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-Project Gutenberg's A Basket of Barley Loaves, by Mary Christina Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Basket of Barley Loaves
-
-Author: Mary Christina Miller
-
-Release Date: October 31, 2015 [EBook #50349]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BASKET OF BARLEY LOAVES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Hulse, Chris Pinfield and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A BASKET
- OF
- BARLEY LOAVES.
-
- BY THE
- AUTHOR OF "THE HIGH MOUNTAIN APART" AND "SACRAMENTAL SABBATHS."
-
-"There is a lad here, which hath five barley loaves."--JOHN vi. 9.
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA:
- PRESBYTERIAN BOARD OF PUBLICATION,
- No. 1334 CHESTNUT STREET.
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by
- THE TRUSTEES OF THE
- PRESBYTERIAN BOARD OF PUBLICATION,
- In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
-
-
- WESTCOTT & THOMSON,
- _Stereotypers, Philada._
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MY FORMER PASTOR,
- REV. ALEXANDER DICKSON,
-
- WHO TAUGHT ME
- "THE WAY OF GOD MORE PERFECTLY,"
- AND WHOSE THOUGHTS AND VERY WORDS ENTER LARGELY INTO THESE PAGES,
-
- I DEDICATE THIS
- BASKET OF BARLEY LOAVES.
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR'S PREFACE.
-
-
-To those who crave more of Christ in the soul and in the daily life,
-to those who long for holiness and assurance, this BASKET OF
-BARLEY LOAVES will bring welcome refreshment and nourishment. The
-devout, even though trembling, believer, who hungers after
-righteousness, will here find that which will kindle his affections
-and lead them to the only satisfying source of love and peace, Jesus
-Christ. What of sweetness and strength there is in these meditations
-is due to God's word, of which they are full. Sweeter than honey and
-the honey-comb, more precious than silver or gold, was that word to
-the Psalmist; and thence these chapters draw their flavor and force.
-By them the weary, the needy, the longing, will be led nearer to
-Christ and be more filled with the power of his love. May these few
-Barley Loaves feed many thousands of hungry souls!
-
-J. W. D.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
- I.
- JESUS SOUGHT AND FOUND 11
-
- II.
- HIS NAME 24
-
- III.
- THE ASSURANCE 31
-
- IV.
- THE PERFECT WORK 41
-
- V.
- THE CHASTENING 52
-
- VI.
- THE COMPASSION 61
-
- VII.
- THE SYMPATHY 69
-
- VIII.
- THE LOVE 78
-
- IX.
- THE LIFE ABUNDANT 85
-
- X.
- THE FORGIVENESS 90
-
- XI.
- THE HELP 97
-
- XII.
- THE DELIVERANCE 102
-
- XIII.
- THE HEARER OF PRAYER 107
-
- XIV.
- THE REWARD 112
-
- XV.
- THE SOUL'S PORTION 119
-
- XVI.
- THE CROSS 127
-
- XVII.
- THE PRESENCE 131
-
- XVIII.
- THE APPEARING 136
-
- XIX.
- THE CONCLUSION 143
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A BASKET
- OF
- BARLEY LOAVES.
-
-
-
-
- I.
- _Jesus Sought and Found._
-
-
-The crowd was thronging and jostling. Eager and wistful faces were
-turned to One who stood in the midst. His countenance was mild and
-compassionate; and as I gazed upon him, a deep desire filled my heart
-to know and follow this Man of Sorrows. With swiftest steps I hurried
-on and pressed into the crowd. The lowly, suffering woman was
-satisfied to touch the hem of his garments, and it was enough. But I
-was not content until I had grasped his hand. Yes, I put my hand in
-his--my guilty hand that nailed him to the cross.
-
-"Who touched me?" He turned, and we stood face to face. In answer to
-his inquiry I whispered, "Lord, I will follow thee whithersoever thou
-goest." A look of love glanced from his eye; nearer he drew me to his
-side and whispered, "Beloved." Oh how it thrilled my heart! Excess of
-joy choked my utterance, and I could only grasp his hand more firmly
-and exclaim, "My Lord and my God!"
-
-Tell me not now of loneliness and desolation. Jesus is mine, and so we
-journey hand in hand; and as he whispers to me of love unchangeable, I
-hide this sweet secret in my heart and answer, "I am thine."
-
-"They tell me," we said to an aged man, "that you have no rock on
-which to plant your feet." "No rock?" he said, calmly, with a
-smile--"no rock? Well, my creed does differ from yours. Mine is love
-to God and love to my fellow-men. I do not believe such a man as Jesus
-Christ ever lived. The world has had many saviours. Mine is a
-principle--a rightening principle. I have tried all beliefs, and here
-I am content to rest."
-
-But we have not so learned Christ.
-
-Infidels may tell me such a man never lived; humanitarians may tell me
-he was mere man and no God; careless worldlings may tell me there is
-no beauty in him that I should desire him; but from the far-off region
-of light, beyond the mist-clouds that encircle the earth, I hear a
-voice, calm in its majesty and tender in its tones: "I am Alpha and
-Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and
-which was, and which is to come, the Almighty." "I am the light of the
-world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have
-the light of life." "I am the Lord thy God, the Holy One of Israel,
-thy Saviour." "I, even I, am the Lord; and beside me there is no
-Saviour." "O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself, but in me is thine
-help." "I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I will redeem
-them from death." "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy
-laden, and I will give you rest."
-
-Hearing this voice I draw nearer. "Have I been so long time with you,
-and yet hast thou not known me? Thou hast both seen him, and he it is
-that talketh with thee." "Lord, I believe." "I know thee who thou art,
-the Holy One of God." With the eye of faith I have seen thee, and I
-can testify that "thou art fairer than the children of men." With the
-hand of faith I have grasped thine, O thou "Friend that stickest
-closer than a brother." And thou hast talked with me. "Never man spake
-like this man." I cannot utter half the words Jesus has spoken to my
-soul; but this I say: Into his hands I commit my soul with all its
-interests; "for I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that he
-is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day."
-
- "O Jesus, Friend unfailing,
- How dear thou art to me!
- And, cares or fears assailing,
- I find my strength in thee.
-
- "I love to own, Lord Jesus,
- Thy claims o'er me and mine;
- Bought with thy blood most precious,
- Whose can I be but _thine_?"
-
-"As the late lamented Dudley Tyng was passing from the earthly
-vineyard to his higher position in the heavenly," writes Boardman in
-his book entitled "Him that Overcometh," "he said to his father, while
-light fell upon him from the open gateway, 'Father, stand up for
-Jesus.' Then, after advancing a little farther on into the fuller
-effulgence, he spoke again, saying, 'Father, stand up in Jesus.' These
-injunctions were reported by his father as they fell from the lips of
-his son, and went abroad all over the land. The first one struck a
-chord which vibrates still, and passed into a watchword for all
-Christian enterprise and for all enterprising Christians, but the
-second seemed to find no chord keyed up and ready to respond. It is to
-be feared that this is indicative of the true state of the Christian
-world to-day--_for_ Christ, more than _in_ him; and yet, if we may
-believe the words of Christ himself, and the history of all the
-progress of his kingdom, we have the secret of all power in these two
-words, "in Jesus," with the converse of them, "Jesus in us."
-
-"_Abide in me, and I in you._" Christ within is better even than
-Christ beside us, as the apostles found after Pentecost. This is the
-secret of all joy and the source of all strength.
-
-To those who are just starting on the Christian pilgrimage we would
-repeat these words of the Master, "Abide in me." Guide-books are good,
-but a trusty guide is better. We might fill our pages with minute
-directions concerning the way, but we would rather point to Christ,
-who is the way. We remember that there are times when travelers forget
-their guide-books and cling to their strong and sure-footed guides.
-
-Consider our Guide. He knows every step of the way, and he will guide
-us with his eye. Let us meditate upon Christ till our hearts are led
-to desire more intimate fellowship with him. "My meditation of him
-shall be sweet"--"sweet" when I remember his name, his character, his
-work, his promises and the peace he gives.
-
-But it may be that some to whom these pages are addressed find many
-dark threads of doubt woven into their meditation of Christ. You have
-never, perhaps, been fully assured of your acceptance with him; or, if
-confident at the commencement of your Christian course, doubts and
-fears may have gathered around your pathway before journeying very far
-into the wilderness. The chilling winds of unbelief make winter in
-your soul. The days are short and cold; the nights are long and
-colder. Yes, even the day seems as the night--all darkness. Some
-around you seem to be enjoying perpetual spring-time, because Christ
-shines so constantly upon their happy souls, and your coldness and
-darkness seem all the sadder in contrast with their warmth and
-brightness.
-
-How can you account for this? Ask some Christian friends, and they
-will tell you that you must not expect so much joy--that the Christian
-life is a constant conflict with doubt and sin, and you cannot expect
-to be always as happy as perhaps you were at first. You turn away
-sadly disappointed. They are older Christians, and you think they must
-know better than you. What will you do? Will you sit under the clouds,
-or struggle to get out into clear sunshine?
-
-We cannot think that God intends you to have a limited measure of joy
-and peace. Why should you not grow happier in your love to Christ as
-you learn to know him better? Why should not the promises become more
-precious as you prove them and find them all "yea and amen in Christ
-Jesus?"
-
-Let us inquire into the cause of your darkness. The Saviour does not
-willingly withhold his smile which makes spring and summer in the
-soul. When God made a covenant with you he gave you this promise: "I
-will never leave thee, nor forsake thee." God has not then forsaken
-you. Perhaps you have neglected the means of grace. Perhaps you are
-cherishing some secret sin. Perhaps you have looked more to your own
-frames and feelings than to Christ's perfect work. Your mind has dwelt
-too much upon self. Take the advice of one who walked with God and was
-not, because God took him: "For one look at self take ten looks to
-Christ." The advice is good, and it has lifted many a Christian above
-the clouds.
-
-"Saw ye Him whom my soul loveth? I sought him, but I found him not."
-Is this your sad lament?
-
-Seek him again. Seek him earnestly, prayerfully, constantly. Seek him
-in the place of secret prayer. Jesus had his secret place upon the
-lonely mountain. Though he lived in constant communion with his
-Father, though his every step was a hymn of praise and his every act
-was a prayer, still he felt his need of a place where he could pour
-out his soul in supplication. If secret prayer was necessary for the
-Master, is it not more needful for you? If you have neglected that, it
-is not strange if it is winter in your soul.
-
-Seek Jesus also in his holy word. In the garden of the gospel you may
-meet him and walk with him, holding sweet communion. Here he reveals
-himself. Obey his own commandment, "Search the Scriptures." This is
-the reason and this the reward, "for they are they that testify of
-me." They testify of Christ. Yes, they are full of Christ. Rays from
-his cross shine through both the Testaments. Prophets and saints of
-old looked forward and rejoiced--"not having received the promises,"
-it is true, "but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them
-and embraced them." Fuller, clearer light now shines on Calvary. Draw
-near and read again the sacred story. Yes, "search the Scriptures,"
-for here you will surely find Jesus. His love prompted every promise,
-and is the pledge and fulfillment of every promise.
-
-Seek him in the place of social prayer. Thomas was not at the
-prayer-meeting when Jesus manifested himself to his disciples. How
-much he lost by staying away! When Jesus draws near and says, "Peace
-be unto you!" then let me be within hearing of his gentle voice. Let
-me be near when he says, "Receive ye the Holy Ghost." "_Only_ a
-prayer-meeting," do you say? _Only_ a visit from Jesus, the Giver of
-peace! Who would miss a visit of so much profit--a visit of so much
-pleasure!
-
-Seek Jesus at the sacramental supper. Jesus is there. There you may
-enjoy his longest, sweetest visits. There he speaks peace to his
-people. Sweet it is to meet Jesus in the closet; sweet visits there he
-pays his beloved and betrothed. Sweet it is to meet him in the holy
-Scriptures; sweet to find him in the place of social prayer. But
-sweeter far are his visits at the communion-table. To sit like Mary at
-his feet, to lie like John upon his bosom--was ever joy like this? was
-ever Jesus nearer? No longer do we say, "Saw ye Him whom my soul
-loveth?" We have found him! we have found him! "His left hand is under
-my head, while his right doth embrace me." I charge you, my unstable
-heart, that you forsake not, nor grieve again "Him whom my soul
-loveth."
-
-Now that you have found him, cleave to him. "Abide in me," the Master
-says. In union with Christ the Christian finds his safety, strength
-and happiness. And the closer this union, the greater is the security,
-strength and happiness of the Christian. Would we be guided by his
-eye? Then must we be continually "looking unto Jesus." Do we need
-strength? "In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength." Are we
-seeking happiness? "Happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for his
-help, whose hope is in the Lord his God."
-
-Cling closer, young Christian, cling closer to Christ. Learn to walk
-with him daily in sweet communion. Be not satisfied with an occasional
-visit from your Lord, but beseech him to abide with you. He is willing
-to come and abide with you. "If any man love me, he will keep my
-words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and
-make our abode with him."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- II.
- _His Name._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember his name_.
-
-We need not say, as did Jacob, "Tell me, I pray thee, thy name." We
-know thy name, _Jehovah Tsidkenu_, "The Lord our Righteousness." We
-are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy
-rags, and all the soap and nitre in the world cannot make us pure and
-holy. "If I wash myself with snow-water, and make my hands never so
-clean, yet shalt thou plunge me in the ditch, and mine own clothes
-shall abhor me." But in the covenant of the cross we come and change
-clothes with Christ. He takes our filthy rags and gives us his own
-spotless robe; and we are "accepted in the Beloved," not having our
-"own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the
-faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith."
-
-We know thy name, _Jehovah Shalom_, The Lord of Peace. Sweet peace
-speedily follows as one of the results of justification. "And the work
-of righteousness shall be peace, and the effects of righteousness
-quietness and assurance for ever." Or, as the apostle expresses it in
-the Epistle to the Romans, "Therefore, being justified by faith, we
-have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." Peace was one of
-the notes in the song which angels sung when He was born who himself
-"is our peace." And when he was parting from his disciples "peace" was
-among the last words that fell from his lips: "Peace I leave with you;
-my peace I give unto you." "Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose
-mind is stayed on thee." "Perfect peace," being interpreted, means,
-"Peace, peace." So that we shall have a double portion, "good measure,
-pressed down and shaken together and running over."
-
-We know thy name, _Jehovah Nissi_, The Lord my Banner. "Thou hast
-given a banner to them that fear thee." He his own self is our
-standard and our standard-bearer, and we need not fear that our flag
-shall ever be taken, or that those who fight under it shall be beaten.
-Though we are but weak worms of the dust, and are called to contend
-"against principalities, against powers, against spiritual wickedness
-in high places," there is nothing more sure than that we shall win the
-day. "If God be for us, who can be against us?" Looking at the end
-from the beginning, and confident of victory, we can say, when
-buckling on the harness before the battle is begun, "We are more than
-conquerors through Him that loved us."
-
-We know thy name, _Jehovah Rophi_, The Lord my Healer. When he began
-his holy ministry here on earth, "Jesus went about all Galilee,
-teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom,
-and healing all manner of sickness, and all manner of disease among
-the people." Some came to him groping in their blindness, others came
-on crutches, and many were carried to him on their beds; and he healed
-them all. Though he came from heaven mainly to heal diseases of the
-mind, yet while he labored here in the flesh he healed more diseases
-of the body. He is still the only Physician of the soul, and by far
-the best Physician of the body. "He knoweth our frame," this our
-mortal body, better than the wisest men, for he made it, and without
-his blessing the best prescription will do us no good. He is our
-Physician. When we are taken sick he is first called to our bedside.
-By prayer we lay hold of something at the mercy-seat that rings a bell
-in heaven, and he makes haste and comes down and "healeth all our
-diseases."
-
-We know thy name, _Jehovah Jireh_, The Lord will Provide. He provided
-a lamb upon Mount Moriah for Abraham in his greatest emergency. He has
-also provided a Lamb for us--a Lamb without spot or blemish, "the Lamb
-slain from the foundation of the world." "Even Christ our Passover is
-sacrificed for us." On his guiltless head our guilt was laid. And
-having provided a Lamb for us, he will provide anything else. "My God
-shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ
-Jesus." As the greater includes the less, so the unspeakable gift
-embosoms all minor blessings. "He that spared not his own Son, but
-delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him freely give us
-all things?"
-
-We know thy name, _Jehovah Shammah_, The Lord is there. Wherever we
-may be called to go, the Lord is there. What strong consolation, what
-good cheer there is in this blessed truth,
-
- "Awake, asleep, at home, abroad,
- I am surrounded still with God!"
-
-In every duty, in every difficulty, the Lord is there. In the lion's
-den and in the fiery furnace, the Lord is there. In sickness and in
-health, in sorrow and in joy, the Lord is there. When our pilgrimage
-is almost over, and we are going down into the dark valley, blessed be
-his name, we shall find that the Lord is there. "Yea, though I walk
-through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for
-thou art with me."
-
-Beyond the valley there is a place about which we know very little;
-but we know that there is a house of many mansions, and we know that
-the Lord is there. "I go to prepare a place for you." There is a holy
-city along whose golden streets these feet shall one day walk; "And
-the name of the city from that day shall be, The Lord is there."
-
-"Oh magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name together." He
-is everything to us. Are we sinners? He is our Righteousness. Are we
-in trouble? He is our Peace. Are we soldiers? He is our Banner. Are we
-sick? He is our Healer. Are we in want of anything? He will provide.
-Are we going into eternity? He is there, waiting to receive us up into
-glory. "Oh magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name
-together."
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" when I remember his name, for
-"they that know thy name shall put their trust in thee."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- III.
- _The Assurance._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember the assurance
-he has given me_.
-
-To his dear children God is pleased to give earnests or pledges of the
-future bliss. We cannot think that any of the heirs of glory are
-wholly deprived of foretastes of heaven. Some indeed walk in the
-mist-clouds of doubt for a great part of their lives. Only at
-intervals the clouds part and reveal a ray of heavenly sunshine. They
-live amid clouds--it may be they die amid clouds--and never know clear
-shining until they reach the land of perpetual sunshine.
-
-Others there are who pitch their tents upon "the high hill Clear."
-They live in the land Beulah, where the sun is ever shining and the
-birds are ever singing, where Giant Despair never comes and where
-Doubting Castle is not so much as seen. They live in the sunshine,
-they die in the sunshine--no, they do not die; they pass away, onward
-and upward, into clearer light and brighter sunshine. Light is sown
-for them on earth by Him who is the light of the world, and the
-harvest in eternity is abundant and glorious. The first-fruits here,
-though nothing compared with the after-fruits, are beautiful and
-greatly to be desired. Why may they not be enjoyed by all?
-
-We hardly think it is God's will that his children should have a
-limited measure of peace and joy. Neither can we think it humility to
-doubt the words of our Lord Jesus: "I give unto them eternal life; and
-they shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out of my hand."
-
-"Yes," we hear you saying, "this is comforting for Christians, but am
-I a Christian? The clouds of unbelief often envelop me and exclude all
-heavenly light. 'Whereby shall I know that I shall inherit the land?'
-Who will assure me of my interest in Christ?"
-
-"He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself." Can
-you remain ignorant of so great a change wrought within by the Spirit?
-Are there not many signs to prove to you that you are in Christ? Do
-you not believe and know that a change has passed over all your
-feelings and affections? Do you not love the things you once hated and
-hate the things you once loved? Do you not love all who bear the
-Saviour's image? Is not sin odious to you? Do you not find some
-pleasure in drawing near to God in prayer? Is not the thought of
-continuing in sin painful to you? Would you willingly grieve your
-Saviour?
-
-We would not say, "Peace! peace!" when there is no peace. We would
-have you look well to the foundations of your hope. Examine it
-closely. Let the light of the Word fall full and clear upon it. Look
-at it on every side, and rest not till you know that it is founded
-simply and solely upon the merits of the Redeemer. If you are sure
-Christ's work is really begun in your soul, you need have no doubt
-about its being continued and finally completed. The Master counts
-well the cost when he begins his work in the sinner's soul, and none
-shall ever mock his work, saying, "This man began to build and was not
-able to finish."
-
-Having ascertained this all-important fact, you may be "always
-confident" till you enter his presence "with exceeding joy." You need
-not fear that you shall fall away. "Rejoice not against me, O mine
-enemy: when I fall, I shall arise." You shall be "kept by the power of
-God through faith unto salvation." You need never fear that Christ
-will weary of his work, but you may be "confident of this very thing,
-that he which has begun a good work in you will perform it until the
-day of Jesus Christ," and you shall stand "without fault before the
-throne."
-
-We know some humble and sincere disciples will shrink back, saying,
-"We are not able," when we beg them to make Paul's language all their
-own. With their hands upon their mouths and their mouths in the dust,
-they dare not look up with perfect confidence; they think it almost
-presumption, or at least they say, despondingly, "It is not for me."
-"Paul," they say, "was an uncommon Christian--he attained a tall
-stature in holiness." So he did; and why? Because his was no half-way
-service; he gave no divided heart to his master. That was the reason
-why he so well understood the doctrine of full assurance. "If any man
-will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine." Do you understand
-these words of the Master? He does not say, "If any man fully keeps
-the law, which is the perfect will of the Father, he shall know of the
-doctrine," for it is not possible for any mere man perfectly to keep
-the commandments of God. Nor does he say, "If any man _does_ the
-will," but, "If any man _will_"--is willing to do his will. If he
-shows a willing heart and mind, God will enlighten him more and more.
-And what is implied in this willing heart and mind but full
-consecration?
-
-When shall we learn the secret of a happy life? "Ye cannot serve two
-masters." Those who give themselves up to Satan's service may lead an
-unhappy life, but greater must be the unhappiness of those who are
-trying to make a compromise between God and Satan. They can enjoy
-neither service; they are of all men most miserable.
-
-O ye who have professed the name of Christ, come away from all
-inferior pleasures! Pleasures? They are not worthy of the name. One
-hour with Christ is worth them all. Will you then suffer them to hide
-the Saviour from your view?
-
-Once we were happy all the day long, having given ourselves to Christ
-in the covenant of the cross. Christ was the source of our life, the
-fullness of our joy, all our salvation and all our desire. Having
-enjoyed his precious presence, we dreamed not that we could ever
-wander; we thought our hearts would cleave to him for evermore. We had
-no doubts in those days. "My Beloved is mine, and I am his," was the
-constant language of our heart. But, alas! the world again entered our
-heart, dividing it and leaving but half for God. Then came the clouds
-gathering thick and fast, till our Saviour was hidden from our view.
-Upon the ear of the watchman who went about the streets soon fell our
-mournful cry, "Saw ye Him whom my soul loveth?" We sought him, but we
-found him not. Our gloom and grief increased. Oh for one hour of
-Jesus' presence! "Let all other joys forsake this heart," we cried,
-"if only we may again enjoy Jesus' presence." Feeling thus, we thrust
-the joys (falsely so called) of earth away, and kneeling at the
-mercy-seat, we renewed our covenant with Jesus. True, there was no joy
-in our hearts; we saw not yet his smile. But we could trust him where
-we could not trace him; so we confessed to him all our wanderings. We
-told him how we had thought to serve him with half our hearts, but now
-we would give him all. The first steps were taken in darkness, but God
-soon revealed his smiling face.
-
-If this assurance is attainable by one, why not by all? If at one time
-it may be enjoyed, why not at all times? We have "for a foundation a
-stone, a tried stone, a precious corner-stone, a sure foundation,"
-laid in Zion by the great Master-Builder.
-
-Foundation-stones are chosen with great care and laid with care, for
-upon them the whole building depends. Look at this foundation-stone.
-Tell me, is it not perfect, sure and tried? This is the stone that the
-builders rejected: they perished, but it remaineth, and upon it the
-Lord hath built his Church. Believers in all ages and climes have
-built all their hopes of heaven upon it. Is it not a tried stone?
-Satan tried it and found no flaw; Pilate tried it and found no fault;
-the Father tried it and pronounced it good; and we have tried it and
-proved it so. What a sure foundation it is, with Christ for the
-corner-stone, the next stone faith, then repentance, hope, submission
-and all the graces! "Master, see what manner of stones are here." Are
-they not goodly stones? and will they not make a beautiful temple?
-
-Upon Christ, the precious corner-stone, let us build our hopes of
-heaven, and dismiss all fears for the future.
-
-My hope, my joy, my salvation, my desire, my righteousness, my
-strength, my all--Christ in me "the hope of glory." "Lord, who shall
-abide in thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill?" I have not
-clean hands, nor a pure heart. Behold, I am vile. Nevertheless, I
-shall abide in thy tabernacle; I shall dwell in thy holy hill. Why?
-Because Christ is mine. His hands are spotless, his heart is pure, his
-righteousness is perfect. All his is mine, for he is mine. I build my
-hopes upon the Rock Christ Jesus. These hopes shall never be
-overthrown; I have no fear of it.
-
-_When_ the head stone shall be placed I cannot tell, but I wait and
-work with joy, hoping unto the end. Sometimes weariness almost
-overcomes me, for building is hard work. Foes within and foes without
-make the labor exceedingly hard. But whether in joy or grief, the
-building goes on, and from the completed structure shouts shall ascend
-to the great Master-Builder: "Grace, grace unto it!" "Glory be to the
-Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost! Amen."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IV.
- _The Perfect Work._
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider his perfect
-work_.
-
-What consternation must have been felt among the ranks of holy spirits
-when sin entered into the world, "and death by sin!" Could grief
-intrude into heaven, we should imagine _that_ an hour of deepest
-anguish when the Father, looking down upon the fallen race, exclaimed,
-"How shall I pardon thee for this?" "How shall I put thee among the
-children?" How could the just and holy God justify the sinner? Not one
-of all the heavenly host could solve the problem. "How shall I give
-thee up?" burst from the heart of the loving Father. The beloved Son
-exclaims: "Deliver him from going down to the pit; I have found a
-ransom." "Who will seek and save these wanderers?" says the Father.
-"Father, send me," the Son replies; "I will seek them, and save them,
-and bring them home. I will bear the wrath due to them for sin; I will
-die for them." The Father accepts the Substitute; the Son lays aside
-his glory and girds himself for the mighty conflict. He looks along
-the line of weary years, and though he sees nothing but suffering,
-reproach and death, his holy purpose remains unshaken. The lost sheep
-of the house of Israel must be saved, and none but Jesus could save
-them.
-
-"So he was their Saviour."
-
-His work of _justification_ is perfect. Look at it for a moment. What
-is justification? "Justification is an act of God's free grace,
-wherein he pardoneth _all_ our sins, and accepteth us as righteous in
-his sight, only for the righteousness of Christ imputed to us, and
-received by faith alone."
-
-Can there be anything more simple and beautiful and perfect than this?
-It is free to all; it is sufficient for all: "Whosoever will;" "And I
-will pardon _all_ their iniquities." It is the work of a moment, but
-it abideth for ever. One look of faith, and life, eternal life, is
-yours.
-
- "The moment a sinner believes
- And trusts in his crucified Lord,
- His pardon at once he receives,
- Redemption in full through his blood."
-
-His work of _adoption_ is perfect. Like justification, it is done in a
-moment, and it abideth for ever. "Adoption is an act of God's free
-grace, whereby we are received into the number and have a right to all
-the privileges of the sons of God."
-
-The Romans had a twofold form of adoption. The first was a private
-transaction between the parties, receiving the person adopted into the
-family; the second was the public recognition in the forum.
-
-The moment we are justified we are adopted. This is the private
-transaction. Hearing a voice from heaven saying, "Thy sins are
-forgiven thee; go in peace," we look up through our tears, and with
-rejoicing lips we cry, "Father!" "_Now_ are we sons of God," placed
-among the children, because Jesus solved the mighty problem, showing
-how God can be just and yet justify the sinner. The public recognition
-will come very soon. When we reach the pearly gates, Jesus, our Elder
-Brother, will be waiting to receive and acknowledge us as his own.
-Standing before his Father and ours, he will stretch forth his hand
-toward his disciples and say, "Behold my mother and my brethren!"
-
-His work of _sanctification_ is perfect. It is not, like justification
-and adoption, an act done in a moment. It is a work slow and at times
-painful, yet sure and perfect. It begins when we are justified, it
-ends when we are glorified. "Sanctification is the _work_ of God's
-free grace, whereby we are renewed in the whole man after the image of
-God, and are enabled more and more to die unto sin and live unto
-righteousness." It is often a painful work. "The flesh, with the
-affections and lusts," must be crucified. We must "die unto sin." The
-sound of the hammer and axe and iron tools is not heard by those who
-are without, yet every blow causes the heart to quiver, and the
-cutting is very painful. Nevertheless, who would not be "a carved
-stone" in the temple of our God?
-
-We praise thee for this work, O God. We rejoice to know that thou wilt
-not weary of it, but wilt carry it on "until the day of Jesus Christ."
-We shall be perfect in that day. No imperfection shall remain in
-us--no sinful desire, no unholy thought. Jesus will say unto us, "Thou
-art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee," and he will present
-us "faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy."
-
-His work of _redemption_ is perfect. Christ, our Prophet, instructs
-us, "revealing to us, by his word and Spirit, the will of God for our
-salvation." Christ, our Priest, offers up himself "a sacrifice to
-satisfy divine justice and reconcile us to God." He also "maketh
-continual intercession for us." Christ, our King, subdues "us to
-himself;" he rules and defends us, and restrains and conquers "all his
-and our enemies." Is he not a perfect Redeemer? He redeems our souls
-from death, our bodies also from the grave. "My flesh also shall rest
-in hope," always confident of a glorious resurrection. "For I know
-that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day
-upon the earth; and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet
-in my flesh shall I see God." "I will ransom them from the power of
-the grave; I will redeem them from death. O Death, I will be thy
-plague! O Grave, I will be thy destruction!"
-
-Though some may cavil at this mystery and say sneeringly, "How are the
-dead raised up? and with what body do they come?" yet we trust in the
-word of our God, and "_we know_ that if our earthly house of this
-tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not
-made with hands, eternal in the heavens." Christ, "the first-fruits of
-them that slept," is risen; then how say some among you that there is
-no resurrection of the dead? "Christ is risen!" Oh glorious truth,
-first proclaimed to the women who came weeping to his sepulchre! "Fear
-ye not," the angel answered, "for I know that ye seek Jesus which was
-crucified. He is not here; for he is risen, as he said." Christ is
-risen! Then we which are Christ's shall rise also. "Because I live ye
-shall live also." "Behold, I show you a mystery:" "the dead shall be
-raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. For this corruptible
-must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality."
-
-O Lord, our Redeemer, Prophet, Priest and King, we praise thee for thy
-perfect work!
-
-Yes, "my meditation of him shall be sweet" when I consider his perfect
-work. My Master too regards it with satisfaction; he sees of the
-travail of his soul, and is satisfied. His life on earth was
-sorrowful, but his triumph was complete. "Having spoiled
-principalities and powers," God's enemies and ours, "he made a show of
-them openly, triumphing over them in it," or in _himself_, as it may
-be rendered. As a victor returning from the fight, he ascended to the
-glory which he had with the Father "before the world was;" and the
-song of the glorified filled the high heavens with richer harmony as
-the Well-Beloved of the Father proved by the nail-prints that he had
-finished the work which was given him to do.
-
-Coming ages will testify to his triumph and to the completeness of his
-work. On earth it was for the most part viewed not only with
-indifference, but even with unbelief and scorn. "He came unto his own,
-and his own received him not." "For a good work we stone thee not; but
-for blasphemy, and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself
-God." "He saved others; let him save himself, if he be Christ, the
-chosen of God." "If thou be Christ, save thyself and us." "If he be
-the King of Israel, let him now come down from the cross, and we will
-believe him." But now a mighty multitude swell the song, "Worthy is
-the Lamb that was slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and
-strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing. And every creature which
-is in heaven, and on the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all
-that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and
-power, be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb,
-for ever and ever. And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and
-twenty elders fell down and worshiped Him that liveth for ever and
-ever."
-
- "Ten thousand times ten thousand sung
- Loud anthems round the throne,
- When lo! one solitary tongue
- Began a song unknown--
- A song unknown to angel ears--
- A song that told of banished fears,
- Of pardoned sins and dried up tears.
-
- "Not one of all the heavenly host
- Could these high notes attain,
- But spirits from a distant coast
- United in the strain;
- Till he who first began the song,
- To sing alone not suffered long,
- Was mingled with a countless throng.
-
- "And still, as hours are fleeting by,
- The angels ever bear
- Some newly-ransomed soul on high
- To join the chorus there:
- And so the song will louder grow,
- Till all redeemed by Christ below
- To that fair world of rapture go.
-
- "Oh give me, Lord, my golden harp,
- And tune my broken voice,
- That I may sing of troubles sharp
- Exchanged for endless joys:
- The song that ne'er was heard before--
- A sinner reached the heavenly shore--
- But now shall sound for evermore."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- V.
- _The Chastening._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider his
-chastenings_, for "blessed is the man whom thou chastenest, O Lord."
-
-Of all the beatitudes this may appear to be the strangest. To the
-young disciple chastisements may seem anything but happiness; you see
-in them no beauty that you should desire them. If you have never been
-taught in the school of affliction, you cannot understand this;
-neither can you understand it if you have not learned well what you
-were there taught. Perhaps you have been greatly afflicted, and yet
-you can see no good fruits of it in your soul. Every disappointment
-has only increased bitter feelings in your heart. You are conscious of
-this. You are ready to say, "Where are the blessed effects of sorrow?"
-The Master comes "seeking fruit," and findeth none. Why is this? We
-reply, that sorrow in itself has no sanctifying power. Many are
-hardened by it, and rendered more unlovely and unholy. But the plane
-in the hand of the carpenter's Son cannot fail to make you better, and
-if you are not profited by it, it is because you do not rightly
-receive your sorrows.
-
-While you were a stranger to the love of Christ you had no special
-consolation to sustain you in the time of trial. The consolations of
-God, which are neither few nor small, you had no right to appropriate.
-With every stroke of the rod you seemed to hear a terrible voice
-saying, "I, even I, will chastise you seven times for your sins." But
-now that you are reconciled to God, all is changed; you hear another
-voice saying, "As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten."
-
-Henceforth, therefore, you may accept trials as love-tokens, for "whom
-the Lord loveth he chasteneth."
-
-Perhaps, like Jonah, you have been sitting with great delight under
-the shadow of your gourd. To give you joy and comfort in the desert,
-God caused it to spring up. You felt glad and even thankful because of
-its pleasant shade, and while you rested under its shadow songs of
-praise ascended to the Giver. Yet "God prepared a worm." You woke one
-morning to find your beautiful gourd all withered. Never did the
-desert seem more dreary. You fainted under God's smiting, and with
-aching and rebellious heart you prayed for death. There seemed to be
-nothing for which to live, and you said, "It is better for me to die
-than to live."
-
-"Doest thou well to be angry for the gourd?"
-
-There are times when God shows his mercy to us by turning a deaf ear
-to our foolish prayer. No, I should not say he turneth a deaf ear to
-our prayer. He does hear, and he does answer, but not according to our
-asking. You asked death; he sent grace to live. "It is better for me
-to die," you said. God, by sparing your life, said most plainly, "It
-is better for you to live." God knows best.
-
-If you are still mourning over your smitten gourd, permit us to give
-you some reasons why you should no longer mourn, or, at least, why you
-should not murmur.
-
-Remember, the gourd was undeserved. You had done nothing to merit such
-a blessing. Perhaps even when it came it found you, like Jonah,
-indulging in bitter, reproachful thoughts. Wayward and wandering were
-you; loving and tender was God. Earthly parents bestow most tenderness
-and anxious thought upon the erring child. The Good Shepherd leaves
-the ninety and nine to search for the straying one. These things but
-faintly illustrate the dealings of God with his children.
-
-Perhaps you were in the path of duty, and were not unthankful while
-you rested under the gourd. Still, you know that you deserve not the
-least of all God's mercies. Your sufferings are less than your sins
-deserve. "He hath not dealt with us after our sins, nor rewarded us
-according to our iniquities." "Wherefore doth a living man complain?"
-Let then this thought silence your complaints.
-
-Remember also that the hand that smote the gourd was the hand of your
-Father, your loving Father. And this thought surely will give you
-comfort in your sorrow, and will even cause you by and by to sing
-aloud for joy. Knowing full well that "he doth not afflict willingly,"
-you seek to know why he thus dealt with you. It ought to be enough for
-you to know that "_God_ prepared a worm." "What I do thou knowest not
-now, but thou shalt know hereafter," should make us dumb before him,
-but so great is his condescension toward them that love him that he
-even tells them _why_ the smiting was necessary. Your heart was fully
-set upon the gourd, and you were
-
- "Making a heaven down under the sun."
-
-It may be that there was very little of the pilgrim spirit in your
-heart. The heart-tendrils were firmly fastened around the gourd; its
-uprooting seemed to rend you in twain. Bitter and severe was the pain,
-but the hand that dealt the blow is ready to bind up the bleeding
-wound, and in after days you will love to look upon this scar, for you
-will cherish it as a sweet reminder of God's faithfulness and
-mercy--not only as a monument, but also as a warning, for whenever you
-look upon it, it will say to you, "Little children, keep yourselves
-from idols."
-
-Have you ever noticed the old grave stones in some English
-burial-garden? The damp climate, which so soon obliterates the
-letters, has a kindly way of dealing with the horizontal stones. Into
-the deep grooves of the lettering little seeds are carried by the
-wind, and, lodging there, the dampness soon causes them to germinate,
-and in place of the blackness of decay spring up the characters in
-living green.
-
-Into the deep scars caused by God's sharp instruments the precious
-seeds of divine consolation shall be wafted. Watered by your tears,
-they shall soon spring up, and in your sweet submission others will
-read your testimony to God's faithfulness: "I know, O Lord, that thy
-judgments are right, and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me."
-
-When God uproots the gourd he gives us something better, and "our
-light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more
-exceeding and eternal weight of glory."
-
-If Paul could call his calamities "light," surely we may; for what are
-our trials when compared with his? Behold what a crushing load he
-carried! "In labors more abundant, in stripes above measure, in
-prisons more frequent, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received
-I forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I
-stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in
-the deep, in journeyings often, in perils of waters, in perils of
-robbers, in perils by mine own countrymen, in perils by the heathen,
-in perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the
-sea, in perils among false brethren; in weariness and painfulness, in
-watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and
-nakedness." Oh what a life! How could he call all these afflictions
-light? Placed in the balance with the exceeding weight of glory, they
-seemed as naught. The afflictions were but for a moment; the glory was
-eternal.
-
-"Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth
-him out of them all. He keepeth all his bones: not one of them is
-broken. Evil shall slay the wicked: and they that hate the righteous
-shall be desolate. The Lord redeemeth the soul of his servants; and
-none of them that trust in him shall be desolate."
-
-Then "wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and he shall strengthen
-thy heart: wait, I say, on the Lord." And let your meditation be sweet
-when you consider Him who smites the gourd in order that he may lead
-you to the shadow of the great Rock.
-
-"When my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the Rock that is higher than
-I."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VI.
- _The Compassion._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember his compassion_
-for the multitude.
-
-It was a beautiful thought to compile a record of loving and heroic
-deeds, of all lands and ages, and to entitle it, "A Book of Golden
-Deeds." Florence Nightingale, whose picture adorns the opening page,
-stands forth a fit exponent of the spirit of love that prompted these
-recorded acts.
-
-The record of Christ's life may truly be called "A Book of Golden
-Deeds;" and that blessed name, which is above every name, becomes the
-symbol of "whatsoever things are lovely and of good report." The works
-which mark his earthly career are wonderful beyond compare, and the
-crowning act of this life of perfect self-abnegation is the greatest
-mystery of love.
-
-It was noble in Dick Williamzoon, the Netherland martyr, when safely
-over the frozen mere, to turn back, at the peril of his life, and
-rescue his pursuer, whom he saw about to perish in the waters. He
-saved his enemy, and was himself captured and burned at the stake--a
-martyr for mercy as well as for truth. It was nobler still in the
-Moravian missionary to enter the hospital in order to preach Christ to
-the lepers. "If you go in, you can never be allowed to come out." "I
-accept," he said, and entered, to go out no more. But the compassion
-of Jesus towers far above the devotion of mortals, and expresses
-itself in a manner which excites wonder in heaven and upon earth.
-Looking down from his heavenly throne, his heart was deeply affected
-by the ruin of our race. One blow of the arch-destroyer had marred
-God's fair creation--man. Could no hand restore what in one dark hour
-had been lost? O mighty Restorer! we wonder and adore.
-
- "He left his lofty throne,
- And threw his robes aside;
- On wings of love came down,
- And wept and bled and died."
-
-Yes, girding himself with full strength, he descended to the work his
-loving heart devised. Humbling himself to bear our sins, he became our
-Saviour. Not satisfied with simply bearing the sins of his people, he
-also carried their sorrows, and so becomes their Sympathizer. "Surely
-he has borne our griefs" as well as our guilt. He became "a Man of
-Sorrows" in order that from henceforth and for ever his followers
-might have not exemption from all sorrow, but a Saviour who would be
-able to sustain them fully in their afflictions, even lifting them so
-far above their sorrows that at midnight and in prison they might sing
-praises.
-
-Gazing along the line of centuries, the omniscient Jesus saw a mighty
-multitude of bowed and suffering ones--in sickness, in pains, in
-poverty and chains; inheritors of "cruel mockings and scourgings, yea,
-moreover, of bonds and imprisonment;" those whose portion should be to
-be stoned, "sawn asunder," tempted, "slain with the sword;" who should
-wander about "in sheep-skins and goat-skins, being destitute,
-afflicted, tormented." Seeing these, is it any wonder if his heart
-melted with tenderness? In the simple story of his life we read: "And
-Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude, and was moved with
-compassion toward them, and he healed their sick." "In all their
-affliction he was afflicted." Blessed be our High Priest who is still
-"touched with the feeling of our infirmities!"
-
-When his life on earth ended and he returned to the glory which he had
-with the Father before the world was, he left us an example that we
-should walk in his steps. To his disciples belongs the honor of taking
-up and carrying forward the work of ministration. Partakers of
-Christ's love and sympathy "look not every man on his own things, but
-every man also on the things of others. Let the same mind be in you
-which was also in Christ Jesus," who "took upon him the form of a
-servant." "He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also to walk
-even as he walked."
-
-How did he walk? Study well the memorial of "golden deeds." Compare
-your life with his. How can you bear the test?
-
-Nothing can be more beautiful than a life of self-abnegation. One
-single act of devotion to another's good is like a ray of golden
-sunshine in a darkened room, and a life of such deeds may well be
-called a golden life. Into the cabin of one of our government
-transports was borne a poor wounded soldier, who, with many others,
-was going home to die. He had just been laid in the middle berth--by
-far the most comfortable of the three tiers of berths in the ship's
-cabin--and was still thrilling with the pain of being carried from the
-field, when he saw a comrade in even greater suffering than himself
-about to be lifted to the berth above him, and, thinking of the pain
-it would cost him to be raised so high, he exclaimed, "Put me up
-there; I reckon I'll bear hoisting better than he will."
-
-Where can we find sufficient inspiration for a life of devotion to
-others? "Act as if the eyes of Cato were always upon you," was urged
-upon the Roman youth to stimulate him to virtuous deeds. Act as if the
-eyes of Jesus were upon you, we urge, for surely he bends from his
-throne to watch you as you endeavor to tread the path your Saviour
-trod.
-
-To some of us God has given leisure from arduous toil, wealth, talents
-and many opportunities for usefulness. Perhaps to all these gifts he
-has added strong faith and bright hopes of heaven. What, then, are our
-duties to the poor and ignorant, the weary and feeble ones?
-"Strengthen ye the weak hands and confirm the feeble knees. Say to
-them that are of a feeble heart, Be strong; fear not." Remember, and
-forget it not, ye favored ones, that "unto whomsoever much is given,
-of him shall much be required." Let nothing be hoarded. "Withhold not
-good from them to whom it is due, when it is in the power of thine
-hand to do it." Nature's and the Gospels' doctrine is, "Be ready to
-distribute, willing to communicate." Looking up at the twelve silver
-statues in Yorkminster cathedral, Oliver Cromwell asked, "Who are
-those expensive fellows up there?" He was told that they were the
-apostles of Christ. "Ah? let them be taken down and melted up," said
-the old Puritan; "then they, like their Master, will go about doing
-good."
-
-It is said that in China the rich buy up and distribute clothing to
-the poor, and in times of scarcity of food, through the kindness of
-the rich, rice is sold to the poor at a third or fourth less than the
-market price. This is done to win the favor of the gods. While we do
-not hope to purchase God's favor by anything that we can do, yet we
-may remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, "Whosoever
-shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water
-only, in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, He shall in
-nowise lose his reward." "And they that be wise shall shine in the
-brightness of the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness,
-as the stars for ever and ever."
-
-Let us daily strive to imitate our Master in compassion for others;
-then shall our meditation prove profitable as well as pleasant.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VII.
- _The Sympathy._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember his sympathy_
-with his chosen ones.
-
-To have a friend who is ready to rejoice with us when we rejoice, and
-to weep with us when we weep, how delightful it is! It doubles our
-every joy and divides our every sorrow. Though some hearts seem to
-scorn this tender plant of heavenly origin, we believe that none are
-wholly insensible to the magic power of sympathy. Those who scorn it
-most are often led to crave it most when the days of bitter grief draw
-near. We call it a plant of heavenly origin, and so it is; for though
-it is often found in unrenewed hearts, yet it attains its fairest
-perfection in hearts regenerated by the Holy Spirit. Planted by the
-hand of God and watered by heavenly dews, it reaches its greatest
-height, and wins the admiration of many who fail to understand the
-secret source of its life.
-
-But human sympathy, even the deepest and tenderest, often fails us in
-the hour of our greatest need. Who will say that Peter and the two
-sons of Zebedee were not friends of the Lord Jesus? Certainly they
-loved him, for they followed him whithersoever he went. Feeling his
-need of human sympathy--for he was the man Christ Jesus--he took them
-with him to Gethsemane. All he asked was that they should watch with
-him. "Tarry ye here, and watch with me." Did they watch? You know the
-record well. "And he cometh unto the disciples and findeth them
-asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one
-hour?" When brought to our Gethsemane, is not our experience something
-like our Master's? Where we looked for sympathy we find indifference;
-we are there alone. Perhaps our sorrow may be of such a nature that we
-cannot reveal it even to our best-beloved. Our secret grief lies like
-ice upon our hearts, sending its chilling influences through every
-member. The hands hang down listlessly and the feeble knees smite
-together; the aching of the head is only exceeded by the aching of the
-heart. Yet no one knows the agony that paralyzes our life. Or, sadder
-still, the heart-friend may be snatched away, and while our hearts are
-breaking by reason of bereavement, we may have no one left to whom we
-may turn for comfort in our affliction.
-
-Is there no friend whose sympathy is deep, ever abiding and ever
-accessible? Thank God, there is One. His name is Jesus. In all our
-afflictions he is afflicted. He suffered that he might sympathize.
-Coming to a race concerning whom it was written "few are their days
-and full of trouble," "it behooved him to be made like unto his
-brethren," therefore he accepted the inheritance of suffering, and
-became "a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief." "Himself took
-our infirmities."
-
-Is poverty your portion? Is it no uncommon thing for you to suffer
-hunger, cold and weariness? Do friends forsake and foes oppress you?
-Go and tell Jesus. Though no longer suffering the sorrows of earth, he
-remembers them well. Think you that _he_ has forgotten those
-wilderness seasons when he suffered hunger; or those times of weary
-watching on the mountains; or that dark night when "all the disciples
-forsook him and fled;" or that sad hour when his Father forsook him?
-Though gone to God's right hand he is the same Jesus still. His heart
-is full of love and pity. "He knoweth our frame," for he has put on
-our humanity. He put on our humanity; he has never put it off. "Behold
-the Man!" "And I beheld, and lo, in the midst of the throne, and of
-the four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it
-had been slain." "And I heard the voice of many angels round about the
-throne, and the beasts, and the elders; and the number of them was ten
-thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands; saying with a
-loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and
-riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing."
-
-And is he absorbed by this homage? I tell thee nay.
-
-Let us recall that parting scene at Olivet. His days of suffering are
-now ended, and he is about to return to the glory which he had with
-the Father before the world was. A few words of parting, and then a
-cloud separates him from his sorrowing disciples. A cloud, the record
-tells us. So it appeared to them; to us it seems rather a company of
-shining ones--a heavenly convoy sent to attend King Jesus back to his
-heavenly throne. In the midst of the homage of this heavenly host he
-does not forget his sorrowful disciples, but arrests the glad song for
-a moment that he may send words of comfort down to them. "And while
-they looked steadfastly toward heaven as he went up, behold, two men
-stood by them in white apparel, which also said, Ye men of Galilee,
-why stand ye gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus which is taken up
-from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him
-go into heaven."
-
-_This same Jesus_ is not now absorbed by the homage of that "great
-multitude which no man could number." Surrounded by those "which came
-out of great tribulation," can he for a moment forget those who are
-going through great tribulation? He does not forget them. The hand
-that was nailed to the cross is still swift to obey the impulses of
-that great heart of love, and hastens to wipe away the tear that
-gathers in the mourner's eye, to bind up the broken heart and to
-smooth the pillow of the dying.
-
-We cannot read the record of Christ's earthly life without perceiving
-that his sympathy with suffering was deep and constant. Failing to
-comprehend this, some may add to your grief by uttering these chilling
-words: "Trouble not the Master." Remember, and forget not the
-broken-hearted father whose "only daughter" died before the help of
-the Good Physician could be obtained. There comes one from the ruler's
-house saying unto him, "Thy daughter is dead; trouble not the Master."
-The mournful message is heard by the Master, and turning to the
-sorrowing father, he said, "Fear not; believe only, and she shall be
-made whole." How speedily joy came into that darkened home when Jesus
-entered and took the maiden by the hand!
-
-Little know they that great heart of love who say to the sorrowful,
-"Trouble not the Master." Young disciple, heed them not. Think no
-sorrow too trifling to pour into his sympathizing ear. Whatever
-troubles you interests him. "In all their affliction he was
-afflicted." No tear falls unnoticed by him; no sigh escapes unheard.
-He keepeth you "as the apple of his eye." What encouragement to carry
-your griefs to Jesus! Satan would suggest that we "trouble not the
-Master." He trembles to see such close communion between Christ and
-the Christian. He knows that his power over the Saviour's "hidden
-ones" is fast passing away, and he would be glad to raise all chilling
-barriers to their delightful intercourse. "Get thee behind me, Satan!"
-My Saviour invites, yea, urges, me to come to him with all my sorrows,
-and I will cast all my cares on him, for he careth for me. "It is good
-for me to draw near to God." Again and again have I found it good--oh
-how good! All sympathy is sweet, but his sympathy is exceeding sweet.
-Yes, so sweet is it that trouble is no longer trouble, because Christ
-shares it with me. He changes the "valley of Baca" into the "land
-Beulah." He gives me songs in the night, and his presence turns my
-darkness into day.
-
-"Trouble not the Master."
-
-I tell you, Satan, it is no trouble for the Master to care for me; no
-trouble to soothe my sorrowing spirit; no trouble to wipe away my
-tears; no trouble to pillow my aching head upon his bosom; no trouble
-to give me "beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment
-of praise for the spirit of heaviness." Many and many a time has he
-done this, blessed be his name! Nothing troubles him but my sins.
-Would to God they might trouble him no more! They grieve him; then let
-me forsake them. By his help I will. Begone, unbelief, pride,
-worldliness, ingratitude--begone! It is ye that trouble my Master!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VIII.
- _The Love._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider his love for
-me_.
-
-The record of Christ's deeds of mercy toward a multitude of sick and
-suffering ones gives us a wonderful glimpse of his heart. The thought
-of his perfect sympathy with his people has comforted the Church in
-all ages. But draw a little nearer and consider his _personal love for
-you_, dear young Christian. Listen to his voice saying so tenderly, "I
-have loved thee." Forget for a moment the multitude that need his
-compassion and the disciples who share his sympathy, and try to
-realize his deep, personal love for you. Consider that love as shown
-on Calvary. Remember the great price he has paid for your redemption.
-
-During the dark days of the Netherland revolt there went forth a
-decree from the cruel Philip the Second; and though many a bloody
-edict had gone out before from that throne, this one in cruelty
-exceeded them all, for it condemned to death all the inhabitants of
-the Netherlands. "Heretic" was branded upon every one, and, without
-respect to age or sex, they were doomed to destruction. Now, if a
-mighty deliverer could have traversed those gloomy streets proclaiming
-full deliverance for those who were condemned, with what joy would he
-have been hailed! Not only would the public thanks of the nation have
-been his, but each rescued one would have hastened to express his own
-thanks to his deliverer.
-
-Let then your heart overflow with grateful love when you remember the
-great Deliverer. "Guilty" was branded upon every forehead when Jesus
-came to the rescue; and while the thanks of all the redeemed are
-ascending to the throne, let your praises unite with theirs, for you
-too were under condemnation when Jesus offered pardon. His terms were
-simple--"only believe;" and through the grace of God you were led to
-accept the offer of everlasting life. "There is therefore now no
-condemnation," for the Son hath made you free.
-
-"No condemnation!" How sweet it sounds! How much it means! Christ hath
-fulfilled the Law's requirements, and you are free. As we meditate
-upon it we seem to hear the Saviour saying, "Lovest thou me?" Dear
-Lord Jesus, we cannot love thee as thou hast loved us. A mother's love
-is as naught when compared with thy love, for she _may_ forget, but
-thou hast said thou wilt never forget us. But yet our hearts cherish
-most fondly this secret of thy love to us. "I have loved thee with an
-everlasting love."
-
-It gives us joy in our loneliest hours. We love to think about it when
-we are all alone. Never are we less alone than when alone, for then it
-is we hear the sweetest whispers that ever fell on mortal ears. And
-when we hear the voice of our Beloved, can we be indifferent to his
-love? I tell thee, nay. Love, a faint reflection of his own, rises in
-our heart, and falling on our knees before him, we exclaim, "Lord,
-thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee." Sadly we feel
-that it is a poor spark of love--nothing like his great love to
-us--yet we rejoice that the little spark is there, and pray that it
-may be kindled into a steady flame. "Lord, thou knowest all things."
-Oh how glad we are of this! Thou knowest every emotion of our heart
-toward thee. Thou knowest our grief because we do not love thee more.
-
-But this meditation has its practical bearings. We may not always
-dwell upon the high mountain apart thinking about our Saviour's love.
-Let our communion with Christ be as close and confidential as
-possible, but let us never forget that He who spent whole nights
-communing with his Father also spent whole days ministering to others.
-Let, then, the love of Christ constrain us.
-
-Standing safely upon the Rock Christ Jesus, let our hearts go out in
-pity for those who are still breasting the billows. Faint and
-exhausted, they seem ready to perish. "Help, Master, help!" Let our
-prayers for them ascend unceasingly. The Master is not far off, and in
-answer to our prayers he will come and rescue them with his strong
-arm. Let the love of Christ constrain us to labor for the perishing
-around us. This is our working-time, and this principle of love is the
-life of our work.
-
-This word "constrain" has several meanings. It might be thus
-expressed: "The love of Christ transports us." It carries away our
-souls in ecstasy even from earth to heaven, and fills us with holy
-rapture. How often at the table of the Lord have we been thus
-transported by thoughts of his everlasting love! And as we went on our
-pilgrim way we cast frequent glances back to that hour of heavenly
-brightness. Earth grew dim during those moments of holy communion.
-Fain would we have tabernacled there.
-
-The love of Christ _urges_ us, _prompts_ us. Sweet it will be to rest
-in the arms of his love. But this rest remaineth; we have not yet
-reached it; to the present belong toil and labor. There must be no
-loitering in the Christian life. Where the love of Christ fills the
-heart there can be no loitering. It is a prompting principle, ever
-leading us to new endeavors for the Master.
-
-The love of Christ _unites_ us. Though diversities of opinion mark
-those who bear the Christian name, yet, if the Saviour's love fills
-our hearts, we have one common platform where we may meet and hold
-sweet fellowship. Our experience is the same: "we love him because he
-first loved us." Our Hope is the same: Christ in us, "the hope of
-glory." Our home is the same: "and there shall be one fold." Our
-Shepherd is the same: "and I will set up one Shepherd over them." And
-though our creeds may differ, our chorus is the same: "Thou art
-worthy, for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood
-out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation." Angels and
-archangels round the throne join in the heavenly melody, saying, with
-a loud voice, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and
-riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing."
-"And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under
-the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them,"
-being united by the love of Christ, join in the song which celebrates
-his wondrous love.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IX.
- _The Life Abundant._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider the life more
-abundant which he gives_.
-
-We are amazed at the languid, feeble lives of many around us. Among
-the aged we naturally look for inactivity, but, alas! "even the
-youths" faint and are weary, and the young men utterly fall. Before
-"the time of old age" the grasshopper becomes a burden, and we hear
-the young exclaiming, in world-weary tones, "I have no pleasure in
-them." They said in their hearts, "Go to, now; I will prove thee with
-mirth; therefore enjoy pleasure." And behold they found it vanity.
-They builded houses, and planted vineyards, and gathered silver and
-gold; but, looking back on all the works their hands have wrought,
-they are compelled to acknowledge that all is vanity and vexation of
-spirit. Therefore they hate life and all their labor which they have
-taken "under the sun." "For what," say they, "hath man of all his
-labor, and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he hath labored under
-the sun? For all his days are sorrows, and his travail grief; yea, his
-heart taketh not rest in the night. This also is vanity."
-
-How marked and beautiful the change when Jesus takes possession of
-these weary souls! "I am come," says the Master, "that they might have
-life, and that they might have it _more abundantly_"--life in greater
-quantity; "good measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and
-running over."
-
-We hear much about the power of love to arouse the dormant faculties
-and animate the feeble spirit. When this love is the dear, deep love
-of Jesus, who can estimate its life-giving power? Truly, we hardly
-begin to live till Jesus reveals himself to us--until, kneeling at his
-cross, we consecrate to him our time, our talents and our all. From
-henceforth life has for us new beauty, because Jesus is the charm of
-our life.
-
-Life "more abundantly!" Let us enter more deeply into the meaning of
-these words. Let us understand that religion does not close the door
-upon any lawful calling. The days of religious seclusion are long
-past, but the days have not yet come when men have fully learned that
-daily business is not antagonistic to Christian life, but that it is
-one of the means of its development. It has been truly said that there
-have been noble bands of Christians who have gone to heaven despising
-ambition, refusing crowns, disdaining sceptres, unwilling to be
-cumbered with wealth, willing to bear hardship and suffering; but
-there shall be another band of men who shall do more mighty things
-than they--men of higher grace who shall conquer enemies more strong
-and terrible, who shall go to heaven even with crowns and sceptres or
-with great wealth. Through abounding grace they learn Christian
-development in spite of, and by means of, those external things which
-cause the spiritual shipwreck of multitudes.
-
-Let the spirit of the Saviour, dwelling in us richly, sanctify all
-commerce, all learning, all politics, all art. May religion dignify
-our every act. Religion was not simply designed for the dying hour.
-"Christ shall be magnified in my body, whether it be by life or by
-death." "For to me _to live_ is Christ."
-
-Dear Lord Jesus, thou hast showed me "the path of life," and by thy
-presence, even on earth, thou hast given me "fullness of joy." Thou
-hast given me power when faint, and "increased strength" when I had no
-might. Therefore my life shall praise thee. "A new creature" in
-Christ, henceforth I will not live unto myself, but unto Him which
-died for me and rose again, "for the love of Christ constraineth me."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- X.
- _The Forgiveness._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider the full and
-free forgiveness he imparts_.
-
-The hour in which we first felt the joy of sins forgiven can never be
-forgotten. The burden had grown so heavy that we could carry it no
-longer, so, bending the knee at the foot of the cross, the burden was
-cast upon Christ.
-
-For many days our joy and peace were so great that we fondly hoped to
-be burdened no more; but as old wounds often break out anew, so it is
-with the soul, and the memory of "sins that are past" often sweeps
-over the Christian like a bitter wave. Daily sins cause daily grief to
-the heart that loves the Lord. The only way of peace is to carry them
-at once to Jesus, confess all and seek forgiveness. We never seek in
-vain.
-
-But these past sins, these iniquities of our youth, how they rise up
-to condemn us and take away our peace! "Thou writest bitter things
-against me," saith Job, "and makest me possess the iniquities of my
-youth." "My sin is ever before me," cries David in the bitterness of
-his soul. It must have been a lifelong grief to Peter that he had
-denied his Lord and Master. Others might easily forget his hour of
-weakness and sin while they listened to his fearless words on the day
-of Pentecost and heard him exclaim, "Him, being delivered by the
-determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by
-wicked hands have crucified and slain." But though others could
-forget, how often must Peter's soul have been saddened by the memory
-of his weakness and sin! Sounding along the corridors of memory, ever
-and anon these words, "I know not the man," must have smote upon his
-ears like a funeral knell. The recollection of that look of love must
-often have brought tears to his eyes and filled his heart with tender
-grief.
-
-How many of us recall with deepest sorrow hours of weakness when,
-yielding to strong temptation, we fell into sin! Perhaps no eye but
-God's marked our wandering steps, no ear but his heard our words of
-sin, no heart but his read the dark secret. The hour of true
-contrition came when, ashamed and deeply grieved, we scarcely ventured
-to look up to our offended Father, but casting our tearful eyes upon
-the ground, we knelt and cried in anguish, "Thou hast set our
-iniquities before thee, our secret sins in the light of thy
-countenance." Remembering that "if we confess our sins he is faithful
-and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
-unrighteousness," we freely confessed all, and in the deep peace that
-followed we found a fulfillment of the promise. "I acknowledge my sin
-unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my
-transgressions unto the Lord, and thou forgavest the iniquity of my
-sin."
-
-But though the Lord is "ready to forgive," and "plenteous in mercy"
-unto all them that call upon him, yet these past sins are weapons that
-the great adversary often uses successfully in his warfare with the
-pilgrims, causing many almost to stand still when they should be
-running in the way of God's commandments.
-
-Think you that our God desires from us constant mourning over "sins
-that are past?" If these are to lie a perpetual burden on our hearts,
-robbing us of our peace and clouding our hopes of heaven, what
-advantage then hath the Christian? or what profit is there in the
-atonement of Christ?
-
-We have somewhere heard of a chemist who was lecturing before his
-class. A number of rags of varied hue lay before him, and by means of
-strong chemicals he was changing their colors into whiteness.
-Presently he paused, and holding up a piece of Turkey red, he
-remarked, "Ah! now we shall have some trouble, for of all colors this
-is the hardest to extract." Again and again he dipped it into the
-strong solution, but with little effect; then cast it aside, saying,
-"It must either remain as it is, or else lie in the solution till its
-very fibres are destroyed."
-
-But the blood of Christ has power to extract even scarlet stains.
-"Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though
-they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool."
-
-Then "why art thou cast down, O my soul?" for "the righteousness of
-God, which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all them that believe," is
-"for the remission of sins that are past," as well as for the
-constantly recurring sins of the present.
-
-Shall we, then, never think of our past sins? Yes; think of them as
-the mariner thinks of dangers past, and as the redeemed in glory think
-of past tribulations. "He maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves
-thereof are still. Then are they glad because they be quiet; so he
-bringeth them unto their desired haven." Yes; think of them with
-gratitude to God for deliverance, and let this be your song as you
-press on: "He sent from above, he took me; he drew me out of many
-waters: he delivered me from my strong enemy, and from them that hated
-me; for they were too strong for me." "When I said, My foot slippeth,
-thy mercy, O Lord, held me up." "The Lord is my rock, and my fortress,
-and my deliverer; the God of my rock: in him will I trust; he is my
-shield, and the horn of my salvation, my high tower, and my refuge, my
-Saviour." "For who is a God, save the Lord? and who is a rock, save
-our God? Therefore I will give thanks unto thee, O Lord, among the
-heathen, and I will sing praises unto thy name."
-
-Think of them, also, with humility and self-distrust, and let this be
-your constant prayer: "Hold up my goings in thy paths, that my
-footsteps slip not." "Keep me as the apple of the eye; hide me under
-the shadow of thy wings."
-
-But oh do not carry the memory of past sins as a weight to drag your
-soul down to the dust! If the Lord has forgiven and forgotten them,
-why not rejoice in this wonderful token of his love toward you?
-Casting aside every weight, you may thus rise to the enjoyment of "a
-present heaven."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XI.
- _The Help._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember the stones of
-help he has given_.
-
-For forty days the champion of the Philistines had defied the armies
-of Israel. He was a man of great stature--a giant--and a man of war
-from his youth. "And all the men of Israel, when they saw the man,
-fled from him and were sore afraid." All, yet not all, for one
-accepted Goliath's challenge and stepped forth to battle with him. Who
-was he? The strongest, bravest and oldest veteran in the army? No; he
-was not a soldier, but a shepherd-boy, and too young to be enrolled.
-"A stripling" the king calls him, and his weapons are only "_five
-smooth_ _stones_!" Is it any wonder that his elder brother chided him
-and that Goliath disdained him? Trusting in the Lord who delivered him
-out of the paw of the lion and out of the paw of the bear, he went
-forth confident of victory. He took a stone from his bag and put it in
-his sling, and buried it in the giant's forehead so that he fell
-prostrate to the ground. How wonderful!
-
-There are giants still in the land--giant powers that defy the armies
-of the living God. There are giant sins and giant fears that throw
-themselves across the path of every Christian and threaten his
-destruction. And if this page shall meet the eye of some youthful
-warrior who would fain overcome those spiritual foes that challenge
-the soul, permit me to choose five smooth stones for you, with which
-you shall prevail to lay the giants low.
-
-_The presence of God_ is one of these stones: "Thou God seest me."
-Sometimes, like David's first stone, it is enough to kill the Goliath
-of temptation. When sinners entice us, there is power enough to defend
-us in the thought that the many eyes of the Most High are looking on
-us, and the soul starts back appalled, saying, "How then can I do this
-great wickedness, and sin against God?"
-
-_The power of God_ is another of these precious stones. David declined
-to go forth to battle with Saul's armor. He could not go with weapons
-which he had not proved, but he took to himself "the whole armor of
-God." He had proved it, and knew by experience that there was more
-than protection in that panoply. Goliath was a giant, but he was not
-God. He was mighty, but he was not almighty. He was potent, but he was
-not omnipotent.
-
-_The wisdom of God_ is still another of these stones. The mighty man
-of Gath was mailed from head to foot. He was completely covered with a
-coat of iron and brass. His whole body was protected; only his
-forehead was left exposed that he might be able to see his antagonist.
-And, strange to say, the first smooth stone went straight to this only
-place where it could harm him, "and sunk into his forehead." God's
-wisdom guided it to its own place.
-
-_The faithfulness of God_ is another of these stones. In his holy word
-he has made unto us many exceeding great and precious promises, and
-his faithfulness ensures their fulfillment. He will do as he said.
-Heaven and earth may pass away, but his promises shall never pass
-away. If ordinary means will not suffice for their accomplishment,
-miracles shall be wrought. The sun and moon shall stand still, if need
-be. Taking the past as pledge of the future, "there shall not fail one
-good word of all that the Lord our God hath spoken."
-
-_The love of God_ is the last stone of help. "And the last shall be
-first." It is the smoothest and most precious of the five. There is
-some gold in all the others, but this one is all gold, and the most
-fine gold. In the presence, power, wisdom and faithfulness of God much
-love is mingled. He goes with us and upholds us and guides us and
-remembers his covenant because he loves us, so that our last thought
-crowns and comprehends all the others. The love of God is first and
-last and best. Presence, power, wisdom, faithfulness and love, these
-five; but the greatest of these is love.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XII.
- _The Deliverance._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider him as my
-Deliverer_.
-
-How dense the gloom that gathers round the record of Adam's sin and
-fall! Reading this chapter without the cross before our eyes, it seems
-the saddest in all the inspired volume. Issuing from the abyss of woe,
-Satan has found an entrance into a newly-created world. Sin and death
-have bridged the gulf that separated earth from hell, and are swift to
-follow in Satan's track, eager to complete the ruin his hellish hate
-devised. Fiends from the pit rejoice, while angels, with grief-clouded
-faces, gaze upon the guilty pair. "Adam, where art thou?" Sinful man
-hears the summons, and, compelled by power divine, appears in the
-presence of his offended Maker. "Can any hide himself in secret places
-that I shall not see him? saith the Lord." "Though they hide
-themselves in the top of Carmel, I will search and take them out
-hence." Truly, "there is no darkness, nor shadow of death, where the
-workers of iniquity may hide themselves."
-
-But when we read this record in the light of the cross, our grief
-speedily changes into gladness. That the promise made to Satan, "Thou
-shalt bruise his heel," has not been retracted, each disciple of
-Christ can testify. The old enmity hissed forth by the arch-apostate
-and his followers when the almighty Arm hurled them into their own
-place, has not yet been destroyed. The conflict, begun in Paradise,
-between the seed of the woman and the serpent--that conflict darkly
-shadowed forth in the mythology of heathen nations and painfully
-experienced by each regenerate heart--is raging still. "O wretched man
-that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" cries
-the Christian. "O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from
-me!" prays the Christian's Lord and Master. That the bruising is not
-light, Gethsemane and Calvary bear mournful testimony. Nevertheless,
-it is not vital. Thou mayest bruise his heel, Satan, but not his head.
-From the abode of demons a yell of triumph must have risen when the
-Light of Life was extinguished on the cross. But the triumph was
-short-lived. "Rejoice not against me, O mine enemy; when I fall, I
-shall arise." "That which thou sowest is not quickened except it die."
-"Thou shalt bruise his heel" because Omnipotence allows it, for "it
-pleased the Lord to bruise him," but "it shall bruise thy head."
-"Traveling in the greatness of his strength," Jesus plants his feet
-upon the necks of his enemies and chains the captives to his triumphal
-car. The Lion of the tribe of Judah has seized the prey. "Judah, thou
-art he whom his brethren shall praise." "Let all the people praise
-thee, O God; let all the people praise thee." And those who will not
-render him willing homage shall be trampled under the wheels of his
-advancing chariot. "But these mine enemies, which would not that I
-should reign over them, bring hither, and slay them before me."
-
-Shiloh, the Pacificator, has come; and though the conflict has not
-ceased, the combatants are already singing the conqueror's song. What
-meaneth this shout of triumph that cometh up from the battle-field? It
-is the voice of them that shout for the mastery. They go forth
-singing, "Thanks be unto God, which giveth us the victory, through our
-Lord Jesus Christ." We hear their song above the clash of arms; amid
-the smoke of the battle-field we see their look of quiet confidence;
-and as they fall in the conflict they shout, "O Death, where is thy
-sting? O Grave, where is thy victory?"
-
-From heaven above is now proclaimed the blessing above the curse; and
-though Eden was lost through the disobedience of Adam, Paradise shall
-be regained through the obedience of Christ.
-
-Mercy closed Eden's gate. "Behold, saith the Lord, the man is become
-as one of us, to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his
-hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever,
-therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden." Life
-everlasting, even in the garden of Eden, would be no boon to a
-sin-stricken race.
-
-The gates are open now not only "that the King of Glory may come in,"
-but also for "the generation of them that seek him, that seek thy
-face, O God of Jacob." "They shall ascend into the hill of the Lord;"
-they "shall stand in his holy place."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIII.
- _The Hearer of Prayer._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider him as the
-Hearer and Answerer of prayer_; for his promises concerning prayer are
-many, making us "always confident" when we come to the throne of the
-heavenly grace. Surely, every Christian may approach with confidence,
-saying in his heart, "My God will hear me." He may adopt the language
-of full assurance and say, "Father, I know that thou hearest me
-always." The Bible abounds in promises relating to prayer. We also
-find there many illustrations of God's willingness to answer the
-prayers of his children.
-
-But some may say, "Notwithstanding the promises which appear so
-positive, we do not always receive that for which we ask." There are
-many reasons why this is so. Sometimes our motive in asking is wrong.
-"Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss." Sometimes we do not
-ask in faith, consequently, no answer comes; for thus reads the
-faithful promise: "All things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer,
-_believing_, ye shall receive." Therefore "ask in faith, nothing
-wavering." There is another reason why we do not always receive the
-things for which we ask. In our ignorance and short-sightedness we
-often ask for that which God in his wisdom sees would be hurtful to
-us. Loving us with more than a mother's love, he withholds the evil
-which seems to us good, and sends the good which seems to us evil.
-Though God's providence may seem to contradict his promise, yet this
-is a faithful saying: "No good thing will he withhold from them that
-walk uprightly." The wicked often prosper for a time. "They are not in
-trouble as other men; neither are they plagued like other men. Their
-eyes stand out with fatness, they have more than heart can wish.
-Behold, these are the ungodly who prosper in the world; they increase
-in riches."
-
-How shall we solve this seeming contradiction? Suppose we cannot solve
-it. Shall we therefore arraign the justice of God? Shall we reject the
-promise because we cannot understand it in the light of God's
-providence? Oh, not so. Let us remember that now we know only in part.
-But do we not often forget the condition of this promise? Do we not
-make the promise void by our unworthy walking? "No good thing will he
-withhold from them that walk _uprightly_." "If ye abide in me, and my
-words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done
-unto you."
-
-We must remember that God's standard of judging between good and evil
-is very different from ours. In this our thoughts are not as God's
-thoughts. We call poverty, sorrow, sickness and bereavement evil; God
-often shows us that they are good. We ask health; in answer God sends
-sickness, which he blesses to the healing of all our spiritual
-maladies. He can make our sick-chambers very Pisgahs, so that we shall
-thank him for sickness. Sometimes in our weariness and discouragement
-we pray for death. God in answer sends sufficient grace. He maketh our
-feet "like hind's feet," equal to the way. Is not his "a more
-excellent way?" It seems to us every Christian should be satisfied
-with answers like these. Is it not better to have our portion
-appointed by God? It is better when praying for temporal blessings
-always to say, in spirit if not in words, "Nevertheless, not my will,
-but thine be done."
-
-There are some things for which you may ask without any limitations,
-and these are spiritual gifts; "for this is the will of God, even your
-sanctification." You may also have this confidence when praying for
-the conversion of friends. God has provided salvation sufficient for
-all. In our Father's house there is room enough, and in our Father's
-heart there is love enough, for all. None need perish with hunger. "As
-I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the
-wicked; but that the wicked should turn from his way and live." If,
-then, you have a desire in your heart for the conversion of a soul, be
-assured that God awakened that desire. It is a token of his readiness
-to bless. "Have faith in God," "and wait on thy God continually."
-Plead till the answer comes; "though it tarry, wait for it." "What
-things soever ye desire when ye pray, believe that ye receive them,
-and ye shall have them."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIV.
- _The Reward._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I think of his reward for
-faithful labor_.
-
-The weariness of work is often very great, but if sufficient
-recompense follows our endeavors, if success crowns our working, we
-soon forget past toils, "for the desire accomplished is sweet to the
-soul." But if we can see no good resulting from our labors,
-disappointment and grief increase our fatigue. Yes, the weariness of
-grief far exceeds the weariness of successful labors, though they may
-be "labors more abundant," "in season" and "out of season." The
-faithful minister of Christ will here bear me witness, for of all
-times of exhaustion he will acknowledge this to be the greatest, when
-he goes from the pulpit to the closet with this despairing cry: "Who
-hath believed our report?" "Master, we have toiled all the night and
-have taken nothing."
-
-It was morning when upon the shore of Tiberias three tired fishermen
-were seen. They were sad as well as weary, for the night had yielded
-them no recompense. From the crowd that pressed upon him to hear the
-word of God, Jesus stepped forth and entered into Simon's boat. And
-when he had left speaking, he said unto Simon, "Launch out into the
-deep, and let down your nets for a draught." Naturally enough, Simon,
-answering, said, "Master, we have toiled all the night." They were
-very tired now, and were greatly in need of rest and refreshment. "All
-the night." Slowly must the hours have worn away while they labored
-and waited. And then he added, "We have taken nothing." We can almost
-hear the tone of disappointment in which he said it. It would have
-been no marvel if he had added, "Lord, if we have been so unsuccessful
-during the time that is generally the most favorable for fishing, will
-it not be useless for us to make another attempt? Besides, we are
-weary all over and almost sick with disappointment; let us at least
-wait till the falling darkness favors our work."
-
-But Simon Peter's answer was marked by more faith than this. While he
-reminded the Master how long and unsuccessfully they had toiled, he
-quickly added, "Nevertheless, at thy word I will let down the net."
-And a great multitude of fishes was the result of this act of faith
-and prompt obedience. Peter and all that were with him were astonished
-at the draught of fishes which they had taken.
-
-To our mind this astonishment does not confute the idea that this act
-of obedience was prompted by faith. The result so speedily followed,
-and was so great in its magnitude, that the strongest faith might well
-be taken by surprise. Have you not sometimes been surprised by the
-blessed and abundant answer to prayer which you have received? Perhaps
-the salvation of a dear friend was the deep desire of your heart. For
-this you toiled till you nearly fainted at the mercy-seat. You prayed
-unceasingly, and you believed it was the prayer of faith; yet when the
-answer came you were almost overcome with astonishment.
-
-Contemplating this scene, let us take new courage. The sowing-time is
-often a time of exhaustion. It is also a time of weeping; from very
-weakness God's seed-bearers weep. The work is great; "who is
-sufficient for these things?" Sometimes God in his infinite wisdom
-sees fit to withhold from them the knowledge of the results they are
-really accomplishing. Often he calls them away before the seed is
-fully ripe, and they never see the harvest, nor hear the joyful song
-of the reapers who come after them. They sow in tears, and then they
-lie down at the close of the day, and with sighs and tears they pass
-away; but God watches over the precious seed, and the tear-watering
-causes it to flourish more abundantly and ensures a more glorious
-harvest. At the time of planting, if the husbandman sees no signs of
-coming rain, he steeps his seed over night in water that it may spring
-up sooner; but no seed springs up so soon as that which is steeped in
-tears. "He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall
-doubtless come again rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him."
-
-The present reward of work is very great, and much to be desired. "In
-all labor there is profit." Every deed done for the good of others
-brings a blessing to our own souls: seeking their happiness, we find
-our own. God's laborers are blessed above all others. He never forgets
-to reward the smallest work of love; even the cup of cold water given
-in his name shall be remembered. When we fail to accomplish the good
-we designed, we cannot say that our labors were in vain or that we
-have spent our strength for naught. God's designs have been
-accomplished; our souls have been disciplined; and as we sit down upon
-the ruins of our brightest plans and fairest hopes, we glorify God far
-more by our cheerful submission than we could have done by successful
-labors.
-
-But the _future_ reward, how great it is and how enduring! The
-harvest-time will be a time of joy. Past labor and weeping will be
-forgotten when the Lord of the vineyard shall call the laborers that
-he may reward them abundantly. What a scene will then be presented to
-our view! From north, from south, from east, from west, will they
-come--some who have toiled through the heat and burden of a long day;
-others who have labored but one short hour. I, too, will obey the
-call, saying, as I come and kneel before the God of the harvest,
-"Master, behold my sheaves. I know they are very few and of little
-worth; yet, Master, behold my sheaves." Then shall these cheering
-words come to me, and not to me only, but to all the faithful
-laborers: "Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the
-joy of thy Lord."
-
-Weary worker in the vineyard, waste not your strength in weeping. Say
-not, "I have labored in vain; I have spent my strength for naught, and
-in vain;" for surely your judgment is with the Lord, and your work, or
-your reward, with your God. "Thus saith the Lord, Refrain thy voice
-from weeping, and thine eyes from tears; for thy work shall be
-rewarded, saith the Lord."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XV.
- _The Soul's Portion._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider him as my
-soul's best portion_.
-
-Again and again in God's holy word are we warned to avoid
-covetousness. From the midst of the thunders and lightning of Sinai
-issues the emphatic command, "Thou shalt not covet." "Take heed, and
-beware of covetousness," saith the Master, "for a man's life
-consisteth not in the abundance of things which he possesseth." "Let
-your conversation be without covetousness," enjoins the great apostle,
-"and be content with such things as ye have; for he hath said, I will
-never leave thee, nor forsake thee."
-
-In order, then, to gain this sweet content, let us meditate upon
-Christ, who is our soul's eternal portion. Let us consider what we
-already possess, and also meditate upon "things to come," till our
-hands shall relax their grasp upon earthly things and our hearts cling
-more closely to Christ. Our lips vainly declare, "Christ is all," if
-our lives contradict our lips. The worldling looks at our daily life,
-and soon judges whether or not we are satisfied with Christ.
-
-"Conversation" means more than mere words. In its original meaning it
-includes the whole life. Our whole lives, then, must prove that Christ
-is our all.
-
-Can we be contented in sickness, in sorrow and in poverty? Yes, we
-can; "for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee." In
-sickness the Lord will make all your bed; he will strengthen you upon
-the bed of languishing; his left hand will be under your head, while
-his right hand will embrace you. In sorrow he will be with you, for he
-has said, "When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee;
-and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou
-walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the
-flame kindle upon thee." In poverty be content, for though you are
-poor and, it may be, despised of men, you are not forgotten by God.
-That you might have eternal riches he became poor--so poor that he had
-not where to lay his head. The manger was his cradle and the rich
-man's tomb was borrowed for his burial. "For ye know the grace of our
-Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he
-became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich."
-
-Christ is our _eternal_ portion, "for he hath said, I will _never_
-leave thee, nor forsake thee." "Lo, I am with you alway" were his last
-words on earth. Be content, then, with such things as ye have. Having
-Christ, ye possess all things, "for all things are yours; and ye are
-Christ's, and Christ is God's."
-
-The "things present," which belong to us through the covenant of peace
-made with Christ, are precious and greatly to be desired. We have the
-promise of all things needful for this life. "My God shall supply all
-your need." "No good thing will he withhold from them that walk
-uprightly." Bread is sure; water is sure. "The young lions do lack,
-and suffer hunger; but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good
-thing." "Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what
-ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye
-shall put on." "Consider the ravens" and "the lilies," and "be not
-faithless, but believing;" for if God so feedeth the ravens and
-clotheth the lilies, "how much more will he" feed and clothe you, "O
-ye of little faith!"
-
-Come and meditate upon his promises, for they are positive and sure,
-and full of sweet comfort. All your wants are supplied by your Lord
-Jesus. Are you sick? He is your Healer. Are you weary? He is your
-Rest. Are you in trouble? He is your very present Helper. Are the days
-dark? He is your Sun. Are you in danger from the darts of the
-adversary? He is your Shield. Does the desert sun beat hot upon your
-head and the desert sand scorch your pilgrim feet? He is "as the
-shadow of a great rock in a weary land." When the wicked, even your
-enemies and your foes, come upon you, he is your Fortress and your
-strong Tower. He is your Teacher, Brother, Friend and Saviour. What
-more do you desire?
-
-And when "things present" are about to pass away for ever, and your
-trembling feet touch the cold waters of the river of death, before the
-last fond grasp of earth is given, Christ will take your hand in his,
-and as he draws very near to you, you will feel in that hour that
-Christ is the best portion your soul can possess. His finger will
-point plainly toward "things to come," and he will doubtless give you
-glimpses of glory before the time.
-
-We need not, however, wait till the last hour to consider the things
-God has laid up for us. The lesson of present content is more easily
-learned while we sit, like Bunyan's Patience, waiting for our good
-things. Passion would not be satisfied till his lap was filled with
-golden treasure, but Patience, with empty hands, was very quiet,
-though Passion laughed scornfully. "Patience," says Bunyan, "is
-willing to wait."
-
-What a beautiful figure of the Christian! And what are these good
-things for which the Christian is willing to wait?
-
-First of all, he has a home in the future. No earthly home can be
-compared to it, for it is a home where change and death never come.
-The earthly home may be made desolate by death, but in the heavenly
-home there shall be no vacant place. "There shall be no more death,
-neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain; for
-the former things are passed away."
-
-The Christian has also a crown laid up in the future. Here thorns may
-bruise his aching brow, but there he shall be crowned. And earthly
-crowns will pale before the Christian's crown of glory. If he is wise
-in winning souls, they shall be placed as jewels in his crown; for
-though all will have bright crowns, some shall be surpassingly
-glorious, being studded with immortal souls.
-
-Let me, dear Lord, be one of those who "turn many to righteousness."
-Give me a glorious crown, and I will gladly lay it at thy feet. No
-matter if it must be with weeping that I now go forth to win souls, no
-matter if my heart be weary and my hands be heavy, the reward will
-more than compensate for the weariness and weeping, and every redeemed
-soul shall shine in my diadem of glory.
-
-Let the worldling keep his portion and clutch his paltry treasures
-till they crumble to dust beneath his eager fingers, but let
-
- "My soul to heaven aspire,
- And fix its all on God."
-
-He is my best portion, and "my meditation of him shall be sweet" when
-I remember that this "good part," which his grace has enabled me to
-choose, "shall not be taken away" from me.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVI.
- _The Cross._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider his cross and
-mine_.
-
-The cross is the emblem of our religion. To it the awakened sinner
-flies when conscience fills him with gloomy fears. There is no place
-of safety for him save in its blessed shadow. Looking up with faith,
-he sees Jesus, the suffering Saviour, and with the sight peace and joy
-fill his heart. As he starts upon his pilgrim course the cross is set
-before him, and these are his marching orders: "If any man will come
-after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me."
-Oh how he learns to love that cross of shame! it becomes radiant with
-glory, and as he journeys he sings,
-
- "In the cross of Christ I glory."
-
-As he bears his own personal cross, which sometimes is exceedingly
-heavy, he lays the heaviest end of it upon Christ, and looks up
-joyfully through his tears to the great Cross-Bearer and learns to
-"glory in tribulation." Looking up, what does he see? Beyond the cross
-he sees the crown. How dazzling! how enduring! No stain nor rust shall
-ever mar its beauty; none shall ever rob it of its sparkling gems.
-
-Tell me, I ask, who shall wear these bright crowns? "And he said unto
-me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have
-washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." Out
-of great tribulation into great exaltation. What a striking contrast!
-What a happy exchange! Like the Master, they passed from a lowly state
-of trouble into a lofty state of triumph. Because they were not
-ashamed of him in his grief, he was not ashamed of them in his glory.
-They were saved not because they suffered, but because they trusted in
-Him who suffered for them. Some of them suffered even unto the death,
-but the blood that made white their garments was not their own; it was
-"the blood of the Lamb." "_Therefore_ are they before the throne of
-God, and serve him day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on
-the throne shall dwell among them."
-
-How happy are they now! Former trials, when recalled, only lead them
-to new songs of praise. They remember all the way of the past, and
-strike the harp-strings with exultant fingers when they think of their
-sufferings, now exchanged for endless joys.
-
-Consider your cross, young disciple, and meditate upon it without
-bitter thought. It was a wise and loving Hand that laid it upon your
-shoulder, and that same Hand will lift it when he thinks you have
-carried it long enough. "He doeth all things well." The end shall be
-better than the beginning, and in eternity you will understand it all.
-Your voice will rise in higher, loftier strains when you remember the
-sickness that was sanctified and the sorrow that led you nearer to
-your God.
-
- "Oh what a load of struggle and distress
- Falls off before the cross! The feverish care;
- The wish that we were other than we are;
- The sick regrets; the yearnings numberless;
- The thought, "this might have been," so apt to press
- On the reluctant soul; even past despair;
- Past sin itself,--all, all is turned to fair,
- Ay, to a scheme of ordered happiness,
- As soon as we love God, or rather know
- That God loves us!... Accepting the great pledge
- Of his concern for all our wants and woe,
- We cease to tremble upon danger's edge;
- While varying troubles form and burst anew,
- Safe in a Father's arms we smile as infants do."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVII.
- _The Presence._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I remember his near and
-constant presence_; for he is the joy of my life and the life of my
-joy. Joy without him is hardly worth the name of joy, and sorrow with
-him is better than joy.
-
-When my heart is overwhelmed because of enemies and foes, my terrified
-soul turns quickly to him, and David's prayer becomes all my own: "Be
-not thou far from me, O Lord; O my Strength, haste thee to help me!
-Deliver my soul." The answer quickly comes: "Wait on the Lord; be of
-good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart."
-
-But oh, my Saviour, "they mar my path." Remove these enemies, even for
-thine own name's sake; for then shall I run in the way of holiness and
-my ever-brightening path shall show forth thy praise.
-
-And again the answer comes: "Commit thy way unto the Lord;" "My
-presence shall go with thee."
-
-Nearer and nearer draws the Saviour; sweeter and sweeter is his
-presence in this time of my soul's sorest need. He lifts my prostrate
-soul and bids my weary eyes survey the upward path. How glorious to
-behold! He tells me "these light afflictions" are working out "a far
-more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." And when I feel his
-strong arms around me, my soul breaks forth in singing:
-
- "I have no foe, with thee at hand to bless;
- Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness."
-
-Blessed is the man who has learned the secret of a happy life, and,
-like Enoch, walks with God. We care not to know the outward
-circumstances of him whose inner life is hid with God. His delighted
-soul bathes in the sunshine of God's smile; his face reflects the
-peace that flows like a river through his spirit.
-
-It was the presence of Christ that made the Emmaus journey so
-delightful. We know that the favored two started with slow steps and
-heavy hearts, and there was a deep undertone of sadness in their
-voices as they talked together of all the strange things that had
-happened. But what a change came over them! A stranger joined their
-company, and as he talked with them their hearts burned within them,
-till, drawing near the journey's end, they felt so unwilling to lose
-his company that they constrained him to come in and tarry with them.
-And so it came to pass that the last hours of the day were the best
-hours. In the morning it was cloudy and dark, but at evening-time it
-was light, for as they sat at meat the Sun of Righteousness shone full
-and clear into their hearts, dispersing all the clouds.
-
-Does not this journey remind us of some of the days of our pilgrimage?
-The morning found us heavy-hearted. We knelt at the mercy-seat, while
-sighs and groans took the place of songs and rejoicings. With slow
-steps and aching hearts we began the duties of the day. But soon there
-came a change. Jesus, our Lord, drew near. He spake some cheering
-promise, uttered some whisper of his love. Our hearts began to melt;
-again we knelt at the mercy-seat. We prayed, we praised; we rose and
-hastened to our duties, singing as we worked; and so the hours sped
-on. Night fell; still he tarried: we slept in sweet security, for "so
-he giveth his beloved sleep;" we woke to find that we were still with
-Jesus.
-
-Happy the soul that hath the abiding presence of the Saviour. Be this
-our constant prayer: "Abide with us." "Lord, I am not worthy that thou
-shouldst come under my roof," but yet my heart cries out, "Abide with
-me." Give me light in the evening-time. Abide with me "until the day
-break and the shadows flee away."
-
- "Not a brief glance I beg, a passing word,
- But as thou dwell'st with thy disciples, Lord--
- Familiar, condescending, patient, free--
- Come, not to sojourn, but abide, with me."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XVIII.
- _The Appearing._
-
-
-"My meditation of him shall be sweet" _when I consider his appearing_.
-
-To those who have refused the Saviour's offer of mercy the thought of
-his second coming is full of terror. With them there is a "certain
-fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation." Having
-"trodden under foot the Son of God," and "counted the blood of the
-covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing," is it any
-wonder if they fear to fall into the hands of the living God, knowing
-full well that the fearful and unbelieving "shall have their part in
-the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone?"
-
-But the event which strikes such terror into the hearts of those who
-are without Christ and without hope in the world, fills the heart of
-the Christian with exceeding joy. There is comfort, yea, great
-comfort, in the thought of Christ's coming. The apostles departed from
-Olivet with new hope and joy after receiving this angel message: "This
-same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in
-like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven." Ever since, the
-waiting Church has been gazing steadfastly toward heaven, "looking for
-that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our
-Saviour Jesus Christ." And ever and anon angel voices have uttered
-words of comfort to the waiting ones. Often the voice is the voice of
-our Beloved, the Angel of the Covenant. "I will come again," he says,
-"and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also."
-Hear his last prayer: "Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast
-given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold my glory." Hear
-the last words of inspiration: "Surely I come quickly." And the
-waiting company of believers joyfully respond, "Amen. Even so, come,
-Lord Jesus."
-
-The thought of his coming comforts those whose dearest friends sleep
-in Jesus, for them will God bring with him. This shall be a time of
-glad reunions. Let us not sorrow "as others which have no hope." We
-shall soon be ever with one another.
-
-_There is deliverance_ in the thought of Christ's coming; "for we that
-are in this tabernacle do groan, being burdened." Yes, young disciple,
-we have not yet reached that state of perfection when we have no
-burdens. We are yet in the body, and the burden of sorrow is often
-upon us; and though we try to cast this burden on the Lord, we yet
-look forward with joy to Christ's coming, for then "sorrow and sighing
-shall flee away," and "God shall wipe away all tears." And though
-Christ has delivered us from the penalty of the broken law, yet the
-burden of sin is often upon us, and many times with contrition and
-shame we bow before the mercy-seat, saying, sadly, "Father, I have
-sinned against heaven and in thy sight, and am no more worthy to be
-called thy son." The burden of death is upon us, and Christ's coming
-gives comfort to those who through fear of death are all their
-lifetime subject to bondage.
-
-Trembling disciple, perhaps you are fearing what may never come upon
-you. You may be among the number of those who shall be alive at the
-coming of the Lord. The time may not be distant, for nearly all the
-prophecies have been fulfilled and the signs of the times seem to
-declare plainly, "The coming of the Lord draweth nigh." Many a time,
-it is true, the waiting Church has fancied it heard the sound of his
-chariot-wheels, but the time was not yet. "Where is the promise of his
-coming?" cries the scoffing world. "Behold, I come quickly." Believers
-closely clasp this promise to their hearts while they pray for
-patience to wait. Generations have passed away, but the word of the
-Lord endureth for ever. "I come quickly." Perhaps this generation
-shall not pass away till all be fulfilled. It may be so. Certainly
-there is "upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity;" men's
-hearts are "failing them for fear, and for looking after those things
-which are coming on the earth."
-
-"My Lord, I stand continually upon my watch-tower," remembering the
-benediction, "Blessed are those servants whom the Lord when he cometh
-shall find watching."
-
-Last of all and best of all, _there is glory_ in the thought of
-Christ's coming. There is comfort, great comfort; there is
-deliverance, great deliverance; there is glory, great glory, "a far
-more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." "Behold, I show you a
-mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a
-moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump; for the trumpet
-shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall
-be changed; for this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this
-mortal must put on immortality. So when this corruptible shall have
-put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality,
-then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is
-swallowed up in victory." What a glorious picture! No doubt is here
-admitted. "We _shall_ be changed;" "this corruptible _must_ put on
-incorruption;" "this mortal _must_ put on immortality."
-
-This thought of glory overwhelms us; it is a "weight of glory." To be
-ever with one another is blessedness; to be ever with the Lord is
-glory. To be free from this body of sin and death is deliverance; to
-wear the likeness of our glorified Lord is transfiguration--wonderful,
-dazzling, glorious!
-
-Is it any wonder, then, if our meditation is sweet when we reflect
-upon "the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus
-Christ," "who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned
-like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is
-able even to subdue all things unto himself?" No wonder the apostle
-calls it "a blessed hope." It sustains the heart of the aged Christian
-who has "fought a good fight" and finished his course. It also helps
-the young disciple to "run with patience" the race that is set before
-him.
-
-"This same Jesus shall come again." How? "In like manner as ye have
-seen him go into heaven." "Behold he cometh with clouds," and with
-"ten thousand of his saints." And why does he come? To take his weary
-children home. "I will come again and receive you unto myself."
-
-"Wherefore, comfort one another with these words."
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- XIX.
- _The Conclusion._
-
-
-"Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter."
-
-We have meditated upon the names of Christ, and have found in them a
-sweet significance. Jehovah Tsidkenu satisfied the demands of the
-broken law, making us righteous in the sight of God. Jehovah Shalom
-gave a peace which even this tumultuous world cannot take from us.
-Jehovah Nissi leads us forth to battle against our mighty foes, and
-always gives us the victory; "thanks be to God!" Jehovah Rophi healeth
-all our diseases with marvelous skill: even the broken heart is not
-beyond his power, for his own word declares, "He healeth the broken in
-heart, and bindeth up their wounds." Jehovah Jireh quiets all our
-fears for the future, for his name is sufficient pledge that he will
-supply all our need. Jehovah Shammah completes and crowns our joy, for
-in his presence is fullness of joy; "his presence is salvation."
-
-We have rejoiced in "the earnest of our inheritance." Glimpses of
-glory before the time have made us homesick. His "perfect work" has
-filled our minds with amazement as we meditated upon our adoption,
-justification, sanctification and redemption. The thoughts of his
-chastenings were not painful, because we knew a blessing was concealed
-in the blow. His compassion for the multitude seemed to us a sweet
-thought; but as we learned something more about his sympathy with all
-his "sanctified ones," and his deep personal love for each individual
-Christian, our hearts melted within us, and drawing nearer to this
-great heart of love, we joyfully exclaimed, "This is my Beloved, and
-this is my Friend, O daughters of Jerusalem."
-
-We have considered the life more abundant which he gives, until life
-with Christ seemed the happiest life man can know. Thoughts of the
-full and free forgiveness of all our sins, even sins of scarlet hue,
-were comforting thoughts; and while we cast the past behind our backs,
-we looked forward to the future with new confidence, remembering the
-"stones of help" provided by him to slay the giant sins. Deliverance
-from the curse was certainly a pleasant thought; and as we gazed into
-Paradise regained, we gave thanks because Christ had purchased for us
-the "right to the tree of life" which stands in the midst of the
-Paradise of God.
-
-Our meditation was sweet when we thought of his faithful promises
-concerning prayer, for his word confirmed our own experience, and we
-learned to kneel and ask with a more unwavering confidence.
-Considering his reward for faithful labors made us almost forget the
-weariness of work as we seemed already to hear his "Well done, thou
-good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."
-
-Christ as the soul's best portion filled the heart with deep,
-unspeakable joy, and we took up our cross, singing as we walked,
-because his near presence made us almost unmindful of its weight upon
-our shoulder.
-
-On Olivet we had our last glimpse of our living Lord. Here we stood
-"gazing up into heaven" at "this same Jesus," who is as dear to us as
-he was to the twelve. Our hearts thrilled over his parting blessing,
-and the thought of his coming again filled us with delight.
-
-Our meditations are over now. They have been "sweet," or, as it may be
-rendered, "as the calm evening hour." Meditating upon Jesus has
-increased our joy: "I will be glad in the Lord." Around his very name
-sweet thoughts thickly cluster. Jesus! my Jesus! In that dear name the
-best music of heaven comes down to me.
-
-How sweet it sounds! A bundle of myrrh it is--a hill of
-frankincense--a mountain of spices. Through all the livelong day,
-through all the silent watches of the night, my mind may turn to Him
-whose "name is as ointment poured forth," and no bitter, doubting,
-fearful thought shall ever mingle with my musing. No dark thread shall
-ever weave itself into the silver web of my sweet meditation of him,
-for my unbelief is banished when my Jesus is near. All my grief fades
-away in the presence of his glory, and he his own self is the joy of
-my heart and the heart of my joy.
-
-"My Beloved is mine, and I am his." All that he is is mine, and all
-that I am is his. He is more than all the world to me, and without him
-heaven would not be worth having. "Whom have I in heaven but thee? and
-there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee." Jesus! my Jesus!
-Eternal musings will not exhaust this hive of honey. He has saved me
-from my sins and betrothed me to himself for ever. O my soul, "how
-much owest thou unto my Lord!" The greatness of my indebtedness I will
-not fully realize till I stand upon the yonder shore, and perhaps not
-even then.
-
- "Jesus, I ne'er can pay
- The debt I owe thy love."
-
-I am, and ever will be, "debtor." Thy gifts to me have been so great
-that, though my giving cannot enrich thee, I would fain relieve my
-grateful heart by giving thee some token of love.
-
-In the stable at Bethlehem the Eastern sages open their costly
-treasures. The sight is a strange one, and there seems a strange
-incongruity between the gifts and the receiver; also between the giver
-and the receiver. The wise men bow before a babe, and lavish the
-riches of the East upon the infant of the lowly manger. "Lavish," did
-I say? Let not the thought of waste be here implied. This babe is "the
-holy child Jesus," the King of the Jews. Bring costly sacrifices. "The
-kings of Tarshish and of the isles shall bring presents; the kings of
-Sheba and Seba shall offer gifts. Yea, all kings shall fall down
-before him; all nations shall serve him."
-
-Jesus, Saviour, once a child! Jesus, my exalted King! what shall I
-bring to thy footstool? What shall I give my Lord?
-
- "Were the whole realm of nature mine,
- That were a present far too small."
-
-But I am poor, very poor. No good works have I to bring; no incense of
-holy prayers; no golden thoughts in which there mingles no alloy of
-impurity.
-
- "Thou willest that thy bride should be--
- I bless thy will--most poor, most low,
- Receiving everything from thee,
- My Lord and God. Then be it so.
-
- "That I have nothing of my own,
- Freely and gladly I to all declare.
- This is my portion, this alone,
- That thou permittest me thy name to bear."
-
-Have I then nothing to give? Stay, holy Christ; I have a heart. True,
-it is polluted--more than this, it is broken--yet I have heard that
-though
-
- "Our God requires a whole heart or none,
- Yet he will accept a broken one."
-
-Accept the gift. Take it and make it holy; fill it with love to thee.
-Fill it even to overflowing; so that, having received all from thee, I
-may be able to give thee all. Let me be wholly thine--thine in every
-thought and passion of my soul. Here, Lord, I give my soul to thee; I
-am thine.
-
- "Poor heart of mine, awake, arise!
- And thou, my Bridegroom, my life's Sun,
- Draw me to reach the heavenly prize,
- Oh, do thou draw, and we will run.
- Draw after thee thy fainting bride,
- Who still is far, too far, from light and grace;
- Till in thy presence, at thy side,
- She see thee wholly--see thee face to face."
-
-My meditation of him makes me long to see Him whom, having not seen, I
-love. I would see him--not as I have seen him in the sanctuary and in
-his holy supper, but I would see him "face to face." I would see him
-as he is; and, blessed be his glorious name for ever! I shall one day
-see him thus. Oh blessed hope! These eyes shall see Jesus; "For I know
-that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day
-upon the earth; and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet
-in my flesh shall I see God; whom I shall see for myself, and mine
-eyes shall behold, and not another."
-
-And, better than all beside, I shall be like him; for "we know that
-when he shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he
-is." Such knowledge is too wonderful for me: it is high; I cannot
-attain unto it.
-
- "Jesus! the very thought is sweet;
- In that dear name all heart-joys meet;
- But sweeter than the honey far
- The glimpses of his presence are.
-
- "No word is sung more sweet than this;
- No name is heard more full of bliss;
- No thought brings sweeter comfort nigh
- Than Jesus, Son of God most high.
-
- "Jesus, the Hope of souls forlorn,
- How good to them for sin that mourn!
- To them that seek thee, oh how kind!
- But what art thou to them that find!
-
- "No tongue of mortal can express,
- No letter write, its blessedness:
- Alone who hath thee in his heart
- Knows, love of Jesus, what thou art.
-
- "O Jesus! King of wondrous might;
- O Victor! glorious from the fight;
- Sweetness that may not be expressed,
- And altogether loveliest."
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's A Basket of Barley Loaves, by Mary Christina Miller
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