men craned their necks and strained
+their ears to see and hear everything, as the deputation challenged the
+prophet with the inquiry, "Who art thou?" There was a great silence.
+Men were prepared to believe anything of the eloquent young preacher.
+"The people were in expectation, and all men reasoned in their hearts
+concerning John, whether haply he were the Christ" (Luke iii. 15). If
+he had given the least encouragement to their dreams and hopes, they
+would have unfurled again the tattered banner of the Maccabees; and
+beneath his leadership would have swept, like a wild hurricane, against
+the Roman occupation, gaining, perhaps, a momentary success, which
+afterwards would have been wiped out in blood. "And he confessed, and
+denied not; and he confessed, I am not the Christ."
+
+If a murmur of voices burst out in anger, disappointment, and chagrin,
+as this answer spread from lip to lip, it was immediately hushed by the
+second inquiry propounded, "What then? Art thou Elijah?" (alluding to
+the prediction of Malachi iv. 5). If they had worded their question
+rather differently, and put it thus, "Hast thou come in the power of
+Elias?" John must have acknowledged that it was so; but if they meant
+to inquire if he were literally Elijah returned again to this world, he
+had no alternative but to say, decisively and laconically, "I am not."
+
+There was a third arrow in their quiver, since the other two had missed
+the mark: and amid the deepening attention of the listening multitudes,
+and in allusion to Moses' prediction that God would raise up a Prophet
+like to himself (Deut. xviii. 15; Acts iii. 22; vii. 37), they said,
+"Art thou the Prophet?" and he answered, "No."
+
+The deputation was nonplussed. They had exhausted their repertory of
+questions. Their mission threatened to become abortive, unless they
+could extract some positive admission. They must put a leading
+question; and their spokesman, for the fourth time, challenged the
+strange being, whom they found it so hard to label and place on any
+shelf of their ecclesiastical museum. "They said therefore unto him,
+'Who art thou?--that we may give an answer to them that sent us.' What
+sayest thou of thyself?" "He said, 'I am the voice of one crying in
+the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said Isaiah the
+prophet.'"
+
+How infinitely noble! How characteristic of strength! A weak man
+would have launched himself on the flowing tide of enthusiasm, and
+allowed himself to be swept away by its impetuous rush. What a
+mingling of strength and humility! When men suggested that he was the
+Christ, he insisted that he was only a voice--the voice of the herald,
+whom men hardly notice, because they strain their eyes in the direction
+from which he has come, to behold the King Himself. When they
+complimented him on his teaching, he told them that He who would winnow
+the wheat from the chaff was yet to appear. And when they crowded to
+his baptism, he reiterated that it was only the baptism of negation,
+_of water_, but the Christ would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire.
+
+Why was this? Ah, he knew his limitations! He was the greatest-born
+of woman, yet he knew that his bosom was not broad enough, nor his
+heart tender enough, to justify him in bidding all weary and
+heavy-laden ones to come to him for rest; he could not say that he and
+God were one, and include himself with the Deity, in the majestic
+pronoun, we; he never dared to ask men to believe in himself as they
+believed in the Father: but there came after him One who dared to say
+all these things; and this is the inevitable conclusion, that either
+Jesus was inferior to John in all that goes to make a strong and noble
+character, or that Jesus was all that John said He was, "The Son of
+God, and King of Israel." There is no third suggestion possible. We
+must either estimate Jesus as immeasurably inferior, or incomparably
+superior, to the strong, sane, Spirit-filled prophet, who never wearied
+in declaring the impassable chasm that yawned between them.
+
+Such humility always accompanies a true vision of Christ. If we view
+it from the low ground, the mountain may appear to reach into the sky;
+but when we reach the mountain-top, we are immediately aware of the
+infinite distance between the highest snow-peak and the nearest star.
+To the crowds John may have seemed to fulfil all the essential
+conditions of the prophetic portraiture of the Messiah; but _he_ stood
+on the mountain, and knew how infinitely the Christ stood above him.
+This is apparent in his reply to the final inquiry of the Sanhedrim,
+"And they asked him, and said unto him, 'Why, then, baptizest thou, if
+thou art not the Christ, neither Elijah, neither the Prophet?'" And
+John said in effect, "I baptize because I was sent to baptize, and I
+know very well that my work in this respect is temporary and transient;
+but what matters that? In the midst of you standeth One whom ye know
+not, even He that cometh after me, the latchet of whose shoe I am not
+worthy to unloose. The Christ is come. Have not I seen Him, standing
+amid your crowds, yea, descending these very banks?"
+
+The people must have turned one to another, as he spoke. What! Had
+the Messiah come! It could hardly be. There had been no prodigies in
+earth or sky worthy of his advent. How could He be amongst them, and
+they unaware! But it was even so, and it is so still. The Christ is
+in us, and with us still. There may be no transcendent symptoms of his
+blessed presence, as He stands in the little groups of two and three
+gathered in his name; but the eye of faith detects Him. Where others
+see only the bare cliffs of Patmos, or the mines with their gangs of
+convicts, the anointed gaze beholds a face brighter than the sun, the
+purged ear catches the accents of a voice like the murmur of waters on
+the still night air. Remember how He said, "He that loveth Me shall be
+loved of my Father; and I will love him, and will manifest Myself to
+him." As the Holy Spirit revealed Him to John, so He will reveal Him
+to us, if only, like John, we will be content with nothing less, and
+wait expectant with the heart on the outlook for the manifestation of
+the Son of God; for so He promised, saying, "He shall take of mine, and
+shall declare it unto you." And when the child of faith speaks thus,
+with the accent of conviction, of what he has seen, and tasted, and
+handled, of the Word of life, it is not strange that the children of
+this world, whose eyes are blinded, begin to question and deride. What
+is there to be seen that they cannot see? What heard that they cannot
+detect? Ah, "the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of
+God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know them,
+because they are spiritually discerned." "There standeth One among
+you," said the Baptist, "whom ye know not."
+
+
+II. THE BAPTIST'S WITNESS TO THE LORD.--Six weeks passed by from that
+memorable vision of the opened heaven and the descending Spirit, and
+John had eagerly scanned every comer to the river-bank to see again
+that divinely beautiful face. But in vain: for Jesus was in the
+wilderness, being tempted of the devil, for forty days and nights, the
+companion of wild beasts, and exposed to a very hurricane of temptation.
+
+At the end of the six weeks, the interview with the deputation from the
+Sanhedrim took place, which we have already described; and on the day
+after, when his confession of inferiority was still fresh in the minds
+of his hearers, when some were criticising and others pitying, when
+symptoms that the autumn of his influence had set in were in the air,
+his eye flashed, his face lit up, and he cried, saying: "This is He of
+whom I said, 'After me cometh a man who is become before me, for He was
+before me.' Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
+world."
+
+Did all eyes turn towards the Christ? Was there a ripple of interest
+and expectancy through the crowd? Did any realize the unearthly beauty
+and spiritual power of his presence? We know not. Scripture is
+silent, only telling us that on the following day, when, with two
+disciples, he looked on Jesus as He walked, and repeated his
+affirmation, "Behold the Lamb of God," those two disciples followed
+Him, never to return to their old master--who knew it must be so, and
+was content to decrease if only _He_ might increase.
+
+Let us notice the successive revelations which were made to John, and
+through him to Israel, who, you remember, held him, as they had every
+warrant for doing, to be in the deepest sense a prophet of the Lord.
+This conviction has been definitely endorsed by succeeding ages, which
+have classed him as one of the six greatest men that ever left their
+mark on the world.
+
+(1) _He rightly conceived of Christ's pre-existence_. "He was before
+me" (John i. 30). The phrase resembles Christ's own words, when He
+said: "Before Abraham was, I am." In John's case it developed soon
+after into another and kindred expression: "He that cometh from above,
+is above all" (John iii. 31). With such words the Baptist taught his
+disciples. He insisted that Jesus of Nazareth had an existence
+anterior to Nazareth, and previous to his birth of the village maiden.
+He recognised that his goings had been of old, even from everlasting,
+that He was the mighty God, the Father of the Ages, and the Prince of
+Peace. As for himself, he was of the earth, and of the earth he spoke;
+as for this One, He came from above, and was above all. It is not
+surprising, therefore, that one of his disciples, catching his Master's
+spirit, wrote: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
+God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God.
+All things were made by Him."
+
+(2) _He rightly apprehended the sacrificial aspect of Christ's work_.
+"Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." Was
+it that his priestly lineage gave Him a special right to coin and use
+this appellation? It was, without doubt, breathed into his heart by
+the Holy Spirit; but his whole previous training, as the son of a
+priest, fitted him to receive and transmit it. An attempt has been
+made to limit the meaning of these words to the personal character of
+Jesus, his purity, and gentleness; but, to the Jews who listened, the
+latter part of his exclamation could have but one significance. They
+would at once connect with his words, those of the Law, the Prophets,
+and the Psalms. "The goat shall bear upon him all their iniquities
+unto a solitary land." "He bare the sin of many." "He is led as a
+lamb to the slaughter."
+
+From the slopes of Mount Moriah, a young voice has expressed the
+longing of the ages, "Behold the fire and the wood; but where is the
+lamb?" This has been the cry of the human heart in all generations.
+From the days of Abel men have brought the firstlings of their flocks,
+laying them on the altar, and consuming them with fire; but there was
+always a sense of failure and insufficiency. Through the ages, and in
+every clime, priest after priest offered the lamb upon the altar, but
+by the very fact of continual repetition, bore witness to the
+insufficiency of its propitiation. "Every priest, indeed," is the
+comment of inspiration, "standeth day by day ministering and offering
+oftentimes the same sacrifices, the which can never take away sins."
+Must not the hearts of hundreds of saintly priests have been filled
+with the same inquiry, Where is the lamb? As the prophets understood
+more clearly the nature of God's dealing with man--as, for instance,
+Micah saw that even the offering of the first-born could never atone
+for the sin of the soul--may we not suppose that from their lips also
+the same inquiry was elicited, Where is the lamb? Nature cannot answer
+that cry. She is fascinating, especially when she dimples with the
+smile of spring, and unveils her face in summer to receive the caresses
+of the sun. But with all her beauty and fascination she cannot answer
+the entreaty of the conscience that the penalty of sin may be removed,
+its power broken, so that man may walk with God with a fearless heart.
+Animals at the best are only symbols of the complete solution to the
+ever-recurring problem of human sin: thus from all the ages goes forth
+the cry, Where is the lamb? Then from his heaven God sends forth his
+Son to be the sufficient answer to the universal appeal: and the
+heaven-sent messenger, from his rocky pulpit, as he sees Jesus coming
+to him, cries, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
+the world."
+
+Dear soul, thou mayest venture on Him. He is God's Lamb; on Him the
+sin of our race has been laid, and He stood before God with the
+accumulated load--"made sin"; the iniquity of us all was laid upon Him;
+wounded for our transgressions; bruised for our iniquities; chastised
+for our peace; stricken for our transgression; bearing the sin of many.
+As the first Adam brought sin on the race, the second Adam has put it
+away by the sacrifice of Himself. Men are lost now, not because of
+Adam's sin, nor because they were born into a race of sinners, but for
+the sin which they presumptuously and wilfully commit, or because by
+unbelief they contract themselves out of the benefits of Christ's
+death. The servant who had been forgiven by his king, but took his
+brother by the throat, brought back upon himself the full penalty from
+which the royal warrant had freed him; and if any one of us cling to
+sin, rejecting and trampling under foot the Saviour's work on our
+behalf, we cancel so far all those benefits of our Saviour's passion
+which otherwise would accrue, and bring back upon ourselves the
+penalties from which He would fain have delivered us.
+
+(3) _He understood the baptism of the Holy Spirit_. "The same is He
+that baptizeth with the Holy Spirit." As Son of God, our Saviour from
+all eternity was one with the Holy Spirit in the mystery of the blessed
+Trinity; but as "the one Man," He received in his human nature the
+fulness of the Divine Spirit. It pleased the Father that in Him should
+all the fulness of the Godhead dwell, that He might be able to
+communicate Him to all the sons of men who were united to Him by a
+living faith. Thus it fell that He was able to assure his disciples
+that if they waited in Jerusalem for the promise of the Father, as John
+baptized with water, they should be baptized with the Holy Spirit (Acts
+i. 4, 5).
+
+The term _baptism_, as applied to the Holy Spirit, had better be
+confined to those marvellous manifestations of spiritual power which
+are recorded in Acts ii., viii., x., xix., whilst the word _filling_
+should be used of those experiences of the indwelling and anointing of
+the Divine Spirit which are within the reach of us all. Still, we may
+all adopt the words of the Baptist, and tell our living Head that we
+have need to be baptized of Him--need to be plunged into the fiery
+baptism; need to be searched by the stinging flame; need to be cleansed
+from dross and impurity; need to be caught in the transfiguring,
+heaven-leaping energy of the Holy Spirit, borne upon his bosom into the
+rare atmosphere where the seven lamps burn always before the throne of
+God. The blood of the Lamb and the fire of the Holy Spirit are thus
+inextricably united.
+
+(4) _He beheld the mystery of the Holy Trinity_. For the first time
+this was made manifest to man. On the one hand there was the Father
+speaking from heaven; on the other the Spirit descending as a dove--and
+between them was the Son of Man who was proclaimed to be the Son of
+God, the beloved Son. Surely John might say that flesh and blood had
+not revealed these things, but they had been made known to him by a
+divine revelation.
+
+The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is a profound mystery, hidden from the
+intellect, but revealed to the humble and reverent heart; hidden from
+the wise and prudent, and revealed to babes. Welcome Jesus Christ as
+John did; and, as to John, so the whole wonder of the Godhead will be
+made known to thy heart. Thou wilt hear the Father bearing witness to
+his Son; thou wilt see how clearly the Son reveals the Father, and
+achieves redemption; thou shalt know what it is to stand beneath the
+open heaven and behold and participate in the Divine anointing. Of
+what good is it to reason about the Trinity if thou hast no spiritual
+appetite for the gifts of the Trinity? But if this is thine, and thou
+openest thine heart, thou wilt receive the gift and understand the
+doctrine.
+
+(5) _He appreciated the Divine Sonship of Christ_. "I have seen and
+have borne witness that this is the Son of God." This witness counts
+for much. John knew men, knew himself, knew Christ. He would not have
+said so much unless he had been profoundly convinced; and he would not
+have been profoundly convinced unless irrefragable evidence had been
+presented to him. What though, when on the following day he repeats
+his exclamation, his whole congregation leaves him to follow the Man of
+Nazareth to his home? The heart of the Forerunner is satisfied, for he
+has heard the Bridegroom's voice. The Son of God has come, and has
+given him an understanding that he might know Him that is true.
+
+
+
+
+IX.
+
+"We must increase, but I must decrease."
+
+(JOHN III. 30.)
+
+ "Where is the lore the Baptist taught,
+ The soul unswerving and the fearless tongue?
+ The much-enduring wisdom, sought
+ By lonely prayer the haunted rocks among?
+ Who counts it gain
+ His light would wane,
+ So the whole world to Jesus throng?"
+ KEBLE.
+
+
+The Moral Greatness of the Baptist--Thoughts on Envy--Christian
+Consecration--The Baptist's Creed--The Voice of the Beloved
+
+
+From the Jordan Valley our Lord returned to Galilee and Nazareth. The
+marriage feast of Cana, his return to Jerusalem, the cleansing of the
+Temple, and the interview with Nicodemus, followed in rapid succession.
+And when the crowds of Passover pilgrims were dispersing homewards, He
+also left the city with his disciples, and began a missionary tour
+throughout the land of Judaea.
+
+This tour is not much dwelt upon in Scripture. We only catch a glimpse
+of it here in the 22nd verse, and again in the address of the apostle
+Peter to Cornelius, where he speaks of Christ preaching good tidings of
+peace throughout all Judaea (Acts x. 36, 37). How long it lasted we
+cannot tell; but it must have occupied some months, for He tarried from
+time to time at different points.
+
+It is not likely that our Lord unfolded his Messianic character, or
+taught with the same clearness as in after days. For the most part, He
+would adopt the cry of the Baptist. Of the commencement of his
+ministry it is recorded: "Jesus came, ... preaching the Gospel of God,
+and saying, 'The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand:
+repent ye, and believe in the Gospel'" (Mark i. 14, 15). But his deeds
+declared his royalty.
+
+Wherever He went He was welcomed with vast enthusiasm. The scenes
+which had occurred a few months before to inaugurate the Baptist's
+ministry were re-enacted. The progress of the heaven-sent Teacher
+(John iii. 2) was accompanied by immense throngs of people, who,
+wearied with the tiresome exactions of Pharisee and scribe, turned with
+eagerness to the humanness and holiness of the True Shepherd. It is
+said that cattle, sick and harried with the voyage across the Atlantic,
+will show signs of revival as they sniff the first land breezes laden
+with the breath of the clover fields.
+
+During all this time the Baptist was continuing his preparatory work in
+the Jordan Valley, though now driven by persecution to leave the
+western bank for Aenon and Salim on the eastern side, where a handful
+of followers still clung to him. "John was not yet cast into prison,"
+but the shadow of his impending fate was already gathering over him;
+and so he was baptizing in Aenon, near to Salim, where the Jordan
+sweeps out into broad sheets of water, eminently suitable for his
+purpose. Thither they came and were baptized. The morning star
+lingers in the same heavens with the sun, whom it has announced; but
+its lustre has paled, and its glories are shorn.
+
+It would appear from the R.V. (ver. 25) that a Jew, probably an
+emissary of the Sanhedrim, brought tidings to that little circle of
+true-hearted disciples of the work that Jesus was doing in Judaea, and
+drew them into a discussion as to the comparative value of the two
+baptisms. It was acknowledged that Jesus did not, with his own hands,
+perform the rite of baptism, probably for reasons afterwards cited by
+his great apostle (iv. 2; compare 1 Cor. i. 14-17): but it would be
+administered by his disciples, at his direction, and with his
+countenance, and therefore it could be reported to the Baptist by his
+disciples, who came to him with eyes flashing with indignation, and
+faces heated with the excitement of the discussion: "Rabbi, He that was
+with thee beyond Jordan, to whom thou hast borne witness, the same
+baptizeth, and all men come to Him" (ver. 26).
+
+It was as though they said, "Master, is it not too bad? See how thy
+generous testimony has been requited! In the day of thy glory thou
+wert too profuse in thy acknowledgments, too prodigal in thy
+testimonials. Now this new Teacher has taken a leaf out of thy
+programme; He too is preaching, baptizing, and gathering a school of
+disciples." But there was no tinder in that noble breast which these
+jealous sparks could kindle. Nothing but love dwelt there. He had
+been plunged into the baptism of a holy love, which had burnt out the
+selfishness and jealousy, which were as natural to him as to us all.
+It was as when a spark falls into an ocean and is instantly
+extinguished. Thus his reply will ever rank among the greatest
+utterances of mortal man. The Lord said that of those born of woman
+none was greater than John; and, if by nothing else, by these words his
+moral stature and superlative excellence were vindicated. He seemed
+great when his voice rang like a clarion through Palestine, attracting
+and thrilling the mighty throngs; great, when he dared to tell Herod
+that it was unlawful for him to have his brother's wife, uttering words
+which those palace walls must have been startled to hear; great, when
+he baptized Him for whom the world was waiting, and who was declared to
+be the Son of God with power; but he never seemed so great as when he
+refused to enter into those acrimonious altercations and discussions,
+and said simply, "A man can receive nothing, except it be given him
+from heaven."
+
+
+I. JOHN COUNTED INFLUENCE AND POSITION AS DIVINE GIFTS.--What
+startling differences obtain among men--Peter and John, Calvin and
+Melancthon, John Knox and Samuel Rutherford, Kingsley and Keble! Each
+of these has left his imprint on human history; each so needful to do
+his own special work, but each so diverse from all others. We are
+sometimes tempted to attribute their special powers and success to
+their circumstances, their times, their parents and teachers; but there
+is a deeper and more satisfactory explanation. Adopting the words of
+the Forerunner, we may say--They had nothing that they had not received
+from heaven, by the direct appointment and decree of God.
+
+It was thus that the Baptist reasoned: "Whatever success and blessing I
+had are due to the appointment of Him who sent me to preach his Gospel
+and announce the advent of his Son. Every man has his work and sphere
+appointed him of God. If this new Teacher meet with such success, we
+have no right to be jealous of Him, lest we sin against God, who has
+made Him what He is. And if we have not the same crowds as once, let
+us be content to take this, too, as the appointment of Heaven, glad to
+do whatever is assigned to us, and to leave all results with God."
+
+This is a golden sentence, indeed!--"A man can receive nothing, except
+it be given him from heaven." Hast thou great success in thy
+life-work? Do crowds gather around thy steps and throng thy
+audience-chamber? Do not attribute them to thyself. They are all the
+gifts of God's grace. He raiseth up one and setteth down another.
+Thou hast nothing that thou hast not received; and if thou hast
+received it, see to it that thou exercise perpetually the faculty of
+receptiveness, so that thou mayest receive more and more, grace on
+grace. The river in its flow should hollow out the channel-bed through
+which it flows. Be thankful, but never vain. He who gave may take.
+Great talents bestowed imply great responsibility in the day of
+reckoning. Be not high-minded, but fear. Much success can only be
+enjoyed without injury to the inner life by being considered as the
+dear gift of Christ, to be used for Him.
+
+Hast thou but one talent, and little success?--yet this is as God has
+willed it. He might have given more had He willed it so; be thankful
+that He has given any. Use what thou hast. The five barley loaves and
+two small fishes will so increase, as they are distributed, that they
+will supply the want of thousands. Do not dare to envy one more
+successful and used than thyself, lest thou be convicted of murmuring
+against the appointment of thy Lord. Here, too, is the cure of
+jealousy, which more than anything else blights the soul of the servant
+of God. To an older minister, who has passed the zenith of his
+popularity and power, it is often a severe trial to see younger men
+stepping into positions which he once held and has been compelled to
+renounce. He is mightily tempted to disparage their power, and condemn
+them by faint praise; or, if he praise, to add one biting comment which
+undoes the generosity and frankness of the eulogium. Why should this
+younger man, who was not born when his own ministry was at full tide,
+now carry all before him, while the waves are quietly withdrawing from
+the margin of seaweed they once cast up! Thoughts like these corrode
+and canker the soul; and there is no arrest to them, unless, by a
+definite effort of the Spirit-energised will, the soul turns to God
+with the words: "A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from
+heaven. I had my glad hours of meridian glory, and have still the
+mellow light of a summer sunset. It was God's gift to me, as rest is
+now; and I will rejoice that He raises up others to do his work. I
+will rejoice that the Kingdom is coming, that Christ is satisfied, that
+men are being saved; this shall be my joy, and it shall be fulfilled."
+
+How much misery, heart-burning, and disappointment would be saved if,
+at the beginning of life, each of us inquired seriously what that
+special work in the world might be to which he was called, and for
+which he is fitted. Then, instead of being poor imitations, we might
+be good originals. Instead of spending our time in going off on side
+issues, we might bend all our strength to the main purpose of our
+existence. God has meant each of us for something; incarnating in us
+one of his own great thoughts, and equipping us with all material that
+is necessary for its realization. We may probably discover its meaning
+by the peculiarities of our mental endowments or the advice of friends;
+by the necessity of our circumstances or the prompting of the Holy
+Spirit. Otherwise we must be content to go on making each day
+according to the pattern shown us--not as a whole, but in detail--sure
+that some day each bit and scrap, each vail and hanging, will find its
+place, and the tabernacle of our life stand complete.
+
+Every name is historic in God's estimate. The obscurest among us has
+his place in the Divine plan, his lesson to learn, his work to do. The
+century opening before us can no more dispense with us than an
+orchestra with the piccolo. A pawn on God's chessboard may take a
+knight, or give check to a king. "We are his workmanship, created in
+Christ Jesus unto good works which God has before prepared (R.V.), that
+we should walk in them" (Eph. ii. 10).
+
+
+II. JOHN CAUGHT SIGHT OF A FULLER AND RICHER IDEAL THAN HIS
+OWN.--Tidings had, without doubt, been brought to him of our Lord's
+first miracle in Cana of Galilee. We know that it had made a great
+impression on the little group of ardent souls, who had been called to
+share the village festivities with their newly-found Master; and we
+know that some of them were still deeply attached to their old friend
+and leader. From these he would learn the full details of that
+remarkable inauguration of this long-expected ministry. How startled
+he must have been at the first hearing! He had announced the
+Husbandman with his fan to thoroughly winnow his floor; the Baptist
+with his fire; the Lamb of God, holy, harmless, and separate from
+sinners. But the Messiah opens his ministry among men by mingling with
+the simple villagers in their wedding joy, and actually ministers to
+their innocent mirth, as He turns the water into wine! The Son of Man
+has come "eating and drinking"! What a contrast was here to the
+austerity of the desert, the coarse raiment, the hard fare! "John the
+Baptist came neither eating nor drinking." Could this be He? And yet
+there was no doubt that the heaven had been opened above Him, that the
+Dove had descended, and that God's voice had declared Him to be the
+"Beloved Son." But what a contrast to all that he had looked for!
+
+Further reflection, however, on that incident, in which Jesus
+manifested forth his glory, and the cleansing of the Temple which
+immediately followed, must have convinced the Baptist that this
+conception of holiness was the true one. His own type could never be
+universal or popular. It was not to be expected that the mass of men
+could be spared from the ordinary demands of daily life to spend their
+days in the wilderness as he had done; and it would not have been for
+their well-being, or that of the world, if his practice had become the
+rule. It would have been a practical admission that ordinary life was
+common and unclean; and that there was no possibility of infusing it
+with the high principles of the Kingdom of Heaven. Consecration to God
+would have become synonymous with the exclusion of wife and child, of
+home and business, of music and poetry, from the soul of the saint;
+whereas its true conception demands that nothing which God has created
+can be accounted common or unclean, but all may be included within the
+encircling precincts of the Redeemer's Kingdom. The motto of Christian
+consecration is, therefore, given in that remarkable assertion of the
+apostle; "Every creature of God is good, and nothing is to be rejected,
+if it be received with thanksgiving: for it is sanctified through the
+Word of God and prayer" (1 Tim. iv. 4, 5).
+
+John saw, beneath the illuminating ray of the Holy Spirit, that this
+was the Divine Ideal; that the Redeemer could not contradict the
+Creator; that the Kingdom was consistent with the home; and the
+presence of the King with the caress of woman and the laughter of the
+child, and the innocent mirth of the village feast. This he saw, and
+cried in effect: "That village scene is the key to the Messiah's
+ministry to Israel. He is not only Guest at a bridegroom's table, but
+the Bridegroom Himself. He has come to woo and win the chosen race.
+Of old they were called Hephzibah and Beulah; and now those ancient
+words come back to mind with newly-minted meaning, with the scent of
+spring. Our land, long bereaved and desolate, is to be married. Joy,
+joy to her! The Bridegroom is here. He that hath the bride is the
+Bridegroom. As for me, I am the Bridegroom's friend, sent to negotiate
+the match, privileged to know and bring together the two parties in the
+blessed nuptials--blessed with the unspeakable gladness of hearing the
+Bridegroom's manly speech. Do you tell me that He is preaching, and
+that all come to Him? That is what I have wanted most of all. This my
+joy, therefore, is fulfilled. 'He must increase, but I must decrease.'"
+
+
+III. JOHN HAD ENLARGED PERCEPTION OF THE TRUE NATURE OF CHRIST.--It
+has been questioned whether the paragraph which follows (John iii.
+31-36) was spoken by the Baptist, or is the comment of the Evangelist.
+With many eminent commentators, I incline strongly to the former view.
+The phraseology employed in this paragraph is closely similar to the
+words addressed by Christ to Nicodemus, and often used by Himself, as
+in John v.; and they may well have filtered through to the Baptist, by
+the lips of Andrew, Peter, and John, who would often retail to their
+venerated earliest teacher what they heard from Jesus.
+
+Consider, then, the Baptist's creed at this point of his career. He
+_believed_ in the heavenly origin and divinity of the Son of Man--that
+He was from heaven and above all. He _believed_ in the unique and
+divine source of his teaching--that He did not communicate what He had
+learnt at second-hand, but stood forth as one speaking what He knows,
+and testifying what He has seen--"For He whom God has sent, speaketh
+the words of God." He _believed_ in his copious enduement with the
+Holy Spirit. Knowing that human teachers, at the best, could only
+receive the Spirit in a limited degree, he recognised that when God
+anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit there was no limit, no
+measuring metre, no stint. It was copious, rich, unmeasured--so much
+so that it ran down from his head, as Hermon's dews descend to the
+lonely heights of Zion. He _believed_ in his near relationship to God,
+using the well-known Jewish phrase of sonship to describe his
+possession of the Divine nature in a unique sense, and recalling the
+utterance of the hour of baptism, to give weight to his assurance that
+the Father loved Him as Son. Lastly, He _believed_ in the mediatorial
+function of the Man of Nazareth--that the Father had already given all
+things into his hand; and that the day was coming when He would sit on
+the throne of David, yea, on the mediatorial throne itself, King of
+kings, and Lord of lords, the keys of Death and Hades, of the realms of
+invisible existence and spiritual power, hanging at his girdle.
+
+To that creed the Baptist added a testimony, which has been the means
+of light and blessing to myriads. Being dead, he yet has spoken
+through the ages, assuring us that to believe on Jesus is to have, as a
+present fact, eternal life, the life which fills the Being of God and
+defies time and change. Faith is the act by which we open our heart to
+receive the gift of God; as earth bares her breast to sun and rain, and
+as the good wife flings wide her doors and windows to let in the spring
+sunshine and the summer air. Ah, reader, I would that thou hadst this
+faith! The open heart towards Christ! The yielded will! Thou needst
+only will to have Him, and He has already entered, though thou canst
+not detect his footfall, or the chime of the bells around his garment's
+hem. And to shut thy heart against Him not only excludes the life
+which might be thine, but incurs the wrath of God.
+
+_There are two concluding thoughts_. First: The only hope of a
+decreasing self is an increasing Christ. There is too much of the
+self-life in us all, chafing against God's will, refusing God's gifts,
+instigating the very services we render to God, simulating humility and
+meekness for the praise of men. But how can we be rid of this accursed
+self-consciousness and pride? Ah! we must turn our back on our shadow,
+and our face towards Christ. We must look at all things from his
+standpoint, trying to realize always how they affect Him, and then
+entering into his emotions. It has been said that "the woman who loves
+thinks with the brain of the man she loves", and surely if we love
+Christ with a constraining passion, we shall think his thoughts and
+feel his joys, and no longer live unto ourselves, but unto Him.
+
+ "Love took up the Harp of Life
+ And smote on all its chords with might;
+ Smote the chord of self, that trembling,
+ Passed in music out of sight."
+
+
+Second: we must view our relationship to Christ as the betrothal and
+marriage of our soul to our Maker and Redeemer, who is also our
+Husband. "Wherefore, my brethren," says the apostle, "ye also were
+made dead to the law through the body of Christ; that ye should be
+married to another, even to Him who was raised from the dead, that we
+should bring forth fruit unto God" (Rom. vii. 4).
+
+The Son of God is not content to love us. He cannot rest till He has
+all our love in return. "He looketh in at the windows" of the soul,
+"and showeth Himself through the lattice." Our Beloved speaks, and
+says unto us, "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away." And, as
+our response, He waits to hear us say:
+
+ "My Beloved is mine, and I am his;
+ He feedeth his flock among the lilies.
+ Until the day break, and the shadows flee away,
+ Turn, my Beloved!"
+
+
+
+
+X.
+
+The King's Courts
+
+(MARK VI.)
+
+ "The number of thine own complete,
+ Sum up and make an end;
+ Sift clean the chaff, and house the wheat;
+ And then, O Lord, descend.
+
+ "Descend, and solve by that descent
+ This mystery of life;
+ Where good and ill, together blent,
+ Wage an undying strife."
+ J. H. N.
+
+
+Under Royal Surveillance--"It is not Lawful."--The Revenge of
+Herodias--The Upbraidings of Conscience--Devotion to Truth--"A Sin unto
+Death."
+
+
+Our story brings us next to speak of the Baptist's relations with Herod
+Antipas, son of the great Herod, a contemptible princeling who
+inherited a fourth part of his father's dominions (hence known as the
+Tetrarch), ruling over Galilee and part of Perea. For the most part he
+lived at Tiberias, in great state, which he had imported from Rome,
+where he had spent part of his early life. From an early age he had
+been entrusted with despotic power, and, as the natural and inevitable
+result, had become sensual, weak, capricious, and cruel.
+
+It is of the collision between this man, whom our Lord compared to a
+fox, and John the Baptist, that we have now to treat. We need only
+notice here that every great character on the page of history has had
+his vehement antagonist. Moses, Pharaoh; Elijah, Ahab; Jeremiah,
+Jehoiakim; Paul, Nero; Savonarola, the Medici; Luther, the Emperor
+Charles V.; John Knox, Queen Mary.
+
+
+I. THE CAUSE OF THE COLLISION.--All the world had flocked to see and
+hear John the Baptist. Every mouth was full of his eccentricities and
+eloquence. Marvellous stories were being told of the effect which he
+had produced on the lives of those who had come under his influence.
+All this was well known to Herod. His spies were present in every
+great gathering, and served the purpose of the newspaper of to-day; so
+that he was well informed of all the topics that engaged the popular
+mind.
+
+For some months, also, Herod had watched the career of the preacher.
+When he least expected it, he was under the surveillance of the closest
+criticism. A fierce light, like that which beats about a throne, fell
+strongly on his most secret actions. And the result had been perfectly
+satisfactory. Herod felt that John was a true man. He observed him,
+and was satisfied that he was a just man and a holy. Reasons of state
+forbade the king from going in person to the Jordan Valley; but he was
+extremely eager to see and hear this mighty man of God: and so, one
+day, at the close of a discourse, an argument with the Pharisees, or
+the administration of the rite of baptism, John found himself accosted
+by one of the court chamberlains, and summoned to deliver his message
+before the court. Herod "sent for him."
+
+We might wonder how it could happen that a man like Herod, who
+notoriously lived in a glass house, so far as character went, should be
+so willing to call in so merciless a preacher of repentance as John the
+Baptist was--before whose words, flung like stones, full many a glass
+house had crashed to the ground, leaving its tenant unsheltered before
+the storm. But it must be remembered that most men, when they enter
+the precincts of the court, are accustomed to put velvet in their
+mouths; and, however vehement they may have been in denouncing the sins
+of the lower classes, they change their tone when face to face with
+sinners in high places. Herod, therefore, had every reason to presume
+that John would obey this unwritten law; and, whilst denouncing sin in
+general, would refrain from anything savouring of the direct and
+personal.
+
+Another reason probably actuated Herod. He knew that the land was
+filled with the fame of the Baptist, and it seemed an easy path to
+popularity, and likely to divert attention from his private sins, which
+had made much scandal, to patronize the religion of the masses. At
+this point he probably entertained much the same feeling toward the
+desert-prophet that led Simon the Pharisee to invite Jesus to eat with
+him. "Yes, let John the Baptist come. Court life is dreary and
+monotonous enough. It will make a little diversion, like a breath of
+fresh air on a sultry day. It is worth risking a little roughness in
+his speech, and uncouthness in his manner, if only he while away an
+afternoon. Besides, it will please his following, which is
+considerable. Let him come, by all means."
+
+We are reminded of a similar scene in Old Testament history, when, at
+the solicitation of Jehoshaphat, Ahab sent for Micaiah. "The messenger
+that went to call Micaiah spake unto him, saying, 'Behold, the words of
+the prophets declare good to the king with one mouth; let thy word
+therefore, I pray thee, be like one of theirs, and speak thou good.'"
+
+One interpretation of Mark vi. 20 suggests that the Baptist's first
+sermon before Herod was followed by another, and yet another. The
+Baptist dealt with general subjects, urged on the King's attention some
+minor reforms, which were not too personal or drastic, and won his
+genuine regard. We are told that he used to hear (the _imperfect
+tense_) him gladly, and "did many things." It was a relief to Herod's
+mind to feel that there were many things which he could do, many wrongs
+which he could set right, while the main wrong of his life was left
+untouched. Ah! it is remarkable how much men will do in the direction
+of amendment and reform, if only, by a tacit understanding, nothing is
+said, or hinted at, which threatens the one sin in which the heart's
+evil has concentrated itself. But John knew that his duty to Herod, to
+truth, to public morality, demanded that he should go further, and
+pierce to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, of the joints and
+marrow; and therefore on one memorable occasion he accosted the royal
+criminal with the crime of which men were speaking secretly everywhere,
+and uttered the memorable sentence which could not be forgiven: "It is
+not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife."
+
+We can imagine how some room in the palace, which had often been the
+scene of wild riot, would be improvised as an audience chamber, filled
+with seats, and crowded on each occasion of the Baptist's appearance
+with a strange and brilliant throng. In the midst, the king and the
+woman with whom he was living in illicit union; next them her daughter,
+Salome; around them courtiers and ladies, nobles and pages, soldiers
+and servants. On all sides splendid dresses, magnificent uniforms,
+rare jewels, luxurious upholstery, added light and colour to the scene.
+
+The sermon began. As was John's wont, he arraigned the sin, the
+formalism, the laxity of the times; he proclaimed the advent of the
+Kingdom, the presence of the King; he demanded, in the name of God,
+repentance and reform. Herod was, as usual, impressed and convinced;
+he assented to the preacher's propositions; already he had settled
+himself into his usual posture for hearing gladly. It was as when we
+watch summer-lightning playing around the horizon; we have no fear so
+long as it is not forked.
+
+Presently, however, John becomes more personal and direct than ever
+before. He begins, in no measured terms, to denounce the sin of men in
+high places, and holds up the dissoluteness which disgraced the court.
+As he proceeds, a breathless silence falls on the crowd sitting, or
+hanging around him, their dresses in curious contrast to his severe
+garment of camel's hair, their nervous dread in as great contrast to
+his incisive and searching eloquence. Here were the people clothed in
+soft raiment, and accustomed to sumptuous fare, bending as reeds before
+the gusts of wind sweeping fiercely across the marsh.
+
+Finally, the preacher comes closer still, and pointing to the princess
+who sat beside Herod, looking Herod in the face, he exclaims: "It is
+not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife."
+
+We need not dwell on all the terrible details of that disgraceful sin.
+But every circumstance which could deepen its infamy was present.
+Herod's wife, the daughter of Aretas, King of Arabia, was still living;
+as was Philip, the husband of Herodias. The _liaison_ commenced at
+Rome, when Herod was the guest of his brother Philip, while apparently
+engaged on a mission of holy devotion to the religious interests of the
+Jewish nation.
+
+The ground of John's accusation calls for a heavier emphasis than
+appears in a superficial consideration of the words. He might have
+said: "It is not expedient; your wife's father will rise in arms
+against you, and threaten the Eastern border of your kingdom. It is
+not expedient to run the risk of war, which may give Rome a further
+excuse against you." He might have said: "This is an unwise step, as
+it will cut you off from your own family, and leave you exposed to the
+brunt of popular hate." He might have said: "It is impolitic and
+incautious to risk the adverse judgment of the Emperor." But he said
+none of these things. He took the matter to a higher court. He
+arraigned the guilty pair before God; and, laying his axe at the root
+of the tree--calling on Herod's conscience, long gagged and silent, to
+take part in the impeachment--he said, in effect: "I summon you before
+the bar of God, and in the pure light which streams from his holy
+Oracle, your consciences being witnesses against you, you know
+perfectly well that it is not right for you to be living as you are
+living. 'Thou shalt not commit adultery.'"
+
+Every hearer stood aghast. A death-like hush fell on the assembly,
+which probably broke up in dismay. So paralyzed was every one that no
+hand was laid on the preacher. We are expressly told that "Herod _sent
+forth_ and laid hold upon John" (Mark vi. 17); from which we infer that
+the fearless preacher passed out through the paralyzed and
+conscience-stricken assemblage, leaving dismay, like that which befell
+the roysterers in Belshazzar's court, when the hand of the Almighty
+traced the mysterious characters on the palace wall in lines of fire.
+
+The first feeling of awe and conscience-stricken remorse would,
+however, soon pass off. Some would hasten to condole with Herodias;
+some to sympathize with Herod. Herodias would retire to her
+apartments, accompanied by her high ladies, vowing fiery vengeance on
+the preacher--a very Jezebel, thirsting for the blood of another
+Elijah. Throughout Herod's court there would be an effort to dismiss
+the allusion as "Altogether uncalled for;" as "What might have been
+expected from such a man;" as "A gross breach of manners," as "An
+affront against delicacy of taste."
+
+But Herodias would give her paramour no rest; and, perhaps one evening,
+when John had retired for meditation and prayer, his disciples being
+off their guard and the people absent, a handful of soldiers arrested
+him, bound him, and led him off to the strong castle of Machaerus.
+
+
+II. JOHN'S IMPRISONMENT AND ITS OPPORTUNITIES.--The castle of
+Machaerus was known as "the diadem," or "the black tower." It lay on
+the east side of the Dead Sea, almost on a line with Bethlehem. The
+ruins of the castle are still to be seen, in great masses of squared
+stone, on the top of a lofty hill, surrounded on three sides by
+unscaleable precipices, descending to such depths that Josephus says
+the eye could not reach their bottom. The fourth side is described as
+only a little less terrible. Wild desolation reigned far and near. A
+German traveller mentions the masses of lava, brown, red, and black,
+varied with pumice-stone, distributed in huge broken masses, or rising
+in perpendicular cliffs; whilst the rushing stream, far below, is
+overgrown with oleanders and date-palms, willows, poplars, and tall
+reeds. Here and there, thick mists of steam arise, where the hot
+sulphur springs gush from the clefts of the rocks.
+
+On this impregnable site, Dr. Geikie tells us that Herod had erected a
+great wall, enclosing the summit of the hill, with towers two hundred
+feet high at the corners, and in the space thus gained had built a
+grand palace, with rows of columns of a single stone apiece, halls
+lined with many-coloured marbles, magnificent baths, and all the
+details of Roman luxury, not omitting huge cisterns, barracks, and
+store-houses, with everything needed in case of a siege. From the
+windows there was a magnificent view of the Dead Sea, the whole course
+of the Jordan, Jerusalem, Hebron, the frowning fortress of Marsaba, and
+away to the north, the wild heights of Pisgah and Abarim. Detached
+from the palace was a stern and gloomy keep, with underground dungeons
+still visible, hewn down into the solid rock. This was the scene of
+John's imprisonment.
+
+The Evangelist says expressly that they _bound_ the child of the
+desert-wastes, with his love for dear liberty--sensitive to the touch
+of the sunshine and the breeze, to the beauty that lay over the hills,
+accustomed to go and come at his will--as though it were the last
+indignity and affront to fetter those lithe and supple limbs, and place
+them under constraint. Ah, it is little short of a sin to encage a
+wild bird, beating its heart against the bars of its narrow cage, when
+the sun calls it to mount up with quivering ecstasy to the gates of
+day; but what a sin to bind the preacher of righteousness, and imprison
+him in sunless vaults--what an agony! What a contrast between the gay
+revelry that reigned yonder within the palace, and the slow torture
+which the noble spirit of the Baptist was doomed to suffer through
+those weary months!
+
+Is there anything like that in your life, my reader? In many an old
+castle the attention of the visitor is directed to a haunted room,
+where ghosts are said to walk at night; but in how many hearts there
+are dark subterranean apartments, where conscience, gagged and bound,
+lies imprisoned! Outwardly there is the gaiety and mirth as of a
+palace; but inwardly there is remorse, misery, unrest. In lonely hours
+there is a voice which pierces the thickest walls of your assumed
+indifference, and rings up into the house of your life, where the soul
+seeks to close its ear in vain. It is a sad, monotonous,
+heart-piercing cry which that voice repeats: "It is not lawful, not
+lawful, not lawful." Whenever there is a moment of silence and
+respite, you hear it--"Not lawful, not lawful." And nothing can stay
+it but repentance, confession, restitution, so far as may be, and the
+blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, which cleanseth from all sin.
+
+From time to time it would seem as though the strictness of John's
+imprisonment was relaxed. His disciples were permitted to see him, and
+tell him of what was happening in the world without; but stranger than
+all, he was summoned to have audiences with Herod himself.
+
+Another rendering of Mark vi. 19, 20, which is perfectly legitimate,
+and is favoured by the R.V., suggests that the king was ill at ease,
+and swept to and fro by very different currents.
+
+First, he was deeply incensed. As he thought of the manner in which
+the Baptist had treated him, denouncing him before his court, the fire
+of anger burnt fiercely within his breast; and he had beside him a Lady
+Macbeth, a beautiful fiend and temptress, who knew that while the
+Baptist lived, and dared to speak as he had done, her position was not
+safe. She knew Herod well enough to dread the uprising of his
+conscience at the appeals of truth. And perpetually, when she saw her
+chance, she whispered in Herod's ear, "The sooner you do away with that
+man the better. You don't love me perfectly, as long as you permit him
+to breathe. Unmannerly cur!" "Herodias set herself against him, and
+desired to kill him; but she could not."
+
+On the other side, Herod was in fear. He feared John, "knowing that he
+was a righteous man and a holy." He feared the people, because they
+held him for a prophet. And, beneath all, he feared God, lest he
+should step in to avenge any wrong perpetrated against his servant.
+
+Between these two influences he was "much perplexed" (Mark vi. 20,
+R.V.). When he was with Herodias, he thought as she did, and left her,
+almost resolved to give the fatal order; but when he was alone, the
+other influence made itself felt, and he would send for John:
+
+"I would like to see him again, chamberlain--tell the gaoler to send
+the Baptist hither; let his coming to my private room be, however, kept
+secret. I don't want all my court blabbing."
+
+And the gaoler would come to the cell door, and call to his prisoner,
+with a mixture of effrontery and obsequiousness, "Up, man; the king
+wants you. Put on your softest speech. It will serve you better than
+that rasping tongue of yours. Why cannot you leave the king and his
+private affairs alone? They are no business of yours or mine."
+
+And might not Herod attempt to induce the prophet to take back his
+ruthless sentence? "Come," he might say, "you remember what you said.
+If you unsay that sentence, I will set you free. I cannot, out of
+respect for my consort, allow such words to remain unretracted. There,
+you have your freedom in your own hands. One word of apology, and you
+may go your way; and my solemn bond is yours, that you shall be kept
+free from molestation."
+
+If such an offer were made, it must have presented a strong temptation
+to the emaciated captive, whose physique had already lost the
+elasticity and vigour of his early manhood, and was showing signs of
+his grievous privation. But he had no alternative; and, however often
+the ordeal was repeated, he met the royal solicitation with the same
+unwavering reply: "I have no alternative. It is not lawful for thee to
+have thy brother's wife. I should betray my God, and act treacherously
+to thyself, if I were to take back one word which I have spoken; and
+thou knowest that it is so." And as he reasoned of righteousness,
+temperance, and a judgment to come, the royal culprit trembled.
+
+John could do no other; but it was a sublime act of devotion to God and
+Truth. He had no thought for himself at all, and thought only of the
+choice and destiny of that guilty pair, from which he would warn and
+save them, if he might. Well might the Lord ask, in after days, if
+John were a reed shaken with the wind. Rather he resembled a forest
+tree, whose deeply-struck and far-spreading roots secure it against the
+attack of the hurricane; or a mighty Alp, which defies the tremor of
+the earthquake, and rears its head above the thunder-storms, which
+break upon its slopes, to hold fellowship with the skies.
+
+How many men are like Herod! They resemble the superficial ground, on
+which the seed springs into rapid and unnatural growth; but the rock
+lies close beneath the surface. Now they are swayed by the voice of
+the preacher, and moved by the pleadings of conscience, allowed for one
+brief moment to utter its protests and remonstrances; and then they
+feel the fascination of their sin, that unholy passion, that sinful
+habit, that ill-gotten gain--and are sucked back from the beach, on
+which they were almost free, into the sea of ink and death.
+
+You may be trying, my reader, to steer a middle course between John the
+Baptist and Herodias. Now you resolve to get free of her guilty
+charms, and break the spell that fascinates you. Merlin will
+emancipate himself from Vivien, before she learn his secret, and dance
+with it down the wood, leaving him dishonoured and ashamed. But,
+within an hour, the Syren is again singing her dulcet notes, and
+drawing the ship closer and closer to the rocks, with their black
+teeth, waiting to grind it to splinters. Oh that there might come to
+you the voice that spoke with such power to Augustine, and that like
+him you might now and here yield yourself to it; so that when the
+temptress, whatever form she may assume, approaches you with the
+whisper: "I am _she_, Augustine," you may answer: "But I am not _he_!"
+
+So John was left in prison. Month after month he languished in the
+dark and stifling dungeon, wondering a little, now and again, why the
+Master, if He were the Son of God, did not interpose to work his
+deliverance. But of that anon.
+
+
+III. HEROD'S INEVITABLE DETERIORATION.--Again and again John was
+remanded to his cell. Probably twelve months passed thus. But each
+time the king failed to act on the preacher's remonstrances; he became
+more impervious to his appeals, more liable to the sway of passion.
+Thus, when a supreme moment came, in which he was under the influence
+of drink and unholy appetite, and the reign of such moral nature as
+remained was greatly enfeebled, it is not to be wondered at that
+Herodias had her way, and before her murderous request the last thin
+fence of resistance broke down, and he gave orders that it should be as
+she desired.
+
+The story does not end here. He not only murdered John the Baptist,
+but he inflicted a deadly wound on his own moral nature, from which it
+never recovered, as we shall see. Ultimately he had no thought in the
+presence of Christ other than to see Him work a miracle; and when his
+desire was refused, set him at nought with his mighty men, mocked his
+claims to be the King of Israel, did not scruple to treat Him with
+indignity and violence, and so dismissed Him.
+
+Is it wonderful that our Lord was speechless before such a man? What
+else could He be? The deterioration had been so awful and complete.
+For the love of God can say nothing to us, though it be prepared to die
+on our behalf, so long as we refuse to repent of, and put away, our
+sin. We remember some solemn words, which may be applied in all their
+fearful significance to that scene: "There is a sin unto death; not
+concerning this do I say that he should make request."
+
+
+
+
+XI.
+
+"Art Thou He?"
+
+(MATTHEW XI.)
+
+ "He fought his doubts and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them;--thus he came, at length,
+
+ "To find a stronger faith his own,
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone."
+ TENNYSON.
+
+
+John's Misgivings--Disappointed Hopes--Signs of the Christ--The
+Discipline of Patience--A New Beatitude
+
+
+It is very touching to remark the tenacity with which some few of
+John's disciples clung to their great leader. The majority had
+dispersed: some to their homes; some to follow Jesus. Only a handful
+lingered still, not alienated by the storm of hate which had broken on
+their master, but drawn nearer, with the unfaltering loyalty of
+unchangeable affection. They could not forget what he had been to
+them--that he had first called them to the reality of living; that he
+had taught them to pray; that he had led them to the Christ: and they
+dare not desert him now, in the dark sad days of his imprisonment and
+sorrow.
+
+What an inestimable blessing to have friends like this, who will not
+leave our side when the crowd ebbs, but draw closer as the shadows
+darken over our path, and the prison damp wraps its chill mantle about
+us! To be loved like that is earth's deepest bliss! These heroic
+souls risked all the peril that might accrue to themselves from this
+identification with their master; they did not hesitate to come to his
+cell with tidings of the great outer world, and specially of what He
+was doing and saying, whose life was so mysteriously bound up with his
+own. "The disciples of John told him of all these things" (Luke vii.
+18, R.V.).
+
+It was to two of these choice and steadfast friends that John confided
+the question which had long been forming within his soul, and forcing
+itself to the front. "And John, calling unto him two of his disciples,
+sent them to the Lord, saying, Art Thou He that cometh, or look we for
+another?"
+
+
+I. JOHN'S MISGIVINGS.--Can this be he who, but a few months ago, had
+stood in his rock-hewn pulpit, in radiant certainty? The brilliant
+eastern sunlight that bathed his figure, as he stood erect amid the
+thronging crowds, was the emblem and symbol of the light that filled
+his soul. No misgiving crossed it. He pointed to Christ with
+unfaltering certitude, saying, This is He, the Lamb of God, the Son of
+the Father, the Bridegroom of the soul. How great the contrast between
+that and this sorrowful cry, "Art Thou He?"
+
+Some commentators, to save his credit, have supposed that the embassy
+was sent to the Lord for the sake of the disciples, that their hearts
+might be opened, their faith confirmed--and that they might have a head
+and leader when he was gone. But the narrative has to be greatly
+strained and dragged out of its obvious course to make it cover the
+necessities of such an hypothesis. It is more natural to think that
+John the Baptist was for a brief spell under a cloud, involved in
+doubt, tempted to let go the confidence that had brought him such
+ecstatic joy when he first saw the Dove descending and abiding.
+
+The Bible does not scruple to tell us of the failures of its noblest
+children: of Abram, thinking that the Egyptians would take his life; of
+Elijah, stretching himself beneath the shadow of the desert bush, and
+asking that he might die; of Thomas, who had been prepared to die with
+his Lord, but could not believe that He was risen. And in this the
+Spirit of God has rendered us untold service, because we learn that the
+material out of which He made the greatest saints was flesh and blood
+like ourselves; and that it was by Divine grace, manifested very
+conspicuously towards them, that they became what they were. If only
+the ladder rests on the low earth, where we live and move and have our
+being, there is some hope of our climbing to stand with others who have
+ascended its successive rungs and reached the starry heights. Yes, let
+us believe that, for some days at least, John's mind was overcast, his
+faith lost its foothold, and he seemed to be falling into bottomless
+depths. _He sent them to Jesus, saying, Art Thou He that should come_?
+We can easily trace this lapse of faith to three sources.
+
+(1) _Depression_. He was the child of the desert. The winds that
+swept across the waste were not freer. The boundless spaces of the
+Infinite had stretched above him, in vaulted immensity, when he slept
+at night or wrought through the busy days; and as he found himself
+cribbed, cabined, and confined in the narrow limits of his cell, his
+spirits sank. He pined with the hunger of a wild thing for liberty--to
+move without the clanking fetters; to drink of the fresh water of the
+Jordan, to breathe the morning air; to look on the expanse of nature.
+Is it hard to understand how his deprivations reacted on his mental and
+spiritual organization, or that his nervous system lost its elasticity
+of tone, or that the depression of his physical life cast a shadow on
+his soul?
+
+We are all so highly strung, so delicately balanced. Often the lack of
+spiritual joy and peace and power in prayer is attributable to nothing
+else than our confinement in the narrow limits of a tiny room; to the
+foul, gaseous air we are compelled to breathe; to our inability to get
+beyond the great city, with its wilderness of brick, into the country,
+with its blossoms, fields, and woodland glades. In a large number of
+spiritual maladies the physician is more necessary than the minister of
+religion; a holiday by the seaside or on the mountains, than a
+convention.
+
+What an infinite comfort it is to be told that God knows how easily our
+nature may become jangled and out of tune. He can attribute our doubts
+and fears to their right source. He knows the bow is bent to the point
+of breaking, and the string strained to its utmost tension. He does
+not rebuke his servants when they cast themselves under juniper bushes,
+and ask to die; but sends them food and sleep. And when they send from
+their prisons, saying, Art Thou He? there is no word of rebuke, but of
+tender encouragement and instruction.
+
+(2) _Disappointment_. When first consigned to prison, he had expected
+every day that Jesus would in some way deliver him. Was He not the
+opener of prison-doors? Was not all power at his disposal? Did He not
+wield the sceptre of the house of David? Surely He would not let his
+faithful follower lie in the despair of that dark dungeon! In that
+first sermon at Nazareth, of which he had been informed, was it not
+expressly stated to be part of the Divine programme, for which He had
+been anointed, that He would open prison-doors, and proclaim liberty to
+captives? He would surely then send his angels to open his
+prison-doors, and lead him forth into the light!
+
+But the weeks grew to months, and still no help came. It was
+inexplicable to John's honest heart, and suggested the fear that he had
+been mistaken after all. We can sympathize in this also. Often in our
+lives we have counted on God's interfering to deliver us from some
+intolerable sorrow. With ears alert, and our heart throbbing with
+expectancy, we have lain in our prison-cell listening for the first
+faint footfall of the angel; but the weary hours have passed without
+bringing him, and we have questioned whether God were mindful of his
+own; whether prayer prevailed; whether the promises were to be
+literally appropriated by us?
+
+(3) _Partial views of Christ_. "John heard in the prison the works of
+Jesus." They were wholly beneficent and gentle.
+
+"What has He done since last you were here?"
+
+"He has laid his hands on a few sick folk, and healed them; has
+gathered a number of children to his arms, and blessed them; has sat on
+the mountain, and spoken of rest and peace and blessedness."
+
+"Yes; good. But what more?"
+
+"A woman touched the hem of his garment, and trembled, and confessed,
+and went away healed."
+
+"Good! But what more?"
+
+"Well, there were some blind men, and He laid his hands on them, and
+they saw."
+
+"Is that all? Has He not used the fan to winnow the wheat, and the
+fire to burn up the chaff? This is what I was expecting, and what I
+have been taught to expect by Isaiah and the rest of the prophets. I
+cannot understand it. This quiet, gentle life of benevolence is
+outside my calculations. There must be some mistake. Go and ask Him
+whether we should expect _another_, made in a different mould, and who
+shall be as the fire, the earthquake, the tempest, while He is as the
+still small voice."
+
+John had partial views of the Christ--he thought of Him only as the
+Avenger of sin, the Maker of revolution, the dread Judge of all. There
+was apparently no room in his conception for the gentler, sweeter,
+tenderer aspects of his Master's nature. And for want of a clearer
+understanding of what God by the mouth of his holy prophets had spoken
+since the world began, he fell into this Slough of Despond.
+
+It was a grievous pity; yet let us not blame him too vehemently, lest
+we blame ourselves. Is not this what we do? We form a notion of God,
+partly from what we think He ought to be, partly from some distorted
+notions we have derived from others; and then because God fails to
+realize our conception, we begin to doubt. We think, for instance,
+that if there be a righteous God, He will not permit wrong to triumph;
+little children to suffer for the sins of their parents; the innocent
+to be trodden beneath the foot of the oppressor and the proud; or the
+dumb creatures to be tortured in the supposed interest of medical
+science. Surely God will step out of his hiding-place and open all
+prisons, emancipate all captives, and wave a hand of benediction over
+all creation. Thus we think and say; and then, because the world still
+groans and travails, we question whether God is in his high heaven.
+Like John, men have a notion, founded on some faulty knowledge of
+Scripture, that God will act in a certain preconceived way, in the
+thunder, the whirlwind, and the fire; and when God does not, but
+pursues his tender, gentle ministries, descending in summer showers,
+speaking in soft, still tones, distilling in the dew-drops, winning his
+empire over men by love, they say--"Is this He?"
+
+II. THE LORD'S REPLY.--"In that hour He cured many of diseases, and
+plagues, and evil spirits; and on many that were blind He bestowed
+sight." Through the long hours of the day, the disciples stood in the
+crowd, while the pitiable train of sick and demon-possessed passed
+before the Saviour, coming in every stage of need, and going away
+cleansed and saved. Even the dead were raised. And at the close the
+Master turned to them, and with a deep significance in his tone, said,
+"Go your way, and tell John what things ye have seen and heard; the
+blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and
+the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good tidings
+preached to them. And blessed is he, whosoever shall find none
+occasion of stumbling in Me."
+
+(1) _It was Indirect_. He did not say, I am He that was to come, and
+there is no need to look for another. Had He done so, He might have
+answered John's intellect, but not his heart. After a few hours the
+assurance would have waxed dim, and he would have questioned again. He
+might have wondered whether Jesus were not Himself deceived. One
+question always leads to another, so long as the heart is unsatisfied;
+hence the refusal on the part of our Lord to answer the question, and
+his evident determination to allay the restlessness and disquietude of
+the heart that throbbed beneath.
+
+God might, had He so willed, have written in starry characters across
+the sky the Divine words, "I am Jehovah, and ye shall have no other
+gods beside Me"; or He might have flashed it, and obliterated it to
+flash it again, as the electric cylinders which serve the purposes of
+advertisements in our large cities by night. This might have awed the
+intellect, but it would not have convinced the heart. Were this God's
+method, we should miss the benediction on those who have not seen and
+yet have believed. We should miss the discipline of waiting until our
+doubts are dissolved by the Spirit of God. The intellect might be
+temporarily overpowered with the evidence; but the soul, the heart, and
+the spirit, would miss the true knowledge that comes through purity,
+faith, and waiting upon God--the deepest knowledge of all. Besides,
+though one were to rise from the dead, and come to men with the awe of
+the vision of the other world stamped on his face, they would not
+believe. The evidence of the unseen and eternal must be given, not to
+the startled physical sense, but to the soul. Some other deeper method
+must be adopted; the heart must be taught to wait, trust, and accept
+those deep intuitions and revelations which establish the being of God.
+
+(2) _The Answer was Mysterious_. Surely, if He were able to do so
+much, He could do more. The power that healed the sick and lame and
+blind, and cast out demons, could surely deliver John. It made his
+heart the more wistful, to hear of these displays of power. He had to
+learn that the Lord healed these poor folks so easily because the light
+soil of their nature could not bear the richer harvests; because their
+soul could not stand the cutting through which alone the brilliant
+facets which were possible to his could be secured. It was because
+John was a royal soul, the greatest of woman born, because his nature
+was capable of yielding the best results to the Divine culture, that he
+was kept waiting, whilst others caught up the blessing and went away
+healed. Only three months remained of life, and in these the
+discipline of patience and doubt must do their perfect work.
+
+That is where you have made a mistake. You have thought God was hard
+on you, that He would help everybody but you; but you have not
+understood that your nature was so dear to God, and so precious in his
+sight, and so capable of the greatest development, that God loved you
+too much to let you off so lightly, and give you what you wanted, and
+send you on your way. God could have given you sight, made that lame
+foot well, restored the child to health, and opened the iron prison
+door of your circumstances. _He could_; but for all eternity you will
+thank Him He did not, because you are capable of something else. We
+are kept waiting through the long years--not that He loves us less, but
+more; not that He refuses what we ask, but that in the long strain and
+tension He is making us partakers of his blessedness. John's nature
+would presently yield a martyr and win a martyr's crown: was not that
+reason enough for not giving him at once the deliverance he sought?
+
+(3) _The Answer was Sufficient_. Together with the works of
+beneficence, the Lord drew John's attention to words he seemed in
+danger of forgetting; "Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the
+feeble knees. Say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong; fear
+not! Behold, your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of
+God. He will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be
+opened; and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped; then shall the
+lame man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing; for in
+the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams in the desert."
+"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me, because the Lord hath anointed
+Me to preach good tidings unto the meek; He hath sent Me to bind up the
+broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of
+the prison to them that are bound." The Lord strove to convince the
+questioner that his views were too partial and limited, and to send him
+back to a more comprehensive study of the old Scriptures. It was as
+though Jesus said, "Go to your master, and tell him to take again the
+ancient prophecy and study it. He has taken the sterner predictions to
+the neglect of the gentler, softer ones. It is true that I am to
+proclaim the day of vengeance; but first I must reveal the acceptable
+year. It is true that I am to come as a Mighty One, and my arm shall
+rule for Me; but it is also true that I am to feed my flock like a
+Shepherd, and gather the lambs in my arm."
+
+We make the same mistake. We have but a partial view of Christ, and
+need to get back to the Bible afresh, and study anew its comprehensive
+words; then we shall come to understand that the present is the time of
+the hiding of his power, the time of waiting, the time of the gentler
+ministries. Some day He will gird on his sword; some day He will
+winnow his floor; some day He will ride in a chariot of flame; some day
+He will sit upon the throne and judge those who oppress the innocent
+and take advantage of the poor. We have not yet seen the end of the
+Lord: we have not all the evidence. This is our mistake. But our
+Saviour is offering us every day evidences of his Divine and loving
+power. Last week I saw Him raise the dead; yesterday, before my eyes,
+He struck the chains from a prisoner; at this hour He is giving sight
+to the blind; to-morrow He will cast out demons. The world is full of
+evidences of his gracious and Divine power. They are not so striking
+and masterful as deeds of judgment and wrath might be--they need a
+quicker eye, a purer heart to discern; but they are not less
+significant of the fact that He liveth who was dead, and that He is
+alive for evermore. And these are sufficient, not only because of the
+transformations which are effected, but because of their moral quality,
+to show that there is One within the vail who lives in the power of an
+indissoluble life.
+
+
+III. A NEW BEATITUDE.--"Blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended
+in Me." Our Lord put within the reach of his noble Forerunner the
+blessedness of those who have not seen and yet have believed; of those
+who trust though they are slain; of those who wait the Lord's leisure;
+and of those who cannot understand his dealings, but rest in what they
+know of his heart. This is the beatitude of the unoffended, of those
+who do not stumble over the mystery of God's dealings with their life.
+
+This blessedness is within our reach also. There are times when we are
+overpowered with the mystery of life and nature. The world is so full
+of pain and sorrow, the litany of its need is so sad and pitiful,
+strong hearts are breaking under an intolerable load; while the battle
+seems only to the strong and the race to those who, by some mysterious
+providence, come of a healthy, though not specially moral or religious,
+stock. And if the incidence of pain and sorrow on the world be
+explained by its ungodliness, why does nature groan and travail? why
+are the forest glades turned into a very shambles? why does creation
+seem to achieve itself through the terrific struggle for survival?
+
+God's children are sometimes the most bitterly tried. For them the
+fires are heated seven times; days of weariness and nights of pain are
+appointed them; they suffer, not only at the hand of man, but it seems
+as though God Himself were turned against them, to become their enemy.
+The heavens seem as brass to their cries and tears, and the enemy has
+reason to challenge them with the taunt, "Where is now your God!" The
+waters of a full cup are wrung out in days like these; and the cry is
+extorted, "How long, O Lord, how long?"
+
+You and I have been in this plight. We have said, "Hath God forgotten
+to be gracious? Has He in anger shut up his tender mercies?" From our
+prison-cell we send up the appeal to our Brother in the glory: "Help
+us; for if Thou leavest us to our fate, we shall question if Thou art
+He." We are tempted to stumbling. We are like to fall over the
+mysteries of God's dealings with us. We are more able than ever before
+to appreciate the standpoint occupied by Job's wife, when she said to
+her husband, "Curse God, and die."
+
+Then we have the chance of inheriting a new beatitude. By refusing to
+bend under the mighty hand of God--questioning, chafing, murmuring--we
+miss the door which would admit us into rich and unalloyed happiness.
+We fumble about the latch, but it is not lifted. But if we will quiet
+our souls like a weaned child, anointing our heads, and washing our
+faces, light will break in on us as from the eternal morning; the peace
+of God will keep our hearts and minds, and we shall enter on the
+blessedness which our Lord unfolded before the gaze of his faithful
+Forerunner.
+
+
+
+
+XII.
+
+None greater than John the Baptist, yet...
+
+(MATTHEW XI.)
+
+ "Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+ In others, in thyself may be;
+ All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+ Be thou the same man thou dost seek!
+
+ "Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+ The whitest of the saints of God!
+ To show thee where their feet were set,
+ The light which led them shineth yet."
+ WHITTIER.
+
+
+Christ's Appreciation--His Independence--The Simplicity of his
+Life--His Place in the Devine Economy--The Spirit of Meekness--The
+Greatness of Humility
+
+
+While John's disciples were standing there, our Lord said nothing in
+his praise, but as soon as they had departed, the flood-gates of his
+heart were thrown wide open, and He began to speak to the multitudes
+concerning his faithful servant. It was as though He would give him no
+cause for pride by what He said. He desired to give his friend no
+additional temptation during those lonely hours. We say our kind
+things before each other's faces; our hard things when the back is
+turned. It is not so with Christ. He passes his most generous
+encomiums when we are not there to hear them. Christ may never tell
+you how greatly He loves and values you; but while you lie there in
+your prison, with sad and overcast heart, He is saying and thinking
+great things about you yonder.
+
+
+I. THE TIME CHOSEN FOR THE LORD'S COMMENDATION OF THE BAPTIST.--It was
+when John had fallen beneath his usual level, below high-water mark,
+that Jesus uttered his warmest and most generous words of
+appreciation--"Among them that are born of women, there hath not risen
+a greater than John the Baptist."
+
+"But, dost Thou really mean, most holy Lord, that this one is the
+greatest born of woman?"
+
+"Certainly," saith Christ, in effect.
+
+"But he has asked if Thou art really the Messiah."
+
+"I know it," saith the Lord.
+
+"But how canst Thou say that he is to be compared with Moses, Isaiah,
+or Daniel? Did they doubt Thee thus? And how canst Thou say that he
+is not a reed shaken with the wind, when, but now, he gave patent
+evidence that he was stooping beneath the hurrying tread of gales of
+doubt and depression?"
+
+"Ah," the Master seems to say, "Heaven judges, not by a passing mood,
+but by the general tenor and trend of a man's life; not by the
+expression of a doubt, caused by accidents which may be explained, but
+by the soul of man within him, which is as much deeper than the
+emotions as the heart of the ocean is deeper than the cloud-shadows
+which hurry across its surface."
+
+Yes, the Lord judges us by that which is deepest, most permanent, most
+constant and prevalent with us; by the ideal we seek to apprehend; by
+the decision and choice of our soul; by that bud of possibility which
+lies as yet furled, and unrealized even by ourselves.
+
+There is a remarkable parallel to this incident in the Old Testament.
+When we are first introduced to Gideon, the youngest son of Joash the
+Abi-ezrite, he is not in a very dignified position. He is threshing
+wheat by the wine-press, to hide it from the hosts of Midian, which
+devoured the produce of the entire country. There was no moral wrong
+in eluding the vigilance of the Midian spies, in transporting the wheat
+from the open country, where the wind might fan away the chaff, to the
+comparative seclusion and unlikeliness of the wine-press; but there was
+nothing specially heroic or inspiring in the spectacle. Yet, when the
+angel of the Lord appeared unto him, he said, "The Lord is with thee,
+thou mighty man of valour."
+
+"Mighty man of valour!" At first there is an apparent incongruity
+between this high-sounding salutation and the bearing of the man to
+whom it was addressed. Surely such an address is far-fetched and
+fulsome; yet subsequent events prove that every syllable of it was
+deservedly true. Gideon was a mighty man of valour, and God was with
+him. The heavenly messenger read beneath the outward passing incident,
+and saw under the clumsy letters of the palimpsest the deep and holy
+characters which were awaiting the moment of complete discovery.
+
+Is not this, in fact, the meaning of the apostle, when he says that
+faith is reckoned to us for righteousness? In the fullest sense, of
+course, we know that to each believer in Jesus there is reckoned the
+entire benefit of his glorious person and work, so that we are accepted
+in the Beloved, and He is "made unto us ... Righteousness." But there
+is another sense in which faith is reckoned to us for righteousness,
+because it contains within itself the power and potency of the perfect
+life. It is the seed-germ from which is developed in due course the
+plant, the flower, the bud, the seed, and the reproduction of the plant
+in unending succession. God reckoned to Abraham all that his faith was
+capable of producing, which it did produce, and which it would have
+produced had he possessed all the advantages which pertain to our own
+happy lot. There is thus the objective and the subjective: in virtue
+of the first, through faith in Jesus, all his righteousness is
+accounted to us; in virtue of the second, God reckons to us all that
+blessed flowering and fruitage of which our faith will be capable, when
+patience has had its perfect work and we are perfect and entire,
+wanting nothing.
+
+
+II. THE OUTSTANDING FEATURES OF JOHN'S CHARACTER AND MINISTRY TO WHICH
+OUR LORD DREW ATTENTION.--(1) _His Independence_. "What went ye out
+into the wilderness to behold? A reed shaken with the wind?" The
+language of the Bible is so picturesque, so full of natural imagery,
+that it appeals to every age, and speaks in every language of the
+world. If its descriptions of character had been given in the language
+of the philosopher or academist, what was intelligible to one age would
+have been perplexing or meaningless to the next. Remember that the
+long gallery in the Pyramids, which was directed to the pole-star when
+they were constructed, is now hopelessly out of course, because the
+position of the pole-star, in relation to the earth, has so entirely
+altered; and what is true among the spheres is true in the use of
+terms. But the Word of God employs natural figures and parables, which
+the wayfaring man, though a fool, comprehends at a glance.
+
+Who, for instance, on a gusty March day, has not watched the wind
+blowing lustily across a marsh or the reedy margin of a lake,
+compelling all the reeds to stoop in the same direction? Has one
+resisted the current or stood stoutly forth in protesting
+non-compliance? Has one dared to adopt an unbending posture? Not one.
+They have been as obsequious as were all the king's servants that were
+in the king's gate to the imperious Haman when he happened to enter the
+palace.
+
+Thus, when our Lord asked the people whether John resembled a reed
+shaken by the wind, and implied their answer in the negative, could He
+have more clearly indicated one of the most salient characteristics of
+John's career--his daring singularity, his independence of mere custom
+and fashion, his determination to follow out the pattern of his own
+life as God revealed it to him? In this he resembles the good
+Nehemiah, when he refers to the usual practice of men of his position,
+and says, "So did not I, because of the fear of the Lord"; or the three
+young men who, when all the myriads fell down and worshipped
+Nebuchadnezzar's golden image, remained erect. In the singularity of
+his dress and food; in the originality of his message and demand for
+baptism; in his independence of the religious teachers and schools of
+his time; in his refusal to countenance the flagrant sins of the
+various classes of the community, and especially in his uncompromising
+denunciation of Herod's sin--he proved himself to be as a sturdy oak in
+the forest of Bashan, or a deeply-rooted cedar in Lebanon, and not as a
+reed shaken by the wind.
+
+Many a saintly soul has followed him since along this difficult and
+lonely track. Indeed, it is the ordinary path for most of the choicest
+spirits of these Christian centuries. I do not say of all, because the
+great Gardener has his violets and lilies in sheltered spots; but
+certainly most of the trees of his right-hand planting have not stood
+thickly-planted in the sheltered woodland, but have braved the winds
+sweeping in at the gates of the hills.
+
+You, my reader, admire, but feel you cannot follow. When your
+companions and friends are speaking depreciating and ungenerous words
+of some public man whom you love; when unkind and scandalous stories
+are being passed from lip to lip; when a storm of execration and hatred
+is being poured on a cause, which in your heart you favour and
+espouse--you find it easier to bow before the gale, with all the other
+reeds around you, than to enter your protest, even though you stand
+alone. Yet the reed thrust by the soldiers into the hands of Christ
+may become the rod of iron with which He rules the nations. He can
+take the most pliant and yielding natures, and make them, as He made
+Jeremiah, "a defenced city, and an iron pillar, and brazen walls,
+against the whole land." Thou canst not; but He can. He will
+strengthen thee; yea, He will help thee; yea, He will uphold thee with
+the right hand of his righteousness. Keep looking steadfastly up to
+Him, that He may teach thy hands to war, and thy fingers to fight; for
+thou shalt be able to do all things through Him that strengtheneth thee.
+
+(2) _His simplicity_. A second time the Master asked the people what
+they went forth into the wilderness to behold; and by his question
+implied that John was no Sybarite clothed in soft raiment, and feasting
+in luxury, but a strong, pure soul, that had learnt the secret of
+self-denial and self-control. Too many of us are inclined to put on
+the soft raiment of self-indulgence and luxury. We are the slaves of
+fashion, or we are perpetually considering what we shall eat, what we
+shall drink, and with what we shall be clothed: or we act as though we
+supposed that life consisted in the number of things we possessed, and
+the variety of servants that waited upon us: whereas the exact contrary
+is the case. The real happiness of life consists not in increasing our
+possessions, but in limiting our wants.
+
+To all my young brothers and sisters who may read this page, and who
+have yet the making of their lives in their own hands, I would say,
+with all my heart, learn to do without the soft clothing and the many
+servants which characterise kings' courts. At table have your eye on
+the simpler dishes, those which supply the maximum of nutriment and
+strength, and do not allow your choice to be determined by what pleases
+the palate or gratifies the taste. A young friend stood me out the
+other day against some article of diet, which was acknowledged to be
+the more nutritious (it was whole-meal bread), because another was
+sweeter and more palatable (some white, light French rolls, from which
+all the nutriment had been extracted). This is the deliberate
+preference of the fare of kings' courts to Daniel's pulse and the
+Baptist's locusts and wild honey. Please note, here, that there was
+nothing inconsistent in his taking honey. We are not to refuse a
+certain diet because it is pleasant; but we are not to choose it
+because it is so.
+
+So with dress. Our Master does not require of us to dress grotesquely,
+or to attract notice by the singularity and grotesqueness of our
+attire. We must dress suitably and in conformity with that station in
+life to which He has called us. But what a difference there is between
+making our dress our main consideration, and considering first and
+foremost the attire of the soul in meekness and truth, purity and
+unselfishness. They who are set upon these may be trusted to put the
+other in the right place. But, on the whole, the truly consecrated
+soul should study simplicity. It should not endeavour to attract
+notice by glaring colours or extravagant display. It ought not to seek
+a large variety of dresses and costumes, but be satisfied with what may
+be really needed for the exigencies of climate and health. Let it take
+no pleasure in vying with others, because dress is a question of
+utility and not of pride. On the whole, we should set our faces
+against the soft raiment which enervates the health, and unfits us to
+stretch out our hands in ready help to those who need assistance along
+the highways of life.
+
+So with service. It is not well to depend on others. If it is part of
+our lot to be surrounded by servants, let us accept their offices with
+grace and kindliness, but never allow ourselves to lean on them. We
+should know how to do everything for ourselves, and be prepared to do
+it whenever it is necessary. Of course, with some of us, it is
+essential that we should have servants, that we may be set free to do
+the special work of our lives. Nothing would be more unfortunate than
+that those who are highly gifted in some special direction should
+fritter away their time and strength in doing trifles which others
+could do for them equally well. To think of a physician whose
+consulting room was crowded with patients needing help which he alone,
+of all men living, could give, spending the precious morning hours in
+the minutiae of household arrangements, blacking his boots, or
+preparing his food! Let these things be left to those who cannot do
+the higher work to which he is called.
+
+This is the secret of making the best of your life. Discover what you
+can do best--the one thing which you are called to do for others, and
+which probably no one else can do so well. Set yourself to do this,
+devolving on voluntary or paid helpers all that they can do as well as,
+and perhaps better than, yourself. It was in this spirit that the
+apostles said, "It is not fit that we should forsake the Word of God
+and serve tables. Look ye out, therefore, men ... whom we may appoint
+over this business; but we will continue steadfastly in prayer, and in
+the ministry of the Word."
+
+It is specially the temptation of Eastern life, where the climate is
+enervating and service is cheap and plentiful, to seek the soft raiment
+and the large assistance of attendants, and it is almost impossible to
+yield to one or the other without relaxing the fibre of the soul. The
+temptation is always around us; and it is well to look carefully into
+our life from time to time, to be quite sure, lest almost insensibly
+its strong energetic spirit may not be in process of deterioration--as
+the soldiers of Hannibal in the plains of Capua. If so, resolve to do
+without, not for merit's sake, but to conserve the strength and
+simplicity of your soul.
+
+(3) _His noble office_. "But wherefore went ye out?--to see a prophet?
+Yea, I say unto you, and much more than a prophet." Nothing is more
+difficult than to measure men while they are living. Whilst the
+fascination of their presence and the music of their voice are in the
+air, we are apt to exaggerate their worth. The mountain towers so far
+above us that we are apt, in the absence of other mountains, or in our
+too great proximity to it, to think of it as the greatest of all the
+mountain-range. But it is not so, as we discover when we remove
+further. But subsequent ages, so far from correcting, have only
+confirmed our Saviour's estimate of his Forerunner. We are able to
+locate him in the Divine economy. He was a prophet, yes, and much
+more. To employ the predictive words of Malachi, he was Jehovah's
+messenger, the courier who announced the advent of the King, the last
+of the prophets--for all the prophets and the law prophesied until
+John--and the herald of that new and greater era, whose gates he
+opened, but into which he was not permitted to enter.
+
+But our Lord went further, and did not hesitate to class John with the
+greatest of those born of woman. He was absolutely in the front rank.
+He may have had peers, but no superiors; equals, but no over-lords.
+Who may be classed with him, we cannot, dare not, say. But probably
+Abraham, Moses, Paul. "There hath not arisen a greater than John the
+Baptist." No brighter star shines in the celestial firmament than that
+of this brief young life, which had only time enough to proclaim the
+advent of the Lord, and after some brief six months of ministry by the
+Jordan, followed by twelve months in the gaol, waned here to shine in
+undimming brilliancy yonder.
+
+There was a further tribute paid by our Lord to his noble servant.
+Some two or three centuries before, Malachi had foretold that Elijah,
+the prophet, would be sent before the great and terrible day of the
+Lord came; and the Jews were always on the outlook for his coming.
+Even to the present day a chair is set for him at their religious
+feasts. This is what was meant when they asked the Baptist, at the
+commencement of his ministry, if he were Elijah. He shrank, as we have
+seen, from assuming so great a name, though he could not have refused
+the challenge, had it been worded to include the spirit and power of
+the great prophet of Thisbe. But here our Lord went beyond John's own
+modest, self-depreciating estimate, and declared, "If ye are willing to
+receive it, this is Elijah which is to come." As He descended from the
+Mount of Transfiguration, He returned to the same subject: "And they
+asked Him, saying, The scribes say that Elijah must first come. And He
+said unto them, Elijah indeed cometh first, and restoreth all
+things.... But I say unto you that Elijah is come, and they have also
+done unto him whatsoever they listed, even as it is written of him"
+(Mark ix. 9-13).
+
+
+III. THE MASTER'S RESERVATION. Let us again quote His memorable
+words: "Among them that are born of women there hath not arisen a
+greater than John the Baptist; yet he that is but little in the Kingdom
+of heaven is greater than he" (Matt. xi. 11, R.V.).
+
+The greatness of John the Baptist shone out in conspicuous beauty in
+his meek confession of inferiority. It is always a sign of the
+greatest knowledge, when its possessor confesses himself to be as a
+child picking up shells on the shores of a boundless ocean. And the
+Baptist's greatness was revealed in the lowliness of his self-estimate.
+
+When the Lord Jesus summarized his own character He said, "I am meek
+and lowly in heart." In doing so He expressed the character of God;
+for He was the Revealer of God, "the brightness of his glory, and the
+express image of his person." He was "God manifested in flesh." He
+was not only the Son of God, He was God the Son: "He that hath seen Me
+hath seen the Father. I and the Father are one." The greatness of
+John was proved in this, that like his Lord he was meek and lowly in
+heart. Neither before nor since has a son of Adam lived in whom these
+divine qualities were more evident. No sublimer, no more God-like
+utterance ever passed the lips of man than John's answer to his
+disciples: "A man can receive nothing except it have been given him
+from heaven. He must increase, but I must decrease" (see the whole
+passage, John iii. 27-36). The very same spirit of meekness was
+speaking in John as acted in his Lord, when, knowing that the Pharisees
+had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John
+(though Jesus Himself baptized not, but his disciples), "He left Judea
+and departed into Galilee." What divisions might have been avoided in
+the Church had his people followed his example! But there was no man,
+not even the apostle John or Paul, whose spirit accorded more exactly
+with the Master's than his faithful and self-effacing herald and
+forerunner, John the Baptist. It might well be said, that of them that
+were born of women there had not arisen a greater than he.
+
+But what was in our Lord's thought when He made the reservation, "_Yet
+he that is but little in the Kingdom of heaven is greater than he_"?
+It has been suggested that the Lord was speaking of John not only as a
+man, but as a prophet, and that this declaration applies more
+particularly to John as a prophet. The words of the evangelist Luke
+are noticeable--"There hath not risen a greater prophet than John the
+Baptist": because to balance the sentence it seems needful to supply
+the word _prophet_ in the second clause--"The least prophet in the
+Kingdom of heaven is a greater prophet than he." John could say,
+"Behold the Lamb of God"; but the least of those who, being scattered
+abroad, went everywhere proclaiming the word of the Kingdom, preached
+"Jesus and the resurrection."
+
+But there is another way of interpreting Christ's words. John ushered
+in the Kingdom, but was not in it. He proclaimed a condition of
+blessedness in which he was not permitted to have a part. And the Lord
+says that to be in that Kingdom gives the opportunity of attaining to a
+greatness which the great souls outside its precincts cannot lay claim
+to. There is a greatness which comes from nature, and another
+greatness from circumstances. The child on the mountain is higher than
+the giant in the valley. The boy in our village schools knows more on
+certain subjects than Socrates or Confucius, the greatest sages of the
+world. The least instructed in the Kingdom of heaven is privileged to
+see and hear the things which prophets and kings longed and waited for
+in vain. The least in the higher dispensation may know and understand
+more than the loftiest souls of the dispensations that have preceded.
+
+And may there not be even more than this? The character of John was
+strong, grand in its wild magnificence--like some Alpine crag, with the
+pines on its slopes and the deep dark lake at its foot; he had courage,
+resolution, an iron will, a loftiness of soul that could hold commerce
+with the unseen and eternal. He was a man capable of vast heights and
+depths. He could hold fellowship with the eternal God as a man speaks
+with his friend, and could suffer unutterable agonies in
+self-questioning and depression. But is this the loftiest ideal of
+character? Is it the most desirable and blessed? Assuredly not; and
+this may have been in the Saviour's mind when He made his notable
+reservation. To come neither eating nor drinking; to be stern,
+reserved, and lonely; to live apart from the homes of men, to be the
+severe and unflinching rebuker of other men's sins--this was not the
+loftiest pattern of human character.
+
+There was something better, as is manifest in our Lord's own perfect
+manhood. The balance of quality; the power to converse with God, mated
+with the tenderness that enters the homes of men, wipes the tears of
+those that mourn, and gathers little children to its side; that has an
+ear for every complaint, and a balm of comfort for every heart-break;
+that pities and soothes, teaches and leads; that is able not only to
+commune with God alone in the desert, but brings Him into the lowliest
+deeds and commonplaces of human life--this is the type of character
+which is characteristic of the Kingdom of heaven. It is described best
+in those inimitable beatitudes which canonize, not the stern and
+rugged, but the sweet and tender, the humble and meek; and stamp
+Heaven's tenderest smile on virtues which had hardly found a place in
+the strong and gritty character of the Baptist.
+
+Yes, there is more to be had by the humble heart than John possessed or
+taught. The passive as well as the active; the glen equally with the
+bare mountain peak; the feminine with the masculine; the power to wait
+and be still, combined with the swift rush to capture the position; the
+cross of shame as well as the throne of power. And if thou art the
+least in the Kingdom of God, all this may be thine, by the Holy Spirit,
+who introduces the very nature of the Son of Man into the heart that
+loves Him truly. "He that is least in the Kingdom of heaven is greater
+than he."
+
+
+
+
+XIII.
+
+A Burning and Shining Lamp.
+
+(JOHN V. 35.)
+
+ "Men as men
+ Can reach no higher than the Son of God,
+ The Perfect Head and Pattern of Mankind.
+ The time is short, and thus sufficeth us
+ To live and die by; and in Him again
+ We see the same first starry attribute,
+ '_Perfect through suffering_,' our salvation's seal,
+ Set in the front of His humanity...."
+ MRS. HAMILTON KING.
+
+
+The Rest-Day--The Light of Life--Shining, because Burning--"Let your
+Light Shine"--A Light in the Darkness
+
+
+Our Master, Christ, was on his trial. He was challenged by the
+religious leaders of the people because He had dared to heal a man and
+to command him to carry his bed--his straw pallet--on the Sabbath day.
+He was therefore accused, and, so to speak, put in his defence.
+
+Of course we must not for a moment think that our Lord was lax in his
+observance of the Sabbath, but simply that He desired to emancipate the
+day from the intolerable burdens and restrictions with which the Jewish
+leaders had surrounded it. It was his desire to show, for all after
+time, that the Sabbath was made for useful purposes, and specially for
+deeds of mercy, beneficence, and gentle kindness. The Lord Jesus was
+maligned and persecuted because He was the Emancipator of the Sabbath
+day from foolish and mistaken notions of sanctity.
+
+It is of the greatest importance that we should do what we may to
+conserve one rest-day in seven to our country and our world; and I
+cannot help noticing in the story of the life of the great statesman
+and Christian, who recently passed from us, how careful he was to guard
+the day from unnecessary intrusion. It has been attested by those who
+knew him well, that physically, intellectually, and spiritually, the
+Lord's day to him was a priceless blessing. Let your rest on the one
+rest-day consist, not in lolling idly and carelessly, but in turning
+your faculties in some other direction; because the truest rest is to
+be found, not in luxurious ease, but in using the fresh vigour of your
+life in other compartments of the brain than those which have been worn
+by the demands of the six days. Then, fresh from the Sunday-school
+class, the worship of the church, and the sermon, you will return to
+the desk or office, or whatever may be your toil, with new and
+rejuvenated strength.
+
+There is a great distinction between shining and burning: shining is
+the light-giving, the illuminating, that comes forth from the enkindled
+wick; but it cannot shine unless it burns. The candle that gives light
+wastes inch by inch as it gives it. The very wick of your lamp, that
+conducts the oil to the flame, chars, and you have to cut it off bit by
+bit until the longest coil is at length exhausted. We must never
+forget that, if we would shine, we must burn. Too many of us want to
+shine, but are not prepared to pay the cost that must be faced by every
+true man that wants to illuminate his time. We must burn down until
+there is but an eighth of an inch left in the candlestick, till the
+light flickers a little and drops, makes one more eager effort, and
+then ceases to shine--"a burning and shining light."
+
+Obviously, then, we have first _the comparison between John and the
+candle, or lamp_; then we have _the necessary expenditure, burning to
+shine_; and, thirdly, we have _the misuse that people may make of their
+opportunities_.
+
+
+I. THE LORD'S COMPARISON.--"John was a burning and shining lamp." In
+the original a great contrast is suggested between _lamp_, as it is
+given in the Revised Version, and _light_. The Old Version put it
+thus: "He was a burning and shining light"; but the Revised Version
+puts it thus: "He was a burning and shining lamp"; and there is a
+considerable difference between the two. In the first chapter of the
+Gospel, the apostle John tells us, speaking of the Baptist, that he was
+not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light, that all
+men through him [John] might believe. "That was the True Light, which
+lighteth every man coming into the world."
+
+Jesus Christ is the Light of the World; and I believe that in every age
+He has been waiting to illumine the hearts and spirits of men,
+reminding us of the expression in the Book of Proverbs--and it is
+wonderfully significant--"The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord."
+
+Here is a candle, yonder is the wick; but it gives no light. The air
+may be full of luminousness, but as yet it has found no point on which
+to kindle and from which to irradiate. But, see, of a sudden the light
+gathers to the candle-wick, which had stood helpless and useless,
+touches it, and it begins to shine with a light not its own. It is
+borrowed light, caught from some burning cone of flame.
+
+Men are born into the world like so many unlighted candles. They may
+stand in chaste candlesticks, all of gold or silver, of common tin or
+porcelain. But all are by nature unlit. On the other hand, Jesus
+Christ, the Light of men, waits with yearning desire, and, as each
+successive generation passes across the stage of human life, He is
+prepared to illumine the spirits which are intended to be the candles
+of the Lord. In these ages He illumines us with the Gospel; but I
+believe that all moral intuitions, all instincts of immortality, all
+cravings after God, all gropings in the dark for the true Light, all
+helpful moral revolutions which have swept over mankind, have been the
+result of his influence, who, as the true Light, lighteth every man
+coming into the world. Whenever and wherever a man has flamed up with
+unusual fervour and spiritual power, with a desire to help his fellows,
+and has shone like a torch, we must believe that he was illumined by
+the Son of God, the Wisdom of the Book of Proverbs, whom he may not
+have known, but whom he would recognise as soon as he crossed the
+portal of the New Jerusalem. He lighteth every man; He is willing to
+illumine every man that comes into the world.
+
+This conception casts a considerable light on some of the enigmas of
+human experience. We have known illiterate, uncultured men, without
+many gifts of style or grace of speech, yet they have shone to such an
+extent that every one in their neighbourhood has been lit by the
+radiance that has streamed from them. On the other hand, we have met
+men who have passed through a college course and been carefully trained
+for their life-work; important pulpits and opportunities of great
+usefulness have been opened to them; but their lives have been a
+disappointment. Why? Ah, the answer is easy. The former class were
+as candles, made of ordinary wax, and placed in inconspicuous
+candle-sticks, which had been ignited by the fire of God through the
+Holy Spirit; and the latter were like exquisitely prepared
+candlesticks, the candles in which had never been kindled by the fire
+of God. There are hundreds of professing Christians, and some may read
+these pages, who have never really been kindled; who have never been
+touched by the Son of God; who do not know what it is to shine with his
+light and to burn with his fire.
+
+What is the process of lighting? The wick of the candle is simply
+brought into contact with the flame, and the flame leaps to it, kindles
+on it, without parting with any of its vigour or heat, and continues to
+burn, drawing to itself the nourishment which the candle supplies. So
+let Jesus Christ touch you. Believe in the Light, that you may become
+a child of the Light. Take off the extinguisher; cast away your
+prejudice; put off those misconceptions; have done with those unworthy
+habits; putting them all aside, let Jesus kindle you. "Arise, shine;
+for thy light is come." "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the
+dead, and Christ shall give thee light."
+
+We were kindled that we might kindle others. I would like, if I might
+have my choice, to burn steadily down, with no guttering waste, and as
+I do so to communicate God's fire to as many unlit candles as possible;
+and to burn on steadily until the socket comes in view, then to light,
+in the last flicker, twenty, thirty, or a hundred candles at once; so
+that as one expires they may begin burning and spreading light which
+shall shine till Jesus comes. Get light from Christ, then share it;
+and remember that it is the glory of fire that one little candle may go
+on lighting hundreds of candles--one insignificant taper may light all
+the lamps of a cathedral church, and yet not be robbed of its own
+little glow of flame. Andrew was lit by Christ Himself, and passed on
+the flame to Simon Peter, and he to three thousand more on the Day of
+Pentecost. Every Christian soul illumined by the grace of God thus
+becomes, as John the Baptist was, a lamp. But there is always the same
+impassable chasm between these and the Lord. They are derived; He is
+original. They need to be sustained and fed; He is the fountain of
+Light: because, as the Father hath life in Himself, He hath given to
+Him also to have life in Himself, and his life is the light of men.
+
+
+II. THE INEVITABLE EXPENDITURE.--"He was a burning and shining lamp."
+_If you would shine, you must burn_. The ambition to shine is
+universal; but all are not prepared to pay the price by which alone
+they can acquire the right to give the true light of life. There are
+plenty of students who would win all the prizes, and wear all the
+honours, apart from days and nights of toil; but they find it a vain
+ambition. Before a man can become Senior Wrangler he must have burnt,
+not only the midnight oil, but some of the very fibre of his soul.
+Conspicuous positions in the literary and scientific world are less the
+reward of genius than of laborious, soul-consuming toil. The great
+chemist will work sixteen hours out of twenty-four. The illustrious
+author acquires, by profound research, the materials which he weaves
+into his brilliant page. Such men shine because they burn.
+
+But this is pre-eminently the principle in the service of Christ. It
+was so with the Lord Himself. He shone, and his beams have illumined
+myriads of darkened souls, and shall yet bring dawn throughout the
+world; but, ah, how He burned! The disciples remembered that it was
+written of Him: "The zeal of thy house hath eaten Me up." He suffered,
+that He might serve. He would not save Himself, because He was bent on
+saving others. He ascended to the throne because He spared not Himself
+from the cruel tree. Pilate marvelled that his death came so soon, and
+sent for the centurion to be certified that in so few hours He had
+succumbed. But he did not realize that in three short years He had
+expended his vital strength so utterly, that there was no reserve to
+fall back upon. There had been an inward consumption, an exhaustion of
+nervous power, a wearing down of the springs of vitality. He shone
+because of the fire that burned within Him.
+
+It was so with the great apostle, who said that he filled up that which
+was lacking in the afflictions of Christ, not of course that there was
+any lack in the work of propitiation which required his further help,
+but that the saints are called to share with their Lord his sorrows for
+men, his tears, to lift the burdens and crosses of others, to give of
+their very life-blood for the replenishing of the exhausted fountains
+of human faith, and hope, and love. Paul gave freely of his best. He
+shone because he never hesitated to burn. Remember how he affirmed
+that he was pressed down, perplexed, pursued, and always bore about in
+his body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of Jesus might be
+manifested in his mortal flesh. The price paid for the life that
+wrought in the hearts of his converts was that death should work in
+himself.
+
+All the saints have passed through similar experiences. They knew, as
+Cranmer said, that they could never hope to kindle a fire that should
+never be put out, unless they were prepared to stand steadily at the
+stake and give their bodies to be burned. But they counted not their
+lives dear unto them, if they might but finish their course with joy,
+and the ministry which they had received of the Lord Jesus, to testify
+the Gospel of the grace of God. The men and women who shine as
+beacon-lights across the centuries are those whose tears were their
+meat day and night, whose prayers rose with strong cryings and tears;
+while, as with Palissy, the Huguenot potter, the very furniture of the
+house was brought out to feed the flame in which the precious glaze was
+being precipitated.
+
+If the Christian worker longs to benefit the poor slum district in
+which he is located, he must be prepared to live amongst the people and
+expend himself. Presently, in his hollow cheeks, his sallow
+complexion, his attenuated form, his diminishing strength, you will see
+that he is paying the price for his 100-candle illuminating power,
+because he is being consumed. Every successful worker for God must
+learn that lesson. You must be prepared to suffer; you can only help
+men when you die for them. If you desire to save others you cannot
+save yourself; you must be prepared to fall into the ground and die, if
+you would not abide alone: there must be with you, as with Paul, the
+decaying of the outward man, that the inward man may be renewed day by
+day. You must be prepared to say with him, "Death worketh in us, but
+life in you."
+
+_If you burn, you will shine_. The burning and the shining do not
+always go together; often the burning goes on a long time without much
+illumination resulting from the expenditure. Those who are rich in
+gifts and natural endowments cast in much, and the poor cast in all
+their living; this they continue to do, year after year, and none seems
+to heed the awful cost at which their testimony is given. Moreover, to
+use a well-known phrase, the game hardly seems worth the candle. The
+area they influence is so limited, the souls affected so few, the
+glimmer of their light, like a street-lamp in a fog, hardly reaches
+across the street or to the ground. Sometimes it appears only to make
+the darkness denser and thicker. In many cases, the saints of God have
+burnt down to the last film of vital energy and expired, and there has
+been no shining that the world has taken cognisance of. Their bitter
+complaint has been, "I have laboured in vain; I have spent my strength
+for nought, and in vain." But even these shall shine. They shall
+shine as the stars for ever and ever in that world where all holy and
+faithful souls obtain their due.
+
+Let us see to the burning; God will see to the shining. It is ours to
+feed the sacred heaven-enkindled flame with the daily fuel of the Word
+of God and holy service; and God will see to it that no ray of power or
+love is wasted. He will place reflectors around us, to catch up and
+repeat the influences that proceed from us. "The Lord was with Samuel,
+and did let none of his words fall to the ground." It is ours to keep
+in company with the risen Lord, listening to Him as He opens to us the
+Scriptures, until our hearts burn within us; then, as we hasten to tell
+what we have seen, tasted, and handled of the Word of Life, there will
+be a glow on our faces, whether we know it or not; and men shall say of
+us: "They have been with Jesus." If we think only of the shining, we
+shall probably miss both it and the burning. But if we devote
+ourselves to the burning, even though it involve the hidden work of the
+mine, the stoke-hole, and the furnace-room, there will be the raying
+forth of a light that cannot be hid. Where there is the burning heat,
+there must be the soft, gleaming light. Let there be but summer, and
+the flowers cover the land.
+
+_For the burning and the shining, God will provide the fuel_. The fire
+which burnt in the bush needed no fuel; "the bush was not consumed."
+With us there is perpetual need for the nourishment of the fire of love
+and the light of life by the administration of appropriate fuel. The
+oil must be supplied to the lamp. The fire cannot be kept burning on
+the altar apart from the incessant care and attention of the priests.
+But be of good cheer; He who hath begun a good work in you will perfect
+it unto the day of Jesus Christ. All grace will be made to abound
+towards you, that you may have all sufficiency for all things, and
+abound to every good work. The Lord will give grace and glory; no good
+thing will He withhold from them that walk uprightly. God will supply
+all your need, according to his riches in glory, by Christ Jesus. It
+is especially helpful to ponder the full import of the phrase--"the
+supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ." It is as though we had access
+to one of those oil-wells of the west, which seem practically
+inexhaustible.
+
+It is a wonderful thing how often God puts his lighted candles in the
+cellar. We would have supposed that He would have placed a man like
+John on a pedestal or a throne, that his influence might reach as far
+as possible. Instead of that He allowed him to spend the precious
+months of his brief life in prison. And the lamp flickered somewhat in
+the pestilential damp. It may be that this is your place also. In the
+silence of a sick chamber, in the obscurity of some country parish,
+amid obloquy and hatred, you are doomed to spend your slowly-moving
+years. It seems such a waste. Loneliness and depression are hard to
+endure; but the consciousness of accomplishing so little, though at
+such cost, is very painful. This is your cellar-life, your dungeon
+experience. Remember that Joseph and Rutherford, John Bunyan and
+Madame Guyon, have been there before you. Probably, because the cellar
+is so very dark, God wants to station a candle there, and has placed
+you there because you can accomplish a work for Him, and for others, of
+priceless importance. Where is the light needed so much as on a dark
+landing or a sunken reef? Go on shining, and you will find some day
+that God will make that cellar a pedestal out of which your light shall
+stream over the world; for it was out of his prison cell that John
+illuminated the age in which his lot was cast, quite as much as from
+his rock-pulpit beside the Jordan. "I would have you know, brethren,"
+said the apostle, "that the things which happened unto me have fallen
+out rather unto the progress of the Gospel, so that my bonds became
+manifest in Christ throughout the Praetorian guard" (Phil. i. 12, 13,
+R.V.).
+
+
+III. CHRIST'S WARNING AGAINST THE MISUSE OF OPPORTUNITIES.--"Ye were
+willing for a season to rejoice in his light." The Greek word rendered
+_rejoice_ has in it the idea of moths playing around a candle, or of
+children dancing around a torch-light, as it burns lower and lower. It
+is as though a light were given to men for an hour, for them to use for
+some high and sacred purpose, but they employ it for dancing and
+card-playing, instead of girding up their loins to serious tasks. "You
+were willing," says the Master, in effect, "to rejoice, to dance and
+sing, in his light. You treated his ministry as a pastime. As long as
+he spoke to you about the coming Kingdom, you listened and were glad;
+but when he began to call you to repentance and warn you of wrath to
+come, you left him." He is now like an almost extinguished lamp. His
+hour is all but done. The brief space he was sent to occupy has been
+fulfilled. "Behold, the night cometh, when no man can work."
+
+The ministry of the Gospel is but for "an hour." The story of man may
+be compared to a brief day (1 Cor. iv. 3, _marg._, R.V.); and in that
+day the proclamation of the good news from God occupies but a very
+limited space. The hour-glass was turned when Jesus ascended, and it
+is more than likely that the last grains are running through; then the
+cry of the herald shall be hushed, and the servants' voices will be no
+more heard in the streets inviting to the marriage supper, and there
+shall be none to break or distribute the bread of life.
+
+With what eager care men should prize these fleeting opportunities, not
+listening to the preacher's voice, as of one that can make a pleasant
+sound from the harp or organ--not seeking merely the delight of the ear
+or intellect; but taking heed to hear for eternity, receiving in meek
+and retentive hearts the precious grain as it falls from the sower's
+hand, and giving diligence that the best possible results may accrue.
+
+Oh, children of the sunny market-place, playing giddily throughout the
+long afternoon, take heed lest your opportunities of preparing for the
+serious work of life slip away unimproved, and you find yourselves face
+to face with death and judgment without a screen, without hope, and
+without God. John murdered in prison; Jesus nailed to the cross; the
+apostles and martyrs done to death on the scaffold and at the
+stake--and the ship drifting on the rocks, without a warning voice to
+arouse the thoughtless crowd of dice-throwers and dancers to the
+certainty and nearness of their doom!
+
+
+
+
+XIV.
+
+Set at Liberty.
+
+(MARK VI. 27.)
+
+ "Hush my soul, and vain regrets be stilled;
+ Now rest in Him who is the complement
+ Of whatsoe'er transcends our mortal doom,
+ Of baffled hope and unfulfilled intent;
+ In the clear vision and aspect of whom
+ All longings and all hopes shall be fulfilled."
+ ARCHBISHOP TRENCH.
+
+
+The Genesis of a Great Crime--The Strength of Evil Influences--An
+Accomplice of Satan--The Triumph of Hate--The Baptist Beheaded--A Place
+of Repentance
+
+
+The evangelist Mark tells us, in the twenty-first verse of this
+chapter, that Herod on his birthday made a supper to his lords, and the
+high captains, and the chief men of Galilee. Now, of course, Galilee,
+over which Herod had jurisdiction, and where, for the most part, he
+dwelt, in the beautiful city of Tiberias, the ruins of which are still
+washed by the blue waters of the lake, was a considerable distance from
+the Castle of Machaerus, which, as we have seen, was situated in the
+desolate region on the eastern side of the Dead Sea. There would
+probably, therefore, have been a martial and noble procession from
+Galilee, which followed the course of the Jordan to the oasis of
+Jericho, and then branched off to the old, grim fortress, which, like
+one of those ruined castles on the Rhine, had been for many years the
+scene of brigandage, pillage, and bloodshed.
+
+It is not difficult to imagine that sumptuous and splendid retinue.
+Roman soldiers and officials in all the splendour of their
+accoutrements and mounting; carriages conveying the royal consort,
+Herodias, Salome, and their ladies; large numbers of native soldiers;
+swarthy Bedouin and Greek traders; priests and levites, who lived on
+the smile of the Court; court officials, camp-bearers, a motley
+following of servants and slaves. In the front of the cavalcade,
+Herod, on a magnificent steed. The line of march, enlivened by the
+sound of martial music, and the flaunting of innumerable banners.
+Slowly they made their way through those desert solitudes, across the
+pasture-lands, and finally swept up through the little village that lay
+at the foot of the hill to the castellated fortress which covered the
+summit, edging its mighty walls to the brink of the steep cliffs. Soon
+the last straggler would be lost to view, the heavy portcullis fall,
+and the massive iron gate swing to, and the first step would be taken
+towards the tragedy, which lay right before Herod's path. One
+sometimes wonders whether the whole of these circumstances had not been
+planned by the cunning device of Herodias. In any case, nothing could
+have been arranged more exactly to suit her murderous schemes.
+
+The days that preceded the celebration of Herod's birthday were
+probably filled with merry-making and carouse. Groups of nobles,
+knights, and ladies, would gather on the terraces, looking out over the
+Dead Sea, and away to Jerusalem, and in the far distance to the
+gleaming waters of the Mediterranean. Picnics and excursions would be
+arranged into the neighbouring country. Archery, jousts, and other
+sports would beguile the slowly-moving hours. Jests, light laughter,
+and buffoonery would fill the air. And all the while, in the dungeons
+beneath the castle, lay that mighty preacher, the confessor,
+forerunner, herald, and soon to be the martyr.
+
+But this contrast was more than ever accentuated on the evening of
+Herod's birthday, when the great banqueting-chamber was specially
+illuminated; the tables decked with flowers and gold and silver plate;
+laughter and mirth echoing through the vaulted roof from the splendid
+company that lay, after the Eastern mode, on sumptuous couches,
+strewing the floor from one end to the other of the spacious hall.
+Servants, in costly liveries, passed to and fro, bearing the rich
+dainties on massive salvers, one of which was to be presently
+besprinkled with the martyr's blood.
+
+In such a scene, I would have you study the genesis of a great crime,
+because you must remember that in respect to sin, there is very little
+to choose between the twentieth century and the first; between the sin
+of that civilization and of ours. This is why the Bible must always
+command the profound interest of mankind--because it does not concern
+itself with the outward circumstances and setting of the scenes and
+characters it describes, but with those great common facts of
+temptation, sin, and redemption, which have a meaning for us all.
+
+This chapter is therefore written under more than usual solemnity,
+because one is so sure that, in dealing with that scene and the
+passions that met there in a foaming vortex, words may be penned that
+will help souls which are caught in the drift of the same black
+current, and are being swept down. Perhaps this page shall utter a
+warning voice to arrest them, ere it be too late, and be a life-buoy,
+or rope, or brother's hand reached out to save them as they rush past
+on the boiling waters. For there is help and grace in God by which a
+Herod and a Judas, a Jezebel and a Lady Macbeth, a royal criminal or an
+ordinary one, may be arrested, redeemed, and saved.
+
+In this, as in every sin, there were three forces at work:--First, the
+predisposition of the soul, which the Bible calls "lust," and "the
+desire of the mind." "Among whom," says the apostle, "we also all once
+lived in the lusts of our flesh, doing the desires of the flesh and of
+the mind, and were by nature children of wrath." Second, the
+suggestion of evil from without. Finally, the act of the will by which
+the suggestion was accepted and finally adopted.
+
+It is, in this latter phase, that sin especially comes in. There may
+be sin in being able and disposed to sin. The possession of a sinful
+nature needs the atonement and propitiation of the precious blood.
+There may be sin, also, in dallying with temptation, in not
+anticipating its advent at a further distance. But, after all, that
+which is of the essence of sin is in the act of the will, which allows
+itself to admit and entertain some foul suggestion, and ultimately
+sends its executioner below to carry its sentence into effect.
+
+
+I. THE PREDETERMINATION TOWARDS THIS SIN.--The word "lust" is now
+universally employed and understood in one direction only. It is a
+pity and a mistake; because we fail to appreciate many of the warning
+signals which the Spirit of God stations along our path. Any
+inordinate desire for sensual and pleasurable excitement, whether fixed
+on a right object, or directed towards a wrong one, comes under the
+denomination of "lust." Strong and ill-regulated desire or passion, in
+whatever direction it expresses itself, will work our ruin, and not
+that alone of impurity, to which this old word is now specially
+confined.
+
+In dealing with temptation and sin, we must always take into account
+the presence in the human heart of that sad relic of the Fall, which
+biases men towards evil. Every one that has handled bowls on the green
+is familiar with the effect of the bias. The bowls are not perfect
+spheres, and are weighted on one side in such a way that, as they leave
+the hand, they will inevitably turn off from a straight course; and on
+this account the greater skill is required from the hands that
+manipulate and impel them. Such a bias has come to us all: first, from
+our ancestor Adam; and, secondly, by that law of heredity which has
+been accumulating its malign and sinister force through all the ages.
+God alone can compute the respective strength of these forces; but He
+can, and He will, as each separate soul stands before his judgment bar.
+
+Herod was the son of the great Herod, a voluptuous, murderous tyrant;
+and, from some source or other, he had inherited a very weak nature.
+Perhaps, if he had come under strong, wholesome influences, he would
+have lived a passably good life; but it was his misfortune to fall
+under the influence of a beautiful fiend, who became his Lady Macbeth,
+his Jezebel, and wrought the ruin of his soul. It is a remarkable
+thing, how strong an influence a beautiful and unscrupulous woman may
+have over a weak man. And for this reason, amongst others, weakness
+becomes wickedness. The man who allows himself to drift weakly before
+the strongest influence is almost certain to discover that, in this
+world, the strongest influences are those which make for sin; these
+touch him most closely, and operate most continuously, and find in his
+nature the best _nidus_, or nest, in which to breed.
+
+The influences that suggest and make for sin in this world are so
+persistent--at every street corner, in every daily newspaper, among
+every gathering of well-dressed people, or ill--that if my readers have
+no other failing than that they are weak, I am bound to warn them, in
+God's name, that unless they succeed in some way, directly or
+indirectly, in linking themselves to the strength of the Son of. God,
+they will inevitably become wicked. Remember that the men, and
+especially the women, who are filling our gaols as criminals, were, in
+most cases, only weak, but they therefore drifted before the strong,
+black current which flows through the world, and have become objects
+against whom all parents warn their children. With all my soul--and I
+have had no small experience of myself and of others--I implore that if
+you are conscious of your weakness, you shall do what the sea-anemone
+and the limpet do, which cling to the rock when the storms darken the
+sky. "Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might."
+
+Herod was reluctant to take the course to which his evil genius urged
+him. He made a slight show of resistance, as we have seen--but he did
+not break with her; and so she finally had her way, and dragged him to
+her lowest level. Here was the cause of his ruin, as it may be of
+yours. You, too, have become allied with one who is possessed by a
+more imperious will, and dominated by a stronger passion, than yours.
+You suppose, however, that you can act as a make-weight, a drag on the
+chariot-wheel; that you will be able to keep and steady the pace; and
+that, when you like, you may arrest the onward progress. Ah, it is not
+so! Herodias will have her way with you. You may be reluctant, will
+falter and hesitate, will remonstrate, will resist, but ultimately you
+will drift into doing the very sins, the mention of which in your
+presence brings the red blood to your face.
+
+Beware, then, of yourself. If you are so impressible to John the
+Baptist, remember that you may be equally so to evil suggestion: take
+heed, therefore, to guard against anything in your life that may open
+the gates of your sensitive nature to a temptation, which you may not
+be able to withstand. If you are weak in physical health, you guard
+against draught and fatigue, against impure atmosphere and
+contagion--how much more should you guard against the scenes and
+company which may act prejudicially on the health of your soul? Of all
+our hours, none are so fraught with danger as those of recreation. In
+these we cast ourselves, with the majority of Gideon's men, on the bank
+of the stream, with relaxed girdles, drinking at our ease, without a
+thought of the proximity of the foe; and, therefore, in these we are
+more likely to fall. The Christian soldier is never off duty, never
+out of the enemy's reach, never at liberty to relax his watch. The
+sentries must always be posted, and the pickets kept well out on the
+veldt.
+
+It was the most perilous thing that Herod could do, to have that
+banquet. Lying back on his divan, lolling on his cushions, eating his
+rich food, quaffing the sparkling wine, exchanging repartee with his
+obsequious followers, it was as though the petals and calyx of his soul
+were all open to receive the first insidious spore of evil that might
+float past on the sultry air. That is why some of us dare not enter
+the theatre, or encourage others to enter. This is not the place to
+enter into a full discussion of the subject; but, even when a play may
+be deemed inoffensive and harmless, the sensuous attractions of the
+place, the glitter, the music, the slightly-dressed figures of the
+actors and actresses, the entire atmosphere and environment, which
+appeal so strongly to the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and
+the pride of life, break down some of the fortifications, which would
+otherwise resist the first incidence and assault of evil. The air of
+the theatre, the ball-room, the race-course, seem so impregnated with
+the nocuous germs and microbes of evil, that it is perilous for the
+soul to expose itself to them, conscious as it is of predisposing bias
+and weakness. It is this consciousness, also, which prompts the daily
+prayer, "Lead us not into temptation."
+
+
+II. TEMPTATION. In the genesis of a sin we must give due weight to
+the power of the Tempter, whether by his direct suggestion to the soul
+or by the instrumentality of men and women whom he uses for his fell
+purpose. In this case Satan's accomplice was the beautiful
+Herodias--beautiful as a snake, but as deadly. She knew the influence
+that John the Baptist wielded over her weak paramour, that he was
+accustomed to attach unmeasured importance to his words, and do "many
+things." She realized that his conscience was uneasy, and therefore
+the more liable to be affected by his words when he reasoned of
+righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come. She feared for the
+consequences if the Baptist and Herod's conscience should make common
+cause against her. What if her power over the capricious tyrant were
+to begin to wane, and the Baptist gain more and more influence, to her
+discredit and undoing? She was not safe so long as John the Baptist
+breathed. Herod feared him, and perhaps she feared him with more
+abject terror, and was bent on delivering her life of his presence.
+
+She watched her opportunity, and it came on the occasion we have
+described. The ungodly revel was at its height. Such a banquet as
+Herod had often witnessed in the shameless court of Tiberius, and in
+which luxury and appetite reached their climax, was in mid-current.
+The strong wines of Messina and Cyprus had already done their work.
+The hall resounded with ribald joke and merriment. Towards the end of
+such a feast it was the custom for immodest women to be introduced,
+who, by their gestures, imitated scenes in certain well-known
+mythologies, and still further inflamed the passions of the banqueters.
+But instead of the usual troupe, which Herod probably kept for such an
+occasion, Salome herself came in and danced a wild nautch-dance. What
+shall we think of a mother who could expose her daughter to such a
+scene, and suggest her taking a part in the half-drunken orgy? To what
+depths will not mad jealousy and passion urge us, apart from the
+restraining grace of God! The girl, alas, was as shameless as her
+mother.
+
+She pleased Herod, who was excited with the meeting of the two strong
+passions, which have destroyed more victims than have fallen on all the
+battlefields of the world; and in his frenzy, he promised to give her
+whatever she might ask, though it were to cost half his kingdom. She
+rushed back to her mother with the story of her success. "What shall I
+ask?" she cried. The mother had, perhaps, anticipated such a moment as
+this, and had her answer ready. "Ask," she replied instantly, "for
+John the Baptist's head." Back from her mother she tripped into the
+banqueting-hall, her black eyes flashing with cruel hate, lighted from
+her mother's fierceness. A dead silence fell on the buzz of
+conversation, and every ear strained for her reply. "And she came in
+straightway with haste unto the king, and asked, saying, I will that
+thou forthwith give me in a charger the head of John the Baptist."
+
+Mark that word, "forthwith." Her mother and she were probably fearful
+that the king's mood would change. What was to be done must be done at
+once, or it might not be done at all. "Quick, quick," the girl seemed
+to say, "the moments seem like hours; now, in this instant, give me
+what I demand. I want my banquet, too; let it be served up on one of
+these golden chargers." The imperious demand of the girl showed how
+keenly she had entered into her mother's scheme.
+
+It is thus that suggestions come to us; and, so far as I can
+understand, we may expect them to come so long as we are in this world.
+There seems to be a precise analogy between temptation and the microbes
+of disease. These are always in the air; but when we are in good
+health they are absolutely innocuous, our nature offers no hold or
+resting place for them. The grouse disease only makes headway when
+there has been a wet season, and the young birds are too weakened by
+the damp to resist its attack. The potato blight is always lying in
+wait, till the potato plants are deteriorated by a long spell of rain
+and damp; it is only then that it can effect its fell purpose. The
+microbes of consumption and cancer are probably never far away from us,
+but are powerless to hurt us, till our system has become weakened by
+other causes. So temptation would have no power over us, if we were in
+full vigour of soul. It is only when the vitality of the inward man is
+impaired, that we are unable to withstand the fiery darts of the wicked
+one.
+
+This shows how greatly we need to be filled with the life of the Son of
+God. In his life and death, our Lord, in our human nature, met and
+vanquished the power of sin and death; He bore that nature into the
+heavenly places, whence He waits to impart it, by the Holy Spirit, to
+those who are united with Him by a living faith. Is not this what the
+apostle John meant, when he said that his converts--his little
+children--could overcome, because greater was He that was in them than
+he that was in the world? He who has the greatest and strongest nature
+within him must overcome an inferior nature; and if you have the
+victorious nature of the living Christ in you, you must be stronger
+than the nature which He bruised beneath his feet.
+
+
+III. THE CONSENT OF THE WILL.--"The king was exceeding sorry." The
+girl's request sobered him. His face turned pale, and he clutched
+convulsively at the cushion on which he reclined. On the one hand, his
+conscience revolted from the deed, and he was more than fearful of the
+consequences; on the other, he said to himself, "I am bound by my oath.
+I have sworn; and my words were spoken in the audience of so many of my
+chief men, I dare not go back, lest they lose faith in me." "And
+straightway the king sent forth a soldier of his guard and commanded to
+bring the Baptist's head."
+
+Is it not marvellous that a man who did not refrain from doing deeds of
+incest and murder, should be so scrupulous about violating an oath that
+ought never to have been sworn? You have thought that you were bound
+to go through with your engagement, because you had pledged yourself,
+although you know that it would condemn you to lifelong misery and
+disobedience to the law of Christ. But stay for a moment, and tell me!
+What was your state of mind when you pledged your word? Were you not
+under the influence of passion? Did you not form your plan in the
+twilight of misinformation, or beneath the spell of some malign and
+unholy influence, that exerted a mesmeric power over you? Looking back
+on it, can you not see that you ought never to have bound yourself, and
+do you not feel that if you had your time again you would not bind
+yourself? Then be sure that you are not bound by that "dead hand."
+You must act in the clearer, better light, which God has communicated.
+Even though you called on the sacred name of God, God cannot sanction
+that which you now count mistaken, and wrong. You had no right to
+pledge half the kingdom of your nature. It is not yours to give, it is
+God's. And if you have pledged it, through mistake, prejudice, or
+passion, dare to believe that you are absolved from your vow, through
+repentance and faith, and that the breach is better than the observance.
+
+"And he went and beheaded John in prison." Had the Baptist heard aught
+of the unseemly revelry? Had any strain of music been waited down to
+him? Perhaps so. Those old castles are full of strange echoes. His
+cell was perfectly dark. He might be lying bound on the bare ground,
+or some poor bed of straw. Was his mind glancing back on those
+never-to-be-forgotten days, when the heaven was opened above him, and
+he saw the descending Dove? Was he wondering why he was allowed to lie
+there month after month, silenced and suffering? Ah, he did not know
+how near he was to liberty!
+
+There was a tread along the corridor. It stopped outside his cell.
+The light gleamed under the door; the heavy wards of the lock were
+turned: in a moment more he saw the gleam of the naked sword, and
+guessed the soldier's errand. There was no time to spare; the royal
+message was urgent. Perhaps one last message was sent to his
+disciples; then he bowed his head before the stroke; the body fell
+helpless here, the head there, and the spirit was free, with the
+freedom of the sons of God, in a world where such as he stand among
+their peers. Forerunner of the Bridegroom here, he was his forerunner
+there also; and the Bridegroom's friend passed homeward to await the
+Bridegroom's coming, where he ever hears the voice he loves.
+
+"And the soldier brought his head in a charger, and gave it to the
+damsel; and the damsel gave it to her mother." There would not be so
+much talking while the tragedy was being consummated. The king and
+courtiers must have been troubled under the spell of that horror, as
+Belshazzar when the hand wrote in characters of mystery over against
+the sacred candlestick. And when the soldier entered, carrying in the
+charger that ghastly burden, they beheld a sight which was to haunt
+some of them to their dying day. Often Herod would see it in his
+dreams, and amid the light of setting suns. It would haunt him, and
+fill his days and nights with anguish that all the witchery of Herodias
+could not dispel.
+
+Months afterwards, when he heard of Jesus, the conscience-stricken
+monarch said: "It is John the Baptist, whom I beheaded; he is risen
+from the dead." And still afterwards, when Jesus Himself stood before
+him, and refused to speak one word, he must have associated that
+silence and his deed together, as having a fatal and necessary
+connection.
+
+So the will, which had long paltered with the temptress, at last took
+the fatal step, and perpetrated the crime which could never be undone.
+There is always a space given, during which a tempted soul is allowed
+time to withdraw from the meshes of the net of temptation. Sudden
+falls have always been preceded by long dallying with Delilah. The
+crashing of the tree to the earth has been prepared for by the ravages
+of the borer-worm, which has eaten out its heart.
+
+If you have taken the fatal step, and marred your life by some sad and
+disastrous sin, dare to believe that there is forgiveness for you with
+God. Men may not forgive, but God will. As far as the east is from
+the west, so far will He remove our transgressions from us. Perhaps we
+can never again take up public Christian work; but we may walk humbly
+and prayerfully with God, sure that we are accepted of Him, and
+forgiven, though we can hardly forgive ourselves.
+
+But if we have not yet come to this, let us devoutly thank God, and be
+on the watch against any influences that may drift us thither. We may
+yet retreat. We may yet disentangle ourselves. We may yet receive
+into our natures the living power of the Lord Jesus. We may yet cut
+off the right hand and right foot, and pluck out the right eye, which
+is causing us to offend. Better this, and go into life maimed, than be
+cast, as Herod was, to the fire and worm of unquenchable remorse.
+
+
+
+
+XV.
+
+The Grave of John, and Another Grave
+
+(MATTHEW XIV. 12.)
+
+ "When some beloved voice, that was to you
+ Both sound and sweetness, faileth suddenly,
+ And silence, against which you dare not cry,
+ Aches round you like a strong disease and new,--
+ What hope, what help, what music will undo
+ That silence to your sense? Not friendship's sigh,
+ Not reason's subtle count.... Nay, none of these!
+ Speak, Thou availing Christ!--and fill this pause."
+ E. B. BROWNING.
+
+
+"Tell Jesus"--The Sin-Bearer--The Resurrection of Jesus--The Followers
+of John, and of Jesus--"He is Risen!"
+
+
+We have beheld the ghastly deed with which Herod's feast ended--the
+golden charger, on which lay the freshly-dissevered head of the
+Baptist, borne by Salome to her mother, that the two might gloat on it
+together. Josephus says that the body was cast over the castle wall,
+and lay for a time unburied. Whether that were so, we cannot tell;
+but, in some way, John's disciples heard of the ghastly tragedy, which
+had closed their master's life, and they came to the precincts of the
+castle to gather up the body as it lay dishonoured on the ground, or
+ventured into the very jaws of death to request that it might be given
+to them. In either case, it was a brave thing for them to do; an
+altogether heroic exploit, which may be classed in the same category
+with that of the men of Jabesh-Gilead, who travelled all night through
+the country infested by the Philistines to rescue the bodies of Saul
+and his sons from the temple of Bethshan.
+
+The headless body was then borne to a grave, either in the grim, gaunt
+hills of Moab, or in that little village, away on the southern slopes
+of the Judaean hills, where, some thirty years before, the aged pair
+had rejoiced over the growing lad. God knows where that grave lies;
+and some day it will yield up to honour and glory the body which was
+sown in weakness and corruption.
+
+Having performed the last sad rites, the disciples "went and told
+Jesus." Every mourner should go along the path they trod, to the same
+gentle and tender Comforter; and if any who read these words have
+placed within the narrow confines of a grave the precious remains of
+those dearer than life, let them follow where John's disciples have
+preceded them, to the one Heart of all others in the universe which is
+able to sympathize and help; because it also has sorrowed unto tears at
+the grave of its beloved, even though it throbbed with the fulness of
+the mighty God. Go, and tell Jesus!
+
+The telling will bring relief. Though the great High-Priest knows all
+the story, He loves to hear it told, because of the relief which the
+recital necessarily imparts to the surcharged soul. He will tell you
+that your brother shall rise again; that your child is safe in the
+flowery meadows of Paradise; that those whom you have loved and lost
+are engaged in high service amid the ministries of eternity; that every
+time-beat is bringing nearer the moment of inseparable union.
+
+It is not, however, on these details that we desire to dwell, but to
+use the scenes before us as a background and contrast to magnify
+certain features in the death, grave, and abiding influence of Jesus of
+Nazareth.
+
+
+I. CONTRAST THE DEATH OF JOHN AND THAT OF JESUS.--There were many
+points of similarity between their careers. These two rivers sprang
+from the same source, in a quiet glen far up among the hills; lay in
+deep lagoons during their earlier course; leapt down in the same mighty
+torrent when their time had come; and for the first few miles watered
+the same tract of country.
+
+It would be possible to enumerate a large number of identical facts of
+the life-courses of the two cousins. Their births were announced, and
+their ministries anticipated, under very special circumstances; Mary
+was unmarried, and Elisabeth past age--and an angel of the Lord came to
+each. John seemed, to the superficial view, the stronger and mightier
+of the two; but Jesus followed close behind and took up a similar
+burden, as He bade the people repent and believe the Gospel. They were
+alike in attending no prophetic school, and avoiding each of the great
+Jewish sects. Neither Hillel nor Shammai could claim them. They had
+no ecclesiastical connections; they stood aloof from the Pharisees and
+Sadducees, the Herodians and Essenes. They attracted similar
+attention, gathered the same crowds, and protested against the same
+sins. Rearing the same standard, they summoned men from formality and
+hypocrisy to righteousness and reality. They incurred the same hatred
+on the part of the religious leaders of their nation, and suffered
+violent deaths--the one beneath the headsman's blade in the dungeons of
+Herod's castle, the other on the cross, at the hand of Pilate and the
+Roman soldiers. Each suffered a death of violence at the hand of men
+whom he had lived to succour; each died when the life-blood throbbed
+with young manhood's prime, and while there was sweet fragrance as of
+early summer; each was loved and mourned by a little handful of devoted
+followers.
+
+But there the similarity ends, and the contrast begins. With John, it
+was the tragic close of a great and epoch-making career. When he died
+men said--Alas! a prophet's voice is silenced. What a pity that in a
+moment of passion the tyrant took his life! Let him sleep! Rest will
+be sweet to one who expended his young strength with such spendthrift
+extravagance! Such men are rare! Ages flower thus but once, and then
+years of barrenness! But as we turn to the death of Jesus, other
+feelings than those of pity or regret master us. We are neither
+surprised, nor altogether sorry. We do not recognise that there is in
+any sense an end of his work--rather it is the beginning. The corn of
+wheat has fallen into the ground to die, that it may not abide alone,
+but bear much fruit. Here, at the Cross, is the head of waters, rising
+from unknown depths, which are to heal the nations; here the sacrifice
+is being offered which is to expiate the sin of man, and bring peace to
+myriads of penitents; here the last Adam at the tree undoes the deadly
+work wrought by the first at another tree. This is no mere martyr's
+last agony; but a sacrifice, premeditated, prearranged, the effects of
+which have already been prevalent in securing the remission of sins
+done aforetime. This is an event for which millenniums have been
+preparing, and to which millenniums shall look back. John's death
+affected no destiny but his own; the death of Jesus has affected the
+destiny of our race. As his forerunner explained, He was the Lamb of
+God who bore away the sin of the world. The Lord hath laid on Him the
+iniquity of us all.
+
+But there is another contrast. In the case of John, the martyr had no
+control on his destiny; he could not order the course of events; there
+was no alternative but to submit. When he opened his ministry, he had
+no thought that such a fate would befall. As he stood boldly forth
+upon his rock-hewn pulpit, and preached to the eager crowds, do you
+suppose that the idea ever flashed across his mind that his path,
+carpeted with flowers and lined on either side with applause, could end
+in the loneliness of a desert track, lying across a barren waste where
+no man dwelt or came, and where the vast expanse engulphs the last cry
+of the perishing? But, from the first, Jesus meant to die. If, eight
+centuries ago, you had seen the first outlines drawn of the Cologne
+Cathedral, whose noble structure has been brought to completion within
+only the last decades, you would have been convinced that the completed
+fabric would enclose a cross; so the life of Jesus, from the earliest,
+portended Calvary. He had received power and commandment from the
+Father to lay down his life. For this cause He was born, and for this
+He came into the world. Others die because they have been born: Jesus
+was born that He might die.
+
+In his great picture of the Carpenter's shop, Millais depicts the
+shadow of the Cross, flung back by the growing lad, on the wall,
+strongly-defined in the clear oriental light. Mary beholds it with a
+look of horror on her face. The thought is a true one. From the
+earliest, the Cross cast its shadow over the life of the Son of Man.
+He was never deceived as to his ultimate destiny. He told Nicodemus
+that He must be lifted up. He knew that as the Good Shepherd He would
+have to give his life for the sheep. He assured his disciples that He
+would be delivered up to the chief priests and scribes, who would
+condemn Him to death, crucify, and slay. Man does not need primarily
+the teacher, the example, nor the miracle-worker; but the Saviour who
+can stand in his stead, and put away his sin by the sacrifice of
+Himself. When the soul is burdened with the weight of its sins, and
+the conscience is ill at ease, whither can we turn save to the Cross,
+on which the Prince of Glory died!
+
+What answer and explanation can be given to account for the marvellous
+spell that the Cross of Christ exerts over the hearts of men? You
+cannot trace it to the influence of early association merely, or to the
+effect of heredity, or to the fact of our having come of generations
+which have turned to the green hill far away, in life and death;
+because if you take the preaching of the Cross to savage and heathen
+tribes, who have no advantage of Christian centuries behind them,
+whenever you begin to explain its significance, the sob of the soul is
+hushed, and its dread dissipated. Tears of anguish are changed into
+tears of penitence. The shuttles of a new hope begin to weave the
+garments of a new purity. No other death affects us thus or effects so
+immediate a transformation. And may not this be cited as the proof
+that the death of Jesus is unique; the supreme act of love; the gift of
+that Father-heart which knew the need of the world, and the only way of
+appeasing it?
+
+
+II. CONTRAST THE GRAVE OF JOHN AND THAT OF JESUS.--Men have alleged
+that the Lord did not really rise from the dead, and that the tale of
+his resurrection, if it were not a fabrication, was the elaboration of
+a myth. But neither of these alternatives will bear investigation. On
+the one hand, it is absurd to suppose that the temple of truth could be
+erected on the quagmire and morass of falsehood--impossible to believe
+that the one system in the world of mind which has attracted the true
+to its allegiance, and been the stimulus of truth-seeking throughout
+the ages, can have originated in a tissue of deliberate falsehoods. On
+the other hand, it is a demonstrated impossibility that a myth could
+have found time to grow into the appearance of substantial fact during
+the short interval which elapsed between the death of Christ and the
+first historical traces of the Church.
+
+In this connection, it is interesting to consider one sentence dropped
+by the sacred chronicler. He tells us, that when Herod heard of the
+works of Jesus, he said immediately, "It is John the Baptist--he is
+risen from the dead." Herod could not believe that that mighty
+personality was quenched, even for this life, by that one blow of the
+executioner's sword. Surely he had risen! There was a feverish dread
+that he would yet be confronted by the murdered man, whose face haunted
+his dreams. His courtiers, ready to take the monarch's cue, would be
+equally credulous. From one to another the surmise would pass--"John
+the Baptist is risen from the dead."
+
+Why, then, did that myth not spread, until it became universally
+accredited? Ah, there was no chance of such a thing, for the simple
+reason that there was the grave of John the Baptist to disprove it. If
+Herod had seriously believed it, or the disciples of John attempted to
+spread it, nothing would have been easier than to exhume the body from
+its sepulture, and produce the ghastly but indubitable refutation of
+the royal delusion.
+
+When the statement began to spread and gain credence that Christ had
+risen from the dead; when Peter and John stood up and affirmed that He
+was living at the right hand of God; if it had been a mere surmise, the
+fond delusion of loyal and faithful hearts, an hallucination of two or
+three hysterical women--would it not have been easy for the enemies of
+Christianity to go forthwith to the grave in the garden of Joseph, and
+produce the body of the Crucified, with the marks of the nails in hands
+and feet? Why did they not do it? If it be said that it could not be
+produced, because it had been taken away, let this further question be
+answered: Who had taken it away? Not his friends; for they would have
+taken the cerements and wrappings with which Joseph and Nicodemus had
+enswathed it. Not his enemies; for they would have been only too glad
+to produce it. What glee in the grim faces of Caiaphas and Annas, if
+at the meeting of the Sanhedrim, called to deal with the new heresy,
+there could have been given some irrefragable proof that the body of
+Jesus was still sepulchred, if not in Joseph's tomb, yet somewhere
+else, to which their emissaries had conveyed it!
+
+It is difficult to exaggerate the significance and force of this
+contrast. And the devout soul cannot but derive comfort from comparing
+the allegation of the superstitious king, which could have been so
+easily refuted by the production of the Baptist's body, with that of
+the disciples, which was confirmed and attested by the condition of the
+grave which, in spite of the watch and ward of the Roman soldiers, had
+been despoiled of its prey on the morning of the third day. Herod
+expected John to rise, and gave his royal authority to the rumour of
+his resurrection; but it fell to the ground still-born. The disciples
+did not expect Jesus to rise. They stoutly held that the women were
+mistaken, when they brought to them the assurance that it was even so.
+But as the hours passed, the tidings of the empty grave were
+corroborated by the vision of the Risen Lord, and they were convinced
+that He who was crucified in weakness was living by the power of God.
+There could, henceforth, be no hesitation in their message to the
+world. "The God of our fathers hath glorified his Son Jesus, whom ye
+denied in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let Him
+go.... But ye killed the Prince of Life, whom God raised from the
+dead." Thank God, we have not followed cunningly-devised fables. "Now
+is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that
+slept. And as by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of
+the dead."
+
+
+III. THE CONTRAST BETWEEN THE EFFECTS OF THEIR TWO DEATHS ON THE
+FOLLOWERS OF JOHN THE BAPTIST AND OF JESUS RESPECTIVELY.--What a
+picture for an artist of sacred subjects is presented by the
+performance of the last rites to the remains of the great Forerunner!
+There was probably neither a Joseph nor a Nicodemus among his
+disciples; certainly no Magdalene nor mother. Devout men bore him to
+his grave, and made great lamentation over him. He had taught them to
+pray, to know God, to prepare for the Kingdom of God. They had also
+fasted oft beneath his suggestion; but they were destined to experience
+what fasting meant, after a new fashion, now that their leader was
+taken away from them.
+
+The little band broke up at his grave. Farewell! they said to him;
+farewell to their ministry and mission; farewell to one another. "I go
+back to my boats and fishing-nets," said one; and "I to my farm," said
+another; and "We shall go and join Jesus of Nazareth," said the rest.
+"Good-bye!" "Good-bye!" And so the little band separated, never to
+meet in a common corporate existence again.
+
+When Jesus lay in his grave, this process of disintegration began at
+once among his followers also. The women went to embalm Him; the men
+were apart. Peter and John broke off together--at least they ran
+together to the sepulchre; but where were the rest? Two walked to
+Emmaus apart; whilst Thomas was not with them when Jesus came on the
+evening of Easter Day. As soon as the breath leaves the body
+disintegration begins; and when Jesus was dead, as they supposed, the
+same process began to show itself. Soon Peter would have been back in
+Gennesaret; Nathanael beneath his fig-tree, Luke in his dispensary, and
+Matthew at his toll-booth.
+
+What arrested that process and made it impossible? Why did the day,
+which began with a certain amount of separation and decay, end with a
+closer consolidation than ever, so that they were, for the most part,
+gathered in the upper room; and forty days after they were all with one
+accord in one place? Why was it that they who had been like timid
+deer, before He died, became as lions against the storm of Pharisaic
+hate, and stronger as the weeks passed?
+
+There is only one answer to these questions. The followers of Jesus
+were convinced by irrefragable proofs that their Master was living at
+the right hand of power; nay, that He was with them all the
+days--nearer them than ever before, as much their Head and Leader as at
+any previous moment. When the shepherd is smitten, the flock is
+scattered; and this flock was not scattered, because the Shepherd had
+recovered from his mortal wound, and was alive for evermore.
+
+And surely the evidence which sufficed for them is enough for us.
+Again and again, in dark hours, when I have longed to have the
+demonstration of sense added to that of faith, it has been an untold
+comfort to feel that sufficient evidence was given to the Lord's
+disciples to persuade them against their contrary expectations and
+unbelief; to hold them together in spite of every possible inducement
+to disperse, and to transform a number of units into the Church,
+against which the gates of hell have not been able to prevail. If they
+were convinced, we may be. If their eyes beheld and their hands
+touched the body of the risen Lord, we may be of good cheer. Their
+behaviour proves that they were thoroughly convinced. They acted as
+only those can act whose feet are on a rock. They knew whom they had
+believed; and they had no doubt that He would perfect the work which He
+had begun. What He had begun in the flesh, He would perfect in the
+Spirit.
+
+In after days Peter spoke of Him as the Prince, or File-leader of Life;
+and suggests the conception, that through all the ages He is marching
+on through the gates of death and the grave, unlocking them for us, and
+opening the pathway into the realms of more and more abundant life.
+Let us follow Him. It is not for us to linger around the grave: even
+John's disciples forbore to do this. But let us join ourselves by
+faith with our Prince and Leader, our Head and Captain, as He waits to
+succour us from the excellent glory, sure that where He is, we too
+shall be; but in the meanwhile we are assured that He is not in the
+grave, where loving hands laid Him, but risen, ascended, glorified--our
+Emmanuel, our Bridegroom, our Love and Life. "The Lord is my Shepherd,
+I shall not want: ... He leadeth me, ... He maketh me to lie down;
+... He restoreth my soul.... Though I walk through the valley of the
+shadow of death, ... Thou _art_ with me."
+
+
+
+
+XVI.
+
+Yet Speaking.
+
+(JOHN X. 40-42.)
+
+ "Shine Thou upon us, Lord,
+ True Light of men, to-day;
+ And through the written Word
+ Thy very self display;
+ That so from hearts which burn
+ With gazing on Thy face,
+ Thy little ones may learn
+ The wonders of Thy grace."
+ J. ELLERTON.
+
+
+Desert Solitudes--Modern Miracles--Our own Age--Nothing Common or
+Unclean--How to Witness for Jesus--After Many Days
+
+
+"Beyond Jordan!" To the Jews that dwelt at Jerusalem that was
+banishment indeed. The tract of country beyond Jordan was known as
+Perea, and was very sparsely populated. There were some tracts of
+fertile country, dotted by a few scattered villages, but no one of
+repute lived there; and the refinement, religious advantages, and
+social life of the metropolis, were altogether absent. Perea was to
+Jerusalem what the Highlands, a century ago, were to Edinburgh. There
+our Lord spent the last few months of his chequered career.
+
+But why? Why did the Son of Man banish Himself from the city He loved
+so dearly? Surely the home at Bethany would have welcomed Him? Or,
+failing this, for any reason over which the sisters had no control, He
+might have found a temporary home at Nazareth, where He had been
+brought up; or Capernaum, in which He had wrought so many of his mighty
+works, might have provided Him a palace, whose white marble steps would
+have been lapped by the blue waters of the lake! Not so! The Son of
+Man had not where to lay his head. The nation, whose white flower He
+was, had rejected Him; and the world, for which He came to shed his
+blood, knew Him not. The religious leaders of the age were pursuing
+Him with relentless malice, and would have taken his life before the
+predestined hour had arrived, had He not escaped from their hands, and
+gone away "beyond Jordan into the place where John was at the first
+baptizing; and there He abode: and many came unto Him."
+
+There was a peculiar fascination to the Lord Jesus in those solitudes,
+because of their connection with the Forerunner. Those desert
+solitudes had been black with crowds of men. Those hill-slopes had
+been covered with booths and tents, in which the mighty congregations
+tabernacled, whilst they waited on his words. Those banks had
+witnessed the baptism of thousands of people, who, in the symbolic act
+of baptism, had put away their sins. And the villagers, who lived
+around, could tell wonderful tales of the radiant opening of that brief
+but epoch-making ministry; they could speak for hours together about
+the habits of the austere preacher, and the marvellous power of his
+eloquence.
+
+As Jesus and his disciples wandered from place to place, Andrew would
+indicate the spot where he was baptized; and John and he would recall
+together the place where they were standing when their great teacher
+and master pointed to Jesus as He walked, and said, "Behold the Lamb of
+God." Bartholomew would find again the spot where Jesus accosted him
+as the guileless Israelite, a salutation for which also he had been
+prepared by the preaching of the Forerunner. Two or three could
+localize the scene where the deputation from the Sanhedrim accosted the
+Baptist with the enquiry, "Who art thou?"
+
+It was as though, years after the Battle of Waterloo, some soldiers of
+the Iron Duke had visited the historic cornfields, and had recited
+their reminiscences of the memorable incidents of that memorable fight.
+Here the long, thin red line stood during the whole day. There
+Napoleon waited to see the effect of the last charge of his cavalry.
+Yonder, through the wood, Blucher's troops hurried to reinforce their
+brothers in arms. And down those slopes the old Guard broke with a
+cheer, as the Duke gave the long-looked-for word. It was in some such
+spirit that our Lord and his apostles revisited those scenes, where
+many of them had seen the gate of heaven opened for the first time.
+
+Probably our Lord would resume his ministry of preaching the good
+tidings. He could not be in any place where the sins and sorrows of
+men called for his gracious words, without speaking them; and to Him
+they probably brought the lame, the blind, the sick, and paralyzed--and
+He healed them all. Many came to Him, and went away blessed and
+helped. So much so, that the people could not help contrasting the two
+ministries. There was a touch of disparagement in their comments on
+the Baptist's ministry. "They said, John indeed did no miracle." No
+lame man had leaped as an hart; the tongue of no dumb man had sung; no
+widow had received her son raised to life from his hands; no leper's
+flesh had come to him, as the flesh of a little child. It was quite
+true--John had done no miracle.
+
+But with this slight disparagement, there was a generous tribute and
+acknowledgment. "But all things whatsoever John spake of this Man were
+true." He said that He was the Lamb of God, pure and gentle, holy,
+harmless, and undefiled; _and it was true_. He said that He would use
+his fan, separating the wheat from the chaff; _and it was true_. He
+said that He would baptize with fire; _and it was true_. He said that
+He was the Bridegroom of Israel; _and it was true_. He did no miracle,
+but he spoke strong, true words of Jesus, and they have been abundantly
+verified. And these simple-hearted people of Perea did what the
+Pharisees and scribes, with all their fancied wisdom, had failed to do:
+they put the words of the Baptist and the life of Jesus together, and
+reasoned that since this had fitted those, as a key fits the lock,
+therefore Jesus was indeed the Son of God and the King of Israel; and
+"many believed on Him there."
+
+
+I. LIFE WITHOUT MIRACLES.--The people were inclined to disparage the
+life of John because there was no miracle in it. But surely his whole
+life was a miracle; from first to last it vibrated with Divine power.
+And did he work no miracle? If he did not open the eyes of the blind,
+did not multitudes, beneath his words, come to see themselves sinners,
+and the world a passing show, and the Eternal as alone enduring and
+desirable? If he did not lay his priestly hand on leprous flesh, as
+Jesus did, did not many a moral leper go from the waters of his
+baptism, with new resolves and purposes, to sin no more? If he did not
+raise dead bodies, did not many, who were immured in the graves of
+pride, and lust, and worldliness, hear his voice, and come forth to the
+life--which is life indeed? No miracles! Surely his life was one long
+pathway of miracle, from the time of his birth of aged parents, to the
+last moment of his protest against the crimes of Herod!
+
+This is still the mistake of men. They allege that the age of miracles
+has passed. If they admit that such prodigies may possibly have
+happened once, they insist that the world has grown out of them, and
+that with its arrival at maturity the race has put them away as
+childish things. God, they think, is either Absentee, or the Creature
+of Laws, which He established, and which now hold Him, as the
+graveclothes held Lazarus. No miracles! But last summer He made the
+handfuls of grain, which the farmers cast on the fields, suffice to
+feed all the population of the globe--as easily as He made five barley
+loaves provide a full meal for more than ten thousand persons. No
+miracles! But last autumn, in ten thousand vineyards, He turned the
+dews of the night and the showers of the morning into the wine that
+rejoices man's heart; as once, in Cana, He changed the water drawn from
+the stone jars into the blushing wine. No miracles! Explain, then,
+why it is, that though ice is of denser specific gravity than water, it
+does not sink to the bottom of rivers and ponds, by which they would be
+speedily transformed into masses of ice, but floats on the surface of
+the water, affording a pathway across from bank to brae, as Jesus once
+walked on the water from the shores of the Lake of Galilee! No
+miracles! It was only yesterday that He cleansed a leper; and healed a
+sin-sick soul; and raised from his bier a young man dead in trespasses
+and sins; and took a maiden by the hand, saying, Talitha cumi, "Maid,
+arise!" As I passed by, I saw Him strike a rock, and torrents of tears
+gushed out: I beheld a tree, with its sacred burden, and the
+serpent-poison ceased to inflame: I saw the iron swim against its
+natural bent, and the lion crouch as though it beheld an angel of God
+with a flaming sword. Again, the seas made a passage for the
+sacramental hosts, and the waters shrank away before the touch of the
+Priestly feet, making a passage through the depths. No; it is still
+the age of miracles.
+
+_Let us not disparage the age in which we live_. To look back on the
+Day of Pentecost with a sigh, as though there were more of the Holy
+Spirit on that day than to-day; and as though there were a larger
+Presence of God in the upper room than in the room in which you sit, is
+a distinct mistake and folly. We may not have the sound as of a
+rushing mighty wind, nor the crowns of fire; there is no miracle to
+startle and arrest: but the Holy Spirit is with the Church in all the
+old gracious and copious plenitude; the river is sweeping past in
+undiminished fulness; though there may not be the flash of the electric
+spark, the atmosphere is as heavily charged as ever with the presence
+and power of the Divine Paraclete. The Lord said of the
+Baptist--though he wrought no miracle--that there was none greater of
+those born of woman; and perchance He is pronouncing that this age is
+greater than all preceding ages in its possibilities. In His view, it
+may be that greater deeds may be attempted and accomplished by the
+Church of to-day than ever in that past age, when she grappled with and
+vanquished the whole force of Paganism.
+
+If there is any failure, it is with ourselves. We have not believed in
+the mighty power and presence of God, because we have missed the
+outward and visible sign of his working. We have thought that He was
+not here, because He has not been in the fire, the earthquake, or the
+mighty wind which rends the mountains. We have become so accustomed to
+associate the startling and spectacular with the Divine, that we fail
+to discover God, when the heaven is begemmed with stars, and the earth
+carpeted with flowers: as though the lightning were more to us than
+starlight, and the destructive than the peaceful and patient
+constructive forces, which are ever at work building up and repairing
+the fabric of the universe.
+
+Do not look back on the Incarnation, or forward to the Second Advent,
+as though there were more of God in either one or the other than is
+within our reach. God is; God is here; God is indivisible: all of God
+is present at any given point of time or place. He may choose to
+manifest Himself in outward signs, which impress the imagination more
+at one time than another; the faith of the Church maybe quicker to
+apprehend and receive in one century than the next: but all time is
+great--every age is equally his workmanship, and equally full of his
+wonder-working power. Alas for us, that our eyes are holden!
+
+_Let us not disparage the ordinary and commonplace_. We are all taught
+to run after the startling and extraordinary--the statesman who
+accomplishes the _coup d'etat_; the painter who covers a large canvas
+with a view to scenic effects; the preacher who indulges in superficial
+and showy rhetoric, the musician whose execution is brilliant and
+astonishing. We like miracles! Whatever appeals to our love for the
+sensational and unexpected is likely enough to displace our
+appreciation of the simple and ordinary. When the sun is eclipsed, we
+all look heavenward; but the golden summer days may be filled with
+sunlight, which is dismissed with a commonplace remark about the
+weather. A whole city will turn out to see the illuminations, whilst
+the stars hardly attract a passing notice. Let there be a show of
+curiously-shaped orchids, and society is stirred; but who will travel
+far to see a woodland glade blue with wild hyacinths, or a meadow-lawn
+besprent with daisies. Thus our tastes are vitiated and blinded.
+
+It is good to cultivate simple tastes. The pure and childlike heart
+will find unspeakable enjoyment in all that God has made, though it be
+as familiar as a lawn sparkling with dewdrops, a hay-field scented by
+clover-blooms, a streamlet murmuring over the pebbles, or the drawl of
+the shingle after a retreating wave. It is a symptom of a weak and
+unstable nature to be always in search for some new thing, for some
+greater sensation, for some more startling sign. "Show us a sign from
+heaven," is the incessant cry of the Pharisee and Scribe: and when the
+appetite has been once created, it can never be appeased, but is always
+set on some novelty more marvellous and startling than anything which
+has preceded. Be content with a holy ministry which does not dazzle by
+its fireworks, but sheds a steady sunshine on the sacred page.
+Cultivate familiarity with the grand, solid works of our English
+literature. Avoid the use of extravagant adjectives. Take an interest
+in the games of children; in the common round and daily task of
+servants and employes; in the toils and tears of working-girls; in the
+struggling lot of the charwoman who scrubs your floors, and the lad who
+cleans your boots. Do not be always gaping at the window for bands to
+come down the street; but be on the pavement before your house with a
+helping-hand and kindly word for the ordinary folk that labour and are
+heavy-laden. It is remarkable that in all these there are tragedies
+and comedies; the raw material for novels and romances; the characters
+which fill the pages of a Shakespeare or George Eliot. All life is so
+interesting; but we need eyes to see, and hearts to understand. There
+has been no age greater than this; there is no part of the world more
+full of God than yours; there is no reason why you should not see
+Madonnas in the ordinary women, and Last Suppers in the ordinary meals,
+and Holy Families in the ordinary groups around you--if only you have
+the anointed eyes of a Raffaelle or a Leonardo de Vinci. If the world
+seems common or unclean to you, the fault lies in your eyes that have
+made it so.
+
+_Let us not disparage ourselves_. We know our limitations; we are not
+capable of working miracles--our best friends are well acquainted with
+this, for no eyes are quicker than Love's. We are sparrows, not larks;
+clay, not alabaster; deal, not mahogany. But if we cannot work
+miracles, we can speak true, strong words about Jesus Christ; we can
+bear witness to Him as the Lamb of God; we can urge men to repent and
+believe the Gospel. The world would have been in a sorry plight if it
+had depended entirely on its geniuses and miracle-workers. Probably it
+owes less to them than to the untold myriads of simple, humble,
+obscure, and commonplace people, whose names will never be recorded in
+its roll-call, but whose lives have laid the foundations on which the
+superstructure of good order, and government, and prosperity, has been
+reared.
+
+Remember that God made you what you are, and placed you. Dare to be
+yourself--a simple, humble, sincere follower of Jesus. Do not seek to
+imitate this or the other great speaker or leader. Be content to find
+out what God made you for, and be that at its best. You will be a bad
+copy, but a unique original; for the Almighty always breaks the pattern
+from which He has made one vase. Above all, speak out the truth, as
+God has revealed it to you, distorting, exaggerating, omitting nothing;
+and long after you have passed away, those who remember you will gather
+at your grave and say, "he did no miracle--there was nothing
+sensational or phenomenal in his life-work; but he spake true things
+about Jesus Christ, which we have tested for ourselves, and are
+undeniable. Indeed, they led us to believe in Him for ourselves."
+
+
+II. THE WAYS IN WHICH WE MAY BEAR TESTIMONY TO THE LORD JESUS.--There
+is no miracle in your life, my reader. You are no genius; you do not
+know what it is to have the rush of thought, the power of brilliant
+speech, the burst of song. You have no wealth, only just enough for
+your bare sustenance, and nothing to spare. You have no rich blood in
+your veins, come of a line of heroes or saints. As you look daily into
+the common routine of your lot, it seems ordinary enough. Be it so;
+there is at least one thing you can do, as we have seen--like the
+Baptist, you may witness for Jesus.
+
+_Speak to others privately_. When only two disciples were standing
+beside him, John preached the same sermon as he had delivered to the
+crowd the day before, and both of them went to the frail lodging where
+Jesus was making his abode. There is nothing that more deeply searches
+a man than the habit of speaking to individuals about the love of God.
+We cannot do it unless we are in living union with Himself. Nothing so
+tests the soul. It is easy to preach a sermon, when the inner life is
+out of fellowship with God, because you can preach your ideals, or
+avenge on others the sins of which you are inwardly conscious; but to
+speak to another about Christ involves that there should be an
+absolutely clear sky between the speaker and the Lord of whom he
+speaks. But as this practice is the most difficult, it is the most
+blessed in its reflex influence. To lead another to Jesus is to get
+nearer Him. To chafe the limbs of some frozen companion is to send the
+warm blood rushing through your own veins. To go after one lost sheep
+is to share the shepherd's joy. Whether by letters addressed to
+relatives or companions, or by personal and direct appeal, let each one
+of us adopt the sacred practice, which Mr. Moody followed and
+commended, of allowing no day to pass without seeking to use some
+opportunity given by God for definite, personal dealings with others.
+
+The apostle Andrew seems to have specially consecrated his life to
+this. On each of the occasions he is referred to in the Gospels he is
+dealing with individuals. He brought his own brother; was the first to
+seek after a boy to bring to the Saviour's presence; and at the close
+of our Lord's ministry he brings the seeking Greeks. Did he not learn
+this blessed art from his master, the Baptist?
+
+It is requisite that there should be the deliberate resolution to
+pursue this holy habit; definite prayer for guidance as one issues from
+the morning hour of prayer; abiding fellowship with the Son of God,
+that He may give the right word at the right moment; and a willingness
+to open the conversation by some manifestation of the humble, loving
+disposition begotten by the Holy Spirit, which is infinitely attractive
+and beautiful to the most casual passer-by.
+
+_Speak experimentally_. "I saw and bare record." John spoke of what
+he had seen, and tasted, and handled. Be content to say, "I was lost,
+but Jesus found me, blind, and He gave me sight; unclean, and He
+cleansed my heart." Nothing goes so far to convince another as to hear
+the accent of conviction on the lips of one whose eyes survey the
+landscape of truth to which he allures, and whose ears are open to the
+eternal harmonies which he describes.
+
+_Speak from a full heart_. The lover cannot but speak about his love;
+the painter can do no other than transfer to canvas the conceptions
+that entrance his soul; the musician is constrained to give utterance
+to the chords that pass in mighty procession through his brain. "We
+cannot but speak the things that we have seen and heard."
+
+Does it seem difficult to have always a full heart? Verily, it is
+difficult, and impossible, unless the secret has been acquired of
+abiding always in the love of God, of keeping the entire nature open to
+the Holy Spirit, and of nourishing the inward strength by daily
+meditation on the truth. We must close our senses to the sounds and
+sights around us, that our soul may open to the unseen and eternal. We
+must have deep and personal fellowship with the Father and the Son by
+the Holy Ghost. We must live at first-hand on the great essentials of
+our faith. Then, as the vine-sap arises from the root, its throb and
+pulse will be irresistible in our behaviour and testimony. We shall
+speak true things about Jesus Christ. Our theme will be evermore the
+inexhaustible one of Christ--Christ, only Christ--not primarily the
+doctrine about Him, or the benefits accruing from fellowship with Him,
+but Himself.
+
+Thus, some day, at your burying, as men turn homewards from the
+new-made grave, and speak those final words of the departed, which
+contain the most unerring verdict and summing-up of the life, they will
+say, "He will be greatly missed. He was no genius, not eloquent nor
+profound; but he used to speak about Christ in such a way that he led
+me to know Him for myself: I owe everything to him. He did no miracle;
+but whatever he said of Jesus was true."
+
+
+III. THE POWER OF POSTHUMOUS INFLUENCE.--John had been dead for many
+months, but the stream he had set flowing continued to flow; the
+harvests he sowed sprang into mature and abundant fruitage; the
+wavelets of tremulous motion which he had started circled out and on.
+
+How many voices are speaking still in our lives--voices from the grave!
+voices from dying beds! voices from books and sermons! voices from
+heaven! "Being dead, they yet speak." Let us live so that, when we
+are gone, our influence shall tell, and the accents of our voice
+linger. No one lives or dies to himself. Each grain on the
+ocean-shore affects the position of every other. Each star is needed
+for the perfect balance of the spheres. Each of us is affecting the
+lives of all that are now existing with us in the world, or will exist.
+To untold ages, what we have been and said will affect all other beings
+for good or ill. We may be forgiven for having missed our
+opportunities, or started streams of poison instead of life; but the
+ill effect can never be undone.
+
+Parents, put your hands on those young childish heads, and say pure,
+sweet words of Christ, which will return to memory and heart long after
+you have gone to your reward! Ministers of religion, and Sunday school
+teachers, remember your tremendous responsibility to use to the
+uttermost the opportunity of saying words which will never die!
+Friend, be true and faithful with your friend; he may turn away in
+apparent thoughtlessness or contempt, but no right word spoken for
+Christ can ever really die. It will live in the long after years, and
+bear fruit, as the seeds hidden in the old Egyptian mummy-cases are
+bearing fruit to-day in English soil.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.
+
+The Spirit and Power of Elias.
+
+(LUKE I. 17.)
+
+ "Oh, may I join the choir invisible
+ Of those immortal dead who live again
+ In minds made better by their presence: live
+ In pulses stirred to generosity;
+ In deeds of daring rectitude; in scorn
+ For miserable aims that end with self;
+ In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
+ And with their mild persistence urge man's search
+ To vaster issues."
+
+
+The Old Covenant and the New--Elijah and the Baptist--A Parallel--The
+Servant inferior to the Lord--The Baptism of the Holy Ghost--The
+Indwelling Spirit
+
+
+Great men are God's greatest gifts to our race; and it is only by their
+interposition that mankind is able to step up to higher and better
+levels of life. The doctrine of evolution is supposed to explain the
+history of the universe. Men would have us believe that certain forces
+have been set in motion which have elaborated this great scheme of
+which we are a part, and the evolutionist would go so far as to say
+that man himself has been evolved from protoplasm, and that the brains
+of a Socrates, of a Milton, or of any genius who has left his mark upon
+the world, have simply emanated from the whole process which culminates
+in them. We believe, on the contrary, that at distinct points in the
+history of the universe, there has been a direct interposition of the
+will and hand of God; and it is remarkable that in the first chapter of
+Genesis that august and majestic word _create_ is three times
+introduced, as though the creation of matter, the creation of the
+animal world, and the creation of man, were three distinct stages, at
+which the direct interposition of the will and workmanship of the
+Eternal was specially manifest. Similarly, we believe that there have
+been great epochs in human history, which cannot be accounted for by
+the previous evolution of moral and religious thought, and which must
+be due to the fact that God Himself stepped in, and by the direct
+raising up of a man, who became the apostle of the new era, lifted the
+race to new levels of thought and action. It is in this light that we
+view the two illustrious men who were, each in his own measure, the
+apostles of new epochs in human history--Elijah in the old Covenant,
+and John the Baptist in the new.
+
+It is remarkable that the prophet Malachi tells us that the advent of
+the Messiah should be preceded and heralded by Elijah the prophet; and
+that Gabriel, four hundred years after, said that John the Baptist,
+whose birth he announced, would come in the spirit and power of Elijah.
+This double prediction was referred to by our Lord when, descending
+from the Mount of Transfiguration, in conversation with the apostles,
+He indicated John the Baptist as the Elijah who was to come. And,
+indeed, there was a marvellous similarity between these two men, though
+each of them is dwarfed into insignificance by the unique and original
+personality of the Son of Man, who towers in inaccessible glory above
+them.
+
+
+I. LET US INSTITUTE A COMPARISON BETWEEN ELIJAH THE TISHBITE, AND JOHN
+THE BAPTIST.--They resembled each other in dress. We are told that
+Elijah was a hairy man--an expression which is quite as likely to refer
+to the rough garb in which he was habited, as to the unshorn locks that
+fell upon his shoulders. And John the Baptist wore a coarse dress of
+camel's hair.
+
+Each of them sojourned in Gilead. In the remarkable sentence, which,
+for the first time, introduces Elijah to the Bible and the world, we
+are told that he was one of the sojourners in Gilead, that great tract
+of country, thinly populated, and largely given over to shepherds and
+their flocks, which lay upon the eastern side of the Jordan. And we
+know that it was there amid the shaggy forests, and closely-set
+mountains, with their rapid torrents, that John the Baptist waited,
+fulfilled his ministry, preached to and baptized the teeming crowds.
+
+Each of them learnt to make the body subservient to the spirit. Elijah
+was able to live on the sparse food brought by ravens, or provided from
+the meal barrel of the widow, was able to outstrip the horses of Ahab's
+chariot in their mad rush across the valley of Jezreel; and after a
+brief respite, given to sleep and food, went in the strength of it for
+forty days and nights, through the heart of the desert until he came to
+Horeb, the Mount of God. His body was but the vehicle of the fiery
+spirit that dwelt within; he never studied its gratification and
+pleasure, but always handled it as the weapon to be wielded by his
+soul. And what was true in his case, was so of John the Baptist, whose
+food was locusts and wild honey. The two remind us of St. Bernard, who
+tells us that he never ate for the gratification of taking food, but
+only that he might the better serve God and man.
+
+We remember also that each of these heroic spirits was confronted by a
+hostile court. In the case of Elijah, Ahab and Jezebel, together with
+the priests of Baal and Astarte, withstood every step of his career;
+and in the case of John the Baptist, Herod, Herodias, and the whole
+drift of religious opinion, with its repeated deputations to ask who he
+might be, dogged his steps, and ultimately brought him to a martyr's
+end.
+
+How distinctly, also, in each case there was the consciousness of the
+presence of God. One of the greatest words which man has ever uttered
+was that in which Elijah affirmed, in the presence of king Ahab, that
+he was conscious of standing at the same moment in the presence of the
+Eternal: "And Elijah the Tishbite, who was of the sojourners of Gilead,
+said unto Ahab, 'As the Lord, the God of Israel, liveth, before whom I
+stand'"--a phrase afterwards used by Gabriel himself when he told
+Zacharias that he was one of the presence angels. "And the angel
+answering, said unto him, 'I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of
+God.'" This consciousness of the Divine presence in his life revealed
+itself in his great humility, when he cast himself on the ground with
+his face between his knees; and in the unflinching courage which
+enabled him to stand like a rock on Mount Carmel, when king, and
+priest, and people, were gathered in their vast multitudes around him,
+sufficient to daunt the spirit that had not beheld a greater than any.
+This God-consciousness was especially manifest in the Baptist, who
+referred so frequently to the nearness of the kingdom of God. "The
+kingdom of heaven," he said, "is at hand." And when Jesus came,
+unrecognised by the crowds, his high spirit prostrated itself, and his
+very visage was shadowed with the vail of intense modesty and humility,
+as he cried; "In the midst of you standeth One whom ye know not, the
+latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and unloose."
+Coupled with this sense of God, there was, in each case, a marvellous
+fearlessness of man. When Obadiah met Elijah, and was astonished to
+hear that the prophet was about to show himself to Ahab, Elijah
+overbore his attempts to dissuade him, saying: I will certainly show
+myself to thy master: go, tell him Elijah is here. And when afterwards
+the heavenly fire had descended, and the prophets of Baal were standing
+bewildered by their altar, he did not flinch from arresting the whole
+crowd of them, leading them down to the valley of the Kishon brook
+beneath and there slaying them, so that the waters ran crimson to the
+sea. This fearlessness was also conspicuous in the Forerunner, who
+dared to beard the king in his palace, asserting that he must be judged
+by the same standard as the meanest of his subjects, and that it was
+not lawful for him to have his brother's wife.
+
+To each there came moments of depression. In the case of Elijah, the
+glory of his victory on the brow of Carmel was succeeded by the weight
+of dark soul-anguish. Did he not cast himself, within twenty-four
+hours, beneath the juniper tree of the desert, and pray that he might
+die, because he was no better than his fathers--a mood which God, who
+pities his children and remembers that they are dust, combated, not by
+expostulation, but by sending him food and sleep, knowing that it was
+the result of physical and nervous overstrain? And did not John the
+Baptist from his prison cell send the enquiry to Jesus, as to whether,
+after all, his hopes had been too glad, his anticipations too great,
+and that perhaps after all He was not the Messiah for whom the nation
+was waiting?
+
+Both Elijah and John the Baptist had the same faith in the baptism of
+fire. We never can forget the scene on Carmel when Elijah proposed the
+test that the God who answered by fire should be recognised as God; nor
+how he erected the altar, and laid the wood, and placed the bullock
+there, and drenched the altar with water; and how, in answer to his
+faith, at last the fire fell. John the Baptist passed through no such
+ordeal as that; but it was his steadfast faith that Christ should come
+to baptize with the Holy Ghost and fire.
+
+Each of them turned the hearts of the people back. It was as though
+the whole nation were rushing towards the edge of the precipice which
+overhung the bottomless pit, like a herd of frightened horses on the
+prairie, and these men with their unaided hands turned them back. It
+would be impossible for one man to turn back a whole army in mad
+flight--he would necessarily be swept away in their rush; but this is
+precisely what the expression attributes to the exertions of Elijah and
+John. The one turned Israel back to cry, Jehovah, He is God; the other
+turned the whole land back to repentance and righteousness, so that
+publicans and soldiers, Sadducees and Pharisees, began to confess their
+sin, put away their evil courses, and return to the God of their
+fathers.
+
+Each prophet was succeeded by a gentler ministry. Elijah was sent from
+Horeb to anoint Elisha, who, for the most part, passed through the land
+like genial sunshine--a perpetual benediction to men, women, and
+children; while John the Baptist opened the door for the Shepherd,
+Christ, who went about doing good, and whose holy, tender ministry fell
+on his times like rain on the mown grass.
+
+From the solitudes beyond the Jordan, as he walked with Elisha, talking
+as they went, the chariot and horses of fire which the Father had sent
+for his illustrious servant from heaven bore him homeward, while his
+friends and disciples stood with outstretched hands, crying: The
+chariot and horses of Israel are leaving us, bearing away our most
+treasured leader. In those same solitudes, or within view of them, the
+spirit of John the Baptist swept up in a similar chariot. As the
+headsman, with a flash of his sword, put an end to his mortal career,
+though no mortal eyes beheld them, and no chronicler has told the
+story, there must have been horses and chariots of fire waiting to
+convey the noble martyr-spirit to its God. The parallel is an
+interesting one--it shows how God repeats Himself; and, if time and
+space permitted, we might elaborate the repetition of a similar
+conception, either in Savonarola of Florence, or in Martin Luther, or
+in John Knox, who had been baptized into the same Spirit, and inspired
+to perform the same ministry. That Spirit is waiting still--waiting to
+clothe Himself with our life; waiting to do in us, and through us,
+similar work for the time in which we live. What these men did far
+back in the centuries, it is probable that others Will have to do
+before this dispensation passes utterly away. A man, or men, shall
+again rise up, who will tower over their fellows, who will speak and
+act in the spirit and power of Elijah--men like Edward Irving, but
+without the mistakes that characterized his heroic life. Perhaps some
+young life may be inspired by this page to yield itself to God, so that
+it may be sent forth to turn back the hearts and lives of vast
+multitudes from their evil way, turning the heart of the fathers to
+their children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, to make
+ready a people prepared for the Lord.
+
+
+II. NOTICE THE INFERIORITY OF THESE GREAT MEN TO THE LORD.--Neither
+Elisha, the disciple of Elijah, nor the eloquent Apollos, the disciple
+of John the Baptist, would have dared to say of their respective
+masters what Philip and Andrew, Peter and Thomas, habitually said of
+Christ. Greatly as they revered and loved their masters, they knew
+that they were men like themselves; that their nature was made in the
+same mould, though, perhaps, of finer clay; that there were limitations
+beyond which they could not go, and qualities of mind and soul in which
+they were not perfected. They dared not say of them, "My Lord and my
+God." They never thought of prostrating themselves at their feet in
+worship; they never appealed to them after their decease as able to
+hear and answer prayer from the heaven into which they had passed.
+
+Neither Elijah nor John had what Jesus asserted--the consciousness of
+an unique union with God; neither of them dared to affirm, as Jesus
+did, that he was the Son of God, in the sense that made other use of
+that term blasphemy; neither of them thought of anticipating a moment
+when he should be seen sitting at the right hand of power, and coming
+in the clouds; neither of them dared to couple himself with Deity in
+the sublime and significant pronoun _we_--"We will come and make our
+abode with Him." Neither of them would have dreamed of accepting the
+homage which Jesus took quite naturally, when men worshipped Him, and
+women washed and kissed his feet: and I ask how it could be that Jesus
+Christ, so essentially meek and lowly, so humble and unwilling to
+obtrude Himself, should have spoken and acted so differently, unless
+his nature had been separated by an impassable gulf from that of other
+men, however saintly and gifted? The very fact that these men,
+acknowledged amongst the greatest of our race, drew a line, and said:
+Beyond that we cannot pass; we are conscious of defilement and need; we
+require forgiveness and grace, equally with those to whom we minister.
+And this compels on our part the acknowledgment that Jesus Christ was
+all He claimed to be, and that He is worthy to receive glory, and
+honour, and riches, and power, and blessing; for He is Man of men, the
+second Man, the Lord from Heaven.
+
+Neither of these dared to offer himself as the Comforter and Saviour of
+men. Elijah could only rebuke sin, which he did most strenuously; but
+he had no panacea for the sin and sorrow of his countrymen. He could
+bid them turn to God; and he did. But he could say nothing of any
+inherent virtue, or power, which could proceed from him to save and
+help. It was never suggested for a moment that he could act as
+mediator between God and men, though he might be an intercessor. And
+as for John the Baptist, though he deeply stirred the religious
+convictions of his countrymen, he could only point to One who came
+after him, and say: "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin
+of the world." But within six months after the commencement of his
+ministry, Jesus says; "Son, thy sins are forgiven thee"; "The Son of
+Man hath authority on earth to forgive sins"; "Daughter, thy sins,
+which are many, are forgiven thee: go in peace"; and presently: "This
+is the cup of the New Covenant in my blood, shed for many, for the
+remission of sins", and again: "The Son of Man came to give his life a
+ransom for many." Tell me of any, either in the story of Elijah or of
+John the Baptist, to compare with these words, spoken by the lowest and
+humblest being that ever trod time's sands? Does that not indicate
+that He stood in a relationship to God and man which has never been
+realized by another?
+
+Besides, neither of them introduced a new type of living. Their own
+method of life seemed to indicate that there was sin in the body, or
+sin in matter; and that the only way of holiness was by an austerity
+that lived apart in the deserts, dreading and avoiding the presence of
+men. That was a type of holiness which every great religious teacher
+has followed; for you remember that Buddha used to say that all the
+present is an illusion and a dream, while the realities await us
+beyond. On the other hand, Jesus taught that the Redeemer was also the
+Creator; that there was nothing common or unclean in man's original
+constitution; that sin consisted not in certain actions, functions, or
+duties--but in man's heart, and will, and choice; and that if a man
+were only right there, all his nature and circumstances would become
+illumined and transfigured by the indwelling Spirit. Let it never be
+forgotten that Christ taught that God is not going to cancel the nature
+which He Himself has bestowed in all its human and innocent out-goings,
+but only to eliminate the self-principle which has cursed it--as you
+would wish to take small-pox from the body of the little child, or the
+taint out of the rotting flesh of the leper.
+
+O Christ, Thou standest pre-eminent in thy unparalleled glory! Let
+Elijah and John the Baptist withdraw, but oh, do Thou tarry! To whom
+shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life. All the prophets
+and kings of men without Thee will not suffice; but to have Thee is to
+have all that is strong, and wise, and good, gathered up into the
+perfect beauty of a man, with the Divine glory of the Infinite God.
+
+
+III. HOW MAY WE HAVE THAT SAME SPIRIT?--John the Baptist came in the
+spirit and power of Elijah: that spirit and power are for us too. Just
+as the dawn touches the highest peaks of the Alps, and afterwards, as
+the morning hours creep on, the tide of light passes down into the
+valley, so the Spirit that smote that glorious pinnacle Elijah, and
+that nearer pinnacle the Baptist, is waiting to descend upon and
+empower us.
+
+We are all believers in Jesus, but did we receive the Holy Ghost when
+we believed? (Acts xix. 2). When the great apostle of the Gentiles met
+the little handful of John's disciples, gathered in the great
+idolatrous city of Ephesus, the first word he addressed to them was the
+eager enquiry, "Did ye receive the Holy Ghost when ye believed?" And
+they replied, "Nay, we did not so much as hear whether the Holy Ghost
+was given." In other words: We heard from our master, John, that
+Jesus, of whom he spake, would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire; but we have never heard of the fulfilment of his prediction--we
+only know of Him, concerning whom our great leader so often spake, as
+the great Teacher, Miracle-worker, and Sacrifice for the sins of the
+people--but what more there is to tell and know we wait to hear from
+thee.
+
+Then Paul explained that John's baptism had stood only for confession
+and repentance: "John baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying
+unto the people that they should believe on Him, which should come
+after him, that is, on Jesus." Those who descended the shelving banks
+of Jordan to be plunged beneath its arrowy waters, declared their
+discontent with the past, their desire to be free of it, and their
+belief in the Messianic character of Jesus of Nazareth, who was to
+introduce a new and better age.
+
+But the apostle hastened to explain that this Jesus, whom the Jews had
+delivered up and slain by wicked hands, was the Prince of Life; that
+God had raised Him from the dead; and that being by the right hand of
+God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy
+Ghost, He had poured Him forth in mighty power on the waiting Church,
+anointing it for its ministry to mankind. It was as though he had
+said: Our Lord, on his Ascension, baptized those that had believed with
+the Spirit of which Joel spake. The water of John's baptism symbolised
+a negation, but this baptism is positive; it is as cleansing, purifying
+flame; it was good to know Jesus after the flesh, it is a thousand
+times better to know Him after the Spirit: and this gift is to us and
+to our children, and to all that are far off, even as many as the Lord
+our God shall call.
+
+When they heard this they were baptized into the name of the Lord
+Jesus. They exalted Him to the throne of their hearts as the glorified
+and ever-blessed Son of God. They directed their longing eyes towards
+Him in his risen glory, that He should do for them as He had already
+done for so many. And in answer to their expectant faith, the blessing
+of Abraham came upon them--they received the promise of the Spirit by
+faith; the Holy Ghost came upon them, and they were equipped for
+witness-bearing in Ephesus by the very power which had rested once on
+Elijah, and also on their first teacher and guide; and, as the result,
+a revival broke out in that city of such magnitude that the magic books
+were burned, and the trade of the silversmiths grievously injured.
+
+This power of the Holy Spirit is for us all. Of course we could not
+believe in Jesus in the remission of sin, or the quickening of our
+spiritual life, apart from the work of the Holy Spirit; but there is
+something more than this, there is a power, an anointing, a gracious
+endowment of fitness for service--which are the privilege of every
+believer. The Holy Spirit is prepared, not only to be within us for
+the renewal and sanctification of character, but to anoint us as He did
+the Lord at his baptism. He waits to empower us to witness for Jesus,
+to endure the persecution and trial which are inevitable to the
+exercise of a God-given ministry, and to bring other men to God. It
+would be well to tarry to receive it. It is better to wait for hours
+for an express train than to start to walk the distance; the hours
+spent in waiting will be more than compensated for by the rapidity with
+which the traveller will be borne to his destination. Stay from your
+work for a little, and wait upon the ascended, glorified Redeemer, in
+whom the Spirit of God dwells. Ask Him to impart to you that which He
+received on your behalf. Never rest until you are sure that the Spirit
+dwells in you fully, and exercises through you the plenitude of his
+gracious power. We cannot seek Him at the hand of Christ in vain.
+Dare to believe this: dare to believe that if your heart is pure, and
+your motives holy, and your whole desire fervent--and if you have dared
+to breathe in a deep, long breath of the Holy Spirit--that according to
+your faith so it has been done to you; and that you may go forth
+enjoying the same power which rested on the Baptist, though you may not
+be conscious of any Divine afflatus, though there may have been no
+stroke of conscious power, no crown of flame, no rushing as of the
+mighty wind.
+
+God is still able to vouchsafe to us as large a portion of his Spirit
+as to the disciples on the day of Pentecost. We are not straitened in
+Him, but in ourselves. The power of his grace is not passed away with
+the primitive times, as fond and faithless men imagine; but his Kingdom
+is now at hand, and Christ, standing on the threshold of the century,
+waits to lead his Church to greater triumphs than she has ever known.
+Oh that He would hasten to come forth from his royal chambers! Oh that
+He would take his throne as Prince of the kings of the earth! Oh that
+He would put on the robe of his majesty, and assume the sceptre of his
+unlimited and almighty reign. Creation travails; the Spirit and the
+Bride invoke; the mind of man has tried all possible combinations of
+sovereignty, and in vain.
+
+"O Lord Jesus Christ, who at thy first coming didst send thy messenger
+to prepare the way before Thee; grant that the ministers and stewards
+of thy mysteries may likewise so prepare and make ready thy way, by
+turning the hearts of the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; that,
+at thy second coming to judge the world, we may be found an acceptable
+people in thy sight, who livest and reignest with the Father and the
+Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen."
+
+
+
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